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If you are desperately looking for lifeguards but need swimming instructors, you will hardly find one.
The “Museum of Europe” now even sends greetings from Italian beaches; however, they have brought this misery on themselves by wanting to see lifeguards or at least lifeguards every 600 metres instead of every 150 metres.
The European dilemma can clearly show us this: Europeans want to have everything, as quickly as possible, but without doing anything themselves.
In keeping with this, today’s lecture by young students who wanted to abolish the market economy altogether and instead create a guaranteed income for everyone living in Europe. basic income The only question they failed to answer was where the money would come from.
All of this will probably be paid for by the lifeguards who will be forced to work in the future so that people living in Europe can relax on the beach without any stress.
That would certainly be a good task for the German army — if only they had enough soldiers. But they could also be conscripted.
But if everyone is forced to work, who will be left on the beaches? And what will all those forced to work do with their unconditional basic income?
Rather than answering these questions, we would rather continue looking for lifeguards, even if we need lifeguards more. In any case, we now know that our economic system is to blame.
In my humble opinion, it could be something completely different.