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tv   The Stream  Al Jazeera  August 14, 2023 11:30am-12:01pm AST

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dollar play put in dogs. this isn't the 1st media shala. i've been careful, but it is the 1st time i've seen so many stalls. so i mean visibility is really great and literally every couple of minutes a stall falls big or small even longer. it's really impressive to see if you haven't seen it yet. you can still get up and settled in for a free celeste, he'll show until at least the end of august. mike level will do 0. the, this is alpha 0 here, the top stories news years military is said, it has enough evidence to prosecute ousted president mohammed by zoom for high treason, magenta statement, detail to multiple charges against the zoom, who was arrested last month was never mind media. i really assist you lose the government of needs. you have to date, gather the necessary evidence to prosecutor before the confident national and international authorities to the ousted president and his local and for an
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accomplice as a high treason and undermining the internal and external security of nisha. following his exchanges with the national was a 4 and a heads of state and heads of international organizations. on g. earlier, a visiting nigerian delegation said that these years coo leaders were open to direct talks with legal was the delegation met the military rulers in the capital, naomi on sunday, to facilitate dialogue with the regional group, which has not ruled out military action. people in the hawaiian island, tomorrow we are searching for relatives and emergency shelters after devastating wildfires. so far, 93 people are confirmed dead but more than a 1000 are missing and there are fears to the death toll could rise significantly. thousands of lost their homes and livelihoods the argentine as far right presidential candidates appears to have upset the odds in the primary elections with about 90 percent of val, it's counted so far, heavier millay has more than 30 percent of the votes,
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which is much higher than expected at least one person has been killed and 7 injured in an attack on a prominent sheer shrine and a rod state media say that the gunman has been arrested. the same site and shares was targeted in october when 13 people were shot dead. at least 3 people have been injured in a russian attack on the black sea port of a desa and ukraine. fires broke out that a hyper market and a dormitory from debris of missiles and drones that ukraine said had shot down a desk that has come into regular attacks since rush of pulled out of the un brokered black c grain deal. moscow said earlier that it was targeting naval jerome production facilities. those are the headlines on the als a 0 up next. the stream state you getting close to the people most affected by those in power is often dangerous, but it's absolutely vital the stories to control we pushed as far forward as we can
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to the front line. now the smells upset, power. a lot of the stories that we cover a highly complex, so it's very important that we make them as understandable as we can do as many people as possible no matter how much they know about a given chrisy. so issue as always is there a correspondence? that's what we strive to do of the hey, walk in the stream. i'm josh rushing money in your pocket. no strings attached. sounds too good to be true, right? but supporters of universal basic income say providing unconditional payments to citizens would help with millions out of poverty and that uncertainty over the future jobs. so today we're looking at initiatives, they've been trials around the world. we want to ask a basic income programs. well, if they're ready for a larger audience,
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joining us today from new york is guy standing, his co president of the basic income earth network and the author of the pro, carry at the new dangerous class. seems so cause a documentary filmmaker who's been on free money examines the impact of a basic and come program on people that rule. kenya, he's and i robi, and eleanor o done of that. as an artist receiving funds through ireland recently launched basic income for the arts initiative. she's on iceland, east coast, and hey, well more see that the stable that you, if you're watching this on youtube, get me your questions through the box over there. we've got a live producer waiting to get their questions to me so i can get them to the people on the panel and you know, we can do this thing together, right? so joining me on this are a guy i want to begin with, you the new book, the precarious. what is the precarious tell us about this dangerous class as well. i actually, my new book is about how to pay for the basic income, but the carrier does go into for additions and just been trying to stay within 24
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languages. and basically the pro carry up is the big mass class of the well today. and it consists of millions of millions of people who are facing chronic instability in their lives on the stable label though, and bought a tile incomes and a chronic gate. and that one mistake one accident. well then the illness and they're out homeless or they think that so that people facing extreme precariousness and then losing the rights of citizenship, losing social bags, but losing cultural rags, but losing because they'll make rights on fundamentally the most important thing for this conversation is that they feel like stop pick ups. a big deal is this. they have to us the fables from landlords from employers, from relatives or bureaucrats, dealing with them. and this, this is a terrible existence show way of living in which millions of people are getting
