This last week marks the start of November. For most of us in the United States, this heralds nothing more than Trick-or-Treating, the end of Daylight Savings Time and the impending doom that is Thanksgiving with its aggressive day-after shopping blitzkrieg.
However, for a few thousand of us, in the US and beyond, it also starts the annual confrontation with self-motivation, internal demons and writer's block known as National Novel Writing Month. NaNoWriMo for short. The goal is to write 50,000 words in one month. 1,667 words a day.
I have entered a few times and completed it once (Purity, an attempted mash up of "The Last Unicorn" with "Game of Thrones"). Then I realized that 50,000 words, as many as that is, does not automatically equal a completed work of art. I did not have an ending, merely a collection of scenes, some of which might be worth keeping, all of which would need to be extensively rewritten if they were ever going to be worth anything. It now sits on my Google Drive and mocks me when I open that folder. So I don't open that folder.
This year, I've done more pre-planning and am starting by writing the climax and then working backwards. I'm not sure if this is any better than working in a more linear fashion, but it can't be worse. You can track my progress, if you care, here.
Aside from the I'm-writing-this-and-this-other-thing-so-you-should-be-interested-in-both, there is more connecting this blog to my nascent novel. Because of all my rambling thoughts on Universal Basic Income, Blockchain, Cryptocurrencies and Smart IDs, I've decided to set the novel in a world where all of those things are ubiquitous parts of the landscape. I plan on using this post, and all of the rest through the month of November, to build this world in a fast-finger stream of consciousness.
Showing posts with label Universal Basic Income. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Universal Basic Income. Show all posts
Monday, November 6, 2017
Monday, August 21, 2017
Virgin Money
Over the past week or so, there has been an increase in interest in Universal Basic Income (UBI). A couple more of the tech elite have added their voices to those of Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg in support of this Utopian economic concept: Stewart Butterfield, founder of Slack, and Richard Branson, founder of all things Virgin.
The two of them are coming at the concept from slightly different bents. Mr. Butterfield sees it as a way to help those hurt by localized market inflation, similar to the housing market in Silicon Valley where high tech salaries have driven home prices out of reach of all of the ancillary jobs that those technocrats take for granted. It doesn't matter how well sourced your latte's beans are if you don't have a barista available to prepare it.
Mr. Branson is looking at it from a bit more humanitarian perspective, having met with groups working in Finland to understand how that countries limited UBI program is working. In a blog post, he states:
The two of them are coming at the concept from slightly different bents. Mr. Butterfield sees it as a way to help those hurt by localized market inflation, similar to the housing market in Silicon Valley where high tech salaries have driven home prices out of reach of all of the ancillary jobs that those technocrats take for granted. It doesn't matter how well sourced your latte's beans are if you don't have a barista available to prepare it.
Mr. Branson is looking at it from a bit more humanitarian perspective, having met with groups working in Finland to understand how that countries limited UBI program is working. In a blog post, he states:
"In the modern world, everybody should have the opportunity to work and to thrive. Most countries can afford to make sure that everybody has their basic needs covered. One idea that could help make this a reality is a universal basic income. This concept should be further explored to see how it can work practically."This is slightly different than both Musk and Zuckerberg who are more concerned with the fallout from workplace automation and how we all can afford basic necessities if we don't have jobs.
Labels:
economy,
Elon Musk,
Richard Branson,
UBI,
Universal Basic Income
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