I think Maslow’s pyramid of needs would be a good starter. But let’s be more concrete.
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House (60 m2, +20 m2 per extra person in household), with electrification, and which can withstand severe weather events (heatwaves, blizzards, heavy rain and wind, etc.).
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Clean air and environment without fine dust, microplastics, PFAS, asbestos, etc.
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Clean, potable and heatable water available anytime
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Healthy and clean food free from animal suffering made available for all
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Everyday and affordable clothes available for all
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Bodily integrity: only the person themselves can decide over their own body, with the exception of vaccination (because everyone ought to be vaccinated!)
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Labour rights, such as automatic unionisation, workplace democracy and self-governance, no vertical hierarchy (so no CEO, overreaching holdings, trusts, etc). And ideally, a wageless gift economy system based on needs. If not that, then this: any company lacking one of the above/being too big, may never get bailed out.
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Protection of personal property, with private property becoming communal property instead.
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Encouragement of meeting people at sport, hobbies, reading (helps finding friendship)
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Bicycle and public transit infrastructure being widely available.
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Free and high-quality public education available for all
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Same with healthcare. No artificial limit mandating that there be max x amount of doctors or teachers.
astutemural@midwest.social 9 hours ago
The study does, in fact. Or actually, bare minimum living standards:
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Quoting from the article: