It's handled efficiently as is evidenced by the never ending innovation and increased productivity. In fact, it is this very system that is producing the robots that you believe will lead to our salvation, yet for some reason you condemn it — Hanover
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. — Hanover
These leisurely folks work much longer hours than the guys on the assembly line — Hanover
Our thirst for more things doesn't end when one task is completed, but we produce more things. — Hanover
And I've seen things that don't suck. That is to say, I'm dismissive of your anecdotes. — Hanover
...dreams... — Moliere
The term "sacred" means nothing to you. It's a hollow concept that fools insert into sentences to create meaning where there is none. — Hanover
Then you simply fail to see a key element of capitalism and why it's preferable over other systems. Financial incentivization is very effective. Robots are being created to do more work not to give humans an easier life, but to make the builders of them more wealthy.don't see innovation as a feature of capitalism. People innovate regardless of the private ownership over the workplace. — Moliere
Sacred is deserving of religious veneration. It's not so hard to draw out that labor is considered sacred when it is both part of existence and created by God. Did you not bring in the allusion of the Garden of Eden?
I don't think I'm being unfair in using the word. You'd be far from alone in thinking that labor is sacred — Moliere
The 80 hour work week is far from unknown to the working class. — Moliere
But I don't think that the unboundedness of human desire explains why people would work themselves to death. — Moliere
Experience is not measurable in the same way mass is. But I assure you that my anecdotes are far from singular. You may not believe me, or find them to be of minor consequence from your experiences -- but dismissal is the sin I've been calling out this entire time, no? — Moliere
Then you simply fail to see a key element of capitalism and why it's preferable over other systems. Financial incentivization is very effective. Robots are being created to do more work not to give humans an easier life, but to make the builders of them more wealthy. — Hanover
Then you simply fail to see a key element of capitalism and why it's preferable over other systems. Financial incentivization is very effective. Robots are being created to do more work not to give humans an easier life, but to make the builders of them more wealthy. — Hanover
I'm not suggesting that labor is not sacred, Puritan work ethic and all. What I'm saying is that your comment that labor is not sacred is a meaningless concept when uttered by you because you don't hold anything to be sacred. If I'm incorrect here, then give me a specific example of what you hold to be sacred. — Hanover
But. . . I mean, I just don't agree I guess. Socialism is an economic system where workplaces are publicly owned rather than privately owned. So just because you didn't have to buy something at work that doesn't mean that it's socialist. The workplace is a privately owned entity, where the rules are written and enforced by those who own it (or delegate that out to managers, as is often the case). — Moliere
Caring is important, I wouldn't disagree. But the household is more of a benevolent dictatorship -- which some believe is how socialism must run, but I don't think that's true. It doesn't seem to me to be set in stone. — Moliere
So though we might choose to share, and not turn a profit with every individual action we take, or view school (and push for schools) which are more than jobs training, I don't see any of that as taking away from the capitalist project where there are owners who write the rules, and workers who follow them. — Moliere
A guaranteed income sufficient for shelter, food, and basic health care would be great. A modern civilized society should be able to afford it, like it can afford infrastructure for transportation which enables all to travel, meet, and generate businesses, culture, intellectual life, sports, crafts, inventions, sciences etc. — jkop
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
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