• LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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    4 days ago

    Show me all these 28 year olds who refuse to work. Because I see mostly 28 year olds who want to work but can’t find jobs, and a handful who wish they could work but are disabled.

    This fucking out of touch hoser needs to spend a day in the real world.

    • ChonkyOwlbear@lemmy.world
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      I think I figured it out. These guys are thinking of themselves when they were younger. They mooched off mommy and daddy’s money after college until they were forced to get a job. They assume everyone’s life is like that.

      • forrgott@lemmy.sdf.org
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        4 days ago

        This is also the secret to how guys like Bezos start a company from a garage; they mooched off their parents, so didn’t have to worry about how long it took to make any money.

        • chaogomu@lemmy.world
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          Bezos took it a step further than most. Small loans of several hundred thousand dollars from his parents paired with actual fraud perpetrated against the major publishers.

          • forrgott@lemmy.sdf.org
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            3 days ago

            I vaguely recall the fraud, but I forget the specifics. Please drop a link for more info if you have one! (Otherwise, yes, I am capable of searching the web myself.)

        • ChonkyOwlbear@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          In Flood’s case, he had a show on his college’s radio so his parents bought him a station. He got more stations. Then he became a politician. He has never worked a day in his life.

          • forrgott@lemmy.sdf.org
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            3 days ago

            Gotcha. Sounds relatively easy to verify, but eh, personally I’m inclined to believe you. And fits his entitled attitude for sure!

        • ruuster13@lemmy.zip
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          3 days ago

          If you haven’t started a business in your garage, you just need to remarket yourself to yourself. I once sold some old clothes on ebay and one of the items went to Canada I am an international designer jeans exporter.

    • Wytch@lemmy.zip
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      4 days ago

      I see way too many 28 year olds who aren’t working at one job, they’re working two.

      And they are still struggling to raise their kids.

      This country’s rulers have asked its working class to try or accept every solution except the one that those rulers are paid to pretend doesn’t work; taxing the shit out of rich people.

    • iAmTheTot@sh.itjust.works
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      4 days ago

      Don’t change the hypothetical.

      He asked if a 28 yo who can work but refuses to should receive free health care.

      I dunno about you but my answer is yes.

      • tburkhol@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        First: do no harm.

        Second: make sure your patient is contributing to society in accordance with his ability.

      • chortle_tortle@mander.xyz
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        3 days ago

        Exactly. This is how the message gets watered down and ends up means tested garbage. I believe in universal healthcare that is free at the point of service.

      • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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        I don’t think I changed the hypothetical. He seems to be complaining there are out-of-work 28 year olds who aren’t, I dunno, taking the backbreaking vacancies left by all the migrants they’re deporting for like $2/hour, plus that they want healthcare. Both are ignorant takes, but the ‘they don’t want these jobs’ thing stands out to me because we fucking told them nobody can hope to live on those wages, so bitching ‘kids these days’ don’t want these jobs is a massive facepalm.

        Of course we should have universal healthcare.

        e: and to be clear, none of these jobs will ever be filled by citizens, not because they’re ‘above it’ or whatever, but you can’t usually extort a citizen into ‘wages’ that low (read: make them a literal slave) by holding their visa hostage or threatening to have them deported back to the situation they fled from. And some of those situations are far, far worse than being dramatically underpaid.

        • iAmTheTot@sh.itjust.works
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          I misspoke, really, because I shouldn’t have said change. I’m reality, you didn’t address the hypothetical at all.

          My point was it doesn’t matter if these people exist or not. That’s the point of a hypothetical.

    • rhvg@lemmy.world
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      Plus 28yo likely doesn’t cost much on healthcare anyway.

      The whole question is a distraction

    • rafoix@lemmy.zip
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      They don’t want 28 year olds to work.

      They want 28 year olds to works for peanuts.

      • ThePantser@sh.itjust.works
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        3 days ago

        Idk how many employees Charles Schulz can support being dead for 25 years BUT I bet they really want these 28 year olds to pick the peanuts and other crops. But then they will say you can’t have free health care because you don’t make enough picking fields.

