UBI as enabling the shared deliberation and collective wisdom necessary for societies to govern themselves rationally.
Zera Yacob emphasized that reason is not merely individual but collective—communities deliberate, debate, and develop shared understanding through dialogue. Desperation fragments community reasoning: when people struggle individually for survival, collective deliberation becomes impossible. UBI examined as a community rationality practice asks: what economic structure enables populations to think together? Yacob would recognize that democracies claiming rational self-governance cannot function when citizens lack the security and time for civic participation. Poverty drains cognitive and temporal resources needed for the deliberation democracy requires. Universal Basic Income becomes infrastructure for collective reasoning—it frees people to attend town halls, study policy, engage in community projects, and participate in decisions affecting their lives. This is not sentimental; it is pragmatic. Societies making rational policy require citizens capable of focused attention on complex issues. Yacob's tradition reveals UBI as fundamentally political: enabling the conditions for actual democracy rather than merely formal voting. When basic security is assured, communities can reason together about distribution, priorities, and shared good. Without UBI, governance remains top-down management of desperate populations unable to participate meaningfully in their own governance.
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