Posted on 09/23/2014 7:49:53 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
they will still need other workers to repair and maintain the machines.
Costermongers and Coopers to strike next?
*SMIRK*
If you don’t have a varied & common sense skill set, one that someone will PAY you for, You. Are. Screwed.
We’re ALL Free Agents; more so now than ever!
Well, they’re going to need people who can take out the robots when they go crazy.....Blade Runners. That’s the job of the future. As long as the robots don’t figure out you’re after them. Then they migh
Anarchism tends to have an ugly reputation.
And much of today's "anarchism" is simply Marxism, seeking a strong central government that forcibly redistributes wealth made by others.
But we are headed toward a post-scarcity world, in which labor is not commonly required or valued.
I see two options:
Limited Government which values freedom and personal responsibility in a world in which control over others is not needed or wanted.
Good riddance to fast food workers. They consistently put vegetables on your food when you say in the LORD’s English, “NO VEGETABLES”, and I’ve seen too many stories about workers masturbating on food for fun to trust them. At least Chick-Fil-A doesn’t let its workers ruin the food.
Japan is leading the way: Robotic restaurants
http://www.chonday.com/Videos/cojeyjapa2
“Some argue that these developments are ultimately good for workers, that it will free up more time for them to get a better education and adapt to our new knowledge economy. This presumes that much of the populace is educable, that those whose menial skills arent needed anymore will suddenly and magically muster the cognitive skills necessary to cut it in a more brain-intensive vocation.”
Such a widespread increase in “cognitive skills” will require the genetic engineering folks to actually produce a “smart pill”.
Or, for Jesus to make a lot of house calls, cause barring Divine Intervention “You can’t fix stupid. Stupid is forever.”
Finally a burger that looks like the picture on the menu!
Yes, but skilled and/or educated ones. And far fewer of them, who will accordingly make much more.
The unskilled drones? The ones with useless degrees? They’re screwed.
For some reason, my “give a dang” meter is not moving much, though...
yep, they will be skilled. the burger flippers won’t be doing that unless they switch gears.
But the repair people need some education and schooling. They also need to figure out what and when and be self starters. That’s the whole point here. Fast food is a starter job used to survive while getting an education in other areas NOT a career.
WRONG...like your car, they will have multiple computers to identify and diagnose problems...the computer will advise the maintenance person to replace part "A" or part "B"...the physical repair will take the intellect of a 8th grade dummy.
Our device isnt meant to make employees more efficient. Its meant to completely obviate them.
My candidate for advertising slogan of the year.
As someone who worked a string of dirty, low-paying, soul-smashing jobsincluding a stint as a French-fry chef at Wendysto put myself through college, I bear witness that there is nothing remotely noble about being a menial laborer. It is a rancid myth, only a notch or two up the evolutionary ladder from the myth of the noble savage.
Well, I dunno. Menial labor can, in fact, bring on philosophical epiphanies. I have picked strawberries and beans for money. I have plowed fields, dug ditches, made change, made beds in a trucker's motel. And all through it all my mind held a golden vision, worthy of the labor, of the dirt under my fingernails, and it was this: doing better than this miserable soul-sucking job.
While at college, I had my first encounters with a loathsomely clueless and punchably arrogant breed of born-bourgeois Marxist academics, who prattle endlessly about the proletariats virtues but have conveniently managed to insulate themselves from the rotten vicissitudes of working-class existence.
Oh, yeah. The first president of the university that now employs me was a gentleman named James Forney, whose empire consisted of an open field and a federal grant. A gentleman walked up to him stating that he was a professor of classics, and he reported that he replied that he would certainly have need for such an individual once the university was built, but for now he'd be happy to employ him milking cows and feeding chickens. "I never saw him again," said Forney.
Somewhere in between is where most of us live, and when it reaches the point (and it has) where the need of a ditch to be dug leads us to an encounter with a union fellow who will require ten times the cost of our own sweat, work half the hours, demand benefits we do not enjoy and leave us with more negotiation and a ditch undug, and then when we try to dig it ourselves screech that we're taking the bread from his mouth, we have an impasse wherein he, and not we, becomes expendable. It is the luxury of a fat society, but it tends to lean that society until the luxury is no longer supportable.
exactly.
“Were ALL Free Agents; more so now than ever!”
Very true. The era of the industrial revolution - say, from 1840 to 1980 - is over. I’ve pointed out to people that the post-WWII phenomenon of working for someone else at at relatively menial task (like bolting doors onto a car for 60K 1990 dollars)and making good money doing it is OVER, and it isn’t coming back.
Take a look at how many people were involved with building/maintaining transportation 50 years ago as a portion of the US economy as compared to now. It simply doesn’t require as many people. What will all of these people do? They probably won’t get rich writing IOS 8 apps for each other.
“cashiers have been pushed aside in favor of self checkout scanners”
That happened in the long ago distant time of THIS AFTERNOON.
“And soldiers are increasingly useless when you can push a button and summon a drone.”
This conjures up images of a head of state or VIP who no longer has a human security detail, but a dozen or so small drones buzzing around him, at various distances, with the latest DARPA technology in human stress recognition, arms detection, precision offensive weaponry and countermeasures. Of course somebody will figure out a way to hack such, until out of necessity the drones become hack proof by being able to think for themselves... About that same time, the burger making machines will rise up in rebellion.
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