    • The point to these chucklefucks is their base is so outraged at the thought of anyone getting something for nothing that they’d rather have everyone else go without just to avoid the possibility.

      • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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        It’s easy to get people angry when you convince them all their hard work meant less than they think, and even easier if they think someone else got something without having to work as hard.

        We see this in all animals that understand fairness, and it’s the fastest way to turn monkeys against each other (visibly give away grapes unevenly if you want somebody’s face to get ripped off).

        It’s also a very primal manipulation tactic that works quite well, so long as you can redirect the animosity.

        • I’ve always had to intellectualize significant jealousy or envy. I can understand it in a way, but I just don’t feel it. I mean, I get the “must be nice” part, but I’ve never understood how what someone else has or does reflects on me. I’m not lesser because they have more. It’s the same way with the gay rights stuff - how does what another person does impact me if it’s not directly impacting me?

      • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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        I believe most people want to contribute, but our society isn’t set up to align individual interest and aptitude with need.

        If we’re asking the majority of people to grind their own bones into dust doing something they hate for a pittance, that’s a large part of the problem. Some people love cleaning (like my sister), others love woodworking or cooking or streaming. But we’re forcing square pegs into round holes because we give no thought whatsoever to how people’s skills, aptitude, and interest might align with society’s needs, then we’re shocked pikachu when most are unhappy and thus unproductive.

        • untorquer@lemmy.world
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          Work in the context I meant was definitely the type that results from the current hierarchy resulting in the categorical failure you’re pointing out.

          Contributing to someone you meet and relate face to face to feels good. Contributing to the concept of company or the “stakeholder” not so good.

          Personally i like to do a little of everything but forced myself to learn a specialty to earn a livable wage.

          • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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            In that case, I guess I agree with him that most people don’t want to ‘work’. Wanting to be a wage slave would be bonkers. Most people want to contribute meaningfully to society and don’t want to starve, but that’s not what ‘work’ means.

            • untorquer@lemmy.world
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              Right, it should just mean paid labor, but the people complaining about this would prefer it unpaid.

              I’d prefer pay to be unnecessary and the labor voluntary. At least I think that’s a good ideal to work towards.

      • Miles O'Brien@startrek.website
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        I have never, and I mean TRULY NEVER wanted to work.

        But I am not stupid, so I know I NEED to work in order to live.

        Not wanting to give the majority of my day to a company that makes more in one second than 10,000 minimum wage employees make in a month is not “being lazy”.

        1/3 is already taken by sleeping, and you fucking want me to just give up another 1/3? For THIS shit pay? Entirely Fuck Off.

        Plus it costs me money just to get to work.

        • untorquer@lemmy.world
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          Preach!

          I used to be able to do math problems and get paid well to do them. It wasn’t ever “fun” or particularly rewarding but I could do it and not be completely exhausted or in pain at the end of the day.

          Now my pay is cut and I’ve been doing brain-rot marketing for months thanks to trump’s cuts. My brain fog is so bad and motivation so low that the email that used to take me 30 seconds takes at least 20 minutes if not an hour these days. It’s just meaningless and I feel like I’m working at a telemarketing call center for a company that doesn’t sell anything. It’s even hard to apply for new jobs. I don’t know how the fuck I’m sober especially now of all times…

          Just luvky I managed to get a couple promising interviews lined up, have some friends, and relatively low expenses.

        • Ethalis@jlai.lu
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          Depends on your definition of work. I don’t think we should let ourselves be convinced that work can only be selling your energy, your time and your skills to a company that will pay you as little as it can get away with. If you have creative hobbies, practice some craft on your free time or help other people free of charge, that’s still work: you’re creating something of value for others and/or for society. It just doesn’t feel like it because it’s something you actually want to do instead of being forced to do.

          • Miles O'Brien@startrek.website
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            that’s still work: you’re creating something of value for others and/or for society

            Honestly I put “NEED to get paid in order to live” but changed it to “I NEED to work” because of this. Even if I just decided to find a forest in the middle of nowhere to claim as my own, build a house, raise animals and farm the land I’m still working.

            But since I do enjoy my hobbies of carpentry, metalworking and leatherworking, I don’t really consider them work in the same sense. You’re 100% correct.

