Now. Let's sit down here, and imagine a really, really big damn hypothetical here. Let's just say, that for whatever reason, money just suddenly dissappeared. Every single piece of currency, the dollar, the pound, you name it. It's all suddenly gone as if it never existed and there is no way to produce it.My question here is, in the abscence of currency, let's say you introduced a new system into play. This is a system where, if you play a part in it, aka you work a job to some degree, you don't get access to money, but intstead you get access to what you could buy with money.Basically, you work and play your part, you get access to everything that's offered. You go up to the store, show you credentials, walk in, and take what you want.Now!Would it not be logical to assume, at this point, that because technically, crime and theft rate would plummet because why steal something when you yourself could get it from simply working? Would a country's population of people, with a rising unemployment rate not change if all they had to do was just simply work, for a bare minimum of time?
Sounds like Star Trek, where they reached a sufficiently advanced technology to do away with currency and give everyone access to goods and services based on an intrinsic drive to contribute to society by working.I don't think that would work any time soon. You'd have to see a global change and have enough resources to completely end hunger and poverty.
Quote from: HurtfulTurkey on March 31, 2015, 07:53:20 AMSounds like Star Trek, where they reached a sufficiently advanced technology to do away with currency and give everyone access to goods and services based on an intrinsic drive to contribute to society by working.I don't think that would work any time soon. You'd have to see a global change and have enough resources to completely end hunger and poverty.You know what I'd wager?We've got enough resources to do so. They're just being mismanaged terribly.
Work where, how long, and would those with huger skills that contribute more get access to more? Cause then we'd be back where we started.
Now, you might think that having a sewage worker go work for the entire day, vs somebody who worked less time, or the respective ends of the scales of a service based on their benifit all equally having access despite the amount of effort or skill their trade requires would be unfair.Now. You might say that there would be a problem. Medical services, technicians, laborers and such wouldn't get shit done.
Quote from: Sandtrap on March 31, 2015, 09:56:48 PMQuote from: HurtfulTurkey on March 31, 2015, 07:53:20 AMSounds like Star Trek, where they reached a sufficiently advanced technology to do away with currency and give everyone access to goods and services based on an intrinsic drive to contribute to society by working.I don't think that would work any time soon. You'd have to see a global change and have enough resources to completely end hunger and poverty.You know what I'd wager?We've got enough resources to do so. They're just being mismanaged terribly.No, not really.
Quote from: DAS | Loli Soul on March 31, 2015, 09:57:44 PMQuote from: Sandtrap on March 31, 2015, 09:56:48 PMQuote from: HurtfulTurkey on March 31, 2015, 07:53:20 AMSounds like Star Trek, where they reached a sufficiently advanced technology to do away with currency and give everyone access to goods and services based on an intrinsic drive to contribute to society by working.I don't think that would work any time soon. You'd have to see a global change and have enough resources to completely end hunger and poverty.You know what I'd wager?We've got enough resources to do so. They're just being mismanaged terribly.No, not really.Oh really? Take a look at how fat the population of mexico and america, and even canada is.Canada, Mexico, the US, Britain, South America, and parts of Africa and Asia are all heavy producers of food.Arguably it's probably the states and canada that are produce juggernaughts. Siphon some of that extra shit off that people make, that people waste, and drop it off in other countries.Betcha you could make a dent in poverty problems.Last year in my province, there was an excess of wheat. So much so, that companies selling steel grain bins went empty. There was so much wheat that nobody bought anymore. So the wheat was eitherA) Packed into a grain binB) Burned because there was nowhere to put it and nobody wanted to buy itExcess like that could easily be shipped off to third world countries.
Excess like that could easily be shipped off to third world countries.
Quote from: Sandtrap on March 31, 2015, 10:13:45 PMQuote from: DAS | Loli Soul on March 31, 2015, 09:57:44 PMQuote from: Sandtrap on March 31, 2015, 09:56:48 PMQuote from: HurtfulTurkey on March 31, 2015, 07:53:20 AMSounds like Star Trek, where they reached a sufficiently advanced technology to do away with currency and give everyone access to goods and services based on an intrinsic drive to contribute to society by working.I don't think that would work any time soon. You'd have to see a global change and have enough resources to completely end hunger and poverty.You know what I'd wager?We've got enough resources to do so. They're just being mismanaged terribly.No, not really.Oh really? Take a look at how fat the population of mexico and america, and even canada is.Canada, Mexico, the US, Britain, South America, and parts of Africa and Asia are all heavy producers of food.Arguably it's probably the states and canada that are produce juggernaughts. Siphon some of that extra shit off that people make, that people waste, and drop it off in other countries.Betcha you could make a dent in poverty problems.Last year in my province, there was an excess of wheat. So much so, that companies selling steel grain bins went empty. There was so much wheat that nobody bought anymore. So the wheat was eitherA) Packed into a grain binB) Burned because there was nowhere to put it and nobody wanted to buy itExcess like that could easily be shipped off to third world countries.Who would pay to ship it? Who would pay to process it once it gets there? Who would pay to distribute it to the population?
Quote from: Sandtrap on March 31, 2015, 10:13:45 PMExcess like that could easily be shipped off to third world countries.It's kind of just like trying to fill in a moat with a few shovels of sand though. To say we currently have to the resources to wipe out world hunger and poverty is grossly overestimating the current status of the world's production and wealth.
Quote from: DAS | Loli Soul on March 31, 2015, 10:18:06 PMQuote from: Sandtrap on March 31, 2015, 10:13:45 PMExcess like that could easily be shipped off to third world countries.It's kind of just like trying to fill in a moat with a few shovels of sand though. To say we currently have to the resources to wipe out world hunger and poverty is grossly overestimating the current status of the world's production and wealth.Does it mean that you can't try however? If you can raise at least a small percentage of a starving population out of the gutter, isn't that a step in the right direction? You'll have that much less to worry about in the future.Instead of tying to find an end all magic button to poverty and starving people that will magically shut everything down overnight, why not work at it, in bits and pieces?That's how you beat a problem. You work away at it piece by piece. It's like a puzzle. Not a magic lock and key.