It's like there are certain privately based models for "universal basic income." You invest into a system, and contribute goods, services and time to it, and the collective benefit is that you get back a small stipend... and it's somewhat of a meritocracy, too.
But again, it's "something for something," not "something for nothing."
Yes!
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Yes, indeed.
It's like there are certain privately based models for "universal basic income." You invest into a system, and contribute goods, services and time to it, and the collective benefit is that you get back a small stipend... and it's somewhat of a meritocracy, too.
But again, it's "something for something," not "something for nothing."