Message from @Redxl

Discord ID: 634466678218031104


2019-10-17 18:58:53 UTC  

What do you think will happen to about 80% of the population in a society where all the goods and services are automated?

2019-10-17 18:58:54 UTC  

both due to immigration and dysgenic factors

2019-10-17 18:59:10 UTC  

Literacy rates alone have skyrocketed, but the availability of knowledge now is completely incomparable to the 1900s

2019-10-17 18:59:29 UTC  

What does it matter if we’re all guys on the factory line vs we’re all guys who kinda get how the factory line robot works. If it becomes a mainline skill because now all the unskilled are now supposedly skilled. Where is the value outside the company reducing costs?

2019-10-17 18:59:37 UTC  

Our tools have always been evolving and getting more efficient, and our economy always grows and adapts to those changes

2019-10-17 18:59:39 UTC  

@TheBadfish AKA inflation in the value of education

2019-10-17 19:00:40 UTC  

Everything has a value tied to it, including your abilities.

2019-10-17 19:00:40 UTC  

The value is in the baseline of intelligence of the population. Yes the value of education is inflated but is that a bad thing? Is it really a bad thing that people can get hyper-educated (at least when compared to 100 years ago) with relative ease?

2019-10-17 19:01:04 UTC  

So all your saying is it’s ok if the worker is able to do less and earn less because now he is somewhat smarter at doing it? Oh great.

2019-10-17 19:01:10 UTC  

It's not like there's a ceiling to what the human race's collective knowledge can encompass, there are still countless mysteries and problems to be solved

2019-10-17 19:01:27 UTC  

No and that's a wildly unfair mischaracterization of my argument

2019-10-17 19:01:42 UTC  

@ubermensch There isn't any value. The point of all automation is basically to reduce the need of employees. If the factory floor is operated entirely by robots, then you don't need the same amount of maintenance guys to keep the robots working as you would've needed factory workers in the past.

I think the example of the farmer is a useful one to this proble. One farmer with one tractor and combine harvester can plow the same area of crop fields that required hundreds of farmhands in the past.

2019-10-17 19:01:44 UTC  

There was a time, flipping burgers could see you survive on your own and even save up for college, now- you'll be lucky to survive with 3 roommates.

2019-10-17 19:02:45 UTC  

If you allow corporatized automation (which is in fact designed to do that) then yes, but what I'm saying is that if you're just going to say "automation bad, kill automation" then you're going to get zoomed past by the corporations _who want to abuse you_ and they will control it.

2019-10-17 19:02:59 UTC  

Just like luddites and amish got zipped past a

2019-10-17 19:03:01 UTC  

There was a time when a single burger flipping bread winner could support an entire family and household. But then feminism happened 😉

2019-10-17 19:03:17 UTC  

Yeah, feminism really fucked a lot of things also

2019-10-17 19:03:39 UTC  

That's kind of a myth though, you could have supported a family for that wage but you'd have massively struggled unless you lived in a place that already had extremely low cost of living

2019-10-17 19:03:59 UTC  

People act like there wasn't a giant poor working class before feminism

2019-10-17 19:03:59 UTC  

Ya, but my example isn't a myth

2019-10-17 19:04:03 UTC  

family, sure...

2019-10-17 19:04:04 UTC  

people had far less stuff in the past too

2019-10-17 19:04:16 UTC  

less valuable stuff anyway

2019-10-17 19:04:31 UTC  

Well, today you can barely function without computer/internet/cellphone.

2019-10-17 19:04:32 UTC  

stuff is pretty overrated

2019-10-17 19:04:34 UTC  

That's also a huge factor, the level of consumerism that constitutes an "average" life is massively increased

2019-10-17 19:04:55 UTC  

Cause of free trade but also because companies use slave labor in China.

2019-10-17 19:05:00 UTC  

@TheBadfish I'm not saying that automation is bad. At worst it's morally neutral.

What i'm saying is that corporations already control the development of automation, to serve the ends of the shareholders. They will eventually leave all the labourers behind.

One could propose various ways to curtail this development. Not necessarily by banning or destroying automation altogether.

2019-10-17 19:05:29 UTC  

Yes I understand that, and it's exactly what I'm saying too. We're talking past each other.

2019-10-17 19:05:47 UTC  

But my other point is that we as the laborers and workers need to take more control over the automation shift

2019-10-17 19:05:48 UTC  

Well ya, a gun is neutral until it is used for a mass shooting, like a lot of things.

2019-10-17 19:06:00 UTC  

Thou shalt not make a machine in the likeness of a human mind.

2019-10-17 19:06:25 UTC  

If we simply resist automation we will get left behind. Our only chance is to attempt to wrest control of it.

2019-10-17 19:06:26 UTC  

@TheBadfish So you suggest socialism/communism/workers revolt then?

2019-10-17 19:06:32 UTC  

Lol bruh

2019-10-17 19:06:41 UTC  

Did you really just

2019-10-17 19:06:45 UTC  

no.... not at all

2019-10-17 19:07:00 UTC  

I mean give it time human drones will do the soldiering as opposed to humans. Because ya know a robot doesn’t need to eat.

2019-10-17 19:07:05 UTC  

@TheBadfish I don't mean to be uncharitable here. I'm genuinely curious.

2019-10-17 19:07:36 UTC  

No, because communistic revolt isn't even a valid way to control the automation shift

2019-10-17 19:07:36 UTC  

All I'm saying, is that with all indications, we cannot trust these corporations with mass automation, they already have an established oligarchy and will not hesitate to take this to the next level of dystopian levels.