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very angry. the less and you k to listen to the voice is a popular stick stream is like donald trump. the more progressive educating group are looking for a new politics on these people, a girl into basic income. and it's a very important development because we now have a mass clause, which is really in favor of basic income and the opinion, polls all over the world, showing that. wow, okay. eleanor. so you're an artist, you're at a, you can explain it better than me, but an art uh, retreat or something right there. and in iceland, but before that you were in ireland. and were you able to, i guess, produce art at the same way that you do now before you were chosen for the u. b. i trial there. yeah, so with this funds i am on an artist residency and i sent delay to live in ireland
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. and before i was randomly selected to be a participant in the base can come to the arts and ireland i was working part time to be able to support myself to be for my rent. and then also to support myself as an artist in the studio. and so getting the basic income is like winning the loss, right. you know, it's, it's usually transformed as all ready for by our practice and just for my general life and sense of, of being i think. yeah, but i'm looking at you in that art studio and i'm just thinking like, this seems good for humanity that you can actually dedicate more time in your life to something creative than just trying to survive. and a capitalist economy, it has it been rest your life and that way? oh, yeah, absolutely. i mean, i love what i do and i was always grateful to be able to do it. even if i could only have spent 2 or 3 days a week to do, i guess. but what this means is that i can kind of relax a bit. and i guess something that is quite relevant to being an artist is that you need time to spend in the studio. and just,
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i'm thinking in to kind of not necessarily be productive or to do stuff that doesn't, doesn't tell you look productive and having to basically comp just means that i have this luxury day of time where i can sort of relax and think more about what i'm making so it has really just been phenomenal. yeah, it just speaks to humanity, the sense that we can be more than cods and the machine that's designed purely to make profits. so co who's with us is a film director and he has this movie called free money. i want to share a clip with you, but he follows a number of people in a kenyan, around canyon village could go. could you do that? right? and you followed him for how long. so for 5 years for the trial, is that right? my? yep. my godaddy. i couldn't i, lauren? full of them for 5 years. yeah, fantastic. let's, let's watch this clip together. the
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so it strikes me there so that this is so powerful in their life that they, they attributed to, to god, god has seen those and bosses but really it's, it's more, it's a matter of economic policy. it's a matter of people getting together within the society or an economy and saying, hey, we could approach this a little differently, right? i think it's big through the depth of poverty and the depth in which luck takes you to the turning into space is like religion and all these other faces because the level of declaration and i think the idea and in this case they come with the following um,
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the funding industry leads that the concept of implementation of a u. b. i was to uplift people from extreme poverty. i think it's just kind of levels where you, you just need might need to do, you know, basic to do basic things. you know, food and shelter come and education, there's things that can just shouldn't be a no brainer in terms of if you think about existing as of humanity. however, a lot of good people are put in a space where these are not the systems that exist instructors that exist not beneficial that are not helpful. i think because those structures are not helpful to their lives. the idea of them getting a consistent income every single month is a total gain to, to, to a got to use the pay for it. yeah. tell us, where does all the money come from? he was the meanest. i'm asking you this guy as well. a my,
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my feeling is that we can pay for a basic income of a modest amount quite easily. if you think about it, governments have billions in the case of rich con fees, billions of dollars or whatever it is in subsidies, but mainly go to rich people, tax breaks, and so on. my own countries, i look 400000000000 pounds a year. if you pay the everybody in bodies basic income, you'll be much less than that. but i'm also advocating e co fiscal policies of levies on people who take from the commons. and that includes having a carbon levy. we need a call for larry, but they can only have a common levy if we recycle the income, the gain from the comp and maybe because otherwise it's regressive. in other words, it increases any quality, but we need a common tax. we need a high common tax because we've got to come down on fossil fuels and greenhouse gas
