New slavery when workers are paid less than 10% of the average global GDP photo Le Havre port by Yanick Toutain |
Occupy Dallas a partagé un lien.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6, 2014
The main source to help the discovery of the concept : formoisie in 1993 |
I fight for equal pay for all Earthlings since 1993.
I am asking $ 1,300 / month for all (since 2000). ($ 1,300 or € 1,000 from 14 years old). I am asking $ 650 per child under 14 years.
And I denounce the "basic income" as a ruse designed by ideological mercenaries of the 3 bourgeoisies (capitalists, formoisie, innovoisie) to protect their privileges and thus prolong the suffering of humanity.
This is the postmarxism (the real one) that explains the program highlighting the ancestral heritage, the giant stock of ancestral innovations (80% are the fire, the words, the agriculture and the numbers).
The economic grid of Adam Smith and Karl Marx is wrong. The "labour-value" is a sham. This is an ideological construction for non-innovative capitalists and formois employees.
Karl Marx's faking (denying the existence of an "surplus value" education and denying the historical productivity and the ancestral copyrights _) made us lose a century and a half.
Matt Zwolinsky, Veronique de Rugy, Michael Huemer (including Elizabeth Nolan Brown reports theses) share to "forget" to notify American citizens that the $ 20,400 that global government (the Human State) pay (1300 $ to consume and to invest $ 400 each month) will be the only payment will be done.
The liberal-egalitarist program denounces anti-scientific aspects of the theoretical framework of Smith and Marx.
In their false propaganda grid, nobody ever pays for the use of ancestral innovations. We never see an enterprise or someone paying for the use of the fire (heating, lighting, cooking), of the words (vocabulary, grammar etc.), for the use of agriculture (discovery and invention) or the use ofnumbers.
These ancestral innovations are seen as a sort of spoils of war whose hidden use is almost natural .....
As a result, the mechanisms of spoliation "legal" by the actions, diplomas, copyrights (for money) are validated. While these distributions of income are also absurdly outrageous as the annuity for land ownership.
The receivers of stolen ancestral lands have nothing to expect from the State of Humans. Dividends, qualified wages, copyrights are rackets operated by gangsters in costume. Racketeering based violence by police, armies, police batons, legal murder ... the imperialist invasions, slave wages to $ 70 in the Third World.
All this will soon cease. The Innovatings will resume soon leadership of Humanity!
Parasites will be shamed!
Libertarians Debate Basic Income Guarantee
replace it with a basic income guarantee for American citizens? That's the subject of debate this month at Cato Unbound, the Cato Institute's online journal, with a quartet of libertarian academics and policy analysts lined up to opine on the matter. First up is University of San Diego philosophy professor Matt Zwolinsky, a strong proponent of the basic income guarantee (BIG). Zwolinski argues that there's a pragmatic libertarian case for dishing out cash, no strings attached, rather than continuing to rely on our current patchwork of poorly-managed and work-disincentivizing welfare programs.
Should libertarians support proposals to scrap the current welfare regime and
Zwolinski uses the term "Basic Income Guarantee" (BIG) to descirbe a range of policy proposals, from Milton Friedman's negative income tax to Charles Murray’s proposal that every American over 21 get $10,000 per year from the federal government.
There is, of course, quite a bit of variation among these plans in terms of cost, payouts, implementation, and so on. Despite these differences, however, they all have in common two important features.First, they involve a cash grant with no strings attached. Unlike other welfare programs which encourage or require recipients to consume certain specific kinds of good–such as medical care, housing, or food–a BIG simply gives people cash, and leaves them free to spend it, or save it, in whatever way they choose.Second, a BIG is an unconditional grant for which every citizen (or at least every adult citizen) is eligible. It is not means-tested; checks are issued to poor and rich alike (though on some proposals payments to the rich will be partially or fully recaptured through the tax system). Beneficiaries do not have to pass a drug test or demonstrate that they are willing to work. If you’re alive, and a citizen, you get a check. Period.
It might not be ideal—certainly "no libertarian would wish for a BIG as an addition to the currently existing welfare state," writes Zwolinski. "But what about as a replacement for it?" He argues that the BIG would amount to less bureaucracy, less expense, "less rent-seeking", and less paternalism. Read his whole argument here.
Veronique de Rugy laid out some pros and cons of a guaranteed income in the March 2014 issue of Reason. "The biggest risk in implementing a guaranteed income is that it won't completely-or even partly-replace existing welfare programs, but instead simply add a new layer of spending on top of the old," de Rugy wrote. "So what are libertarians to support? If nothing else, more research."
Up next in Cato Unbound's BIG debate is Michael Huemer, a professor of philosophy at the University of Colorado, Boulder, followed by Manhattan Institute fellow Jim Manzi on August 8, and Cornell management and economics professor Robert H. Frank on August 11; it will continue through the end of August.
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