Leave a comment

Comments 9

gwendysmile April 9 2014, 15:15:04 UTC
I've never been entirely convinced by the "if men could menstruate" thing. (Sorry Ms. Steinem.)

However, How The Woman Got Her Period was an excellent read.

Reply

erindubitably April 9 2014, 16:01:39 UTC
It's exaggerated, yes, but based in truth. For example, the stooshie over hormonal birth control* being covered by Medicare in the states, despite the fact that plenty of money is spent on male sexual aids with no one protesting.

http://www.thewire.com/entertainment/2014/03/daily-show-discovers-why-government-paying-penis-pumps/359129/

*which isn't even necessarily for sexual purposes!

Reply

gwendysmile April 10 2014, 09:00:34 UTC
It's not that I don't agree with the message - it's that piece of writing in particular. I've come across it a number of times and I don't think it makes the point very well at all, because parts of it are exaggerated to the point of silliness, and other parts of it are true for women. There was certainly gossip and envy of the more "grown-up" girls at school when we started getting our periods, for example.

Reply


Silk could soon be used in medical implants instead of metal alloys fiddlingfrog April 9 2014, 21:17:25 UTC
Interesting. Though I'm sure I'd still have needed metal implants for the actual bone replacement, silk screws and wires probably could have saved me from my most recent surgery.

Reply

Re: Silk could soon be used in medical implants instead of metal alloys andrewducker April 10 2014, 07:59:40 UTC
Yeah, it won't fix everything, but hopefully it will make a bunch of stuff better.

Next up - growing bone in the lab!

Reply


Citizen's income woodpijn April 10 2014, 17:27:15 UTC
I have no ideological objections to it - I think it's fine and would be a mark of an advanced society if people didn't have to work unless they wanted to, and people could be free to pursue rewarding but financially unprofitable activities.

But I can't see how it works practically, and reading the intro leaflet from the CI Trust doesn't help. They show how the total bill would be comparable to the current bill for benefits + admin; but only a minority currently get benefits, so if there's the same amount of money now being divided among everyone, those currently claiming benefits will get a fraction of what they currently get (which is itself argued to be insufficient). The Guardian article says "It's not a high figure - barely enough to survive on alone, and below the minimum wage" - but the people campaigning for CI seem to be the same people saying the minimum wage is inadequate to live on, hence Living Wage; so CI < minimum wage < Living Wage, but CI is still (admittedly "barely") enough to live on ( ... )

Reply

Re: Citizen's income andrewducker April 10 2014, 19:39:37 UTC
The way I would do it (and there are many approaches) is to give everyone 1/3 of median income (about £7k), and then charge 40% tax on _all_ earnings.

This means that it's in everyone's interest to have a job - because they get 60% of what they earn, and you never get trapped in a situation where working means you have less. And it works out that you end up with the same income somewhere around £30k - people under that have more, and people over that have less.

Some numbers here:
http://andrewducker.livejournal.com/2996833.html?thread=27481697#t27481697

Reply

Re: Citizen's income woodpijn April 10 2014, 19:53:03 UTC
That's fine for people who currently earn a low income and are in the benefits trap (or people who could work but don't because they would be in that situation if they did), but I'm talking about people who currently earn nothing at all: pensioners, and people who are unemployable for whatever reason, and people who could and would work but there aren't enough jobs. Are you happy with them only ever having £7k?

Reply

Re: Citizen's income andrewducker April 10 2014, 20:06:35 UTC
The basic state pension is £113/week, significantly less than that.

What I'm proposing _to start with_ is that we replace the current level of starting benefits with a simpler system - a basic income.

In the long run, I will happily set our robot slaves to creating all sorts of wonders so that nobody has to work and we can all live in luxury.

A starting point of a Basic Income that pays about as well as the current benefits, but is doesn't have the poverty trap, and can't be removed from people, so that there's not the constant stress of dealing with bureaucrats, is something that would make me happy in the mean time.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up