Yearly Archives: 2019

UN CORRECT NY Podcast Interviews Diane

UN CORRECT NY Podcast Interviews Diane about Universal Basic Income after the March in New York on October 26th 2019. Basic Income March co-founder Diane Pagen stops by to discuss the Universal Basic Income movement, the Basic Income March on Oct 26th, and her history as a social worker advocating for guaranteed income.

By |2020-09-22T03:48:49-04:00November 30th, 2019|Featured, Universal Basic Income|0 Comments

Basic Income March, 2019

On October 26, 2019, people from across the region and even from other states who want a national UBI marched from Convent Avenue Baptist Church in Upper Manhattan to Roberto Clemente Plaza in Mott Haven, The Bronx. Veterans of the Universal Basic Income Movement as well ask people new to the movement turned out for an unconditional, consistent income transfer for every adult over 18, sufficient to meet basic human needs. Check out the highlights and sign up for the Income Movement at www.basicincomemarch.com

The 18th Annual North American Basic Income Guarantee Congress

The 18th Annual North American Basic Income Guarantee Congress June 15 @ 8:30 AM - June 16 @ 7:30 PM Silberman School of Social Work at Hunter College 2180 3rd Avenue New York, NY 10035 United States Click here to register

By |2020-09-22T03:47:19-04:00May 20th, 2019|Featured, Universal Basic Income|0 Comments

Diane Pagen joins the panel @ Income Systems: A Discussion

Basic income is a hot topic this year at New York's blockchain week. Join the discussion this evening to learn about four different OpenUBI projects: two cryptocurrencies (Manna and GoodDollar), an independent digital currency (Project Greshm), and a Sybil-resistant decentralized identity system (BrightID). We will kick off at 6:00pm with an introduction to Universal Basic [...]

By |2019-12-02T18:39:22-05:00May 15th, 2019|Universal Basic Income|0 Comments

Andrew Yang at Washington Square Park, NYC May 14th

Today, in 2019, we know the truth: automation is shredding swaths of human jobs, including at our drug stores, our clothing stores, and our banks.

National Priorities?

Is it lost on anyone that in a city where we say we want to end inequality, that all the kids who sell candy on the train are black, while almost none of the 895 kids who got into Stuyvesant High School this year were black? That's really, really bad.

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