Why is Riding a Bicycle in the City Turning Into a Culture War - eviltoast
  • secretlyaddictedtolinux@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Most wealthy people get their wealth from the labor of poor people. If poor people have easy lives, and need to work less hard for fun and to enjoy life, then they are less likely to work hard and wealthy people are less likely to stay wealthy.

    I can’t demonstrate a causal link because it would be impossible to design a study really showing that.

    To demonstrate anything, I’d have to get a group of wealthy people and determine which of them don’t want poor being free (and just asking them wouldn’t reveal that).

    Then I’d have to determine which of the wealthy people hate e-bikes by asking them.

    Then I would have to see if there was a correlation.

    If you use Democrat versus Republican as a proxy for the first inquiry, it would be an easier but less approximate estimation.

    In order try to show causation (and it would be a iffy showing), you would have to take wealthy people and measure their views of e-bikes, wait a week, divide them in three, and show them films of poor people. One film would show poor people disliking ebikes and being unhappy. One film would show poor people feeling free after using ebikes and having nicer lives. One would be a film of a a film that showed something as neutral as possible, like a show about how to do math problems. That wouldn’t actually be neutral, so if a budget allowed there would be a fourth group with no tv show at all. Then measure their views of e-bikes again and see if they changed.

    I can’t prove any of this, but the wealthy people shown groups of poor people happy using e-bikes would probably have more negative views of e-bikes after on average because this is a control issue. E-bikes are cool and great for the planet and rich people who don’t like them only have 1 rational reason: wanting to maintain their lifestyle and concern that the lower classes finding more fun may reduce that. (And alcohol is fun and promoted because lower classes who use it a lot are more likely to have less intelligent children who will lack social mobility and can be exploited more easily.)

    So yes, I don’t have a budget or inclination to prove this, but it’s not an impossible thing to prove nor is it irrational.

    • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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      5 months ago

      I don’t have the budget nor inclination to prove that the sky is purple, I’m just going to keep saying it because it makes me feel better about myself.

      • secretlyaddictedtolinux@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        So you’re saying that my position is clearly evidently wrong, just like purple is not the color of the sky and therefore that’s clearly wrong.

        I get it, but the easy lifestyles of the rich come from the suffering of the poor. The poor doing well is always a threat to that lifestyle and it’s naive to think the wealthy don’t often have a deep-seated gut reaction to anything that could threaten that. Even if you think it’s a stretch, it certainly isn’t as evidently wrong as a purple sky.

        • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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          5 months ago

          This just isn’t how wealthy people think though, even if it’s correct.

          They think they became wealthy through hard work and good decisions. They think of themselves as benevolent and generous. They think they’re using their wealth to improve the lives if the have-nots.

          • secretlyaddictedtolinux@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            The wealthy probably don’t think:

            “Uh oh, if the poor have more freedom and are happier, they may not work for such cheap wages collectively and it could affect my lifestyle. I better dislike the thing that makes their life easier.”

            But the wealthy do in fact make choices and respond in gut ways that protect their lifestyles.

            The wealthy often do think of themselves as generous and benevolent, but then they do not structurally change society to make life less oppressive. No one should be opposed to universal health care. No one should support criminalizing homelessness.

            There are also ways to structurally change society to make life easier for the poor that don’t involve Marxism or incentivizing laziness. Classical economic theory and democracy can work together to make change but the poor are misled into voting for idiots because they are manipulated by the rich with religion and wedge issues and other clever tricks. Some of these rich people that deceive the poor with religion may even believe the lies of religion on some level. The logic of the mind of the average rich person may not be internally consistent, but they ultimately protect their interests.

            • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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              5 months ago

              You’re just redefining your position to be a tiny bit less nutty. Your original assertion that “the upper classes do not want the lower classes free on any level” remains preposterous.

              Wealthy people hate e-bikes and e-scooters because they can afford fancy cars and e-scooters cluttering up the sidewalk or zipping through the dog park are a minor inconvenience.

              That really is all there is to it.

              • secretlyaddictedtolinux@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                I am not trying to make my position any less nutty. I assert it is equally as nutty as before, which is to say not very nutty at all.

                It’s more than it being a minor inconvenience. If this were a pass time of the rich, the inconvenience would not be regulated. For instance, hobby sailing or expensive motorcycle riding is annoying and there isn’t constant discussions about how to regulate it to make it harder for people to do those things.

                You’re wrong on this, you don’t get it but you are.

                • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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                  5 months ago

                  Ah yes. The hallmark of enlightened discussion - “you’re just wrong but you don’t know it”.

                  Continue feeling persecuted by wealthy e-bike haters suppressing your freedom for their personal benefit you nutter.

                  • secretlyaddictedtolinux@lemmy.world
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                    5 months ago

                    I don’t own an e-bike or feel persecuted by wealthy people, you presumptuous gas-lighter.

                    You’re also assuming I don’t either have money or have wealth in my family, that I’m some angry lower class Marxist inventing reasons to be angry at the upper classes. You don’t know me or my life or anything about me. Your anti-Marxism and anti-paranoia has left you naive as to the sadism and avarice of humanity.

                    One person who I had a romantic relationship with literally talked to me about how he sold things that harmed poor people but someone was going to do it and the poor were stupid and these things just happen. He made millions doing what he did and was both extremely intelligent and cruel.

                    When slaves used to run off the plantations, slave owners put iron boxes over their heads after. Children used to work long hours in factories. People in China have committed suicide from working so much, because their lives are so miserable. None of these things were or are “needed.” Not all cruelty and sadism has been eliminated. Not wanting the lower classes to be happy or free was part of it and on some level it still is, despite wealthy platitudes about giving and gestures of helping that don’t structurally change things.

                    Rich people are at times sadistic and cruel to poor people, rich people not liking poor people is real. And e-bikes are not simply just frowned upon because they are annoying. You just lack the intelligence to see that classism is part of the equation. This isn’t to say you’re a moron, perhaps you’re intelligent at some things, but you lack the insight to see that a lack of open class warfare doesn’t mean that upper classes have no motivation to sustain their lifestyles and that poor people doing well could be a threat to that. The fact that wealthy giving does lift some people up, and the fact that socialism that doesn’t reward individual effort leads to people being very lazy, doesn’t negate these things.

                    Go gaslight someone else who won’t respond to your tripe.