• Who is responsible for providing for people who choose not to contribute?

    I’m not working away all day when I could be persuing a hobby and still getting paid just so someone else can persue a hobby and get paid

    • iByteABit [he/him]
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      42 years ago

      I’m not talking about luxuries or even a comfortable life, I just think that everyone should have enough to live under a roof and have enough to eat healthy every day.

      • @V4ty6BybVXjr@lemm.ee
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        32 years ago

        That’s a good goal. But it’s also fair to expect people to pay their own way.

        Arguably an ‘elite athlete’ is just an extreme hobbyist. And again, a hobby is not a job. If you can get someone to pay you for it, bully for you, but i personally don’t want my taxes paying for some randomer to run harder/better/faster/stronger than some other randomer.

        Give me bike lanes!

        • @Jumuta@sh.itjust.works
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          32 years ago

          bike lanes should be made for normal people too, I’m not a cyclist but I would prefer cycling over sitting in a gas fume filled metal can that’s stuck in traffic

          • @V4ty6BybVXjr@lemm.ee
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            22 years ago

            A good bike lane is a real joy and normally a huge asset to its population. Here’s hoping for more, wherever you are, friend.

    • @root@aussie.zone
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      -12 years ago

      I would think being an elite athlete is way beyond just a hobby.

      Running a few laps around the field every day, yes a hobby. Being faster or able to run farther than 95% of the Australian population, that’s way beyond hobby levels.

      • These are activities that only exist for the sake of the participants and are not financially self-sufficient

        They may be super intense hobbies, but if they aren’t jobs or charitable services, they are still hobbies