TheodorAlforno

joined 2 weeks ago
[–] TheodorAlforno@feddit.org 3 points 3 days ago

Insurance premiums will be adjusted. Plus people will avoid buying Teslas if there are too many attacks on them.

That being said, I think there are smarter ways to fight for democracy.

[–] TheodorAlforno@feddit.org 2 points 5 days ago (3 children)

I'd love to have people move over to other apps. But here in Germany it's nearly impossible to have a messenger group on any other app than WhatsApp. Everybody is on there. For every other app there will be someone not having it installed. It doesn't matter if 80% are on Signal, 80% in Threema and 80% on Telegram. 100% are on Whatsapp and that's what the group will be using.

[–] TheodorAlforno@feddit.org 2 points 5 days ago

If it's quality furniture you can sell or donate it. If it's recent Ikea or other cheap stuff, it won't survive being disassembled, moved and reassembled. Ikea's surfaces scratch so easily, even on desks. It's ridiculous. That kind of fast furniture is terribly unsustainable. But I wouldn't be bothered if you bought a new sofa every ten years and make someone else happy with a used sofa that will last another ten years in it's new home.

[–] TheodorAlforno@feddit.org 6 points 5 days ago

My first Led for a regular lamp at home was an Osram for nearly 20€. It died after ca. 3 years. After that Ikea had launched their cheap LEDs and I started buying them. I can't really say how long each of them lasted, but I moved and started reusing them in different lamps. I guess most of them are over 5 years old by now. Every now and then one of them dies but my subjective feelings is that they offer great value.

[–] TheodorAlforno@feddit.org 9 points 5 days ago (3 children)

I only use IKEA, and they last forever for me.

[–] TheodorAlforno@feddit.org 1 points 1 week ago

Lower revenues for residential property means lower prices for land. It means lower prices for buying houses and makes it cheaper for people to own their house or flat. If you are a developer that builds properties, you sell them to individual owners that live there instead of institutional investors like corporations or real estate funds. Wealth tax only applies for people that own big estates. When done well it does not apply to people that own their own property or rent out a few flats.

That way, super rich people that look for investment opportunities for their enormous wealth make less profit with real estate and move towards other assets. Land owners (who are usually really wealthy themselves) and large investors are the only losers here, and that's exactly the intention.

[–] TheodorAlforno@feddit.org 3 points 1 week ago (2 children)

We pay for using that capital. We pay rent, we pay for groceries, we pay for gas. Everytime we pay something, somebody makes money. Tax them.

[–] TheodorAlforno@feddit.org 8 points 1 week ago (1 children)

But we could also try fascism again. Maybe it works this time.

/s

[–] TheodorAlforno@feddit.org 72 points 1 week ago (19 children)

Fix wealth inequality. Rich people accumulate so much money that there's hardly any left for average people. Rich people hoard assets like houses and increase their prices and the cost of living. As long as we don't fix this, things will get worse. As long as politicians don't fix this other parties will get more popular no matter what they offer.

Migrants are just scapegoats. They have no lobby, they are easy to blame. They are one piece in a bigger equation. They are used as a ruse to distract from bigger problems. If the housing market was functional it could handle the influx of Ukranian refugees and the way smaller number of refugees from countries like Afghanistan or regions like Africa.

If countries had funds from wealth and inheritance taxes they could fund a working administration, faster justice systems, working infrastructure and so on. It would be absolutely beautiful and I cannot say why there isn't a bigger movement for that solution.

It's not about taxing 100.000€ in stock, or you inheriting your mum's cottage, but about taxing people who have been living off intergenerational wealth for decades without ever working at all.