            I make stuff for people all the time, but it’s on my own schedule when I feel like working on something, and I only accept orders when I feel like it. If I tried to do that full time, it’s now not really up to me if I go work on something today. I have to or I get backed up, the customer gets pissed, and I’m losing money. Or the equivalent favors/barter.

        • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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          ‘Do something you love and you’ll never work a day in your life’.

          I’ll bet there are things you love to do that would have value to others in society, even if you wouldn’t consider that a ‘job’ or ‘work’.

          That’s kind of my point. If our society weren’t so broken, you could contribute without having to do what we currently consider ‘work’.

          e : this sounded wrong, sorry. I meant if we could let go of capitalism, this is how things should work. We can’t have nice things, though.

          • Miles O'Brien@startrek.website
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            ‘Do something you love and you’ll never work a day in your life’.

            It’s a nice sentiment, but sadly the moment you depend on it for survival, it becomes work.

            In another comment just now, I mentioned my hobbies include making knives/swords, leather work, and some light carpentry.

            I love all these things. I make a pretty neat and simple metal rose that I can do different things with for coloring, and those sell like hotcakes around valentines day. But every year, I only make a handful for a few people here and there, and almost always as gifts. I never make a bunch of them beforehand with intent to sell “to someone”, that’s work. That’s unenjoyable for me.

            I could make bank in my area if I invested my savings into metalworkingnstuff stuff and focused on custom knives for hunting and camping, but the thought of that makes me want to kick my anvil and forge into the lake.

            I suppose the response to that should be “well I just haven’t found the thing I truly love” yet, but I just don’t believe there is anything of value that I could provide to anyone that I would enjoy so much that it never feels like work and pays all my bills.

            I long for the utopian future of post-scarcity…

            • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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              Right, but you’re still assuming a capitalist society. Without that cutthroat marketplace and the need to compete, it wouldn’t necessarily be like that.

              It’s really hard to imagine, I know – and especially because I get it, I have a very niche hobby (period corset making and couture tailoring) that I could potentially make a lot of money doing but when I tried, it sucked all the enjoyment out of it to the point I had to stop for a few years.

              I’m talking about doing what you’re good at without the backdrop of a capitalist system that sucks you for every drop of blood you have.

  • boaratio@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    It’s not free. We all work to lift up the most vulnerable people in our society. I am very thankful to be an able bodied person that pays taxes. I’ll never look down upon anyone that needs to use public assistance.

    I’m sick and fucking tired of Republicans talking about welfare queens.

    • Oyml77@lemmy.today
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      Meanwhile these assholes suck off the public teat and do nothing to give back to anyone except the donor class.

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        I think you maybe didn’t understand my point. It seems like you drank from the right wing talking points fire hose.

        • aturtlesdream@lemmy.world
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          I think you missed this person’s point- he is calling the politicians (aka this idiot) the useless ones. They help no one and only take away from the vulnerable and make things worse for those they are supposed to help. The comment agreed with you

        • SaintNyx@lemmy.world
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          I think you’re misunderstanding. He’s saying Republican states that hate welfare are usually the welfare states that need the most funding and then the only money they want to give back, it’s to ultra millionaire conservatives who parrot the welfare Queen rhetoric.

        • Oyml77@lemmy.today
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          You missed my point. This guy (and plenty of other Republican assholes like him) is saying that only “productive” members of society deserve to live a healthy life while producing nothing but misery for most of the people they were elected to represent and are supposed to be helping. They are the true “welfare queens.” They live off of taxpayer money and contribute nothing to taxpayers.

    • Wahots@pawb.social
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      This. And when we lift people up, it generally helps get people out of poverty and become contributing members of society.

      It’s not a hand out, it’s a hand up. And for those that dgaf about helping their neighbors, it also is generally cheaper to help people once and get them squared away, vs being screwed up for life, committing crimes and using up tax dollars on police/justice/jail/cleanup resources.

      In short, literally everyone should be on the same page. It’s the moral and economically right thing to do, lol.

    • dependencyinjection@discuss.tchncs.de
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      Exactly. I tell people all the time I am happy to pay taxes and heck I’d even pay more in taxes, but what I want is for everybody to pay their fair share.

