• gid@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    I mean yeah, it’s a glib portrayal but I don’t think it’s wrong to present it this way. It’s a fact that a few of America’s most wealthy have enough money to house every homeless person in the US, with enough to spare to keep themselves in megayachts and luxury Texan compounds. It drives home the massive wealth inequality.

    It also really isn’t infeasible to build enough homes to house all the homeless in the US within one or two years. It’s not infeasible to spend that same amount of time setting up universal basic income and healthcare. Those three things are achievable and would make a positive, life-long difference to the majority of people experiencing homelessness.

    And there are a handful of people in the US whose combined personal wealth could easily fund all that.

    • ObjectivityIncarnate@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      It’s a fact that a few of America’s most wealthy have enough money to house every homeless person in the US

      If they have enough to do that, then the government certainly already has enough to accomplish this, no? Even the wealthiest person on the planet’s total net worth is nothing compared to what is already spent every single year by the US government.

      It also really isn’t infeasible to build enough homes to house all the homeless in the US within one or two years.

      I thought it was commonly said that there were more empty houses in the country than there are homeless people, already?

      It’s not infeasible to spend that same amount of time setting up universal basic income and healthcare.

      If you’re talking about something that goes only to homeless people, then it’s not “universal”. If you’re now talking about true UBI, I just don’t see how it can be realistically afforded.

      Back of the napkin math, a measly $10,000 to every working-age adult in the US amounts to an annual bill of over $2 trillion each year. We have no realistic way of paying for that–even if you squeezed all the billionaires completely dry, it’d only pay for it for a couple of years. And that’s just $10,000.

      It just doesn’t seem feasible until/unless we are literally post-scarcity, from the raw numbers. And that’s assuming it doesn’t replace any of the welfare systems already in place–if it would, then it really wouldn’t lift anyone out of anything long-term.

      And there are a handful of people in the US whose combined personal wealth could easily fund all that.

      It’s honestly very difficult to believe this, knowing all the trillions upon trillions of dollars the government has already spent over the years on issues like these, without them being ‘solved’.