asklemmy Ask Lemmy If the logic of copyright/trademark/IP law applied to everything, what's the most peculiar possible implication you can think of for it?
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 4 hours ago 100%

    Some squatter who bought the rights to it for two twigs and a raspberry back when they were first selling off name rights 200,000 years ago

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  • 196 196 Just kind of makes sense no?
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 2 months ago 100%

    And things like vertical bifacial solar panels can work especially amazingly on grazing land that isn't suitable for crops.

    Counter-intuitive as they may look, they actually have a number of benefits:

    1. The panels face east and west, meaning they generate peak power in the morning and evening, which corresponds to peak demand => less need for energy storage to bridge the gap between the mid-day peak in production from traditional PV and the aforementioned morning and evening demand peaks.
    2. The panels are vertical, which makes them easier and cheaper to maintain, as dust, snow, and rain naturally shed from their surfaces.
    3. The panels get less direct energy during mid-day, keeping their surfaces cooler. Turns out cooler solar panels are more efficient at converting light energy into electrical energy.
    4. The arrangement lends itself very naturally to agrivoltaics, which means you can derive more yields from a given piece of land and use less land overall than if you had segregated uses.
    5. The compatibility with agrivoltaics allows farmers to diversify their incomes streams and/or become energy self-sufficient.
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  • politicalmemes Political Memes Remember that?
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 3 months ago 100%

    Plus, why do people act like the "incumbent advantage" is some magical advantage? It's a cargo cult mentality, especially in this day and age where all the old "rules" about elections have gone out the window.

    I mean, I remember the day where being twice-impeached and a convicted felon would be unrecoverable political death, yet here we are staring down the barrel of a possible second Trump term.

    Biden is a historically unpopular president, who is behind in basically all polling in basically every key swing state, and who just had the mother of all "the emperor has no clothes" moments on national television, losing the confidence of his own base. Even Democratic congresspeople are calling on him to step down now.

    There is simply no path forwards for Biden to win in November. He's cooked.

    As for replacements, personally, I think Gretchen Whitmer is the best choice. Relatively young, good compromise candidate between the progressive and moderate wings of the party, current beloved governor of Michigan (key swing state!), competent technocrat, no significant political baggage, and made a name for herself protecting abortion rights in Michigan after SCOTUS overturned Roe v. Wade.

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  • politics politics Biden Told Ally That He Is Weighing Whether to Continue in the Race
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 3 months ago 50%

    Leaked internal memo with post-debate polling data showing a strong preference for Biden alternatives (especially Whitmer and Buttigieg) in key swing states: https://puck.news/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/SUNDAY_Post-Debate_Landscape_2024_06_30__1_-1.pdf

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  • fuckcars Fuck Cars [article] Montreal becomes largest North American city to eliminate mandatory minimum parking spots
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 3 months ago 100%

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  • fuckcars Fuck Cars [article] Montreal becomes largest North American city to eliminate mandatory minimum parking spots
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 3 months ago 100%

    The problem is tons of free parking everywhere needlessly sprawls out our cities, makes people drive further, and makes actual green methods of transit (like walking, cycling, and electrified public transit) less viable.

    In the long term, maintaining car dependency is fundamentally incompatible with addressing the climate crisis. Removing mandatory parking minimums is a necessary step towards ending car dependency.

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  • climate Climate - truthful information about climate, related activism and politics. Farmers who graze sheep under solar panels say it improves productivity. So why don’t we do it more?
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 3 months ago 100%

    Silvopasture is an ancient practice that integrates trees and pasture into a single system for raising livestock. Pastures with trees sequester five to 10 times as much carbon as those of the same size that are treeless while maintaining or increasing productivity and providing a suite of additional benefits. Livestock continue to emit the greenhouse gases methane and nitrous oxide, but these are more than offset by carbon sequestration, at least until soil carbon saturation is achieved.

