• Jaysyn
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    17911 months ago

    Reminder that the both the Mormon & Catholic “Churches” could feed, house & clothe every single homeless person in the USA indefinitely & it would only cost them a fraction of their net worth.

    They had rather sit on their wealth like the Dragon though, regardless of the punishments for that described in their “Bible”.

    That’s how you know they don’t really believe in their own bullshit.

      • @Welt@lazysoci.al
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        311 months ago

        How do you reckon we make that happen? Any hope, or are they as powerful as billionaires?

        • @Kiernian@lemmy.world
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          1311 months ago

          I’m far less worried about churches paying sales, property, and income taxes than people making tens of billions of dollars a year.

          We’ll get WAY MORE social benefit out of properly taxing the ultra-ultra rich than we will out of the hundreds of thousands of mini-churches who have volunteer receptionists twice a week or even the few hundred mega churches with jet-setting pastors.

          Turn your ire on the bigotry and hypocrisy of a church that attempts to profess love and hate at the same time and out of the same mouth to your heart’s content, but when it comes to money, we need to deal with the robber barons. They’re the ones causing the economic problem.

        • @Fondots@lemmy.world
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          1511 months ago

          It’s unacceptable that they’re the only ones who are officially exempt.

          Kind of seems like the person you’re replying to is well-aware of that, and when they’re said “Churches need to pay taxes,” they didn’t mean it as “churches are currently legally obligated to pay taxes” but rather “churches paying taxes is something that needs to happen.”

        • @macbayne82@lemmy.world
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          611 months ago

          Not quite. Churches are exempt from many taxes, but not all, as a part of the separation of church and state.

          Churches do need to pay their share of FICA, Social Security, and other income-related taxes. Clergy are also required to pay income taxes, though they are permitted some tax-exempt benefits, most notably church-provided housing.

          That being said, I’d completely agree with removing tax-exempt status from churches that breach the separation of church and state, beginning with those that outright tell their members who to vote for.

    • @theangryseal@lemmy.world
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      1511 months ago

      Libertarians are always certain religious charities will foot all of the bills though.

      Like if humans were perfect and weren’t greedy assholes.

    • @Coasting0942@reddthat.com
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      511 months ago

      Pretty sure it’s not that simple. They have projects all over the planet, and administrators that need their cut. Also need church renovations so that people feel their church is fancier than their own homes.

    • @Surp@lemmy.world
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      -1711 months ago

      Hey I’m all about shoving this down religious zealots throats but can you site some proof so I can do just that lol 😜

      • @Fondots@lemmy.world
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        1211 months ago

        There’s an often cited figure that it would cost $20 billion to end homelessness. As best as I can find, that figure is taken from an interview in 2012 with Mark Johnson who was with the dept of housing and urban development at the time, he wasn’t directly quoted in the interview, it wasn’t an official statement from the department, and by his own admission it was a rough estimate, I’m also not clear if that’s a global figure or specifically for the US, though I suspect it’s for just the US.

        The wealth of churches can be a bit hard to quantify, between cash, investments, real estate, artwork, etc. across multiple countries and various legal entities, but either organization is worth, at the low end, easily 10s of billions of dollars, and possibly hundreds (I tend to see estimates for the Mormons somewhere between $100-200 billion) and in the case of the Catholic Church, they are almost definitely sitting on some properties and artifacts that could only be valued as “priceless,” if the Pope, hypothetically, decided to sell off the entirety of Vatican City, how would the value even be determined for that?

        So if we assume that 20 billion estimate is good, either church could handle it pretty easily.

        That figure is over a decade old at this point though and so likely outdated (if it ever was accurate at all, which is questionable at best,) I’m seeing other sources saying that the true price to end homelessness would be at least $300 billion at the low end.

        Which, again, may possibly be within either or both church’s ability to pay for out of pocket depending on how they use their assets, but even if it’s not, they could certainly put a very good dent in the problem.

        You could also quibble about what it means to end homelessness and the appropriate ways to go about doing so.

        So in short, they could maybe do it, but at the very least they could certainly afford to do a lot more than they are.

    • @Linkerbaan@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Reminder that the secular institution with the Democrats leading it can also fix homelessness with even less of a fraction of their net worth.

      Atheism to the rescue again.

      Oh. Wait.

