• Flying Squid
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      3211 months ago

      That Americans have to pay to survive in any capacity- food, healthcare, shelter… it’s the sign of a sick society. My daughter asked me why we have to pay a bill to get water in and sewage out of our house instead of just have that be a government thing. She’s only 13 and even she realizes capitalism is fucked up.

        • @knivesandchives@lemmy.ca
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          711 months ago

          That’s not empirically true. I pay for water as a flat rate in Quebec as part of my municipal taxes, as do all of my neighbors, and I don’t see people engaging in flagrant water wastage. Lawns routinely go yellow during the hottest parts of the summer, I rarely see people washing their cars, and low flush toilets are getting increasingly common.

            • @knivesandchives@lemmy.ca
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              011 months ago

              Ok. The EPA estimates that the average American uses 82 gallons a day as of 2015, which comes out to 310L.

              EPA link

              By contrast, McGill University cites that the average Canadian uses around 329L a day.

              McGill water usage page

              Montreal, specifically as an unmetered water city, estimates 327L a day.

              City of Montreal annual water usage report

              I’ll grant you that Montreal does seem to have slightly higher usage per capita. But I’m not sure the extra pain in the ass of managing water meter infrastructure would be meaningful to reduce water usage to be in line with metered locations, when we’re talking about a difference of 17L a day.

          • @SCB@lemmy.world
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            11 months ago

            A public utility handles mine and yet it still costs money. Odd.

            Maybe this 13 year-old isn’t the oracle I initially suspected

        • @SCB@lemmy.world
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          -311 months ago

          Lots of 13 year olds are dumb, doubly so if their parents are dumb, and think “capitalism is when things cost money”

          • @ZzyzxRoad@lemm.ee
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            511 months ago

            You’re right. It is dumb to not understand the difference between privatized services and government services…

      • @nkiru@lemm.ee
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        211 months ago

        I live in the SW USA, and until very recently, we had to pay the fire dept a monthly fee to be able to call them to come to our house in case of fire.

    • sverit
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      711 months ago

      Absolutely. Binding any basic need to profits is atrocious if you think about it.

    • @dx1@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      There’s a little bit of nuance here, “for profit” isn’t the same as “for greed”. Organizations of any kind - corps, non-profits, governments - have to remain essentially “solvent” or “profitable” to even operate - they can’t function just perpetually burning through resources. A medical org, even one that’s a “corporation”, can run a profit but not be governed by greed (though obviously that’s not the case everywhere right now).

  • @littlecolt@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    Every day when I get off work and I go to a local gas station, I see them throw away a bunch of prepared food that passed shelf life. This is a chain, so hundreds of locations do this every day. Tons of food per year, tossed in the trash because it sat in the heat box too long.

    Imagine how many people could eat that food. It makes me upset.

    • @4lan@lemmy.world
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      2611 months ago

      I worked at a Dunkin for a summer and they had us throwing away two large trash bags full of food every night. It had to be 50lbs of food.

      I started giving donuts to teenagers and an elderly Asian man that was always ecstatic to get a big bag of donuts and bagels. I didn’t have a car to transport it to a shelter, and this was in a rich area. It was disgusting

      • @littlecolt@lemm.ee
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        2111 months ago

        I once tried to buy a rye loaf from a local grocery store and the cashier couldn’t ring it up because it was one day expired. I said it looked fine to me, but she said the system won’t even let her.

        So I said okay, don’t ring it up, just give it to me.

        Another guy jumped in and took it, said no, it had to be thrown away.

        They were literally not allowed to give me trash I was willing to pay for.

    • K Vinayak
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      611 months ago

      May be they are avoiding getting sued. If someone gets sick. Especially junk food, which is unhealthy to begin with

      • Dadd Volante
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        511 months ago

        This has been long debunked. Laws have passed that protect owners from this.

        I used to work in a sandwich shop that made it’s own bread fresh daily. At the end of every day the owner started donating the leftover bread and explained how it’s an urban myth.

        People just don’t like to share.

  • @protist@mander.xyz
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    11 months ago

    There are serious ethical problems with a capitalist system, especially when it comes to the necessities of life, but there’s also ample evidence that other economic systems in practice have been just as bad of not worse regarding food security, eg follow the history of the USSR from the Holodomor in the 1930s to empty grocery shelves and bread lines in the 1980s

    • @fidodo@lemm.ee
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      1811 months ago

      I view the problem as us treating a tool as a system of government. Capitalism is an incredibly powerful tool for increasing efficiency (real capitalism as in a healthy free market, not monopoly bullshit). But we should be using that tool to our benefit, not having that tool use us. We can use it as a tool without it being our basis of society. Also, capitalism is not self regulating. That’s a bullshit myth created by elite monopolists. Unchecked capitalism leads to monopolies and monopolies are the antithesis of capitalism. We used to know that. We used to bust monopolies. We need to learn when and when not to use capitalism. Certain things need to be monopolies. Like transportation and the power grid. Since healthy competition cannot prosper we cannot make them capitalistic. We already need to recognize that capitalism is a tool for us to use. It’s ok to break capitalism in special circumstances for the greater good, because the good of the people is more important than perpetuating capitalism. I think abolishing it leads to apathy and inefficiency, but worshipping it leads to inhumanity, and we’re not even worshipping it properly because again, monopolies are not capitalism. Like all things in life it’s about balance.