    Silvopasture also offer financial benefits for farmers and ranchers. Livestock, trees, and other forest products, such as nuts, fruit, and mushrooms, generate income on different time horizons. And help protect farmers from risk. The health and productivity of both animals and the land improve.

    https://drawdown.org/solutions/silvopasture

    Trees in silvopasture systems provide livestock with protection from sun and wind, which can increase animal comfort and improve production. Trees can provide shade in the summer and windbreaks in the winter, allowing livestock to moderate their own temperature. Heat stress in livestock has been associated with decreased feed intake, increased water intake, and negative effects on production, reproductive health, milk yields, fitness, and longevity.[4][5]

    Certain tree types can also serve as fodder for livestock. Trees may produce fruit or nuts that can be eaten by livestock while still on the tree or after they have fallen. The leaves of trees may serve as forage as well, and silvopasture managers can utilize trees as forage by felling the tree so that it can be eaten by livestock, or by using coppicing or pollarding to encourage leaf growth where it is accessible to livestock.[1]

    Well-managed silvopasture systems can produce as much forage as open-pasture systems under favorable circumstances. Silvopasture systems have also been observed to produce forage of higher nutritive quality than non-silvopasture forage under certain conditions. Increased forage availability has been observed in silvopasture systems compared to open-pasture systems under drought conditions, where the combination of shade from trees and water uptake from tree roots may reduce drought impacts.[1]

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silvopasture

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  • fuckcars Fuck Cars [meme] Part of my ongoing efforts to rebrand urbanist ideas as patriotic and pro-freedom (which they unironically are)
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 4 months ago 92%

    Exactly. I'm just trying to reframe dumb NIMBY policies like restrictive zoning and mandatory parking minimums as anti-freedom so as to try to get conservative NIMBYs to maybe be just a little less NIMBY.

    Absolutely no one is seriously arguing we allow PFAS chemical plants next to kindergartens or that we remove all building safety codes. Just that restrictive zoning (and other NIMBY land use policies) is stupid, harmful, and we should get rid of it.

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  • fuckcars Fuck Cars [meme] Part of my ongoing efforts to rebrand bicycles as the ultimate freedom vehicle (which they unironically are)
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 4 months ago 100%

    The right to a bicycle shall not be infringed

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  • fuckcars Fuck Cars [meme] WOKE transit vs PATRIOT transit
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 4 months ago 100%

    Excellent point, brother. Always choose AMERICAN MUSCLE over COMMIE OIL.

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  • fuckcars
    Fuck Cars Fried_out_Kombi 4 months ago 96%
    [meme] WOKE transit vs PATRIOT transit

    Me doing my part to portray car dependency as deeply unpatriotic. Which it kinda unironically is.

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    technology Technology RISC-V adoption predicted to get AI boost — forecast shows 50% growth every year until 2030 for the open-standard ISA
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 4 months ago 100%

    The raison d'être for RISC-V is domain-specific architecture. Currently, computational demands are growing exponentially (especially with AI), but Moore's Law is ending, which means we can no longer meet our computational demands by scaling single-core speed on general-purpose CPUs. Instead, we are needing to create custom architectures for handling particular computational loads to eke out more performance. Things like NPUs, TPUs, etc.

    The trouble is designing and producing these domain-specific architectures is expensive af, especially given the closed-source nature of computer hardware at the moment. And all that time, effort, and money just to produce a niche chip used for a niche application? The economics don't economic.

    But with an open ISA like RISC-V, it's both possible and legal to do things like create an open-source chip design and put it on GitHub. In fact, several of those exist already. This significantly lowers the costs of designing domain-specific architectures, as you can now just fork an existing chip and make some domain-specific modifications/additions. A great example of this is PERCIVAL: Open-Source Posit RISC-V Core with Quire Capability. You could clone their repo and spin up their custom RISC-V posit chip on an FPGA today if you wanted to.

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  • memes Memes Monopoly
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 4 months ago 100%

    It also had a second rule set where a land value tax was implemented, and the winning condition was when everyone made a minimum amount of money.

    A land value tax (LVT) is a levy on the value of land without regard to buildings, personal property and other improvements upon it.[1] It is also known as a location value tax, a point valuation tax, a site valuation tax, split rate tax, or a site-value rating.

    Some economists favor LVT, arguing it does not cause economic inefficiency, and helps reduce economic inequality.[2] A land value tax is a progressive tax, in that the tax burden falls on land owners, because land ownership is correlated with wealth and income.[3][4] The land value tax has been referred to as "the perfect tax" and the economic efficiency of a land value tax has been accepted since the eighteenth century.[1][5][6] Economists since Adam Smith and David Ricardo have advocated this tax because it does not hurt economic activity, and encourages development without subsidies.

