UniversalMonk

joined 1 week ago
[–] [email protected] 0 points 10 hours ago

It's funny because there is a school called the University of the People. Which I looked at, and has a great mission, but it's fairly terrible to navigate. I dropped out because the instructors at the time didn't even seem to know english. And I always hated the name.

But then I am reading this essay, and I guess there is a history of using the term "people" in college names. lol

 

From the 1984 article:

Amid great fanfare, the 99/4A home computer was born into the aristocratic Texas Instruments family. The year was 1981. The precocious infant grew quickly. But in 1983 it met an untimely end, largely because of the unreasonable demands of its pushy parent.

 

The Green Party is promising a radical overhaul of the New Zealand tax system, raising $88.2 billion in new revenue and taking the size of the state to over $200b a year.

The party announced its alternative Budget this morning, which was an altered version of its 2023 tax plan — the main differences being this one included two new taxes: an inheritance tax and a tax on private jets.

The plan would reinstate two property taxes: the 10-year bright-line test and banning interest deductions for residential property, which are currently being phased out.

Companies tax would be raised from 28% to 33%, making it one of the highest in the developed world, higher than Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

Income tax would be raised for some, with the 39% threshold kicking in at income over $120,000 and a 45% rate applied to income over $180,000.

However, a tax-free threshold would be introduced at $10,000, increasing the after-tax incomes of people earning less than $115,000 — the vast bulk of people, although setting the tax rate that low would begin to capture some professions the Greens are trying to target.

Thanks to a 2023 pay equity settlement, senior nurses had their pay lifted to between $105,704 and $153,060, meaning many would pay higher rates of income tax under this plan.

Mining royalties will be doubled and private jet arrivals and departures to New Zealand will be taxed at a rate of $5,000.

The big income raiser in the plan is the wealth tax, which would raise $72.4b over the four years.

The inheritance tax component of the plan would mean inheritance or gifts would be taxed at 33%, but the tax would only kick in once a lifetime threshold of $1 million had been reached.

Green Party co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick said it was a “Budget for a country that belongs to and works for New Zealanders”.

“We believe in fairness and common sense. A Green Government will rapidly reduce emissions, reduce the cost of living and improve our quality of life,” she said.

Health

In health, the party proposed introducing free GP and nurse visits nationwide, projected to cost about $8.5b over four years.

It was in addition to the party’s 2023 election campaign commitment to provide free dental care.

Green Party co-leader Marama Davidson argued the policy would reduce pressure on hospitals and would address health inequities.

As part of the package, the Greens would create “community care clinics” in high need areas like South Auckland.

The budget’s health commitments included building Dunedin Hospital, re-establishing an earlier bowel screening age for Māori and Pasifika, and bringing back the Māori Health Authority.

In childcare, the Greens proposed to expand 20-hours free care per week in early childhood education for children from 6 months up to school age with a cap on fees for hours above the entitlement.

Under the plan, the entitlement would increase to 35 hours in 2029.

The policy was expected to cost almost $5.4b over four years.

It formed part of the Greens’ effort to “wind down subsidies for commercial centres” with the hope of making the sector fully publicly funded.

“These for-profit providers benefit from hundreds of millions in public subsidies while charging high fees and paying low wages to teachers which impacts upon the quality of care,” Davidson said.

“Our budget covers the full cost of delivering quality ECE, ending subsidies to corporations and instead supporting community-based and public centres that prioritise the needs of our kids, not the interests of shareholders.”

Welfare

The budget featured another policy from 2023, introducing an income guarantee for students and the unemployed.

It sought to provide a weekly payment of at least $395 with top-ups of $140 per week for single parents.

The policy included reforming ACC to ensure anyone unemployed due to a health condition or disability was receiving at least 80% of the full-time minimum wage.

The party costed the package in excess of $30b over four years.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 18 hours ago

TEXT:

The following letter of protest was sent to President Nixon on behalf of the 75 Socialist Workers Party candidates for public office in 15 states. It was written by Paul Boutelle, SWP vice-presidential candidate in 1968 and currently the SWP candidate for Congress from Harlem. Paul Boutelle has just returned from a fact-finding trip to the Middle East.

President Nixon:

The Socialist Workers Party demands the immediate halt to all steps toward U.S. military intervention in the Jordanian civil war. The U.S. has no right whatsoever in Jordan.

People throughout the world are just beginning to learn the scope of the wholesale slaughter that is occurring in Jordan right now. We hold your administration and its imperialist policies responsible for the bloodbath being perpetrated upon tens of thousands of Palestinian men, women and children. It is American arms and financial aid that have enabled the reactionary Hussein regime to inflict this carnage on the Palestinian refugees.

Your threatened intervention in Jordan has also encouraged Israel to consider whether it too should invade Jordan — as it did in June 1967. Such a conflict could easily bring the world to the brink of a nuclear war.

Your administration has announced that three aircraft carriers from the 6th Fleet, each carrying 80 combat planes, have been ordered to the coast of Lebanon, and that you have placed on alert troops from the Eighth Infantry Division in West Germany and the 82nd Airborne Division at Fort Bragg, N.C. I remember the 82nd Airborne as the same division that President Johnson sent to Santo Domingo to crush the uprising there in 1965, and into Detroit in 1967 to crush the revolt of the Black community.

This is not a coincidence. The struggles of the Dominicans and Afro-Americans, like those of the Palestinians, are struggles of oppressed peoples to control their own affairs.

The United States government's support for the reactionary, Zionist regime in Israel and its support for King Hussein's slaughter of the Palestinian refugees is consistent with its support to reactionary dictatorships throughout the world — from Cambodia and Vietnam to South Africa, Greece and Iran.

Millions of Americans, especially Black Americans, Chicanos, students, women and GIs, now see through your war in Vietnam as an arrogant and bloody interference in the affairs of another country. Millions of Americans will also refuse to go along with another war in the Middle East, a war in support of a corrupt monarchy and a war to crush the Palestinians' elementary fight to regain the land they were driven from.

 
 

Good article giving a brief summary of early socialism through the lives and ideas of Saint-Simon, Robert Owen, and Charles Fourier. Talks a little about their push against capitalism. They guys also tried to build cooperative, egalitarian alternatives—laying the moral and intellectual groundwork for later socialist movements.

Utopian socialism has some lasting influences on labor, education, and radical politics.