Moose-tache wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 4:00 pm
I've said this before, but I think it is one of the stupidest ironies of our current economic system that having robots produce infinite free resources would cause most of us to starve to death. I think more automation is generally a good thing. It only causes a problem because it accelerates the consequences of private ownership of the means of production.
Curiously, I just found a pamphlet from one Mustacius, writing in the year 1815, complaining about "steam-machines, cotton gins, spinning-jennies and suchlike Contraptions." It points out that these infernal machines would put 90% of the "labouring population" out of work. "Rather than supporting the whole of nineteen millions as they now gloriously do, our British Isles could not bear more than two millions of labourers."
I'm as suspicious of what we optimistically call Late Capitalism as you are— but the 19th century version was arguably worse. And yet somehow Mustacius's vision was wrong. Those isles now support 70 million people, very few of whom have to shovel manure for a living. (Cue standard joke about "You call having Boris as PM living?")
Of course Mustacius's near-contemporary Malthus was right when it came to Ireland— but that was egregious colonial mismanagement; Ireland was purposely and methodically excluded from modern development.
I'm not as convinced that robots will produce "infinite free resources" as you are, nor that automation, er, automatically makes jobs disappear. Even with Covid, unemployment is at 7% here— it was 3.5% in February. Where it gets scarily higher, it's not due to automation, it's due to the pandemic or, in 2008, to
other ills of capitalism (deregulation, the housing bubble).
But yeah, plutocracy is bad, it really is, and things just do not go well when productivity gains go to the top 10% and not to everyone. It actually is possible for a capitalist system to benefit everyone, and spectacularly so: cf. 1940–1970. But our voters got tired of Rooseveltian liberalism and ushered in the plutocrats instead.
The good news, though, is that we don't even have to nationalize all industry. We just nationalize the robots.
Oscar Wilde may turn out to be more prescient than Marx. Machines may finally be advanced enough to implement his vision: support everyone in style without coercion of any kind, and let them work on what pleases them.