The way I see it, life is nothing but a loss of "money" when it's conceived of as a mysterious wealth substance rather than counters handed out to coordinate trade. There is no amount of productivity you can contribute that will make your life a net gain for the world despite all the resources you consume. That is, unless you can literally reverse entropy. Geeks like to glorify inventors, but this ignores the fact that inventions often come about as lucky breaks in a brute-force search.Ares Land wrote: ↑Fri Jun 18, 2021 2:57 am No, you couldn't: assuming a UBI of $10,000 a year -- barely enough to survive on, there are 200 million adults in the US. This amounts to 2 trillion dollars a year.
(By comparison, Amazon's entire income is 26 billion a year and Jeff Bezos' net worth is 200 billion dollars.)
The US federal budget is 3.5 trillion; and in fact that sum distributed to our 200 million American that would make for a decent UBI.
That doesn't mean it's impossible (far from it: I mean even if the numbers look huge, that's only 15% of GDP.) But 'how to double the federal budget and raise 3.5 trillion dollars' isn't a trivial problem.
In other words, Zeus is right to despise humans. If there existed gods, superheros or martial arts prodigies with qi powers who can reverse entropy, then ordinary humans would in fact be entirely dependent on them in the long run. As it is, we are all in a subordinate position to existing negentropy.
The glorification of the military in Starship Troopers, a tremendously destructive and largely unproductive profession, came off as fascist to me.Ares Land wrote: ↑Fri Jun 18, 2021 2:57 am Libertarias are just very good at that sort of thing. That's because the real inventors of libertarianism are Robert and Virginia Heinlein: an engineer and a science-fiction writer.
Engineers feel compelled to explore solutions thoroughly and figure out where and how they'd break. Science-fiction writers or more largely conworlders feel the need to explore in some detail how fictional society would work -- it also helps that Robert Heinlein had worked in marketing and wasn't half bad at it. The two of them working as a team turned Barry Goldwater's uninspiring reactionary conservatism into a very compelling and vivid picture.