and we’re right back to the doublethink – “Again I say to you, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God.”
It's not doublethink. It's the belief that separate classes of people exist - "hard workers" who "create value" and rightfully become rich - and "lazy people" who just work because they have to and would otherwise do nothing. The people who push this propaganda see themselves in the first group, and if they aren't yet rich, that's because the liberals and commies prevent it. And they see the majority of others in the second group.
Came to a recent epiphany that we have proof that people would still work even if basic needs were provided without worry...
Simulation Video Games
Many people, myself included, play a lot of job simulator games. I found myself asking, while playing some of these what makes this more fun than doing it in real life and the answer was almost always the pay for the job and the basic needs not existing.
Turns out, the old adage of giving someone UBI, and having it turn everyone into lazy layabouts, is bullshit. We may actually choose to work if we didn't have to worry about how the cost of my labor would need to be spent to keep myself alive, and not merely extra to throw back in the system.
Shipbreaker, Power Wash Simulator, and Euro Truck Simulator are a few games I've enjoyed playing, but would never do IRL.
Hey! Someone who understands the convoluted minds of conservatives!
I'll point out though, this isn't really a conservative mindset.... It's a capitalist mindset. The difference isn't obvious since almost every conservative I've ever known is a capitalist.
Billionaires are special job creators without whom jobs could not be created. Prior to having billionaires we all wandered around aimlessly looking for snacks or TV shows.
Many people would stop working because so many jobs are awful and not worth doing unless you need the to survive. The job market would have to undergo radical shifts due workers no longer being desperate and actually having power. Awful jobs would have to become decent or pay more to make it worth it.
Many jobs would just go away. Some would never come back. They were probably not useful anyway.
Some people would never rejoin the workforce. Much of that is good, like elderly people who should have retired long ago but don't have savings. Some for worse.. but it's hard to say it would be any worse than what we have now.
Hopefully they don't wonder, hopefully we carve the reason into everything that can hold a message. So once the system buckles under its own greed, due to us poors being unable to purchase anything at all, our descendants can look through the remnants and heed the warning.
They're also the people that think minimum wage is enough, working a minimum wage job is easy (so much easier than their job), and, have and would never work a minimum wage job in their life.
Minimum wage jobs aren't easy, but becoming a successful doctor or engineer or attorney is so much harder, but I guess that thought wouldn't fit in your mind
Some people probably wouldn't work if all their basic needs were met.(No judgement, i'd definitely consider it myself) And some billionaires probably are hard workers(although that is definitely not why they're billionaires)
For the most part, people like to work. To feel like they're doing something, to be productive. This is within reason of course. The work should be something they enjoy, and no one likes being overworked.
Right? There's people still spouting that "all of that money from the pandemic" is somehow still sustaining the lives of thousands and thousands of people 4 years later.
I straight up told a coworker he's a "fucking dumbass piece of shit" if he thinks anyone is somehow still running on 2-3 checks of $1000 three years later, because either he's too stupid to realize that's only one week of pay for him or he has an ulterior motive for continuing to lie about something he knows isn't true. So which is it, dumb or lying, because we both know that's bullshit.
He stood there for a second staring at me and goes "yeah I suppose that's not THAT much..."
Of course absolutely nothing about his other right-wing bs changed but at least he hasn't brought up "pandemic money" again.
People are really inconsistent in general. Most people don't seem to have a defined moral code even when they're religious. This is a really good example of the issue, though. I've seen this too and it's hella frustrating. I don't know if there's really a solution. Capitalism encourages this phenomena though, for sure.
Billionaires are often workaholics. They work extremely long hours because they’re obsessed with winning, with crushing the competition. I’m sure there are also plenty of billionaires living it up Great Gatsby style but those obviously don’t fit the “hard working billionaire” stereotype.
I mean, its not like they're just going to tell you "lol no, I paid some mug to do all the work, with money I inherited, and took all the credit and money" (actually how they earned it) now is it?
No, we know they work harder than we do and obsess about winning which is how they did it. We know this because they told us so.
So I have been asking myself why I held some of my beliefs, and the answer is that I "learnt" them at a really young age, maybe 4-10 years old. It was an age where I basically knew "nothing" and I guess I filed it away for clarification later and that "later" never came. All of a sudden I'm much, much older and asking myself why I even believe this strange thing and the answer is "they got me when I was young". If I wasn't exposed to other thinkers who asked me to re-evaluate my ideas, I might never have questioned them.
People do stop working when it's all provided. Anyone with simple pattern recognition has seen that happen, not everyone of course, but a lot give up. Like this pattern I noticed of people saying stuff like this pretending to be altruistic and empathetic but really are just salty they don't have the money to lie around all day.
That's not what UBI tests have shown us in practice.
Anecdotally, a close friend of mine made enough to retire several years ago and now he just works a job he finds fulfilling instead of the highest paying one. IMHO humans instinctively want to contribute to the tribe.
I won't deny that a portion of the population would definitely do this, but I don't think it's a majority. There's a nontrivial number of people who would stop working because they don't need to anymore, eg, working mom's with supportive spouses who work a menial job just to help cover the bills. They would definitely leave their work and spend time with kids and being a homemaker. Some would quit and do nothing because they're lazy. Sure.
I don't think that's the majority of the workforce. Many people, such as myself, do it mainly because they want to be productive and/or help people. Those like me, who are also happy with their employer (I presently am quite pleased with my boss/management), would not really do anything differently.
I think the root of what you're seeing is that if the basic needs were covered, people would quit bad jobs. Bluntly, there are a lot of bad jobs out there. I would venture a guess to say it's the majority. If someone hates their workplace but they need to make rent, they're more likely to stay with a bad job so they can have a place to live; these people, if their needs were met, would walk out in droves. That would be enough to move the needle over to a majority.
My argument from your statement can be rephrased as: if we met everyone's needs, they would have no reason to stay working at jobs they hate.