Destructionator XIII wrote:Broomstick wrote:A certain minimum of economic success is required for survival needs, and that is certainly connected to human happiness. In other words, poverty sucks. It's not until your base needs are comfortably met that "total income" starts to have less relevance to "total happiness".
This minimum doesn't need to be very high for a lot of people. My family makes about $15,000 a year for all of us (which doesn't really include everything; we also get lots of subsidized things), and I'm actually quite happy with it; I have close to no desire to have anything more than what I have now.
Gee, how nice for you.
My Other Half's base medical expenses - that is, the medications and tests that keep him alive and functioning, as well as the necessary daily supplies to manage his various problems, costs $6,000 per year. That would leave only $9k a year for everything else.
My mother costs about (if I recall) 10-12k a year just to keep alive. That would leave her and dad 3k a year for everything else.
From outside my family, a person with celiac disease will require a more expensive diet to remain healthy than a person without the disorder.
See, the problem is not everyone has the same base needs.
I've very convinced that one of the best things that could happen to America is if everyone got about that much money annually from the government just for being here.
Who would pay for it? Where would the money come from?
This would let them work for anything else they want while knowing their basic expenses are always taken care of (assuming they don't blow the money in some stupid way).
Ah, the Star Trek universe - but who defines "some stupid way"?