Even if work sucks, that doesn't mean that having no work will be better. Even the suckyest work place is likely the source of many people's vital social relationships. It's often the very suckyness of work that has bound people together. — Bitter Crank
The chapter goes into detail on these four demands — Moliere
There positive project can be boiled down (and they are the ones who do this outline) to 4 demands:
1. Full automation (meaning, robots do a lot of work)
2. The reduction of the working week
3. The provision of a basic income
4. The diminishment of the work ethic. — Moliere
First, I am a bit put off when someone starts out talking about problems. — swstephe
Second, I'm wary of someone who falls back to hand-waving or vague pronouncements about how there is some technological solution to the problem. Every technology has trade-offs. — swstephe
Third, currently, technology, economy and society are all tightly integrated — swstephe
In capitalist economies, money has become objectified values, so technology is our need/desires objectified. If we ever managed to automate everything, then we would no longer be relevant to the economic equation. Even political spectrum, "conservative" and "liberal" are balance each other, simplifying the negative and positive emotions of the population. — swstephe
Reduction of work week. Well, that is a minor economic tool to fine-tune consumerism and capitalism at the lower levels. Is it even relevant in a "post-capitalist" society? There is an assumption that we will still work and won't like it. In such a big economic and social shift, that assumption may no longer be true. — swstephe
Basic income is nice, but it is another capitalist adjustment, and it has an obligatory part of inflation which keeps invalidating what is considered "basic". So you need to put a bunch of other controls in place, like price fixing for essential assets or forced restriction on what is considered a "need". If you need to do that, then start with that.
But what if there are problems and people do not see those problems? I believe this is why he begins -- because people don't see it as a problem, so they have no reason to look at the solution. So he's making the case, here, for why the rest of his argument should be paid attention to. — Moliere
I don't think it's quite hand-waving. It's not just "well, technology will take care of it" -- but automation has already had a large effect on the economy, and automation is already something which companies are pushing for. Automation is here, and it cuts into the number of jobs that are available (has already cut into jobs that are available). (He goes over this at minute 21 of the video -- still listening, but he starts to cover the topic there) — Moliere
Could you spell this out? I don't know what you're getting at here. — Moliere
Not in a post-capitalist society, but a demand that makes sense right now in our concrete conditions. Is a post-capitalist society even possible? I don't know, but I know that what we have isn't working, and that our relationship to work is a part of that. — Moliere
you spend a lot of time in what is essentially a socialist household — swstephe
If you added up all the positive and negative effects, do you end up with a net positive outcome? — swstephe
If so, was that positive outcome based on some other economic pressure? I have found in other movements, if you get past the problem and focus on the solution, you end up trying to figure out how is it going to pay for itself.
I'm looking at the problem as an engineer. There is a kind of conservation of motion even at economic and social levels. There are liberals because there are conservatives, they balance each other out. Automation has to balance with the opposite of automation, which would probably be alienation and dehumanization. It has happened many times through human history, and there is always some pressure to reclaim what was lost. — swstephe
I took some personal time off to address this kind of question. I realized that not only is post-capitalist society possible, (every society was pre-capitalist at some point), but we spend a minority of our time being capitalists. If you remove the time at work or shopping, you spend a lot of time in what is essentially a socialist household. The "state" provides services, works and nothing depends on real exchange of money. Capitalism is already shrinking. More services and social interchange are becoming less capitalist every year. — swstephe
You're just being dismissive. Do you have a reason why it wouldn't work? — Moliere
Well, first off, my point was that what you envision is some sort of teenager utopia where you reap all the benefits of labor without having to do anything. Simply replace your "full automation" premise with a money tree, a rich parent, a sugar daddy, or someone else's tax dollars and you'll arrive at the same conclusion. You're trying to eliminate the "labor" from the labor force. — Hanover
If someone makes robots that can do everything, obviously someone has to design them, build them, operate them, and maintain them. What this does is actually the opposite of what you want. It rids our need for low level workers and the wealth flows to those more highly skilled workers who can operate the robots. Any effort to redistribute the wealth down to those who've been made obsolete will land us right back where we are today: a disproportionate amount of the wealth will be both created and controlled by a smaller and smaller percentage of the population. — Hanover
That is to say, technology isn't kind to those whose contribution is brute force. Sure, they can lift the boxes of the robots and put them on the floor, but we've got fork lifts that can do that too. — Hanover
Also, I disagree that the household is socialist, or that capitalism is shrinking. — Moliere
The desire to be free isn't a teenage utopia.
Labor isn't something to enshrine from now to forevermore. I rather doubt that robots can entirely replace work, but that was addressed before in previous exchanges with others -- it doesn't need to entirely replace labor in order to have an effect.
Further, the entitled ones in the world we live in now don't even work. Rather, they convince laborers to work for them through coercion. — Moliere
Thanks for outlining the thesis, Moliere. My own response to how things are as I age has been to shift to a perspective which I know is a minority view - the Green, ecological view - which I've concluded is where I am most intellectually content. Out here on a limb :) But I think I spent many years slipping into mainstream thinking while kidding myself that I was persuading people out of the mainstream. — mcdoodle
On this limb the medium-term looks like that economically most countries will have to adjust from fossil-fuel energy to renewable energy, and that there will be considerable conflict over basic resources, including water, with wars including civil wars a likely continuing consequence. Meanwhile a belief in the rightness of inequality of reward seems embedded in Western thinking, more embedded than it was fifty years ago when I was Hanover's teenage dreamer. In that 50-year period class-based unions have weakened considerably, though gender/race-based organisations have grown much stronger. But coalitions of identity-politics-believers seem flimsy to me.
My worry about the agenda proposed is that it doesn't seem to be taking these very considerable issues into account. Automation is energy- and resource-hungry: is it really inevitable that it will grow and grow? I think it will recede when energy costs become too great, or workers begin to demand the right to work, or the powerful begin to demand that the proleteriat works in return for its basic income. (I am a strong advocate of the universal basic income, and don't think it's necessarily a capitalistic adjustment as swsteph does) — mcdoodle
To be frank I think the word 'capitalism' has become too broad a word to be as useful as it was. It disguises tremendous differences in institutional arrangements because they all superficially share certain features.
I realise these are rather stray observations. Broadly the ideas feel to me like an extrapolation from what seem like existing trends which I doubt will continue (nor, sadly, do I agree with swstephe that 'capitalism' or business/finance is weakening). Some of them were 60s dreams too - the reduced working week, cleaner work - and events did not fulfil those dreams. — mcdoodle
Yet, though labor is part of human existence, how it is organized is indeed coercive because of how ownership is handled. — Moliere
You're speaking gibberish. The term "sacred" means nothing to you. It's a hollow concept that fools insert into sentences to create meaning where there is none. Unless you can tell me what is sacred, it seems a waste for me to explain why labor might be sacred.Further, that it is part of existence differs from thinking that labor is somehow sacred -- which it is not. — Moliere
These leisurely folks work much longer hours than the guys on the assembly line.And there is a leisure class of owners responsible for these decisions -- yet you call that a diatribe. — Moliere
Our thirst for more things doesn't end when one task is completed, but we produce more things.If the job gets done faster, yet we have no more leisure, what reason would you attribute to that? — Moliere
And I've seen things that don't suck. That is to say, I'm dismissive of your anecdotes.It's a desire to not suffer. I've known people who have been worked so hard they are disabled to provide stupid services for entitled rich people. — Moliere
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