All right, let's say for the sake of argument that economics of scale and automation are a big problem.
Well "are a big problem" and "have problems" are two different things. I am not implying that those things are bad, just recognizing that they do have
some negatives in addition to all of the positives.
What do we do about it? We can't exactly un-ring that bell. How do we stop the forward march? And what are the consequences if we do? We may stop, but the rest of the world will not.
I don't claim to know that. Recognizing issues is not the same as knowing the answer.
I'll just say that this forward march of technological progress may not be the nightmare that so many are making out.
I've never called it a nightmare.
A few posters pointed out how the industrial revolution severely cut down the numbers of certain manuel laborers. I'm sure that most of them found a way to adapt and move into other fields of labor.
That's not the discussion. The discussion is whether that world is merely a phase. From 1000BC to 1750AD,
everyone lived in poverty and your work was done on a small scale, quantitatively speaking. From 1750-2013, we've used machinery to replace people and move people into other jobs.
The question is what will happen when the people aren't needed. It's a a totally different world much like 1900 was from 1500. We cannot assume that our reality will remain forever, can we? Every single government, economist, religious official, etc believed that universal poverty was inescapable, and that humans could only do X amount of work so they just needed to enslave people. They were all wrong, we can be too.
It's not all sunshine and roses out there, but I think it gives too little credit to people and our country to think that we won't find a way to deal with this in a (mostly) positive way. It doesn't do anyone any good to have a disenfranchised, unemployable labor force.
Perhaps. Yet we see the billionaires of the world say our "entitlement society" is killing us. We have a whole party insinuating that everyone who is poor is lazy. Evidence tends to say that they aren't really caring.
We may not have the revolution that Buster envisions, but it is a problem nonetheless. I think we can find a way to deal with this without just ragging on Wal-Mart and the uber-wealthy.
Revolutionary and an actual revolution are two different things, and I didn't not say that I "envision" a revolution. There are a myriad of reasons to rip on Walmart and the uber-wealthy though, and I won't stop.