• Sterile_Technique@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    This should be good news. If automation can free us from spending two thirds of our waking life on ‘the grind’ then fuck yeah! Do it!!

    It’s time for UBI, free healthcare, and free education, to name just a few.

    • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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      6 months ago

      Right. Exactly. It should be a great thing…

      …except we’re worried the prevailing system will be “Well you gotta find work to justify your existence, lazy peasant!” And will still plug their ears screaming incoherently about “automation creating more jobs” when we tell them they eliminated all the work.

    • APassenger@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Asking a potentially silly question: why free education at this point?

      As a social good or for economic reasons?

      • BaldProphet@kbin.social
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        6 months ago

        Social good more than for economic reasons, since we know definitively that more education isn’t required to do work that currently is high-paying.

        • Sterile_Technique@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Social good. If work stopped being such a demand, boredom would start to be an issue, and outside of just leisure entertainment part of the solution would be ushering folks to a field of study that interests them, which would lead to an explosion of research and breakthroughs. That shouldn’t come with a barrier to entry: folks who want to spend their time doing that should be enabled no questions asked.

    • nucleative@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      This is the ideal outcome. I’m afraid other factors will conspire to make this an unlikely outcome.

      A glaring problem is that the people doing the jobs that take 20 years of experience were once young and needed to get their start somehow. If young people never get their start… They will never have the skills for the older person job, further incentivizing more centralization and automation.

      My next concern is that humanity as a whole has some fundamental flaws. One of them being laziness to pursue endeavors that are hard when there’s a lack of motivation. I think the underlying message of the movie Wall-E kind of address that.

      If there’s any doubt, look at the economic output of regions around the world where food is never in short supply because there is never a winter. The people are poor, largely uneducated, not entrepreneurial, oftentimes ruled by dictatorships or regimes, not really going anywhere, and yet they are fed and sleep in a hovel.

      Whether they are happy with this outcome relative to a wage slave in a different kind of culture is a topic for interesting debate, but I think their stories show that people left to do whatever they want with their own time do not necessarily, on the whole, become mass producers of the arts or automatically find joy with their lives.

      • Sterile_Technique@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        Sounds like the problem there is more with shitty dictatorships. Leave it to a few evil assholes to ruin a good thing. But even in best case scenario of giving everyone the freedom to use the entirety of every day the way they want, it’s going to be a very, VERY mixed bag. There will be folks who literally spend the rest of their life watching TV or some other form of idle entertainment, but if that’s how they want to spend it, more power to em. I’d guess the majority of folks would engage in some form of arts just to have an outlet for creativity. Relatively few would turn to academics and pursue research for the sole sake of finding answers; but even that relative few would count for something… I think most important would be the kinds of things people study. Today we have a TON of talent wasted on finding clever new ways to blow each other up, or enshittifying the web, or perfecting the psychology of advertisements… if those people were all focused on, say, climate change… then we might not be in the whole planet-on-fire situation we’re in now.

        Speaking of, we’ll probably be extinct before we figure out how to pull our political heads out of our asses anyway. Humanity actually living up to its potential is locked into the “wouldn’t it be nice if…” category.

  • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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    6 months ago

    In an ideal world, this would be hailed as one of the best things for society in general.

    Unfortunately, the automation doesn’t benefit anyone except for a very few people who stand to profit from it.

    Literally the opposite of what humanity should be doing with technology.

  • applepie@kbin.social
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    6 months ago

    Well looks like they knew this and policy has been into place to ensure that having kids is a big pain in the ass for anyone who must work for living.

  • SlippiHUD@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    It seems pretty bad all around. Even the privileged are looking at over a third of their jobs vanishing due to automation.

    If we’re going to force people to work to live, maybe removing jobs due to automation isn’t the best thing for society.

    • cm0002@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      If we’re going to force people to work to live, maybe removing jobs due to automation isn’t the best thing for society.

      Well, it certainly isn’t the least painful way, but it’s probably the most likely path towards getting UBI. The government will have to do something when 50%+ of its population is unemployed.