    LVT is associated with Henry George, whose ideology became known as Georgism. George argued that taxing the land value is the most logical source of public revenue because the supply of land is fixed and because public infrastructure improvements would be reflected in (and thus paid for by) increased land values.[7]

    It's just a stupidly good tax policy, and we should be implementing it in more places.

    !justtaxland@lemmy.world

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  • technology Technology How rental ‘libraries of things’ have become the new way to save money
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 90%

    Yeah, this is the one piece a lot of people miss: in any decently competitive market, individual firms have effectively zero power to set prices; they must instead accept the prices determined by the market.

    Knowing that, the solution to that sort of corporate BS, then, is to ensure markets are competitive by busting monopolies, lowering barriers to entry, and getting money out of politics to reduce the effect of lobbying.

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  • fuckcars Fuck Cars [meme] Solutions to car dependency
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 100%

    That's actually the neat thing about land value taxes; both in economic theory and observed practice, they can't be passed on to tenants.

    It would absolutely be a boon for the poor if we replaced other forms of taxation (such as on sales and income) with land value taxes. Plus, land value taxes tend to make housing cheaper, which helps the poor as well.

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  • politicalmemes Political Memes End homelessness with this one weird trick!
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 100%

    When Milwaukee implemented a housing-first homeless policy, they actually saved money.

    Turns out that, by almost completely eliminating homelessness, you can save a lot of money on the legal system, policing, healthcare, and other costs associated with homelessness.

    Housing-first homeless policy is the obvious solution: it's humane, it's effective, and it saves us money.

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  • fuckcars Fuck Cars [meme] Lawns and car storage — name a more wasteful use of land
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 92%

    Exactly. People love to treat it as "a war on cars/lawns/etc.", but it's really a war on everybody who doesn't want to be legally mandated to have those. All we're asking for is to end the legal mandates (zoning, parking minimums, setback requirements, etc.) and for those who wish to partake in those wasteful luxuries to pay their true price without public subsidy.

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  • fuckcars Fuck Cars [meme] Lawns and car storage — name a more wasteful use of land
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 100%

    Tbh, my favorite kind of gardening is the kind that thrives on neglect. I love making ecosystems that thrive on their own, without my constant input. There's just something beautiful about seeing life thrive on its own.

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  • aboringdystopia A Boring Dystopia Get rid of landlords...
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 100%

    It's not, though. The classical factors of production, whence we get the concept of "capital" as a factor of production, has land and capital as clearly separate:

    Land or natural resource — naturally occurring goods like water, air, soil, minerals, flora, fauna and climate that are used in the creation of products. The payment given to a landowner is rent, loyalties, commission and goodwill.

    Labor — human effort used in production which also includes technical and marketing expertise. The payment for someone else's labor and all income received from one's own labor is wages. Labor can also be classified as the physical and mental contribution of an employee to the production of the good(s).

    Capital stock — human-made goods which are used in the production of other goods. These include machinery, tools, and buildings. They are of two types, fixed and working. Fixed are one time investments like machines, tools and working consists of liquid cash or money in hand and raw material.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Factors_of_production

    And it's an important distinction. The fact that land is not made and inherently finite makes it zero-sum. Meanwhile, the fact that capital such as education, tools, factories, infrastructure, etc. are man-made and not inherently finite makes them not zero-sum. This distinction has truly massive implications when it comes to economics and policymaking. It's the whole reason LVT is so effective, so efficient, and so fair: it exploits the unique zero-sum nature of land.

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  • aboringdystopia A Boring Dystopia Get rid of landlords...
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 100%

    I got a positive one for you

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  • asklemmy Ask Lemmy Has there ever been a political system where legislative votes were weighted by how many votes each legislator received?
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 100%

    You might like single transferrable vote (STV), then. You have districts with several seats in them (preferably ~5), and then do a ranked-choice ballot to select the candidates who will fill those seats. Key advantages over proportional representation are that it maintains the idea of a constituency and that it maintains voting for individual candidates, not just parties.

    Downside, of course, is that it's not as proportional as proportional representation, but it still achieves pretty proportional results. That's the tradeoff for maintaining constituencies and individual candidates.

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  • aboringdystopia A Boring Dystopia Get rid of landlords...
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 100%

    !justtaxland@lemmy.world

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  • aboringdystopia A Boring Dystopia Get rid of landlords...
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 100%

    Property taxes != Land value taxes

    Further, it's not a tax on capital; it's a tax on land. It's very explicitly designed to target land, as land has distinct economic properties that make it a prime target for taxation.

