UBI would be a more efficient way to cover housing and food (I’m not saying 1K a month is enough to do that).
UBI is also portable where universal housing would not be.
Edit: But I think 6’s point has more to do with we have a population of homeless people and people who can’t afford to eat. We have the money and the means to eliminate poverty. That should be done before healthcare and would actually reduce the cost of healthcare overall. Poverty is expensive.
Why are we still discussing $$$? If we’re going as far as UBI, let’s look at basing a society on something other than access to capital. We can form our own little Kibbutz where we emphasize mutual aid and communal enterprise. What greater motivation does a person need than the satisfaction of work, concern for community, competition for prestige, and praise from other community members? Aside from shitting on our enemies as soon as they take a knee.
Similar for other foodstuffs, e.g. “meat”, “cheese”. They can be singular or plural uncountable, whereas “fruits”, “meats”, “cheeses” are plural countable. Uncountable nouns usually take a singular verb (e.g. water, liquid, herd). “People” is an interesting exception. “Company” seems to take either. English is weird.
I don’t know any of the above for a fact btw, just an educated guess.
“Descriptive grammarians” can fuck off. What’s next, “descriptive mathematicians” telling us that 0.9 recurring is actually not equal to 1? Or maybe “descriptive probability experts” explaining how tails is more likely to come up after a streak of heads.
I was being a tad facetious. Much like anyone driving slower than I am is a pussy, and anyone driving faster is a maniac, I am quite self-evidently the most qualified arbiter of when descriptive grammar is, and is not appropriate.
“More” is not fine for both. It’s two different words, which happen to be homophones and homographs. One is used for discrete/countable quantities, the other for continuous/ucnountable quantities. Prove me wrong
Jeez. It should be relatively easy to prove this to anyone with a modicum of mathematical understanding. Anyone who teaches maths in any capacity and thinks this should be summarily fired and sent away to the gulags for re-education, though.
By the way, the traditional method of proving 0.999… = 1 by multiplying by 10 then subtracting, while intuitive, is totally invalid, since it contains a hidden assumption which basically presupposes the very thing about infinite series that it’s trying to prove in the first place.
Second step also pretty much contains the same assumption as I mentioned above. You’re already assuming that 0.9999… = 3/3 = 1. It’s not really proving anything.
Yes, it’s much easier to explain it this way than it is to explain how to prove a geometric series converges and work out its sum from first principles, that is certainly true.