The 1% block seems small to me. We sure the proportions are right?
According to a quick Google search, the top 1% in the US own 30.6% of wealth (and the top 0.1% own 14%), the top 10% own 70%, and the bottom 50% own 2.5%. So it looks like it checks out
The 0.0001% is even more interesting
That’s 335 people btw
…
y’allw’all living like this in the times of excess production & advanced technologies?w’all… we is already plural by default…
… I meant ‘w’ as wordlings, then it checks out.
:D
(I actually like being corrected, but in this case both things are just jokes, like smol instead of small … and additionally adding ‘all’ in that case would be acceptable as an emphasis on the fact that sadly everywhere is like this, to a lesser extreme tho)
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Aside from the impotent, “let’s eat the rich,” comments I see on Lemmy every day, is there something tangible that we can actually do about this?
Organize your workplace, join the IWW if you want to know how.
Buy your food as directly as possible from farmers, CSAs, food co-ops and buyers clubs are a good first step to decomodifying food.
Organize renters to prevent evictions and rent increases through collect action. Support non-profits that supply non-market housing. Advocate for and support your local houseless population. If houseless people can’t be used as a moral lesson for workers, they’ll feel more able to organize.
Read some history, all of this shit has happened before. People fought it in the past and won victories. We can too.
Vote in local elections. This will have a greater effect than voting in national elections and can move the needle on significant issues in some states. You can vote in national elections too I guess
Basically act collectively and educate yourself. The process of taking power from the owners will be a slow process but solidarity and empathy for your fellow workers is the only way we can get out of this.
Tax the rich more. Decommodify food and housing.
Tax the rich more
Approaching a tangible policy recommendation, but still not really concrete. And more importantly, it’s not a tangible action an individual or even a moderately-sized group of individuals can take, which seemed to be what the parent comment was asking for.
Decommodify food and housing
This isn’t even vaguely approaching anything tangible.
What is your definition of tangible? These problems are large. We are not going to solve it by switching a percentage a couple points to the left or right.
Tangible means it’s some specific idea. From context, @blandfordforever@lemm.ee seemed to be asking for things individuals can do to help drive change, so the best answers would have been some idea of how to organise or lobby for change (note: I have not provided a tangible answer here, because frankly I don’t know one that’s very good. A tangible answer that’s not particularly great might be “write letters to your representatives telling them you want [some idea fulfilling the criteria in the second part of this comment]”), because that’s a tangible action an individual can take to try and help.
Less directly answering their question would be to provide an actual tangible policy that could be enacted. It’s not something an individual can do, but it is at least tangible in a different sense. “Tax the rich more” is close to being tangible, but still vague enough that I don’t think I’d call it that. “A 5% p/a wealth tax on all wealth over $1 billion as estimated by government auditors” is one possible tangible example of that abstract idea.
Decommodify food and housing is even more abstract, and frankly there would need to be a whole bunch of different policies put in place to address this. From tenant’s rights/protection laws, to greater amounts of public housing, to zoning law reform. That’s still pretty vague wording, but maybe tangible enough considering we’re not talking about any specific city here. A couple of definite-tangible example might be “eliminate single-family-only zoning” and “increase property tax/rates on any property without a full-time occupant by 500% (to discourage land banking and unregulated Airbnb hotels)”.
I’m not suggesting that my answers here are perfect or the best. Just that they are examples of something that’s tangible.
So I take issue with this approach. If you specify specific rules and regulations down to the percentage. You get into a situation where you don’t really know the outcome and the system may be more complex than somebody understands it to be.
So I could do some research and come up with some very specific stuff to try. Setting aside finding a representative that would give you exactly what you wanted, those specific elements might not get the outcome that was desired. Meanwhile, a lot of political willpower would have been put towards getting those specific things.
This also kind of defeats democracy. If I am single-handedly deciding what policies should be enacted, those policies are not decided. Democratically.
So if the original poster wanted specific policies to fix problems. I would not have replied, because I don’t understand the current system well enough to make specific policy suggestions.
Don’t get me wrong. Specific policies will be necessary for people running for office, and I think it’s good to discuss them.
Now if somebody was running for office on increasing the tax for the rich and/or subsidizing food for housing. This would be a person I would vote for.
If you specify specific rules and regulations down to the percentage
You know, you’re probably right, and that level of specificity probably isn’t really needed. But the suggestions you left still could have been improved to something like “Wealth tax. Build more public housing.” Which are specific ideas.
However, I think the generally point remains that if someone asks for tangible actions, the focus should be on…tangible actions.
But again, I don’t really want to get hung up on policy suggestions, because I don’t even think that’s what the original user was asking about. They wanted to know “is there something tangible that we can actually do about this?” We, not politicians. And since it’s contrasted to ‘the impotent, “let’s eat the rich,” comments’, I think that makes it fairly clear they’re asking about actions individuals and smallish grass roots groups can do. Forms of civil disobedience, methods of effective protest, etc.
Are we sure they dont already?
Well, at least they got stuck with Idaho.
Where’s the data for this?
What are the garbage pickup days on the red dot. I don’t wanna miss it this week