    And yes, it does target speculative investments like those of Blackrock:

    It reveals that much of the anticipated future tax obligations appear to have been already capitalised into lower land prices. Additionally, the tax transition may have also deterred speculative buyers from the housing market, adding even further to the recent pattern of low and stable property prices in the Territory. Because of the price effect of the land tax, a typical new home buyer in the Territory will save between $1,000 and $2,200 per year on mortgage repayments.

    https://osf.io/preprints/osf/54q68

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  • aboringdystopia A Boring Dystopia Get rid of landlords...
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 100%

    They are taxed, but I think they could be taxed more and better. Specifically, we should implement a land value tax (LVT).

    As for why LVT? In short, it's just a really good tax. Progressive, widely regarded by economists as "the perfect tax", incentivizes efficient use of land, discourages speculation and rent-seeking, economically efficient, and hard to evade. Plus, critically regarding landlords, land value taxes can't be passed on to tenants, both in economic theory and in observed practice.

    As for the difference between LVT and property taxes? This video explains well how property taxes enable land speculation and disincentivize housing development, and how replacing them with land value taxes would alleviate these issues.

    Further, even places (such as the Australian Capital Territory) that have implemented quite milquetoast LVTs have seen positive impacts on housing affordability:

    It reveals that much of the anticipated future tax obligations appear to have been already capitalised into lower land prices. Additionally, the tax transition may have also deterred speculative buyers from the housing market, adding even further to the recent pattern of low and stable property prices in the Territory. Because of the price effect of the land tax, a typical new home buyer in the Territory will save between $1,000 and $2,200 per year on mortgage repayments.

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  • aboringdystopia A Boring Dystopia Get rid of landlords...
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 78%

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  • yimby
    Yes in my backyard! Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 81%
    [article] Eliminating 'parking minimums' helped U.S. cities. Could it work here? | CBC https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/ottawa-parking-minimum-rule-requirement-space-change-1.7179240

    Ottawa recently announced they're considering removing their mandatory parking minimums. For context, [parking minimums are extremely arbitrary, based on pseudoscience, and are a key barrier to housing development](https://youtu.be/OUNXFHpUhu8?si=6rHh4rkts4UaecDm).

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    politics politics Biden might actually do something about ludicrously expensive concert tickets
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 100%

    NYC itself doesn't have much (although it still has some! see image below) low-density zoning, but their suburbs sure do. The city itself also has a lot of other bureaucratic barriers to development that result in it having abysmal housing construction rates.

    As for vacancy, yes, the threat of not being able to sell is what stops builders from building too much. For example, it's the reason no one's even trying to build the Burj Khalifa in Bakersfield. But if you make it legal and reasonably easy to build, yes, people will build.

    Perhaps Tokyo is the best example. Biggest city in the world, and yet it's actually relatively affordable, thanks largely to good land use policy:

    In the past half century, by investing in transit and allowing development, the city has added more housing units than the total number of units in New York City. It has remained affordable by becoming the world’s largest city. It has become the world’s largest city by remaining affordable.

    Two full-time workers earning Tokyo’s minimum wage can comfortably afford the average rent for a two-bedroom apartment in six of the city’s 23 wards. By contrast, two people working minimum-wage jobs cannot afford the average rent for a two-bedroom apartment in any of the 23 counties in the New York metropolitan area.

    ...

    In Tokyo, by contrast, there is little public or subsidized housing. Instead, the government has focused on making it easy for developers to build. A national zoning law, for example, sharply limits the ability of local governments to impede development. Instead of allowing the people who live in a neighborhood to prevent others from living there, Japan has shifted decision-making to the representatives of the entire population, allowing a better balance between the interests of current residents and of everyone who might live in that place. Small apartment buildings can be built almost anywhere, and larger structures are allowed on a vast majority of urban land. Even in areas designated for offices, homes are permitted. After Tokyo’s office market crashed in the 1990s, developers started building apartments on land they had purchased for office buildings.

    I think the key idea is to not have government bureaucrats or existing homeowners or landlords decide whether there's "enough" housing, but rather let builders determine if there's unmet demand. If there is unmet demand, they will build if you let them. If there truly is enough housing in a certain city, then you don't need to tell builders not to build -- they'll simply stop building if they sense there's not enough demand for it.

