>>482404>I honestly think bandaid solutions like these sound plausible for people to have under the current system, but in reality reforming the existing system is so difficult you may as well go for the comprehensive, all encompassing solution: abolition of private property.I'm a Georgist, but I basically agree, and I think that's unfortunate.
I actually like Georgism
better than communism, it seems less risky, but
also the powers-that-be are so opposed to even an equitable tax and land reform that we'd need to have a violent revolution just to get it… and it's much more difficult to get people to do revolution for Georgism than it is to get people riled up for socialism, which has a much broader mythos and more radical stance against the status quo. Georgism isn't generally as compelling for disaffected people as Marxism is.
>>482407>free housing>less benefits than the USA.Pick one.
Also, part of the problem is there
aren't really much in the way of socialist countries today. The USSR, notably, had robust public housing. A lot of the problem with countries like the USSR wasn't that they
didn't have enough public services or
didn't have a strong enough public sector, it was that they were very suppressive, and fell prey to a lot of problems which were more products of dogma than anything else. There was contempt for all sorts of outcasts, yes, but there was also great contempt for such people in capitalist countries.
>>482408>if you want to go after real estate, take into account that those have become hedge-funds, and you would have to defuse potential disruptions to the financial system. Also keep in mind that social spending for things like public housing also competes with other things like militarism spending.The first thing isn't really relevant -
who the landlords are doesn't actually matter. The only people to worry about are single-home owners, and an exemption or reduction can be carved out for them.
The government as it exists now literally prints money to pay for its military spending. We can't actually afford to do that when the US loses its hegemony, which technically means we can't afford to do it
now, since the country has a fuckton of debt & the military spending isn't stopping China from outpacing us. The extensive militaristic spending is profoundly wasteful, and we'd have to stop doing it even if we
didn't invest in housing and (other forms of) American labor. The handouts for the arms trade would have to stop no matter what we did, and investing in the wellbeing of the nation will have far greater returns, and will also be a much better deal if we fund it by taxing deadweight economic activity like land speculation which drives up costs.
>What you say is fair but there are band-aids that could be worth while, like allowing squatting in buildings that stay empty for long.Not that anon, but this has been common practice for a long time. It's good, but it's not a solve for current issues, it's just commonsense policy.
>>482418The thing about this, and I was hoping for an excuse to bring it up… the thing about this is that the USSR, when it criminalized homelessness/unemployment/etc., actually had massive public housing & employment services. It stands in stark contrast, in this regard, to the places in the US which are trying to criminalize homelessness
now. People will point to the USSR's laws as cruel or draconian, and I wouldn't even disagree, but, unlike the United States, they at least gave the public opportunities to be in good standing. With that context in mind, it's far less cruel.