; jobs are disappearing at alarming rates due to rapid automation.
Quote; jobs are disappearing at alarming rates due to rapid automation. They aren't, though.If anything, automation has led to humanity's shift towards capitalism.
You'll get a subsequent change in the job market to accommodate the influx of automatons. More robots, more software developers, technicians for maintenance, robot designers, specialists so that a robot can do X job. You'll get niche "human/hand-made markets" as a counter culture to generically mass produced goods. Hell, we already have that now to some extent with large brands doing quantity over some locally produced quality food, tools, decorations and furniture, etc.
Automation compliment's labour though, it doesn't nullify it.We've been crying wolf over the prospect of automation since the 1800s. Poor farmers thought that industrialisation and agricultural advancements were going to kill their jobs, when it had the exact opposite effect. There's no concrete evidence that automation is the ticking time bomb that's going to wreck the economy and capitalism. It's just speculative guff.
Whose going to make those robots though? And whose going to keep them from breaking? Whose going to make the parts that make up the robots? Machines building machines inevitably leads back to some form of human labor. We will never be in a position where there's not a seat for every ass.
Quote from: Anglosaxophone on April 22, 2017, 05:36:07 PMAutomation compliment's labour though, it doesn't nullify it.We've been crying wolf over the prospect of automation since the 1800s. Poor farmers thought that industrialisation and agricultural advancements were going to kill their jobs, when it had the exact opposite effect. There's no concrete evidence that automation is the ticking time bomb that's going to wreck the economy and capitalism. It's just speculative guff.But industrialization did kill plenty of jobs for poor farmers. The farmers themselves were fine, sure, but you don't see nearly as many field hands nowadays, now do you?There's no concrete evidence, sure, but there rarely is any concrete evidence for societal and economical shifts.
I'm not implying future automation has absolutely no negative consequences whatsoever, but the suggestion that it could lead to the downfall of capitalism itself has no basis in reality.
I am suggesting that this will lead to a point where there won't be enough jobs for people to consistently work at the same individual rate that they are now, not that jobs will be phased out entirely any time in the near future.
Quote from: Môr-ladron on April 22, 2017, 03:15:43 PMYou'll get a subsequent change in the job market to accommodate the influx of automatons. More robots, more software developers, technicians for maintenance, robot designers, specialists so that a robot can do X job. You'll get niche "human/hand-made markets" as a counter culture to generically mass produced goods. Hell, we already have that now to some extent with large brands doing quantity over some locally produced quality food, tools, decorations and furniture, etc.If you honestly think that jobs surrounding automation will be as plentiful as jobs without automation, then you're just kinda...wrong. 20 self-checkouts at a store don't require a single person to watch over each one of them, they require a single person to watch over all of them - 1 hiring position instead of 20. Sure, jobs for people will still exist that contribute to the automation, but they will be vastly reduced.And yeah, the "human markets" niche will probably arise, but that's not exactly enough to support an entire economy. Vinyl sales and 50's diners are both pretty popular in American culture right now, but mp3s and fast food sales still outweigh them to an absurd degree.
Quote from: Töqi on April 22, 2017, 01:20:49 PMQuote; jobs are disappearing at alarming rates due to rapid automation. They aren't, though.If anything, automation has led to humanity's shift towards capitalism.They...definitely are. Like, quantifiably.
Quote from: Cindy on April 22, 2017, 07:54:12 PMQuote from: Môr-ladron on April 22, 2017, 03:15:43 PMYou'll get a subsequent change in the job market to accommodate the influx of automatons. More robots, more software developers, technicians for maintenance, robot designers, specialists so that a robot can do X job. You'll get niche "human/hand-made markets" as a counter culture to generically mass produced goods. Hell, we already have that now to some extent with large brands doing quantity over some locally produced quality food, tools, decorations and furniture, etc.If you honestly think that jobs surrounding automation will be as plentiful as jobs without automation, then you're just kinda...wrong. 20 self-checkouts at a store don't require a single person to watch over each one of them, they require a single person to watch over all of them - 1 hiring position instead of 20. Sure, jobs for people will still exist that contribute to the automation, but they will be vastly reduced.And yeah, the "human markets" niche will probably arise, but that's not exactly enough to support an entire economy. Vinyl sales and 50's diners are both pretty popular in American culture right now, but mp3s and fast food sales still outweigh them to an absurd degree.In my experience the less hiring in the cashier departments have led to more people being hired in other departments to lighten up schedulesNot saying thats a regular thing but its something I noticed across a few stores i was trying to work at and friends have worked at
Quote from: gats on April 23, 2017, 07:06:32 AMWho cares? Just buy a big plot of land and build a self sufficient estateok saddam
Who cares? Just buy a big plot of land and build a self sufficient estate
I also like how you basically wriggle out of substantiating your post by providing a single, shitty source and then acknowledging it's shittyness as if that absolves you of its flaws. But w/e.