Forgetting2 wrote:Personally I don’t think it’s possible at this point without a great deal of pain, the trick being to find ways to fairly distribute said financial suffering.
I disagree. The world produces more food than it consumes, even with millions of acre of potentially productive but "uneconomic" and unsubsidised farm land, millions of homes are empty in the western world while millions of people are homeless, the costs of industrial production are lower then ever... there's plenty for all to live well, if you don't have enough it's because someone else has stolen it from you. Those people may need to take a little suffering.
This list doesn’t include things which wouldn’t necessarily help the economy, but which would be healthy for a democracy, such as removing corporate personhood from practice, although this step may be necessary to achieve some of the things on my list.
Corporations need to be made more like people. They need to be punished for their crime, conscripted for wars, properly taxed, made to pay tax in the country where they reside rather than a country of their choosing, given a limited life span and occasionally imprisoned or executed.
It also doesn’t include suspected suppressed technologies being released for humanities benefit as I, personally, can’t know for sure if these things actually exist or not.
There's plenty of evidence they exist. Mostly war technologies, though, so probably not likely to improve our everyday lives.
It also doesn't include a few things where I feel I have no good answer, such as immigration, where I only have opinions on what I don't want to see happen, such as Arizona's recent legislation, and only really facile ideas about what I favor: if they are here they should have basic human rights, living wages and conditions.
You want to know why no-one actually does anything about illegal, and in the EU especially legal, immigration? Supply and demand. More supply for labour allows lower wages.
1) Cut military spending in half, ending all wars and occupations. More cuts to be made as what is determined to be truly necessary for defense.
America finds itself surrounded by allies and oceans, with a massive nuclear arsenal and no enemies with the capacity to strike so far away militarily. It has no need for a conventional military at all. We could easily make do with territorials.
3) Plan/support for localized food production and jobs.
Which would leave some areas with a glut of food and some without enough to eat.
4) End the ‘War on Drugs’. Legalize and regulate. Release all non-violent drug offenders on probation. Expand drug rehab clinics.
Rehab doesn't really work, although if it was legalised Ibogaine could be used which might help. Also a massive cut in police numbers would be possible if addicts were supplied by the government with safe versions of their poison, relatively speaking.
7) Tariffs on all companies not solely based within the US. Pro-rated as a percentage of company spending/ investment outside the US. Possible exceptions for goods/services not possible or difficult to produce domestically. May need some flexibility here with regard to company’s host country’s financial situation. Must include living wage/conditions and environmental guideline in importation of any product.
This would lead to a massive increase in inflation as prices on foreign produce rose, the comprehensive eradication of American exports as other developed nations reciprocated and the likely bankruptcy of several third world nations.
8 ) Revisit tax structure with an eye towards taxing extreme wealth and corporate profits.
Of course the wealthy and corporations don't pay the taxes they owe now, so more important would be requiring any company operating withing your jurisdiction or doing business in your jurisdiction to reveal its ultimate owners and all taxes and fees paid elsewhere, with terminal punishments for non-compliance. Perhaps also make sure a minimum level of tax is paid, so if only 10% is paid in a tax haven like the Isle of Man more must be paid elsewhere.
9) Nationalize critical industries.
Firstly banking and the natural monopolies, of course.
10) Break up monopolies.
Probably an unattainable goal, and less important if monopolies are put under democratic control.
11) Public financing of elections.
Not sure I like the idea of taxpayers giving more money to politicians. Why not just limit donations to political parties, a maximum of £500 per year per person, none to come from for-profit corporations.
12) Medicare for all. First new jobs in Medicare to be offered to former insurance industry workers. Medical supplies, doctor fees and drug prices subject to negotiation with Medicare.
Doesn't apply here, although I'd like to see the PFI terminated and the drug price control scheme enforced. In the British experience National Insurance was introduced to ensure unemployment benefit, health care and old age pensions in 1911, followed by the creation of the NHS in 1945, drug prices decided unilaterally by government, doctor's stipends paid according to their merits, GPs being paid according to the number of patients registered with them, hospitals according to work done (with senior doctors in charge of the running of the hospital, at that time).
14) Attempt controlled collapse of housing market, as prices are still well above historical baselines.
Or alternatively seize empty houses through adverse possession, refurbish them and rent them out to needy tenants.
15) Aid, as is possible, to countries the US has dominated/damaged/destroyed in order to create good will and trading partners under living wage/conditions and environmentally healthy guidelines.
So you intend to dictate to the democratically elected governments of financially disadvantaged nations what wages they should pay and what regulations they should enforce, in exchage for "aid", which normally takes the form of refuse, such as out of date drugs, and interest-bearing loans.
This is also contrary to your protectionist job-based stance further up. Personally I think we should just do less work. Be like the French and limit work weeks to 35 hours. If the work needs doing more people must then be employed to do it. Less unemployment, less overemployment.
Would that "fix" it? I'm certainly not qualified to say. Obviously every one of those suggestions would require an analysis of cost, savings, and benefits, done with human rights and environmental impact taken into full accounting.
Such concerns may be nullified by the revolution which must inevitably take place for any of these things to come to pass.
I know there's a lot of super sharp people on this board. I often feel I'm auditing a class I haven't done the prerequisites for. Looking forward to any comments.
You're not a scientologist, are you?