I was thinking recently - what are the minimum barriers to be useful in a America (or other similar country)? I mean usefulness in the sense that someone is contributing to society. I'd assume someone would need to:
- Be active in the financial system (have a job, buy products, save money, build companies, etc)
- Be active in the social system (donate time/money to charities, vote, affect your local government, support/start social programs, improve living/working conditions, etc)
It occured to me that it's not easy to change these things for the better. Further, at some level it actually becomes nearly impossible. Where is this level? Well it depends of course on what the climate is. In order to get a job, you need a minimum of:
- some social skills, hopefully learned through family/school at an early age
- a place to shower
- a place to sleep
- transportation
And without these things, you can't have even the McDonalds jobs, which require no training whatsoever. What about when these jobs run out, and we're left with jobs that do require some prior training? Well, I can think of:
- clean clothing, preferably a suit to show you're a "higher" class of person.
- far better social skills that previously needed, in order to impress the interviewers
- people who can vouch for your skills (a college degree, previous work employers)
And if you want an even better position, you have:
- even BETTER social skills
- the ability to deal with government regulations (paid lawyer(s) most likely)
- the ability to regulate/hire employees
- the ability to out-compete others
- the ability to get a loan (for equipment, employees, office/work space, etc)
- an idea
And what about the political/social arena? Yes, the ability to vote is a basic requirement, as is a certain amount of liberty and flexibility in developing social rules. Since I'm a USA citizen, I'm assuming my own political scenario for minimum requirements. So, other minimum requirements:
- registration to vote
- access to accurate information (which is nearly always lacking)
- a knowledge of the positions of all candidates
- the ability to guess what those candidates will proceed to do once in office
- the desire and time to do the above
- the ability to regulate candidates and replace them easily (currently done when new terms are voted for)
- the ability to regulate and replace laws that do not represent people (currently done through the judicial system, newspapers, and passing new laws)
So the main question is how can we lower these requirements? Also, what other requirements are there that I haven't described? There are probably lots of those. I figure if we get all these barriers roughly understood, than this becomes a relatively simple engineering problem to fix our political and financial problems.
***IDEAS from forum***
free transportation, particularly bus networks.
(Levi)
a co-op that does a bunch of small support things like:
- Has a bunch of nice suits that a person can rent for a day.
- Tool rentals for Do-it-yourself projects
- Manages an extremely simple investment fund(Like an index fund) for people looking to save for the future.
- Cheap seminars for teaching people basic life skills like cooking, gardening and home repair.
(Levi)
public works programs (temporary government employment ala FDR), at cost of military.
(Flying dice, critiqued by Luke_Prowler)
Refocus military toward public works.
(PnX)
tax-subsidized education
(Cryptfeind)