      • Jaysyn
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        2011 months ago

        Probably, especially these days, but the #GOP has to actually be come a minority party before that can happen.

        • @Jonna@lemmy.world
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          611 months ago

          There have been many spans of time when Democrats had enough control of government to push through what they profress. They don’t use those opportunities.

          Not arguing that the two parties are the same. They are better than the Republicans by far, but the Democrats are still not our friends. They either need to be destroyed or changed.

          Since Eugene McCarthy, to the Rainbow Coalition, and then the campaigns of Kuccinch and then Bernie working inside has not worked. Of course, neither has working outside.

      • @Welt@lazysoci.al
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        311 months ago

        It’s not about faith. It’s about corporations. Religious, commercial or government, none of them are working for us.

        • @Linkerbaan@lemmy.world
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          -211 months ago

          His comment was about faith though.

          I keep having to read the dumb narrative that le atheism would fix everything here on Lemmy and everything is the fault of religion but the atheist institutions are doing just as little if not less than the religious ones.

          • @Welt@lazysoci.al
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            011 months ago

            Atheist institutions? You’re trying to compare FAANG to open source. False equivalency. U dumb.

  • gregorum
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    11011 months ago

    proof again that the government could severely curtail homelessness if they wanted to-- they just don’t.

      • TheCrispyDud
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        1111 months ago

        That’s it I’m cutting any and all bootstraps I see. Menacingly approaches old riding boots

      • @chitak166@lemmy.world
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        411 months ago

        The disparity in wealth should grow instead of shrink.

        As long as most people believe this, then that’s what’s going to happen.

        • @SCB@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          Wealth disparity is not relevant to this discussion. It doesn’t say anything about where the bottom tier is.

          If we had full UBI, free homes, free food, free healthcare, etc and some small portion of the country were quadrillionaires, we’d have massive wealth disparity and no loss of quality of life.

          Wealth is not zero-sum, and the high and low do not necessarily have anything to do with one another.

          • @Cruxifux@lemmy.world
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            511 months ago

            Bruh, not to shit out an old conservative adage, but that money has to come from somewhere. You’re missing the entire nuances of how the monetary system works, and the whole argument of where the money should come from for these things. A country where wealth disparity is increased because the tax comes from the middle class looks very different from one where it comes from the upper classes and massive corporations.

            • @SCB@lemmy.world
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              11 months ago

              A country where wealth disparity is increased because the tax comes from the middle class

              This also has nothing to do with the money disparity.

              Like, I agree with you regarding taxation in broad terms. But the objective reality is the wealth disparity does not have any impact, on its own, on anyone’s individual well-being, the same way me acknowledging that it doesn’t has no bearing on whether or not wealthy people should pay more taxes.

              If we cannot discuss things in a real world framework, were basically just writing fan-fiction of reality. That is a MAGA way to create policy, not a real world methodology.

              • @Cruxifux@lemmy.world
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                611 months ago

                The way you’re trying to frame this is magical thinking where wealth disparity within our society doesn’t come with sets of nuanced issues that don’t directly effect the wellbeing of society as a whole. After a certain rate of wealth disparity, for instance, those with the most can directly control those with the least with any number of creative ways that mostly amount to “I have money so I can buy people.”

                From controlling government officials, to controlling individual level situations like law enforcement and judiciary measures so that they can essentially do whatever they want, which is never used for the betterment of others and always to the detriment of the masses. To leave these things out of a conversation about wealth disparity and quality of life is just disingenuous man.

                • @SCB@lemmy.world
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                  11 months ago

                  The way you’re trying to frame this is magical thinking where wealth disparity within our society doesn’t come with sets of nuanced issues that don’t directly effect the wellbeing of society as a whole.

                  This isn’t magical thinking, it’s simply understanding that wealth is not zero-sum.

                  https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/abs/seven-deadly-economic-sins/wealth-is-positivesum/78D2A23B03BB245AF40C45B5C1F6C9FF

                  From controlling government officials, to controlling individual level situations like law enforcement and judiciary measures so that they can essentially do whatever they want, which is never used for the betterment of others and always to the detriment of the masses.

                  This is indeed bad, but is a measure of the strength of institutions, not wealth disparity. Wealth doesnt win elections on its own - 2012, 2016, 2018, 2020, and 2022 all featured out-spent candidates who won. Trump famously won despite being outspent handily in 2016

                  I’m genuinely flabbergasted that some people perceive this as some sort of hot take and not just acknowledging the reality at play here.

