There are enough houses for everyone to live in.
https://betterdwelling.com/vacant-homes ... ng-60-tax/#_
There is enough food for everyone to eat.
https://www.worldhunger.org/world-hunge ... /#produce1
So why do we still allow people to go homeless and starve?
The Myth of Scarcity
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The Myth of Scarcity
"Believe me, there’s nothing so terrible that someone won’t support it."
— Un Lun Dun, China Mieville
— Un Lun Dun, China Mieville
Re: The Myth of Scarcity
Because success is measured by comparing yourself to others.
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Re: The Myth of Scarcity
Are we talking regionally or globally? Because those are different problems with different potential solutions.Fuzzy Necromancer wrote: ↑Thu Jul 12, 2018 5:36 pmSo why do we still allow people to go homeless and starve?
Regionally, in the US, we pretty much have starvation beat...in fact, obesity is now a much, MUCH bigger problem than food deprivation. Yes, I realize that there are still problems with food insecurity and malnutrition, but we're still among the very best if not THE best in the world at tackling this problem, and given that Famine is one of the oldest specters haunting mankind, I have no problems giving the US a thumbs up on this problem. There's always more to do, of course, but someone actually starving in the US today is a pretty edge case, whereas historically, it's been ubiquitous. (Seriously: for most of the history of our country, it was simply an accepted fact that lots of people would starve every year. Hopefully not to death, but that wasn't out of the realm of possibilities. All you could do was try to not be one of those people.)
Globally, we have a massive distribution problem, because the places where there are lots of people that need food do not line up particularly well with the places where all the food is produced. Global warming is making the problem worse, because while it's not clear that climate change is going to make the planet less fertile as a whole, it's quite clear that it is going to make some places that were until recently very fertile into deserts. (see: Syria) Of course, you can move both food and people around, and we do both on a scale that would have seemed impossible just a few decades ago, but it isn't easy. Most foods spoil, and are vulnerable to pests and contamination. Moving people around comes with different but equally daunting set of problems. But we are trying, and honestly, we're doing a pretty amazing job on this problem, considering how persistently it has haunted humanity since our earliest days.
Make no mistake, this is an old problem. The Ugarit tablets are some of the earliest examples of human writing that we have. These things are well over 3000 years old, and what is the translation of one of them? A desperate appeal for aid from a trade outpost in a neighboring kingdom. There is famine in our house; we will all die of hunger. If you do not quickly arrive here, we ourselves will die of hunger. You will not see a living soul from your land. We have literally been battling this horsemen for our entire existence as a species, and while we haven't vanquished it, we've made tremendous progress, especially since we just keep adding more and more people to the planet. Not long ago, most scientists would have told you the Earth simply could not feed 5 billion people. We're currently at 7 billion and we just keep crankin' em out...mostly in countries that are already struggling to feed their populations. That's a big hurdle to overcome, but we're trying. And new GM foods offer real hope at delivering yet another hard right onto Famine's jaw. We're doing pretty well in this fight, all things considered.
Housing is a different problem all together, and one that I assume you're taking a more regional view of. (I mean, we CAN talk about global housing if you want, but it's not a problem that people usually take a global view of) Homeless in the US, which unlike hunger is fight that we're losing ground on, has (IMO) four driving factors, none of which is going to be easy to tackle.
- Worker pay continues to stagnate. Pay rates have been stagnate for a very long time, and they show no signs of moving up in any significant sense. This is bad, because while inflation is low, it's still been constant, so real worker compensation is at best treading water and quite likely trending down. This maybe wouldn't be SO bad except for....
- American economic activity is centralizing in the cities. This means if you want a job, you probably have to go to the cities. But building housing to accommodate all these new people, while possible, does come with a lot of challenges. (everything from zoning to NIMBY to construction costs to infrastructure strains) So supply gets limited. And when supply gets limited, prices go up. But PAY hasn't gone up, so more people are squeezed to the margins. This is made even worse by....
- American real estate is considered one of the most stable assets that you can own. If you're a newly minted Chinese billionaire who's worried that the government may suddenly decide to look poorly upon your suicide-net filled factory, a swanky apartment in San Francisco is a fantastic insurance policy. So rich people from all over the world are busy buying properties in American and Canadian cities, but they have no intention of actually LIVING there. The result is that developers only want to build luxury housing, because that's what these rich people want to buy, but the development is being used as a asset store, not as a living space, so it doesn't help with the homelessness problem even as it eats up available capital and space. And then there's....
- The smallest, but possibly most difficult problem to tackle: mental illness/addiction. A decent chunk of America's homeless population are struggling with severe handicaps - they either have mental disorders that they self-medicating/leaving untreated, or they are in the grip of addiction to one substance or another. Housing these people is very, very difficult. You can't simply give them a house...they're not capable of maintaining it and they probably won't even stay there, because they either need to find their next fix or they need to carry out whatever orders the squirrels are giving them that day. In fact, it's not easy to do ANYTHING to help these people that doesn't either enable their self-destructive behavior or get into murky civil-rights territory.
