Happy birthday Sir Terry Pratchett.
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Happy birthday Sir Terry Pratchett. The more the world gets more cruel and unfair, the more I miss him.
Plus the Vimes boots theory remains the greatest piece of economics ever written.

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Happy birthday Sir Terry Pratchett. The more the world gets more cruel and unfair, the more I miss him.
Plus the Vimes boots theory remains the greatest piece of economics ever written.

Thanks for the boot theory quote!
I've been looking on it for a while now, but couldn't find it on the usual quote pages.
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Happy birthday Sir Terry Pratchett. The more the world gets more cruel and unfair, the more I miss him.
Plus the Vimes boots theory remains the greatest piece of economics ever written.

@derbadian @count_01 He was so clear-eyed about human failings, and yet so humane.
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Happy birthday Sir Terry Pratchett. The more the world gets more cruel and unfair, the more I miss him.
Plus the Vimes boots theory remains the greatest piece of economics ever written.

@derbadian
Being poor is very expensive! -
R relay@relay.mycrowd.ca shared this topic
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Thanks for the boot theory quote!
I've been looking on it for a while now, but couldn't find it on the usual quote pages.
-
Happy birthday Sir Terry Pratchett. The more the world gets more cruel and unfair, the more I miss him.
Plus the Vimes boots theory remains the greatest piece of economics ever written.

@derbadian This is very true logic, unfortunately

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Happy birthday Sir Terry Pratchett. The more the world gets more cruel and unfair, the more I miss him.
Plus the Vimes boots theory remains the greatest piece of economics ever written.

@derbadian
May his name be forever remembered.
We've just finished reading "Lords and Ladies" to the children a. because it is great fun and b. to counterbalance the adoration for elves caused by a Lord of the Rings marathon at our local cinema (which was great fun as well). -
Happy birthday Sir Terry Pratchett. The more the world gets more cruel and unfair, the more I miss him.
Plus the Vimes boots theory remains the greatest piece of economics ever written.

@derbadian If one is able to extrapolate this to "being able to spend more can save you money in the long run" instead of "expensive products are better value" then its a useful idea.
Being able to buy property saves you rent. Being able to pay fancy healthcare potentially saves you from suffering&paying more from getting really sick.
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Happy birthday Sir Terry Pratchett. The more the world gets more cruel and unfair, the more I miss him.
Plus the Vimes boots theory remains the greatest piece of economics ever written.

@derbadian aka "being poor is expensive."
Even if you play your bad hand really well and you save up for the better boots and then use the saved money to save up for the better gloves and then use the saved money to save up for the better coat, and after years you have all the better stuff, meanwhile some other guy had all of it from the get-go, and now he has the ultra-better stuff.
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Happy birthday Sir Terry Pratchett. The more the world gets more cruel and unfair, the more I miss him.
Plus the Vimes boots theory remains the greatest piece of economics ever written.

@derbadian somebody wrote a couple of decades ago that middle-class people were fucked because they'd become convinced they were spending money on "investments" when they were actually just expenses. Houses. Cars. Babies. Furniture.
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Happy birthday Sir Terry Pratchett. The more the world gets more cruel and unfair, the more I miss him.
Plus the Vimes boots theory remains the greatest piece of economics ever written.

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Happy birthday Sir Terry Pratchett. The more the world gets more cruel and unfair, the more I miss him.
Plus the Vimes boots theory remains the greatest piece of economics ever written.

@derbadian things are pretty much this in the 21st century but with investment and tax efficiency.
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Happy birthday Sir Terry Pratchett. The more the world gets more cruel and unfair, the more I miss him.
Plus the Vimes boots theory remains the greatest piece of economics ever written.

@derbadian I use this anecdote to explain systemic poverty to people all the time. Terry Pratchett was the best. RIP.
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Happy birthday Sir Terry Pratchett. The more the world gets more cruel and unfair, the more I miss him.
Plus the Vimes boots theory remains the greatest piece of economics ever written.

@derbadian poor def have higher COL for necessities. like a trap
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Happy birthday Sir Terry Pratchett. The more the world gets more cruel and unfair, the more I miss him.
Plus the Vimes boots theory remains the greatest piece of economics ever written.

@derbadian This theory is brilliant!
I have a corollary to this theory- people who can afford all the bells and whistles of a product actually don’t use those products anyway, because they can literally get other people to get their things done, so the whole thing is moot. Tiered product options are just scams by capitalism
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@derbadian
May his name be forever remembered.
We've just finished reading "Lords and Ladies" to the children a. because it is great fun and b. to counterbalance the adoration for elves caused by a Lord of the Rings marathon at our local cinema (which was great fun as well).It was reading Lords and Ladies many years ago that first made me question how much elf-lore in mythology and fantasy is just propaganda...
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It was reading Lords and Ladies many years ago that first made me question how much elf-lore in mythology and fantasy is just propaganda...
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Happy birthday Sir Terry Pratchett. The more the world gets more cruel and unfair, the more I miss him.
Plus the Vimes boots theory remains the greatest piece of economics ever written.

I read this as the bourgeois being better off than the poor for this reason; a moderate stake lets you live like that.
The rich buy stupidly overpriced boots to gatekeep, it's not the same.
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I read this as the bourgeois being better off than the poor for this reason; a moderate stake lets you live like that.
The rich buy stupidly overpriced boots to gatekeep, it's not the same.
@eestileib Once the author has written something and published it, it's up to the reader what it means. There's no right or wrong.
To me there's a lot going on, being poor is expensive, making (and keeping) money when you're rich is easy, etc.
Vimes likes the shitty boots, they let him feel the cobbles of the city under his feet in a way that the rich will never feel. But his feet are still wet.
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Happy birthday Sir Terry Pratchett. The more the world gets more cruel and unfair, the more I miss him.
Plus the Vimes boots theory remains the greatest piece of economics ever written.