      I don’t even know how it’s become so radical these days. We’ve got governments around the world being elected and saying governments can’t be trusted so let’s give it all to corporations.

    • GroundedGator@lemmy.world
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      It’s “free at time of service” which is an important distinction. Everyone in a community contributes in some way to fire services. The fire brigade doesn’t ask for payment before they arrive at the scene.

      Health should not be tied to employment. You shouldn’t be afraid to take care of your health because you’re between jobs. I imagine that people who do visit doctors regularly have better health and as a result lower healthcare costs. If you have to worry about how you’re going to pay for it you’re less likely to go.

      I pay a fair amount to cover my family and pay a fair bit more in taxes if it meant that I didn’t have to worry about my employment to get coverage or knew that my child would be covered in the future.

  • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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    3 days ago

    This mindset is aggressively capitalistic…

    Basically, the capitalistic mindset is: you need to earn your living and pay for everything that you get.

    So when he qualifies it with “able to work but unwilling to work” … In his mind, that’s an egregious fault that puts a person into a place in his mind where they are invalid, and not worthy of anything.

    This is how these fucks think. No empathy. No humanity. No “helping” anyone with anything unless they get something in return .

    It’s about them, and they don’t want to “pay for” (via taxes) someone else’s healthcare when that person did not earn it for themselves.

    They’re dicks. Every last fucking one of them.

  • jballs@sh.itjust.works
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    Just flip the question around and think about it for a sec. Should people who can work but don’t and then get sick just die? Obviously fucking not, that’s insane.

  • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    Stop framing it as you might help others that take advantage of the system and frame it as helping yourself and those who might need it legitimately.

    There will always be bad eggs in society. Including this representative that punishes the many for the failures of the few. You cannot have civilization without the outliers. But you can help the majority even if there are a few leeches. It says a lot about the right wing when their public face is hypocritical selfishness.

    • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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      Stop framing it as you might help others that take advantage of the system and frame it as helping yourself and those who might need it legitimately.

      Exactly. You know what I see when I see someone who “just doesn’t want to work?” I see someone likely struggling with depression or other mental health issues. And I’m not so prideful that I believe I’m immune to those mental health struggles. I’m certainly not immune from them. None of us are. And if I fall into such a dark place in the future, I don’t want to risk dying or bankruptcy just because I’m struggling with my mental health. If someone thinks they can’t fall into such a dark place, they’re a fool.

    • Zexks@lemmy.world
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      People need to frame it back on him. Should representatives get paid since some dont want to show up to work. Should representatives have all of their assets siezed when theyre elected because some of them are taking bribes and doing illegal trading. Shouldnt representatives have to wear ankle braclets since theyre living on the tax payer dime, we deserve to know where they arw at all times if theyre living off our money. Shouldnt they be subiect to weekly random drug tests since theyre all on welfare.

  • danc4498@lemmy.world
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    “Do you think that people who are 28-years-old, that can work, & refuse to work, should get free [fill in social service]?”

    • Fire department services
    • Police protection
    • Military protection
    • Public street access
    • Public park access
    • Library access
    • PapaStevesy@lemmy.world
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      Sewage services

      Water treatment services

      Education

      Innumerable benefits of scientific research

      Broadcast Television

      Radio

      Anything available because of publicly-funded agriculture…so basically everything

  • betanumerus@lemmy.ca
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    “who refuse to work” - And how many people is that? Numbers please.

    If someone refuses to work, that’s the problem you need to address. Not that dumb question.

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        So they legally dont have to supply you with healthcare, you know that thing you need to keep you from getting sick and help you when your sick that is for some reason tied to you being employed in the first place?

    • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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      And even if they do, they don’t offer enough pay to make working worthwhile. Especially if you have kids and shit to deal with on top of it.

      • pivot_root@lemmy.world
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        Exactly.

        That whole “nobody wants to work” narrative is such horseshit.

        It’s not that nobody wants to work, it’s that nobody can afford to work for bottom-of-the-barrel wages. In a lot of places it’s simply not possible to survive on minimum wage, and having a shitty job take away from the time and energy you could be spending looking for a good job isn’t worth the money you save.

        • ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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          I’m a school bus driver and my boss (the district’s transportation director) loves to bitch about how “nobody wants to work” because we have so much trouble finding drivers. Our hourly pay is actually decent (over $30 an hour) and we get benefits including excellent health insurance (the entire reason I do this job) and a small pension down the road. However (and this is why we have so much trouble finding drivers) you usually get only about 4.5 hours a day, and when you start as a driver you’re only a substitute and you don’t get the benefits until you become a regular route driver - which takes some unknown length of time until somebody retires or dies or tests positive for drugs (which happens) or drives kids around drunk (which also happens). So very few people, even if qualified and experienced as bus drivers, can afford to live for a long time without benefits or an adequate total salary until they have enough seniority to exist reasonably well. I was lucky to become a regular route driver with benefits after only two months as a substitute, but some people wait years.

          I’m totally pro-union, but seniority really makes for a strange mindset. I find myself looking at coworkers that I like and respect and pondering what their chances are of getting cancer and dying. Many of them are trumpers (and smokers) and I actively root for them to die.

      • Mirshe@lemmy.world
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        Or the hours are incorrectly posted - “morning shift” that starts at 3AM - or the benefits are nonexistent, or the job posting is for a completely different position and they just posted the wrong one because “it draws us more applicants”. Literally had someone offer me a janitor position after applying for an IT position, because they thought they could dupe some new graduate into mopping floors for half the pay and no benefits.

  • bufalo1973@europe.pub
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    And this mindset is, ladies and gentlemen, the one that improved the spreading of deadly diseases.

    Free public healthcare is not only about you being healthy. It’s also about you not spreading diseases to everyone you cross on the street.

  • AeonFelis@lemmy.world
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    This is red herring. I’m not saying the subject of health care for the unemployed is not important, but framing the question like this distract from the practice of tying health insurance to the employer, which is the real problem.

  • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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    “Refuse to get a job” lol. Listen, I’ve dealt with my state’s unemployment insurance claim website and it’s awful. Anyway they’re gonna implement people proving they’re “not refusing to get a job” is going to be poorly thought out and half baked which will inevitably lead to people not getting healthcare.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      “Refusing to get a job” folks are the same ones who kick and scream when you whisper “affirmative action” or “job security” in their ears.

      These guys aren’t happy unless they can buy and sell the working class at auction, then whip them into the ground to maximize ROI.

    • Madison420@lemmy.world
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      If it’s like my state it’s a part time job just keeping on unemployment because of the amount of paperwork and trips to random places to turn it in in person.

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        I got called in once for some sort of audit/training thing. I lucked out, I live extremely close to one of the offices. The site is so bad, someone picked one that was way further away and had to make over an hour drive to come here. (If the site wasn’t so shitty I’d blame user error, but it’s so so bad.)

        Also, so many times I’d apply for companies only to realize they’re either a scam or don’t have a US address or any address listed. I never lied but I may have stretched the truth as much as I could on some of them.

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          A government official that will register a fake company, then refuse to police its conduct, has very little ground to complain when people interact with the company’s HR scheme sincerely.

    • JollyBrancher@sh.itjust.works
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      During 2020 I moved states after leaving a job. Then I was seasonally laid off in PA. I didn’t qualify for unemployment because I didn’t work enough in the look back period of PA, and didn’t qualify for NY because I willingly switched state residencies and I didn’t work there recently enough. Unemployment being left up to states is an extra layer of bull - especially for anyone considering un/employment numbers as some kind of valid metric.

    • brygphilomena@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 days ago

      a job

      The people making the requires don’t care how good the job is or what it pays. In some places, there simply aren’t good jobs. I’d rather we as a society used our combined economic power (taxes) to take care of the basic needs of everyone, regardless of whether they have a job or not. Or if their job pays $7/hr or $500k a year.

    • JcbAzPx@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      In my state, in order to keep unemployment you have to prove that you made some sort of action towards getting a job on at least five separate days every week. Also, declining a job offer, no matter how bad it might be, ends the unemployment immediately.

