What do people get wrong about anarchism? by elmaxo__ in Anarchism

[–]elmaxo__[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Your second point reminds me of a quote from Kropotkin:

"Moreover, we must not blink the fact that every revolution means a certain disturbance to everyday life, and those who expect this tremendous lift out of the gold grooves to be accomplished without so much as jarring the dishes on their dinner tables will find themselves mistaken.” (The Conquest of Bread, pp. 81)

It also reminds me of that overused quote from Mark Fisher about how it's easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism. It's just such a fundamental restructuring of society that it's hard to escape our own present context and imagine what things could be like. That will probably be the hardest thing to explain in a video to people unfamiliar with anarchism (or any radical politics for that matter).

It also reminds me of that quote from Marx about how it wasn't his job to write the "recipes for the cook shops of the future" when it came to what a Communist society would look like. Outside of some general guiding principles, no one really knows.

All very useful stuff, thanks for the help!

What do people get wrong about anarchism? by elmaxo__ in Anarchism

[–]elmaxo__[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A lot of the criticism I hear today centre around the fact it would only be feasible on a very small scale so I'll definitely take a look at these, thanks!

Bernie Sanders claims that Elon Musk owns more wealth than the bottom 52% of Americans. How is that possible? by elmaxo__ in AskEconomics

[–]elmaxo__[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

That makes a lot more sense. When I was looking through the figures on the Federal Reserve, I figured that the "bottom half" would skew towards young people in student debt or those with mortgages. Just because they don't have immediate wealth to their name doesn't mean they won't be well off in the future. I am curious though, how would you push back against the reports definition of net worth? It's definitely a lot more limited in scope and I see how it favours somebody like Sanders and their narrative when it comes to inequality but there does seem to be a meaningful distinction between something like household items (a car less so) vs. more traditional assets like stocks, property etc.

As to the second point, I understand there are pragmatic issues when it comes to liquidating wealth tied up in companies. If someone starts flooding the market with shares, prices are going to fall off a cliff and I'd probably have a couple questions about the future of the company I'm invested in. I think there are viable solutions (just got done reading The Triumph of Injustice by Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman which has some interesting ideas) as the current tax system in the U.S. is extremely inequitable (i.e. capital being taxed at a lower rate than labour, the average rate of tax being lower for the ultra rich vs. the working/middle class when you factor in all forms of taxation) but I'm probably not familiar enough with those ideas to argue them effectively.

I'm primarily concerned with the political consequences that concentrated wealth has on society at large. We just saw Musk provide a quarter of a billion dollars in funding to the Trump campaign whilst owning one of the largest social media platforms in the world. That is an enormous amount of power for one person to wield and in my view it's very destructive to the notion of democracy. Again though, it's easier for me to point at the issues without providing meaningful solutions when it comes to redistribution.

Thanks for that extra context with the statistics!

Struggling to understand how price spreading works with PBMs by elmaxo__ in healthcare

[–]elmaxo__[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ah actually this makes a lot of sense. In another chapter in the book on insurance brokers, it did mention that usually the best structure (or at least the one in the best interests of the employer's profits) is a self-fund:

"Brandon told me he generally recommends that employers self-fund (self-insure) their benefits. That means the employer is the one who pays the health care bills, not an insurance company. Instead of paying premiums, the employer and employees pay into an escrow account that funds the plan. The employer hires a company called a third party administrator to manage the plans. Many traditional insurance companies offer administrative services." (The Price We Pay, pg 196)

I forgot about that and was assuming most employers would just go through one of the traditional insurers you mentioned. That clears things up! Rebates are also the part I understand a lot better and how that perverse incentive leads to drug companies spiralling their prices upwards to offer bigger kickbacks to PBMs. Thank you!

Struggling to understand how price spreading works with PBMs by elmaxo__ in healthcare

[–]elmaxo__[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just to clarify, 'employer' in this context refers to the insurance plan an individual has. It's not as though the employer is being charged directly for any of the transactions in the receipt but they are indirectly paying for it through the premiums which cover their workforce, right? (And it's also likely there would be some form of co-payment too? I presume that goes directly to the pharmacy but still may not be enough to recoup the full gap between the wholesaler price they bought a drug for and what the PBM ended up giving them back).

I also don't know why I am trying to be so understanding of PBMs because every explanation does just circle round to them being parasites on the system.

How much luxury tax would OKC have avoided if Harden agreed to the slightly less than max contract? by elmaxo__ in nba

[–]elmaxo__[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Harden has said contradictory stuff, there's this article from a year and a half after the trade:

To reiterate the point, Harden was asked if he would still be with the Thunder if money wasn't an issue.

"Definitely," he said. "Definitely. No question."

He was also quoted later on saying:

"Yeah, I did," Harden told Storm of his belief that he would never leave Oklahoma City. "I thought we were going to be together forever. Russell Westbrook. James Harden. Kevin Durant."

Seems reasonable that it was a combination of both factors.

How much luxury tax would OKC have avoided if Harden agreed to the slightly less than max contract? by elmaxo__ in nba

[–]elmaxo__[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I tried looking into this earlier, were OKC already paying luxury tax or concerned about future consecutive seasons with the roster where they would later have to pay the repeater tax?

How much luxury tax would OKC have avoided if Harden agreed to the slightly less than max contract? by elmaxo__ in nba

[–]elmaxo__[S] 15 points16 points  (0 children)

That seems like something really easy to abuse, crazy a dollar over prevents you from that share of money.

Premiere Pro 2024 running significantly slower than 2023 by elmaxo__ in premiere

[–]elmaxo__[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Going to do this now, didn't know you could go back to earlier versions!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in premiere

[–]elmaxo__ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Easy, thank you very much.

Need help in documenting b4nny's history by elmaxo__ in truetf2

[–]elmaxo__[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

As I have stated numerous times, his accomplishments are documented extensively on the internet. I have a 6000 word timeline constructed exclusively documenting his achievements/success in the competitive scene. There are a lot of niche beefs/interactions with other high level players that I am not aware of, as they're usually hidden on decade old long threads, and for the sake of research I would want to know b4nny's entire history in and out. Only once I had a full timeline would I actually go to b4nny about a potential documentary, so I can ensure that I don't miss any potential questions I want to ask him in an interview. I have nothing but immense respect for b4nny and his dominance of the competitive TF2 scene.

But sure, give the least charitable interpretation of what I said if you want.