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  • politics politics Biden might actually do something about ludicrously expensive concert tickets
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 100%

    The "we have enough homes already" is a common (and unfortunately very harmful) myth.

    A couple good in-depth videos on the topic:

    The gist of it is that statistics on how many vacant homes exist are highly misleading, for two main reasons:

    1. Many of the homes are not where the demand is. A vacant home in St Louis does nothing to help with a housing shortage in NYC. People want to live in NYC because that's where the jobs are. A house in St Louis isn't worth much if you can't find work there. And statistics consistently show that the most expensive cities have the lowest vacancy rates.
    2. A lot of the homes that are counted as "vacant" aren't actually just free for the taking like "vacant" would have you believe. In these statistics, "vacant" can mean: 1) a unit that is between tenants, 2) a unit that just finished being built and is awaiting its tenant's move-in, 3) a unit occupied by someone who doesn't legally state it as their primary residence (e.g., student housing where the student still lists their parents' home as their primary address), 4) a unit in horrible disrepair that is unfit for occupation, etc.

    Add to this the fact that high vacancy rates are GOOD for you, as it means landlords and sellers have a credible threat of vacancy, meaning they can't demand ludicrous prices. Reducing vacancy rates is an incredibly anti-consumer, pro-landlord move.

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  • politics politics Biden might actually do something about ludicrously expensive concert tickets
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 100%

    Yeah, political opinions based on "regulations always good" or "regulations always bad" are lazy and unhelpful. For one, it ignores that many regulations are written for the express purpose of manufacturing or solidifying a monopoly.

    Regulatory capture

    And NIMBY land use policies really are just a textbook example of regulatory capture. Homeowners, who expect their homes to perpetually increase in value, lobby their local governments to manufacture an artificial scarcity of housing so as to drive their property values to the moon. All of this at the expense of renters and new home buyers.

    Imo, we should all be trying to form nuanced political opinions where we judge policy on whether it's good policy or not.

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  • politics politics Biden might actually do something about ludicrously expensive concert tickets
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 95%

    Honestly, I care far more about untangling our rat's nest of NIMBY land use laws. As it stands, it's literally illegal to build anything denser than sprawling, low-density suburbs on the majority of urban land thanks to NIMBY policies such as restrictive zoning and arbitrary mandatory parking minimums.

    Tbh, the whole "corporate ownership of homes" is a red herring. Shuffling around ownership does nothing if you're not massively expanding supply. And what we need most right now is massively expanded supply.

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  • aboringdystopia A Boring Dystopia But how would they be able to live on that?
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 50%

    Better than a wealth tax is a land value tax. Key properties are that it doesn't cause capital flight (you can't move land), it's almost impossible to evade (you can't hide land), it's economically efficient (it literally doesn't even harm the economy in the slightest to implement it), it can't be passed on to tenants (both in economic theory and in observed practice), and it's progressive.

    Plus, it incentives denser, transit-oriented city development and disincentivizes wastage of prime real estate (which contributes to the housing crisis). All in all, a terrific policy that people aren't talking nearly enough about imo.

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  • lemmyshitpost Lemmy Shitpost unsure why we are surprised lol
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 87%

    Exactly. When the accused has paid off half the jury, you shouldn't put much stock in the verdict.

    The only thing I care about when determining whether something is a genocide is the facts of the case (which are overwhelmingly in favor of describing the Uyghur genocide as a genocide), not the outcome of a highly political vote by countries all with their own motives and interests.

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  • lemmyshitpost Lemmy Shitpost unsure why we are surprised lol
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 78%

    Imagine if someone defended nazis with "they were calmly denying the Holocaust". I've seen far too many tankies denying the Uyghur genocide every chance they get. Like you say, it doesn't matter the tone; genocide denial is itself a line you don't cross.

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  • lemmyshitpost Lemmy Shitpost unsure why we are surprised lol
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 63%

    They'll ban you for acknowledging the existence of the Uyghur genocide, for one

    Edit: wording

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  • yimby Yes in my backyard! [article] Opinion: Lowering Canada’s high housing costs is also a recipe for raising our notoriously low productivity
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 100%

    Agreed 100%. Upzoning and land value tax would do so much to change the underlying incentive structure. Housing ought to be a consumer good like any other, not a speculative investment or a retirement plan. The fact we became convinced that simply possessing an asset should be our primary means of wealth accumulation is one of our great societal mistakes that we're now paying the price for.