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emissions. we can't go on as we've been doing. so i don't think the affordability is really critical on the i've, i've outlined various ways you can pay for it. and the important thing from our conversation is that to get governments to move in the direction of having a decent basic income for every party. pilots and i've been involved in 6 or 7 pilots altogether ponder, show the net cost is much less than the gross cost. what that means is that because it improves people's health, for example, as its places less stress on the health services. it reduces the cost of providing public health services. so governments gain by saving money the same with education, it improves educational attendance, educational performance,
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and therefore makes it a better investment. so you really shouldn't look at the back of the envelope calculation. you should look at what other net pretends and the dynamics of a moving towards the basic income as we have a new wealth as so can you want to jump in the i yeah, i think the idea of where the basic and come works and not is in many ways irrelevant because it, it kind of comes from, they can a, he's story, this could be need to be thinking of where as a society is like, we have a, i hate for poor people. and it was due for like the idea of that to people need to lead better lives will have the politically better life. because is very complicated. that the issue of time that is something that kind of like things that have to be talked about. things like even with the giving of basic income, it is not exactly a silver bullet because unless you have better health care and that you have the
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best age occasion. and if you have all these amenities that are available free and capable of helping people and making life, you know, ok for people to exist and then we, we kind of end up just going round and round in circles discussing whether it's ok for people to have a certain level of income to support their basic existence. that's kind of a sad reality, i think. and, and check capitalism and the pilots. you're talking about guy. these are experiments that have happened all over the world. no one's really taking this on as a, as a permanent economic policy in illinois. you right now, are they, i don't want to called a lab indicate but you're part of the experiment. and i'm curious, how did a measure in your life the impact that has had on you? yeah, absolutely. um, just to touch back on was um the others were saying that the affordability of that, i mean this is a playlist and our end of 2000 people were getting paid and 17 grand
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a year for 3 years. i think it work cited by 25000000 a year, which is really just a drop in the os. and in terms of, you know, islands, villages, and bush. the benefits are just astronomical. i mean, like how the records the impacts of the basic income in the survey. and it has only been 6 months since we have only had to do the survey once the last few questions about you know, how much time have you been able to spend making, how much time as you've been able to spend researching opportunities. but they also ask you questions like, how much sleep to get to night? like per nice, how many areas to use benz caring after children or like else we relatives or you know, etc. so they really do take into account the, the, the well being of the people who are receiving this basic income. and it's something that was, you know, it didn't just come in to know where it was advocated for. there's the national campaign for the arts and art and which are really pushing for those basic income trials. and i mean, i should point out that it's not a universal piece of income. it's really just a very,
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very small sector of people working in ireland and bus, you know, focusing as well, an artist productivity. and they are both the, i think it's probably the most productive way of looking at what you're not alone here. eleanor in our youtube audience, richard for a says that he's on the saying you b, i program that you're on release. he thinks he is. and he says he knows other artist and that program and they feel so supported guy i. i see that you want to jump in and i'm, i'm, i'm thinking about eleanor getting more sleep at night and wondering who's profiting off of her sleep. so, well, this bill, i mean we, we now have an enormous amount of evidence because there have been over a $150.00 pilots and experiments. the may is scheme and in the united states is a really exciting initiative. 50 may is assigned up to do basic income to experiments. we've done a huge basic income pilot in india with thousands of people would give them
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a basic income when we evaluated it by comparison with people. some of the people who weren't receiving it. and we found improvements in nutrition improvements in health improvements in health care improvements in work. one of the biggest issues that keeps coming up is this claim that if you had a basic income, it would reduce people's work. but i want, i want the listeners to listen very carefully to what i have to say in the next couple of seconds. basic income results in an increase in work this and more productive activities in work and more collaborative, uncooperative phones of what the evidence is overwhelming. and it's very important that we scotch that. but somehow, if you have the basic security, you're going to become indolent on the country, you feel more energized,
