Ares Land wrote: ↑Thu Nov 28, 2024 3:52 am
[*]There's the whole advertising and marketing industry, which nobody likes, including the people who work for them.
Surely this is a matter of proportion? Commercials have gotten longer over the decades, to the point where TV is pretty much unwatchable. Likewise I can't watch Twitch any more-- I'm not devoted enough to any streamer to sit through a minute of ads. When ads are kept in check, I don't think people mind that much, and may even enjoy them. Or take the opportunity to go to the bathroom.
For that matter, socialist systems have propaganda departments! I'm all for socialist solutions when they work, but I get tired of "capitalism lol" as the answer to everything.
[*]Not cucumbers, but still about food: I live right next to a major fruit producing area. As it happens, Chilean apples in the supermarket are cheaper than locally grown ones. I have nothing against Chilean apple farmers, the carbon emissions that comes with importing stuff that is produced literally next door to the supermarket is killing us.
Climate change is the big killer, yes. Again, socialist systems contributed just as much, if not more: the environmental movement didn't come from the communist countries. The planet doesn't distinguish between capitalist and communist carbon.
[*]Lots of talk these days about Threads, Twitter and Bluesky. Looking at it as a programmer, there's nothing complex about these tools. Exchanging text messages over a computer network is not hard, we've done that for decades. But social media are huge monsters that require enormous datacenters precisely because they require, not cucumber blessing (which would be fun and innocuous) but targetted ads and a curating algorithm.
Which is why I'm on Mastodon.
And -- and there's the gist of the degrowth argument -- all of that is useless or actively deleterious but counts towards GDP. And under our economic and political system, GDP is more or less taken as the measure of human happiness, which means such inefficiency is not only not eliminated, but in fact actively encouraged.
Productivity in the US has for example at least doubled (probably more!) since 1984. I think 1984 Americans already enjoyed a very high standard of living (in some ways more comfortable than they do now) -- this means Americans could enjoy a very comfortable lifestyle on about half the working hours they put in now. This, in itself, is enough to question the point of economic growth. But that's not enough -- the problem is, under current economics and technology, the GDP growth that went on during these past fourty years has actively degraded the ecosphere.
I'd quibble about the judgment here: was it better when everything was on paper? I happen to love physical books, but it's a huge improvement that so much can be done online.
But again, climate change is scary but the whole world is addicted to it. Not just the US, but the US has elected someone who will make it worse, and tech companies are falling over themselves to push carbon-spewing technologies like AI. Absolutely insane. On the other hand, if anything can wean us off fossil fuels, it's
new technology. We weren't going to solve the problem by going back to bicycles and burning cow manure. Solar and windpower have become far cheaper and more competitive, and nuclear power looks better than it did in years.
Public housing can definitely suck, but it doesn't have to. In fact, I've had a pretty positive experience with it.
We lived in public housing back when we lived in Paris, so did many of our friends. It turns out to be the only way to provide housing to middle-class families with kids. The apartments were definitely not crummy (we're talking decent two or three bedrooms in great neighborhoods). I won't say there weren't issues at times (they were) or that waiting times aren't long (they definitely were!).
France isn't Russia, despite what a few of our reactionaries here think.