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  • yimby
    Yes in my backyard! Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 100%
    [article] Opinion: Lowering Canada’s high housing costs is also a recipe for raising our notoriously low productivity www.theglobeandmail.com

    Non-paywall link: https://archive.is/J2cSo Turns out the housing crisis is *awful* for the economy at large.

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    solarpunk Solarpunk consider the implications for a post scarcity future
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 5 months ago 75%

    Somehow internet populists have become convinced that liberalism = the government never does anything. Ask literally any economist and they will tell you government intervention and regulation are needed in many things.

    For example, read this study on the policy views of practicing economists: https://econfaculty.gmu.edu/klein/PdfPapers/KS_PublCh06.pdf

    You will find that most economists strongly support things like environmental, food and drug safety, and occupational safety regulations.

    Convincing people liberalism is an evil capitalist ploy to deregulate at all costs is a conservative psyop, and judging from comments like the one to which you're responding, it's working.

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  • memes Memes My landlord thinks my gaming pc is for work... haha
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 6 months ago 100%

    How do so few people in this comments section see the obvious satire?? It's clearly making fun of both landlords and absurd tipping culture.

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  • fuckcars Fuck Cars [article] In France, the Future Is Arriving on a Barge
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 6 months ago 100%

    Non-paywall link: https://archive.is/psmPE

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  • fuckcars
    Fuck Cars Fried_out_Kombi 6 months ago 100%
    [article] In France, the Future Is Arriving on a Barge www.nytimes.com

    >The Seine is becoming a test case for a European plan to cut carbon emissions by turning rivers into the new highways.

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    politicalmemes Political Memes Billionaires should not exist.
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 6 months ago 91%

    I'm personally in favor of land value taxes, externality taxes, and natural resource severance taxes.

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  • fuckcars Fuck Cars [meme] Sustainable modes of transit
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 6 months ago 100%

    If they help to get people out of cars (including electric cars), I see them as a win. Orders of magnitude less impactful than cars.

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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 7 months ago 100%

    Me, too. I haaaaaate mint toothpaste.

    Just discovered coconut ginger toothpaste a little over a year ago. I'm sticking with this toothpaste for life.

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  • 196 196 Freedom☭
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  • Fried_out_Kombi Fried_out_Kombi 7 months ago 66%

    I agree that I think worker coops elegantly solve certain problems (notably the principal-agent problem), but they also have certain drawbacks. Notably, they have more difficulty raising funds, they tend to be more risk-averse, they tend to be more growth-averse (people don't like to dilute their own stake within the company with more people, but this means they don't typically scale as easily or quickly to benefit economies of scale), and they tend to pay worse than hierarchical companies (counterintuitive as that may seem at first if the whole goal of market socialism is to have workers get more of their value back).

    So is the solution to just throw our hands up and say, "Screw it, nothing we can do but let hierarchical organizations win"? Not quite. We still do see plenty of successful coops, notably in the form of credit unions. We also have unions and syndicalist solutions. We still have minimum wages (which are supported by most economists, as it turns out you can raise minimum wages a certain amount without raising unemployment because there's often a non-zero amount of monopsony power in the labor market).

    Further, I do think a Georgist system would empower labor much more than now. Without a housing crisis (thanks to LVT and YIMBYism), with a citizen's dividend, with quality public education (education has positive externalities and thus deserves a Pigouvian subsidy), with more jobs (thanks to more economic growth and less rent-seeking), and with public works projects (essentially Pigouvian subsidies for things like environmental cleanup), I think labor would have much more bargaining power with employers.

    For instance, the professional class right now gets good pay and generally good quality of life , despite rarely having unions or worker coops, precisely because they have high negotiating power with prospective employers.

    My inclination is to strive for a more Georgist system, encourage unions, use minimum wages and government spending technocratically, and then see if more is yet needed.