            • @SCB@lemmy.world
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              -711 months ago

              It’s not a take. This is just correct information that you don’t like. There is 0 opinion in the above.

              • @chitak166@lemmy.world
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                011 months ago

                You would be delusional enough to believe that.

                It’s okay, I’m going to put you on my ignore list now. You’re not worth arguing with because every post you make is asinine.

                Goodbye.

          • @zbyte64@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            211 months ago

            The rich people who go on TV and say “people don’t want to work for me anymore, that’s why we need to cut benefits” certainly see wealth as zero-sum. They know if we had all those things you listed their business would stop working.

            • @SCB@lemmy.world
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              11 months ago

              Or they’re lying for their own gain

              Also this is a question of incentives, not wealth. They believe people who get benefits are incentivized not to work. This has been proven soundly false in recent tests of UBI.

    • Billiam
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      2111 months ago

      We can invent billions of dollars to give away during the pandemic, and billions more to give Israel to continue its genocide against Palestinians, but solving student debt or homelessness or universal health care? We don’t have enough money for that!

      • @tsonfeir@lemm.ee
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        2211 months ago

        Because interest payments make profit, and reducing people’s ability to not live paycheck to paycheck increases the workers dependency on the system.

      • @SCB@lemmy.world
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        1411 months ago

        universal health care? We don’t have enough money for that!

        Universal healthcare would, ironically, save the government, businesses, and consumers money all at the same time.

      • BlanketsWithSmallpox
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        -711 months ago

        Is Hamas/IDF genocide against each other some kind of meme that must be mentioned in every comment section now or is this just propaganda?

        • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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          511 months ago

          Hamas isn’t in the West Bank. And yet Israel is demolishing houses right now so that settlers can move in. Only one side is perpetrating a genocide.

            • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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              11 months ago

              Nothing. It has everything to do with your comment. This isn’t a “both sides” moment. It may have been in the past but Israel is commiting war crimes at a breathtaking pace now.

    • FlashMobOfOne
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      511 months ago

      No Democrats or Republicans actually get voted out for voting for shitty things, so where’s the motivation?

      • @Linkerbaan@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        What did you do the last four years that should make us vote for you again Biden?

        “I’m not Trump”

        Democrat voters cream their pants and run to the voting booth so Genocide Joe can have another 4 years

    • @mhague@lemmy.world
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      -611 months ago

      What’s the point of thinking of our government as “the government”? Or changing “We could solve this.” to “They could solve this.”?

      • FlashMobOfOne
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        1111 months ago

        Considering the military budget is now up to 1.2 trillion a year and we pay for other country’s wars, the government clearly exists to make warmongers wealthier.

      • AlwaysNowNeverNotMe
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        1011 months ago

        Because the government has on multiple occasions during my lifetime refused to consider measures with over 90% popular support.

        Because they do not serve us as it is written in the Constitution. They serve the wealthy, they bend and scrape and lick their boots, never hold them accountable to the law, and never. Ever. Act against their best interest in any scenario. And the wealthy benefit from the social safety net having a big hole above a pit trap their workers are afraid to fall into.

        • @mhague@lemmy.world
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          111 months ago

          Our leaders serve the people making noise at the bargaining table. We the people have the most power. We just leave after the first victory. We don’t become educated voters and choose to instead focus on exciting narratives. Elite interests try to affect change and so focus on reality. We the people seem to be after catharsis and so focus on symbolic victories.

          But what can you expect from people who constantly tell themselves they have no power? No agency? They don’t conceptualize themselves as being able to affect change and it colors everything they do.

          • @pearable@lemmy.today
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            211 months ago

            You’re judging the majority of the population without questioning why we feel powerless. The vast majority of news, media, and education we encounter support our oppression.

            Just because you’ve been lucky enough to hear the truth and been in the right place emotionally to hear it doesn’t mean you should write everyone who is ignorant as morally inferior.

            • @mhague@lemmy.world
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              211 months ago

              I’m not judging, I’m curious about why people say this stuff. The way we talk is intimately tied with results. Changing rhetoric is a big step in getting girls to conceptualize themselves as capable of “boy” things. “Chess is for boys.” isn’t just a phrase, it’s like a spell that alters reality. If people can understand how words have power when it comes to women’s opportunites, or minorities taking interest in voting, then they’ll eventually understand that it affects our agency too.

      • gregorum
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        11 months ago

        Oy. Arguing with nihilists is about as useful as pissing into a black hole. You’ll just get your dick turned into spaghetti for the effort, so why bother?

        • @mhague@lemmy.world
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          011 months ago

          All I care about is that people can see what kind of mentality pairs with rhetoric like, “They control us!” It’s not a productive, insightful perspective that speaks helplessness into themselves and others.

    • @chitak166@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      proof again that the government people could severely curtail homelessness if they wanted to-- they just don’t.

      • gregorum
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        11 months ago

        That’s why we formed a government, to handle shit like this. A government of the people by the people for the people. it’s their fucking job.

        • @chitak166@lemmy.world
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          -1011 months ago

          The government is just doing what its people want.

          If the people want something different, then they should do something different.

          Haven’t you heard how good the economy is doing?

              • gregorum
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                211 months ago

                don’t sprain something with those mental gymnastics

                • @SCB@lemmy.world
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                  -111 months ago

                  Homeowners pulling the ladder up after them is the single largest driver of our housing crisis. You literally cannot build more housing in the areas we most need it, due to regulations pushed for, and at times written by, local homeowners.

  • @Nurgle@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    44% of single family homes were purchased by private equity in 2023. Some analysts expect institutional investors to control 40% of the SFH rental market by 2030.

    • @Bonskreeskreeskree@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      And when are the American people going to demand an end to this shit? They represented less than 3% of sfh ownership in 2012. How long until everyone must rent? How long until people are forced to sell due to taxes driving them out of ownership due to inflated pricing from these ghouls?

      • @aesthelete@lemmy.world
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        311 months ago

        While I’m not 100% about it, Prop 13 in California has some good effects.

        People shouldn’t be tax hiked out of their living quarters. I think most states should have something similar and limit it to only the property you reside in so that property taxes are predictable instead of the incalculable beast they are today in most areas.

    • @orcrist@lemm.ee
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      611 months ago

      Let us not forget apartments, which are invariably occupied by less wealthy folk on average, who definitely can’t afford the cost.

  • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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    6911 months ago

    It’s okay guys. The government is (checks notes) giving money to your land lords with no strings attached.

    I’ll be at the bar if anyone wants to join me.

  • @applebusch@lemmy.world
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    4211 months ago

    Wait people were getting aid? I thought we all got a couple thousand dollars and thoughts and prayers… That shit dried up in one month.

      • @dumpsterlid@lemmy.world
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        -511 months ago

        Don’t forget, Biden never wanted to give Covid relief checks either, it was only the threat of Trump promising to do so that caused him to actually do it (in order to win in places like Georgia if I recall correctly). Then he shortchanged everyone on the actual amount he promised (I don’t care if when you read the fine print he was technically correct, that was not how the promise was pitched to voters).

        Trump is far worse, but let’s not forget how pathetic the Democratic Party is at actually helping desperate people.

        • @MotoAsh@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          You are definitely correct in the general sense. People actually to the left HAVE to remember: Democrats are allies only against the right. They are not ideologically aligned and no matter how many individuals you can pull left, “Democrats” will never be left or progressive.

          They HAVE to be pushed to do good things. That doesn’t magically make Trump good. Fuck that wannabe dictator and everyone who supports him, but Democrats are allies only against the right.

          • @UsernameHere
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            311 months ago

            Why are you trying to speak on behalf of all democrats?

            And why do you feel democrats are only allies against the right?

            • @MotoAsh@lemmy.world
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              211 months ago

              I speak on behalf of the label. Like I said: “no matter how many individuals you can pull left…”

              The party itself is not a specific person. MAYBE people like AOC and others will succeed in shifting the whole party left, but as it stands, it is a heavily center-right organization on the global scale of politics as far as how they vote in-house, on actual legislation.

            • Maeve
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              -111 months ago

              Most aren’t even allies to the right. If we’re being honest, they owe far right.

          • @SCB@lemmy.world
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            11 months ago

            Most Democrat voters are not leftists, so it stands to reason that Democrats would not be leftists.

        • @UsernameHere
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          1311 months ago

          Biden never wanted to give Covid relief checks

          Where did you hear this?

          Then he shortchanged everyone on the actual amount he promised

          I thought Congress decided the amount?

