caltrek wrote: ↑Tue Mar 31, 2026 5:18 pm
Basic Income’s Appeal Today is Similar to Its Roots in 18th century England – It’s a Way to Compensate People for a Common Good Taken for Private Gain
By Will Glovinsky
March 30, 2026
Introduction:
(The Conversation) A story has been going around about artificial intelligence for the past decade: At some point, AI advances, robots and self-driving cars will throw countless people out of work.
The rich folks who control AI companies will get richer. Most other people’s fortunes will decline as their skills lose value and they fail to get new jobs. To prevent the U.S. from suffering mass hunger and political chaos, the story goes, it will need a new system: The government will provide many people, or maybe everyone, with no-strings-attached cash payments.
There are many names for this kind of policy, including “basic income.”
Backing from a diverse group
This is essentially the story told by 2020 presidential candidate Andrew Yang and by the labor leader Andy Stern. You may also hear it from an array of tech billionaires, including OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk. In telling it, those moguls also get to hype their companies’ AI models.
Local governments from Stockton, California, to Atlanta are testing basic income programs by giving low-income residents cash. Across the Atlantic, British Investment Minister Jason Stockwood has said he and other leaders are “definitely talking” about the idea.
Read more here:
https://theconversation.com/basic-inco ... in-276950
The linked article reviews some of the history of the “basic income” idea. In doing so it also reviews the enclosure movement in England. Recently, there was a discussion here that I was involved in concerning the relative lack that markets played capitalism in historical economic development. The enclosure movement was yet another important example of government picking winners as opposed to a market system performing that function. Something that strengthens the case for a Universal Basic Income.
“AI systems,” they wrote, “freely scrape content from websites, social media, YouTube, newspapers, Wikipedia, and blogs, then statistically recombine this material and sell access to the results.”
IDK, the human versions of these services aren't necessarily free either? Eg. lots of news sites require a subscription, and artists charge a fee. Furthermore, it's not like free knowledge sites are mutually exclusive with AI, unlike how the commons were mutually exclusive with enclosure.
UBI would be more of a response to unemployment, as people have been saying.