I'm not sure I've ever heard that phrase. Do you mind explaining what you mean? (Just to be clear, I'm not trying to be combative. I just have no idea how to read that)
In simple terms, the failure to do something absolutely perfectly shouldn't stop you from doing something that will still be better than the status quo.
And that's the million dollar question. I'm not arguing the perfect should be the enemy of the good. I'm questioning how much "good" I get by aligning myself with a fundamentally bad dude. Biden's played this bait-and-switch game before, and there's a real reason to believe 2025 Joe Biden won't be willing or able to deliver on his 5% rent cap promise. In exchange, what is he asking you to give up?
An hour of your life in line to vote on election day? A small recurring donation to his campaign? A week block-walking your neighborhood to canvas for him? Three months volunteering to work for his reelection campaign?
Presidential elections aren't cheap. I have to wonder what would happen if all the money and manpower pouring into Biden's coffers was simply directed towards Habitat For Humanity instead. Would we get more bang for our bucks?
Dawg, I'm not even the OP. I was just explaining an idiom, and you expect me to answer a humanist philosophical question as if I'm the greatest thinker of our generation 😭
I can't help you decide what extent you're willing to compromise to vote Biden/democrats. I can't even vote in the US.
"Don't make perfect the enemy of good" essentially says that it's better to do what you can in the short term to reduce harm or make positive change than to wait for the perfect solution and do nothing in the meantime. The idea is that the good is still going to help some people while we wait for the perfect solution to the problem- which, crucially, may never come, or come too late for a whole bunch of people.
One example would be letting a parent having their kid eat fast food instead of a perfectly healthy diet because their parents live in a food desert; not ideal, but it'll keep the kid fed and alive.
While making rent cheaper for existing tenants, capping rent increases actually makes it harder for new tenants to find affordable apartments because it entrenches people in existing living situations (see: New York).
Wanna actually make stuff cheaper? Raise taxes on the wealthy. Wealthy people buy and build big residences, pricing out people who want small ones.
What BS. This is like arguing that "trickle down economics" is good because money eventually trickles down to us plebs. We're in a sinking boat filled with holes and you're trying to argue that we should be happy that 1 of 1000 holes got patched up even though there isn't time to patch the other 999 holes before the ship sinks because the crew would rather sit on their ass and drink martinis.
No this is like y'all getting mad at someone working on patching a hole because he's not simultaneously patching every hole in the exact same instance. All why you sit there and don't work on anything. Get a mallet get some wood get to work or shut up.
Cheap vodka comes in plastic bottles and landlords are faceless corporate entities on the other side of the country (if they're in the country at all). So my ability to help is limited.
Interesting. We all have the same feeling about you. The sad part is that you might actually know something. Maybe you could say something constructive, if only you cared to do so.
You could have made an argument about how aiming for perfection is a bad strategy here. But you didn't, so let me show how you're wrong. The proposed solution doesn't address the underlying problem, and it adds complexity. Rent can only go up by 5%, sure, but what happens if you sell the property you move into it or other exceptional circumstances happen? Then you can raise the price. Or perhaps you rent it through Airbnb, so the rules don't apply either. It doesn't really matter what the special cases are, because finance folk love complicated solutions. They're always going to find ways to game the system at our expense.
But let's suppose the 5% solution is somehow good. If it's good for rent then it should be good for other things too, right? You can't let electricity or gas prices go up faster, or people won't be able to heat their homes. You can't let food prices go up faster, or people won't be able to eat. Oh, and you certainly need minimum wage to be going up 5%, for any of that to make sense.
So if we consider all of that, and we find the aforementioned proposal slightly lacking, maybe it's not because we're seeking perfection. Maybe it's because you have no idea what problems we are trying to solve.
Lol it's like you summoned the ancient spirit of not understanding incremental improvement, who then wrote a short essay to explain to you just how much they don't understand the concept.
I also stand corrected. I thought you might actually know something. But then you double down with a witty empty response: two sentences with zero information. What good is that? Grandstanding is boring and pointless.
And then you want to trash talk my username? Jesus. Have fun with that.
Some people are here to learn, some people are here to teach, some people are here to share, some people are here to build community. You're not doing any of those things. Meh.