Poor people wouldn't be better off if you gave them free healthcare and raised the minimum wage? That's not going to fly. You might argue that the country as a whole wouldn't be better off, and that is the usual argument, but you can't argue that certain sectors would not be better off when you redistribute money their way. Just like you can't argue that the rich are not better off when you give them tax cuts. It's literally nonsense. — Baden
I hope you're right, although even if it does go the way you lay out. It will be to late. The help is needed now and the West is nowhere near coming out the other side of the first peak yet. The help wouldn't start to be sent out for a few months at the earliest and there are to many countries crying out for help now. Just imagine if that Ebola outbreak had been in multiple countries at the same time, it would have been a struggle to get it under control even with our own countries not infected.I don’t agree. The world can act together. The quicker the developed countries get sorted out the sooner they can ship supplies and equipment to help out.
think there is a political discussion to be had here. For example, the much touted healthcare systems of Europe, often held against the American system as far superior, are not fairing much better when put to the test in this crisis. The notion that we must risk our livelihoods and put ourselves on lockdown to keep them from collapsing is damning, in my opinion. — NOS4A2
Just imagine if that Ebola outbreak had been in multiple countries at the same time, it would have been a struggle to get it under control even with our own countries not infected. — Punshhh
At this stage of the pandemic, it is not a simple choice between lives and livelihoods. There is the chaos resulting from what would happen without lockdown measures. It would not only be a medical crisis and an economic one, but a food and civil disobedience crisis as well. This was already pointed out at the beginning of the thread, but ought to be considered here.As countries open up I suspect the lives vs. livelihoods approach will loosen—governments cannot task itself with saving lives forever—and a better balance will be sought.
At this stage of the pandemic, it is not a simple choice between lives and livelihoods. There is the chaos resulting from what would happen with out lockdown measures. It would not only be a medical crisis and an economic one, but a food and disobedience crisis as well. This was already pointed out at the beginning of the thread, but ought to be considered here.
If you raise minimum wage, you reduce minimum wage jobs — Hanover
Whether you're a right wing libertarian or a totalitarian Marxist, this pandemic is not cause for you to lose your religion, and that is the gist of my (recent) objection to this meandering conversation. This whole "let's take advantage of every crisis in order to advance our political agenda" thing is what I'm objecting to. — Hanover
For example, the much touted healthcare systems of Europe, often held against the American system as far superior, are not fairing much better when put to the test in this crisis. The notion that we must risk our livelihoods and put ourselves on lockdown to keep them from collapsing is damning, in my opinion. — NOS4A2
Not true. We have raised the minimum wage in Ireland consistently (at above inflation rates, you know, to reflect economic growth and actually give everyone a share of it) over the past 30 years and also consistently increased employment. And, besides, reducing minimum wage jobs as a proportion of overall jobs would be great for obvious reasons as long as overall employment levels remained steady. — Baden
So, unless, you can explain what a politics-free conversation would look like here, I don't see much substance to the objection. — Baden
@NOS4A2@Punshhh
At this stage of the pandemic, it is not a simple choice between lives and livelihoods. There is the chaos resulting from what would happen with out lockdown measures. It would not only be a medical crisis and an economic one, but a food and disobedience crisis as well. This was already pointed out at the beginning of the thread, but ought to be considered here.
That’s a good point. The line-ups outside the barbershop alone will cause chaos.
This is precisely what the use of "herd immunity" by politicians was for. It was not used as a statement of the uncontroversial fact that eventually populations will immunise. The fact was used rhetorically as a stalling tactic. Eventually all countries effected which used the rhetoric have responded somehow, because they needed to. - The use of "herd immunity" by politicians was a stalling tactic against every response. — fdrake
As I understand some areas, like Seattle, have priced some employees out of jobs. — Hanover
That is, I don't [want to opportunistically pretend] see this crisis as [is] evidence that we've been doing things all wrong and we need non-crisis times to be different now — Hanover
Well, let's remember what the definition is of an epidemic:Sweden just recorded it’s highest daily death count since the 6th of April after a slow weekend. This will surely ignite pressure for more draconian measures and put their choices under more scrutiny. I’m still hoping for them because I believe the lives vs. livelihoods approach is a false dichotomy, and that a sustainable balance would be preferable and more sustainable. But if I’m being honest it’s not looking good.
As countries open up I suspect the lives vs. livelihoods approach will loosen—governments cannot task itself with saving lives forever—and a better balance will be sought. — NOS4A2
the occurrence of more cases of disease, injury, or other health condition than expected in a given area or among a specific group of persons during a particular period.
This whole "let's take advantage of every crisis in order to advance our political agenda" thing is what I'm objecting to. — Hanover
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.