If you give a man a fish, you feed him for a day. If you teach a man to fish, you feed him for a lifetime — Anonymous
Of course, there maybe very good reasons why teaching the poor job-skills will fail to produce the desired results but I just feel that...
If you give a man a fish, you feed him for a day. If you teach a man to fish, you feed him for a lifetime
— Anonymous — TheMadFool
Education has been seen as this quasi-holy savior that solves nearly all problems in society. — ssu
The solution is to allow people free access to the river. — Pfhorrest
Agreed. Case in point: in the late 1970s and early 1980s there was a chronic unemployment situation. Gov's idea to solve it? In Canada? To teach people good and better job hunting skills, interview skills.
This was the stupidest thing they could think of. Sure, people would be better educated in the arts of getting a job, but everyone would be. But everyone was better educated, so nobody would be advantages — god must be atheist
This is a good idea (that is, as you say, probably being implemented somewhere already), but I would contest that the root cause of poverty is really inability to get a decent-paying job, because that translates to "inability to prove your worth to the people who control access to the resources you need to survive — Pfhorrest
The problem that these programs face, even the most excellent ones, is that many, many millions of people live in societies that are at least somewhat dysfunctional, and no amount of programming can overcome people's disadvantages on a piecemeal basis. — Bitter Crank
Charities won't get money if they would help Third World countries with the slogan: "We'll transform the workforce of these poor countries to highly educated kick-ass competitive professionals so that global corporations will flock to move their factories to these countries from the US!" — ssu
I don't know the exact rationale behind it but the alternative is theft. — TheMadFool
How are such societies dysfunctional? — TheMadFool
Do note that mechanization is a phenomenon that has been with us since the industrial revolution. Industry, but also agriculture has transformed dramatically with machines doing the work. This has created huge transformations in the workforce and in our societies, yet it hasn't created roaming hordes of poor people.One key determinant in this imbalance between jobs available and job-seeking people is mechanization. Machines are more efficient and cheaper than a human workforce: to find employment in such an environment is nearly impossible. Also, machines seem to occupy the employment sector that requires the least of skills, their only advantage being their efficiency and cost. This ultimately means that humans can find employment in areas where machines haven't entered the scene and such jobs require a level of training and skill that is both beyond the reach of many and also highly competitive. — TheMadFool
And unemployed doesn't need alms, he or she needs a job.That's a poor view of charities and again reflects a deep flaw in the economic system that prevents us from giving real assistance to the poor and allows us actions that keep the poor poor. — TheMadFool
If I understand what you're implying correctly, I would say that whoever it is that privatized the "river" (in the fishing metaphor) is the one guilty of theft, and that the solution to the problem is to correct that theft and return the "river" back to public property as it originally was. — Pfhorrest
They are dysfunctional because they have been fucked over too many times. — Bitter Crank
if everybody would lose their because of automation and AI taking over, the aggregate demand side of the system would dramatically fall and nobody would make investments. — ssu
How, in your opinion, would we make the necessary transition if complete mechanization becomes a reality and I'm thinking of true general AI here. Humans would become obsolete in the truest sense of the word and assuming such general AI wouldn't opt to exterminate humans, what would be our role in such a world? — TheMadFool
Even if I'm no socialist, the real societal problem is the division of income and if there emerges a new class of povetry, those who aren't as poor as earlier, but idle and sustain an adequate, but meager lifestyle by wealth transfers. This can create a situation where the society lacks cohesion and anything unifying. Coming from a Nordic welfare state, it might be sound strange to Americans, but welfare state does create it's own problems, even if I would choose those problems rather than absolute povetry or crime. The biggest problem is alienation from the society. Imagine if not only you hadn't ever worked, but your parents and your grandparents had never worked. Unemployment carries a huge stigma and truly makes people fall into apathy as being unemployed is seen as a personal fault: there's still that job at McDonalds open.
Even if the economy can sustain this, thanks to cheap robot labour, it does create a lot of social problems.
2h — ssu
It has already happened and continues to happen in the West. Just visit the rust-belt in the US. You have few hubs where the economy has centered and otherwise the country is "Fly-over-country". Those areas that pin their hopes in politicians like Trump.So, you foresee alienation from society via unemployment as an undesirable consequence of mechanization. — TheMadFool
In the 60's people believed that the Space Age would be right behind the corner. The makers of the 1968 classic "2001 - A Space Odyssey" genuinely thought that they made a very realistic portrayal on what life would be in 2001. And why wouldn't they believe it? If you looked at what had happened in 33 years from 1968 from the year 1935, Space Age by 2001 looked quite possible. How long has it now been since man has left low Earth Orbit? I think 47 years. In few years it will be 50 years. And all that talk about going to Mars with internet billionaires wanting to go there are just one stock market crash from being fairy tales.This image of the future of man and machine existing in harmony is very appealing to me. — TheMadFool
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