      • @SCB@lemmy.world
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        011 months ago

        Well it wasn’t so much a problem to Russians because their centralized economic system allowed them to simply starve away those they didn’t like

    • sverit
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      211 months ago

      Yeah, the problems are just different. A mixed form would be ideal, where basic needs would be handled socially and the rest may compete in a capitalist way. The difficulty is where to draw the line exactly.

    • @lauha@lemmy.one
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      -111 months ago

      I cannot comment on communism as there has not been a true communism in the world yet, but dictatorships sure have been bad.

    • Are you the least bit aware of what caused the egg shortage? There was a super virulent strain of avian influenza (bird flu) that has the potential to infect wild birds and to jump to mammals. You know, like people. The same thing triggered the pandemic in 1918 that killed anywhere from 1% - 5% of the world population.

      So to avoid that happening again, they had to destroy (slaughter) millions and millions of egg laying hens, which yes, caused a shortage of eggs relative to normal.

      https://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/chart-gallery/gallery/chart-detail/?chartId=105576

      There are real issues that need to be addressed with capitalism and workers rights. This isn’t one of them and you hurt the real arguments by not educating yourself.

            • I’m not sure what point you’re trying to make, but you’re wrong.

              Profit is logged against prior expenditure, so that would be the cost of acquiring and feeding the hens they had to destroy.

              The cost to replace those hens will be offset against the sale of eggs produced by the new hens. That will be how next year’s profit is calculated.

  • @Siegfried@lemmy.world
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    2611 months ago

    It’s already non profitable to feed people, that’s why it’s said that hunger is a problem of logistics and not problem of production capacity.

  • Kes
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    1111 months ago

    Food production is one of the very few things the US government has been handling well. We give out tens of billions in subsidies to farmers every year to artificially inflate the food supply and have a nationwide SNAP program to help low income families afford food. As a result, we produce far more food than we actually need and far more than we would in a free market, allowing the US to be a major exporter of food globally and ensuring we have enough redundancy built into our food supply that the US will be the last country to starve in a famine

      • @QuadratureSurfer@lemmy.world
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        111 months ago

        I don’t think a food desert means what you think it means…

        Are you trying to say that we should rate food production of the US based on how many grocery stores we have in residential areas?

        In the end a food desert really just means you have to drive a little farther to get to the store.

        • @dragonflyteaparty@lemmy.world
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          011 months ago

          A little further implies a minor inconvenience as if it’s not a real problem. No, food production shouldn’t be tied to number of grocery stores. Not sure how you think they’re implying that. It is a logistical problem that could be solved if people weren’t more worried about profit than human needs and suffering. Zoning laws probably also play a role.

      • @SamboT@lemm.ee
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        -211 months ago

        Because the USA is huge and has areas that are more remote? Providing abundance to areas by certain priorities such as population still allows food deserts to exist.

        I mean I guess I could be wrong but are we really going to talk about the food distribution system like we know about it?

    • @Agent641@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Remember that time they had too much milk and were like “Lets make cheese!” And then they had too much cheese so they put it in a cave and slowly gave it away for decades.

  • @blady_blah@lemmy.world
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    711 months ago

    I really don’t get why we don’t have “meal bars” or “human food” yet. Something that covers all basic calorie and nutritional requirements, can be mass produced, and easily stored at room temperature. Like “dog food” but for humans.

    The real choice should be a normal meal or a “meal bar”, not a normal meal or starving.

  • @SCB@lemmy.world
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    511 months ago

    Thats just “under the concept of having any amount of people not be farmers”

    People were paying for food long before capitalism existed.

    • @TotallynotJessica@lemmy.world
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      511 months ago

      It’s capitalism vs government programs that can feed the starving, not capitalism vs anything else. That was an era before the modern state. We’re talking about with today’s systems, not with systems that are no longer relevant.

      Also, self sustaining communities shared food with their own at numerous points in history. People were giving food to eachother for the common good long before Karl Marx.

        • @TotallynotJessica@lemmy.world
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          211 months ago

          True, but I was trying to highlight relying on capitalism to feed people, vs using government programs at all. I didn’t mean to imply that they are mutually exclusive.