            • @UsernameHere
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              1111 months ago

              I remember the controversy and would’ve preferred the full $2000.

              I remember Republicans saying they wouldn’t let the full $2000 pass. So Biden lowered the amount so that it would actually pass.

              Because Congress had the final say in what would pass. Right?

              • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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                -1211 months ago

                If Congress had the final say then Biden shouldn’t have kept saying $2,000. But I guess you don’t get elected by only making promises you can keep

                • @UsernameHere
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                  611 months ago

                  So you feel Biden should’ve stuck with that original $2000 and let Republicans block the bill which would’ve resulted in nothing for the American people?

                • @TheSanSabaSongbird@lemdro.id
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                  211 months ago

                  Read this very carefully; winning an election doesn’t mean that you get to do everything you want. Again; winning an election doesn’t mean that you get to do everything you want.

                  There are a lot of people who don’t seem to understand this concept. Winning an election just means that you get to try to do what you want, but you’re always going to have to make compromises because that’s how democracies work.

          • @dumpsterlid@lemmy.world
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            -1011 months ago

            I mean, am I in Biden’s head? No.

            Is there any other reasonable conclusion to draw from his behavior and rhetoric in the political context he was in? No.

            The process involved congress but the president had most of the power to frame and shape what the covid relief checks were.

            • @Wrench@lemmy.world
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              611 months ago

              It’s almost like the president doesn’t have absolute authority to implement ideas exactly how they like, and have to work with other branches of the government, which usually means compromising.

              Wow. Guess we really should pivot to authoritarianism. Then campaign promises can be implemented to the letter. /s if that wasn’t obvious.

            • @UsernameHere
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              211 months ago

              I mean, am I in Biden’s head? No.

              So you made that up.

              Is there any other reasonable conclusion to draw from his behavior and rhetoric in the political context he was in? No.

              Republicans said they wouldn’t let the full $2000 pass. If Biden tried it anyway it wouldn’t pass and Americans would be left with nothing. That’s common sense. But you claim there is no other conclusion to come to…

              The process involved congress but the president had most of the power to frame and shape what the covid relief checks were.

              And Republicans in Congress said they wouldn’t let the full $2000 pass.

              • @dumpsterlid@lemmy.world
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                -311 months ago

                Republicans said they wouldn’t let the full $2000 pass. If Biden tried it anyway it wouldn’t pass and Americans would be left with nothing. That’s common sense. But you claim there is no other conclusion to come to…

                Source on this? Even if it is true democrats did nothing to publicize this fact, the fight for this shit is like Biden’s “fight” for a $15 minimum wage. Even if he technically fought for it, the strategy is so poor and so halfhearted it hard to count it for anything meaningful.

                • @UsernameHere
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                  211 months ago

                  What was poor about his strategy?

                  The only other strategy would be to write a bill that will go nowhere.

                  How is that a better strategy?

    • @TheSanSabaSongbird@lemdro.id
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      -111 months ago

      I don’t think that’s what is happening at all. We don’t need to imagine some vast and ridiculously improbable media conspiracy to explain this seeming disconnect. What I imagine is really happening is that the tools that economists and by extension the media use to gauge the health of the economy are no longer (if they ever were) calibrated to accurately reflect the lived experience of many/most Americans.

      This is by far the simplest explanation.

      The idea that this is somehow a conspiracy is simply an example of poor media literacy. It doesn’t work like that at all.

        • @TheSanSabaSongbird@lemdro.id
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          111 months ago

          It’s cute that you appear to imagine that anyone gets rich through journalism. No one goes into journalism because they want to get rich.

          Journalism is probably the lowest paid “profession” there is because it’s highly competitive and in recent decades the bottom has entirely fallen out of local news organizations due to the Internet having destroyed their revenue streams.

          Overwhelmingly people go into journalism because they want to make a difference, not because they want to get rich. If you want to get rich you go into finance or a STEM field or go to law school.

          This idea of yours, that journalists use their own economic conditions when reporting on the economy is also objectively absurd.

          To the contrary, they report what the economists and financial market experts are saying. Again, this “gaslighting” notion of yours makes no sense inasmuch as it implies something very like a conspiracy or a collective understanding that the truth is to be misrepresented.