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you feel more confident. do you feel more like taking entrepreneurial risks in your domain of life? and you can what care is what it just isn't? county does work in all of the districts, but it's particulars and it's, it's a feminist issue. it increases the amount of time that people can put into care for their loved ones. that commute the, it's a sounds almost 2 years. it'd be true. it sounds so good to be true. so but listen, you mentioned that this does happen in america. i want to bring in one clip and we'll come back to you to your guy. but this clip is from a, a p, and it's looking stockton, california, where the mayor brought it brought a new e b. i've got experiment there, they're checked us out. i'm surprised about this. how many people are struggling? these are people with good jobs, small business owners, teachers, retired people, union members who are struggling, who are working hard,
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doing over and live on top of their jobs, not seeing their kids. nothing. heather, how can i get any of that peace of mind? and right now, my car, i bought a car accident and my car. i told them so i didn't have no car payments and now i have a car payment and that money, i know it's not going to be forever. but it puts me a foot in the door to get a car and also to get the payments paid until the money runs out. so, so much of that seems to be about like our perception of something. and so i'm going back to you here where it's like in capitalism, we blame the poor, and that's a part of the game. it's a part of the system that we need to blame the poor. how do you, how do you get over that mindset? how do you get people over that mindset? i can, it's a sample sound, but you know, i think it, it, it, it, them, in, in,
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not only speaking about this experiment of thinking about what's happening and watching the stories of, of the people who have gone through them. but at the same time and like makes payment that we look for knowing that been challenges on that intended consequences . what in a society based on the fact that the recipients and their experiences are the money then intended consequences were in, in things like say, the sources of the money. and they kind of came, come through, i don't know system. i'm kind of like it's, it's based on the, the past experiences that a lot of people have had in the continent when we don't have funding and, and the, the, the lack of sustainability with that kind of system. it means that it's, it's not sustainable. it's implementation in a space like can yet, because you have to involve governments and this money has to be involved in together in kind of like collectively in the level and how the money kind of comes through to the people. under the same time. it can be implemented in black ones,
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but then you don't have connected to another spot because you own the most i did that creating class class struck to that one that makes it so in, in, in the ad, unintended consequences in implementation of the experiment. and that's why we should stop experimenting and implementing programs. we should just implemented programs because like guy said, as we're open override with experiments, i think we're done with experimenting. why the hell are we still experimenting? what are we experimenting for? it's a perception issue at this point rather than i think so as a system because you may notice that it is political now me, josh. i think we have enough evidence from around a well different types of countries. we can afford it because we can afford all sorts of schemes, even as we saw it during the cove it pandemic. when government sudden they were able to flush put money into companies and then the 0 interest rates and
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photos, games, billions of dollars in new york that was, was spent. then they suddenly they have that money. it's not a question and not being able to afford it. we have to be fiscally responsible, but it's affordable. i think we have to go back to why we want a basic inc. and the fundamental reason lane is ethical. it's festival, a matter of common justice. the income on wells of every single one of us, including all of us in this program, is far more to do with the efforts and the treatments of all proceeding generations than anything we do ourselves. but we don't know whose parents, grandparents and previous generations contributed more or less. so, you know, sense, you could see a basic king coming as a sort of common dividend on the collect to. well, now is very interested. the pope during toby came out in favor of
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a basic thing. so 1st time the catholic church has come out, family and faith. and with your religious you can say that gold gave us on equal tons on equal skills, us. and in the sense of basic income is a compensation for those you don't get the out of making a lot of money. but also we realize that basic income gives people basic security. and basic security is a human me. it's a public boat. and if you don't have a basic security, your mental i q goes down the psychologist to show us that. so in the sense giving people basic security is a way of saying you're a citizen, then you come by. but if you'll probably be in secure, it's unfair for us to expect somebody to behave in