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  • fuckcars
    Fuck Cars Fried_out_Kombi 7 months ago 84%
    [image] People would probably hate cars a lot less if they were limited in size and speed to a golf cart

    Pros of golf carts and neighborhood electric vehicles (NEVs) replacing all private cars within a city: - Only goes as fast as a bicycle, so isn't a viable suburban commuter vehicle, meaning you'll probably only take it to the nearest transit station - Only goes as fast as a bicycle, so isn't likely to kill people - Excellent visibility, so less likely to run over children - Much smaller and lighter, so building parking garages for park-and-rides would be a lot cheaper and less objectionable than with our current style of cars - Electric - Smaller batteries than jumbo EVs - Compatible with dense, transit-oriented city development - Could be installed with mandatory speed limiters Cons: - Less profit for GM and ExxonMobil

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    yimby
    Yes in my backyard! Fried_out_Kombi 7 months ago 93%
    [article] How NIMBYs are helping to turn the public against immigrants | Vox www.vox.com

    I've seen this in Canada waaaay too much. Instead of rightfully directing their anger at screwed-up land use restrictions and a draconian zoning code, people who are normally pro-immigration are rapidly turning anti-immigrant because of the housing crisis.

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    yimby
    Yes in my backyard! Fried_out_Kombi 7 months ago 100%
    [article] Why State Land Use Reform Should Be a Priority Climate Lever for America rmi.org

    >New analysis from RMI finds that by encouraging better-located, less car-dependent communities, we can solve the nationwide housing shortage while dramatically cutting pollution.

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    yimby
    Yes in my backyard! Fried_out_Kombi 7 months ago 100%
    [article] 'I was elected to slow down development,' Pointe-Claire mayor tells Poilievre | Montreal Gazette montrealgazette.com

    For reference, Pointe-Claire is right next to a new automated light metro station, so blocking housing there is doubly harmful, as it sabotages the potential ridership of a brand new rapid transit system.

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    justtaxland
    Just Tax Land Fried_out_Kombi 7 months ago 95%
    [article] A 19th-Century Property Tax Idea Is Back. Can It Revive a Blighted City? www.governing.com

    > The Georgists advocated shifting the tax burden from buildings to land. Today that would face major political hurdles, but there might be variations on the concept that could spur housing development and discourage land speculators.

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    fuckcars
    Fuck Cars Fried_out_Kombi 7 months ago 94%
    [discussion] The generation that complains about "participation trophy kids" is the same generation that made it impossible for kids to walk or bike to school

    How are kids supposed to become capable and independent if they have to be chauffeured everywhere?

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    fuckcars
    Fuck Cars Fried_out_Kombi 7 months ago 93%
    [image] We don't need trucks or diesel to move freight in cities, just cargo trams

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacramento_Northern_Railway > The Sacramento Northern Railway (reporting mark SN) was a 183-mile (295 km) electric interurban railway that connected Chico in northern California with Oakland via the California capital, Sacramento. In its operation it ran directly on the streets of Oakland, Sacramento, Yuba City, Chico, and Woodland and ran interurban passenger service until 1941 and freight service into the 1960s.

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    196 Fried_out_Kombi 8 months ago 99%
    radical rule
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    fuckcars
    Fuck Cars Fried_out_Kombi 8 months ago 100%
    USA + CAN + AUS + NZ have all the ingredients for terrific urbanism

    America is horrifically car-dependent. So is Canada. So is Australia. So is New Zealand. But within that mess are some great seeds if you know where to look. Imagine a city with a dense downtown surrounded by tons of missing middle housing (like in Chicago or Montreal). Imagine it with an comprehensive underground metro network like New York. Or even for slightly smaller cities, look to Montreal, DC, or Toronto. Imagine it with modern, automated light metros like the Vancouver SkyTrain, the Montreal REM, the Sydney Metro, or the Honolulu Skyline. Imagine it with abundant trams like Melbourne, Portland, Toronto, or parts of San Francisco. Imagine it with modern, electrified suburban rail like Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, or Perth. Imagine it with extensive and well-ridden suburban bus networks like Vancouver, Toronto, and Montreal. Imagine it with bike infrastructure like Montreal, Portland, San Francisco, or Minneapolis. Imagine it with better zoning and land use policy, like Auckland (as of a few years ago), Edmonton (as of this year), Minneapolis (as of a few years ago), or counless other cities loosening their restrictive zoning laws and/or parking minimums. There's nothing magical in the water in Europe or Asia that makes them inherently more capable of urbanism than North America and Oceania. We have all the seeds of great urbanism in our own backyards. All we need to do is keep on advocating at the local level for good policies (e.g., zoning reform, land value taxes) and better infrastructure (e.g., bike lanes/paths, trains, etc.).

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    196 Fried_out_Kombi 8 months ago 100%
    trains rule
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