          This makes no sense in the reality that is competitive reporting in which one is rewarded for reporting “scoops” in terms of breaking news. Again, it just shows how illiterate you and many others are when it comes to understanding what actually happens in newsrooms.

          While it makes sense to imagine that traditional economic indicators aren’t necessarily indicative of the lived experience of average citizens, it makes zero sense to imagine that the highly competitive news media is somehow in collusion to present an inaccurate picture of the economy.

          That’s just plain stupid.

          Source; I have a degree in journalism together with decades in the news business. It’s actually pretty difficult for me to emphasize how wrong-headed you are on this.

  • @EmoBean@lemmy.world
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    2111 months ago

    But unemployment is at the lowest ever! We added 200.000 jobs. There was only a soft recession. Line goes up, and just in time for something important. What a coincidence. The economy is so great and we’re back in the bull market!

    • @Kiernian@lemmy.world
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      1711 months ago

      Few seem to care…including those who will one day be there themselves.

      What are those of us who care supposed to be doing?

      Amidst deciding which bills get paid each paycheck, trying to find nutritional variety out of food banks (canned fish intake should ideally be less than 10 cans a month per person, for example, and even rinsing canned vegetables/beans isn’t doing wonders for sodium intake compared to fresh), trying to decide which medical and dental issues we can afford to address and which just get to be endured, and watching debt go to collections because food, insurance, automobile fuel, home energy, rent, and everything related to cars has gone up, what are we supposed to be doing?

      In what way can we unite as a people and fix this?

      • I could not comment as I do not know you, but many people choose nice things like bigger cars, new phone, alcohol and such over quality food. Some however are in a place that they are trapped and have no choice and for those people I have no advice other than to really make some noise and vote accordingly if you are in a country you can.

      • @pearable@lemmy.today
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        111 months ago

        Worker and renters unions are a good place to start. Talk to your neighbors and coworkers. Join the IWW if you’d like some help

    • @cryostars@lemmyf.uk
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      811 months ago

      I keep seeing this argument. I see a metric funckton of new construction and they are ALL 400k+ which is a lot for our smaller/mid city. Existing inventory is averaging the same.

      • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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        711 months ago

        Yes some construction happens. It’s still profitable in some cases, especially when the target market is the richest segments of society.

        But there could be so much more. They could build two houses on each of those plots of land, and maybe each house is only $250k but you’ve managed to get $500k of real estate out of the same plot of land which (as any good capitalist will tell you) is better than $400k of real estate.

        But you can’t do that. Density restrictions. Zoning laws that are way too narrowly defined, ie bloated, and have long since surpassed the “Don’t boil horse carcasses next to a daycare” sort of scenario by which zoning laws are explained in our history books.

        Instead of just protecting public health zoning’s now also protecting people’s views, protecting people’s lawns, protecting people’s resale value on their homes.

        Like, oh your view of Mt Shasta got blocked by an apartment building? Gee that sucks but it also doesn’t suck that five hundred new apartments are on the market now, weakening the monopoly some local cartel has on pricing and slowing the rise of rent prices.

        We have a sort of overton window in terms of how much construction is “a little” and how much is “a fuckton”. Living our lives in this kind of supply crackdown has calibrated our sense of how much construction is a fuckton.

        Just imagine that construction you’re seeing … but twice as tall. Perfectly conceivable, even financially favorable to the people who would make it happen, but literally not allowed.

        • @Welt@lazysoci.al
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          511 months ago

          This is an excellent and erudite comment. I’m curious what industry you work in. And did you make up “Don’t boil horse carcasses next to a daycare”? Because I’m fucking keeping it, funniest shit I’ve read all day. Keep it up mate

    • @loxo@lemmy.world
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      811 months ago

      Homelessness is a very complex issue encompassing things like mental health and climate change. The president has no direct control over rent prices, they may be able to influence them to a degree, but that’s all. This is an integral part of late-stage capitalism. People in need are being left behind because America is filled with greed. One of the many things to help alleviate this would be the construction of subsidized dense housing in areas with high levels of amenities.

    • @NatakuNox@lemmy.world
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      411 months ago

      Lol presonal accountability? Over a quarter are children. And the rest, a majority have mental and physical disabilities. Studies show around 40% to 60% have jobs. Very few are homeless by choice.

      • FunkyMonk
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        111 months ago

        ah I should I put /s or something, it was a lyric from Capital G, NIN song.