But apart from the specifics, be wary of simplifications. "The world produces 14 billion potatoes a year, people need 2 potatoes each per year, therefore, potatoes should not be scarce" is a nice little bit of logic that reminds me of one of my wife's favorite sayings: "Calculating the volume of a horse is easy. First, measure the length of the horse. Then, assume the horse is a sphere..." The real world is complicated and messy. Where the people are and where the potatoes grow may not be the same place. When people need potatoes and when potatoes are ready for harvest may not be the same time. All of these things may change from year to year. Problems that are simple to solve have for the most part been solved, so if something is still a big problem, then it's likely that solving it is complicated. That doesn't mean you shouldn't try, but you need to be prepared to dive deep.
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Re: The Myth of Scarcity
No. http://www.feedingamerica.org/hunger-in ... facts.htmlLittleRaven wrote: ↑Thu Jul 12, 2018 7:52 pmAre we talking regionally or globally? Because those are different problems with different potential solutions.Fuzzy Necromancer wrote: ↑Thu Jul 12, 2018 5:36 pmSo why do we still allow people to go homeless and starve?
Regionally, in the US, we pretty much have starvation beat...in fact, obesity is now a much, MUCH bigger problem than food deprivation. Yes, I realize that there are still problems with food insecurity and malnutrition, but we're still among the very best if not THE best in the world at tackling this problem, and given that Famine is one of the oldest specters haunting mankind, I have no problems giving the US a thumbs up on this problem. There's always more to do, of course, but someone actually starving in the US today is a pretty edge case
"Believe me, there’s nothing so terrible that someone won’t support it."
— Un Lun Dun, China Mieville
— Un Lun Dun, China Mieville
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Re: The Myth of Scarcity
LittleRaven wrote: ↑Thu Jul 12, 2018 7:52 pm[*]The smallest, but possibly most difficult problem to tackle: mental illness/addiction. A decent chunk of America's homeless population are struggling with severe handicaps - they either have mental disorders that they self-medicating/leaving untreated, or they are in the grip of addiction to one substance or another. Housing these people is very, very difficult. You can't simply give them a house...they're not capable of maintaining it and they probably won't even stay there, because they either need to find their next fix or they need to carry out whatever orders the squirrels are giving them that day. In fact, it's not easy to do ANYTHING to help these people that doesn't either enable their self-destructive behavior or get into murky civil-rights territory.[/list]Fuzzy Necromancer wrote: ↑Thu Jul 12, 2018 5:36 pmSo why do we still allow people to go homeless and starve?
You can, you know.
I've been reading about it in One Step Away, my city's street paper. It's a lot easier to get sober and mentally stable when you have a home to live in. Why would you want to stay off drugs when your daily life is being crawled on by cockroaches and suffering the pains of rain and sun?
"Believe me, there’s nothing so terrible that someone won’t support it."
— Un Lun Dun, China Mieville
— Un Lun Dun, China Mieville
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Re: The Myth of Scarcity
Fuzzy, read their definition of 'hunger.' It's 'food insecurity,' which means, at the very worst level, that "At times during the year, eating patterns of one or more people in the household were disrupted and food intake reduced due to lack of resources." But it doesn't always mean that. It can just mean that food variety or quality was reduced, although eating patterns where not substantially disrupted.Fuzzy Necromancer wrote: ↑Fri Jul 13, 2018 4:47 amNo. http://www.feedingamerica.org/hunger-in ... facts.html
Now, obviously that's not great, and we should be trying to improve those numbers. (we are) But that's not starving, either. I'm sure there are some people actually starving in America...somewhere. We're a huge nation of 330 million, there's always going to be edge cases. But they're very, VERY edge. Obesity is what poor people in America usually struggle with, not hunger.
I love your passion, but it won't serve you well unless you couple it with a real understanding of the problem you want to solve.
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Re: The Myth of Scarcity
You're right. You can. And some places are experimenting with it. But it's very, VERY expensive to implement in the cities where it's needed most, because as we've already established, real estate prices are already out of control in those places. And nothing gets voters more upset than seeing the government pay for housing poor people when they feel like taxpaying citizens can't afford the rent.
Ideally, you'd want to house people far away from city centers, where real estate is cheap. But very few people want to live in the sticks, because the cities are where the action is.
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Re: The Myth of Scarcity
The problem is American have a twisted belief that you don't deserve to eat if you don't work.
America is a truly despicably wicked vile and evil nation.
America is a truly despicably wicked vile and evil nation.
Call me KuudereKun
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Re: The Myth of Scarcity
/)(\MithrandirOlorin wrote: ↑Fri Jul 13, 2018 5:32 am The problem is American have a twisted belief that you don't deserve to eat if you don't work.
America is a truly despicably wicked vile and evil nation.
"Believe me, there’s nothing so terrible that someone won’t support it."
— Un Lun Dun, China Mieville
— Un Lun Dun, China Mieville
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Re: The Myth of Scarcity
I think the dream of every American citizen owning their own home is turning into a fantasy. Look at New York City, even if you turned the whole county into one giant sub-division, which you can't do obviously, it still would not be enough to house everyone.
Even in my home town of just 75,000 people it would be hopelessly impractical at best. I think the percentage of Americans who actually own their homes are going to be getting smaller and smaller until its just the super rich who actually live in a proper house and not in an apartment somewhere.
Even in my home town of just 75,000 people it would be hopelessly impractical at best. I think the percentage of Americans who actually own their homes are going to be getting smaller and smaller until its just the super rich who actually live in a proper house and not in an apartment somewhere.