      Oh and also we have one of the lowest amounts of benefits and you can only be on for about 24 weeks before they cut you off entirely. Also, they don’t pay the first week after you’re approved.

      • ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        I got laid off from my last job, and for the first time ever in my career I got paid a severance. As it turned out, however, the total amount of the severance was about $100 less than the total amount I could have gotten from unemployment. I say “could have” because any amount you get as a severance is deducted from the amount of unemployment you’re eligible for, so had I applied for unemployment I would have been eligible for the grand total of $100 - definitely not worth the hassle.

        I can’t really complain, I guess. I got the whole amount up front instead of in dribs and drabs for six months, and I didn’t have to pretend to be looking for work at any point.

  • omgboom@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 days ago

    I want a healthcare system that works for everyone. I want to not have to worry that I am going to die or go massively in debt because I get sick. I HAVE insurance and these are still the things that I worry about. Unfortunately the people who are in control are bought and paid for by healthcare lobbyists

    Edit: check out Rep Mike Flood’s top donor industries

    https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/mike-flood/summary?cid=N00050145

    • i_dont_want_to@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      4 days ago

      All the budgeting in the world did not save me from the massive bills to treat conditions I was born with. I live paycheck to paycheck because of it.

    • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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      I had good insurance and worked in a very good career for decades, but my health issues and disability have wrecked me. I can’t afford food, I’ve chipped a tooth that hurts like hell but can’t afford a dentist, and I’ve been staving off homelessness by the skin of my teeth. I can’t afford anything now* and can no longer afford to live, even though I did everything ’right’.

      People like this dickhead who think you can ‘just work harder’ are delusional.

  • Auth@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    If you dont give them healthcare then congrats you’ve just lost a 28 year old that could have been a productive member of the workforce. Reps are so short sighted it hurts.

  • BigDiction@lemmy.world
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    Even if you if you agree with the premise, it still always costs us all more in the long run when people don’t get healthcare.

    We need to provide healthcare early and often. Turns out there’s a high correlation between well-fed healthy people and people who learn effectively and have the energy and aptitude to be productive later in life!

    • SabinStargem@lemmy.today
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      Plus, the less often people are laid up, the more time they can spend on doing things: raising family, working, making society feel worth being part of.

      The wealthy are corroding the foundation of society, and they will suffer when the building collapses upon them. People are the source of civilization.

    • WanderingThoughts@europe.pub
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      Kinda depends on what kind of economy you want. If you need an educated population for advanced work, provide healthcare and welfare in general. If you just need some schmucks to work in the mines or sweatshops, it’s much less of a priority. You get what you pay for in the end.

      • TotalCourage007@lemmy.world
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        Our main issue is that the 1% get to say what kind of economy we want instead of the other 99%. We all know the 1% would love to replace all humans with AI.

      • SabinStargem@lemmy.today
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        3 days ago

        I think the 1% are idiots. Culture comes from people, and the wealthy go out of their way to prevent the fostering of culture. New foods, new media, tourism, people to do things with, all vanishing because the people are too busy being run ragged for the sake of a line going up.

        Money is inherently boring. Money is just a means of accessing cool stuff, but if neat things goes extinct, money becomes pointless. The elites are myopic as hell.

        With every million people forced to be burger flippers, a George Lucas or Hideo Kojima won’t have a career. Our overlords are robbing themselves of a more interesting life.

        • 5too@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          Where we see the tragedy of the commons, they see first-mover advantage.

    • Revan343@lemmy.ca
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      people who learn effectively

      There’s the sticking point; one side of the political spectrum opposes learning

    • Hasherm0n@lemmy.world
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      This is an argument I’ve made a few times, well run public healthcare is the fiscally conservative position because it costs much less over time than what we have today.

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    3 days ago

    When I grew up, everyone got cholera and dysentery! If people don’t get it now, that’s UNFAIR! Getting these diseases builds character.

    If we want our kids to be SERIOUS we need to let them get cholera and dysentery. After all, both are totally natural.

    • InvisibleShoe@lemmy.world
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      My father got cholera on New Years Eve from oysters here in Aus. Besides a mild fever and 2 days on an IV drip, he was fine. Not a great thing but far more manageable than back in the day.