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a way we might like. but think ought to behave just as a bar. i'm a basic security is fundamental. and finally, ethically politician, i the speak says they're in favor of freedom, but you call be free if you're chronically. i'm insecure and impoverished ending debt. so can only be if you have access to the material resort so that you can make decisions. hey, i wanna bring a quick video and running out of time and the show, and i, and i want to ship this conversation. there may be a little bit more forward looking for your check this out. we'll discuss it after the
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law, the other music, and that, that's a mass of attack. that's a video that they actually did with a guy. he's got an over 3000000 views. it wasn't the video i wanted you to see the i wanted to bring in this video off a tick tock. check this out. what you were looking at as of as far as most recent out water started take up to 31 minute, which is amazing, but it's an incredible reminder of our 2055. over half of all the current jobs will be replaced by automation in over half of the global population will be unemployed with no real way to generate income. which people use to say with major business and creative renaissance, now we have a secondary artwork. so for hundreds of thousands of dollars using papers and soon to be and also scripts to prevent the economy from completing classic governments are going to have to start handing or you've got everyone that will be enough to cover all basically the needs so okay, shipping to a guy, uh he was saying,
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have to half the jobs by 2050. something are going to be taken away by automation or, or a i, as we look at the changes that are coming in the future. eleanor. i see that that, that struck a chord with you. what, what do you think about that? i mean, i just think it's so hilarious to bring the image generation into the conversation about ours. because, you know, ours has so much more than, you know, selling an image that could hang up on someone's sofa. and what are you in the morning? i'm going to interrupt because we only have a few minutes. this is not about the image generation. it's about a replacing lawyers, maybe some nurses and doctors, like all the things a i that the chat g p t can do better than hearing loss outcome. yeah, i think there's, there's 2 levels in which you can look at the end of a, the composition of, of a i probably abruptly written this on the compensation of the u. b. i. in the last couple of years. however, the 1st challenge of looking at a i, which is using a i in deciding who gets money or not, which is
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a super problematic situation because human beings of a very dynamic and there's something very different about her. so using that technology and i think it's happening and it's already taken place. but at the same time, i think replacing all the changing jobs and determining whether this is the particular problem for us to fight. indeed with poverty, it should not come to that. like i said, you're like, oh my god, i've got a job and because i've got less than a minute left, and sam or a guy, i don't have time to get to go to you. i'm sorry. and no guy wanted to get into a point about one of the things you b, i does is giving everyone money. people are much less likely to be exploited. if they have the money they need to live on. so it can be very empowering and what should have gotten to that point during the show. but man, what an interesting topic. thank you for joining us. that's all the time we have for today. want to take my guess guy. so go on eleanor, and for you, you can always find a stream that al jazeera. com. thank you for watching the
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the, a new generation of young people, a more political gauge than the one that came before. welcome to generation change a global series and attempts to challenge and understand the ideas that mobilize use around the world. in south africa, the women who are at the full friends is a woke generation. we must never, ever get tired of developing resistance passages and the just ignited passions to
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stand up and flight generation chains on algae 0, frank assessments $3000000000.00. is it going to be enough to get, i guess, on the economy back on track? the short answer is no informed opinions for those who are attempting to flee to chat. how dangerous is that? the journey is incredibly difficult for many people to manage to get out, but it's a great cost in depth analysis of the phase headlines. questions really? who controls what goes on an outer space in the future will be governments for won't be big part of the corporations and individual super wealthy cleaners inside story on al jazeera stairs from i'll just say around on the go and meet tonight. i'll just there is only mobile app is that the, this is where we live in from out is there is a mobile app available in your favorites apps to just set for it and type download
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the new app from out to 0 new at using is it the is yours cool. leaders say they have enough evidence to prosecute deposed president mohammed by zoo behind trees. us the 0 then. yeah, it's great to have you with us. this is alice's 0 live from the also coming up a community rallies to take care of its own in the wake of lions buyers that have so far killed 96 people in hawaii. the origin seen as far right takes the lead in the present.

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