The most popular conspiracy theory in the US today is that American wealth is the result of a steady cabalistic transfer of extant wealth from the poor and middle class to "like 10 people" at the "tippy top." It's provably false but will define the next several election cycleshttps://twitter.com/AOC/status/1127270688925134849 …
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Take a look at what AOC is pointing out: for-profit prisons, student loans, "tricking the country into war," abusing food stamp programs. Notice a theme? Prisons are a product for governments. Rich people do not declare wars or issue food stamps. Student loans are backed by whom?
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The trap I *don't* want to fall into is claiming that all is well. Wages have stagnated while healthcare and higher ed pricing skyrocketed, and both systems are regulatory fortresses. Regulatory capture via licensure and accreditation is locking in profit for the current players
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The healthcare/education monster is unavoidably a private interest + government collaboration. Moreover, the collaboration has grown so complex and labyrinthian that it's unclear how to attack it. And it's moot anyway, unless it sounds better than "boo yachts, free college!"
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Here's what worries me: whether via a punitive income tax bracket or a wealth tax, you're hitting a group that contains some game-players and many more value-creators. If you don't first solve the regulatory capture issue, you funnel the gains straight back to the game-players.
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If we bet on a policy as aggressive as Warren's wealth tax, it'd become nearly impossible for ultra-successful entrepreneurs to maintain controlling stakes in their own companies over 1-2 decades. It should not be controversial to say this would be disastrous for the US economy.
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Find me a politician who's saying "we need to prevent the AMA from artificially bottlenecking residencies" or "we need to reorganize higher education around student career expectations and implement elements of apprenticeship." Then find me a voting populace who wants to hear it
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Replying to @webdevMason
I don't know about a voting populace, but:
@AndrewYang wants to increase teacher pay: https://www.yang2020.com/policies/teacher-salaries/ …, provide life skills education: https://www.yang2020.com/policies/life-skills-education/ …, vocational training: https://www.yang2020.com/policies/promoting-vocational-education/ … and control the cost of higher education: https://www.yang2020.com/policies/controlling-cost-higher-education/ ….3 replies 0 retweets 9 likes -
a policy you could have pointed out was the one about expanding the role of mid level healthcare providers https://www.yang2020.com/policies/expanding-medical-licensure/ … it tackles problems caused by occupational licensing in medicine like the AMA restricting residency slots by sidestepping it to increase supply
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Replying to @EurydiceWaits @DragonGod2718 and
I've seen
@ESYudkowsky say before that some surgeons could very easily have massively reduced occupational licensing educational requirements and be effective, and this strikes me as a very similar proposal for primary care that could be great for increasing supplypic.twitter.com/bRl7ym5DJW
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Relatively ignorant on Yang, although I've enjoyed listening to him speak. I kinda wish UBI wasn't his signature proposal, because I have such mixed feelings on it, but I think he's just playing his hand wisely. I donated to his campaign in the hopes the DNC will let him debate
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Replying to @webdevMason @EurydiceWaits and
That's nice to hear. I'm interested in your mixed feelings on UBI since I'm very much in favour of it but consider you an epistemic superior, so there are probably stuff I'm not considering.
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Replying to @DragonGod2718 @EurydiceWaits and
I say "mixed feelings" in the most genuine sense. I've advocated for it in the past. There's a lot of evidence in favor of giving poor people cash over gov coupons, and I think a lot of people are bottlenecked re: long-term productivity for want of relatively small amounts of $
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