I'm pretty sure most everyone would love a scarcity-free environment
Absolutely. I know quite a few people in this thread have told me I'm evil, accused me eating babies, and so forth...but really, I
don't want my success to be at the expense of others and I don't seek to crush others beneath my boots like some people seem to think. And nobody I know really wants that either.
I just want to have the things I want. Whether the things I want are simple food and housing, or gold chandeliers and cartier watches...it doesn't really matter. I want the things I want, and I see nothing wrong with me having them. And contrary to what seem in this thread seem to think...I really don't believe that me having these things harms others. Money may exist in finite quantities, but no baby seals or orphan children were ground up by machinery in order to provide me with the lifestyle I have.
I want the things I want, and I believe it's well and good and proper for me to have them. If
others have wants, it seems just as well and good and proper to me that they have their wants fulfilled too. I know plenty of people with more money and better toys than I have, and that doesn't bother me. It seems silly to me that others might look at me and "feel bad" because they don't have the things I have.
Everybody having what they want seems like a good thing to me. Maybe I'm not willing to give up the things I want so that others can have what they want...but I'm not asking anybody else to give up what they want to give me stuff either.
Currency based systems have flaws. A post-scarcity environment would be better for everyone. If I enjoy a glass of wine, I enjoy it because I like it. Not because I'm laughing at the peons beneath my heels compelled to drink water from the gutter. If everybody could have wine and fancy cars, and gold watches and wear nice clothes and fly planes and lead fun and happy lives...I think that would be both healthy and appropriate. If nobody felt compelled to work menial, pointless jobs for the sake of "making a living" that would be a huge improvement for everyone. Personally, that bothers me more than quality of life issues. Going hungry from time to time, not owning a car, taking the bus to get around and eating donated food...yeah, that's not so great. But living an entire
lifestyle of dreary servitude, spending the majority of your waking hours every day doing something trivial, pointless and that you hate...all just to barely survive and even still not have the things you want...that's just horrible.
So, yes. If we can outgrow money and advance to a post-scarcity society where nobody works and everybody can have whatever they want at the press of a button, I'm all in favor. I think most of the "rich" people I know would go along with that.
People don't need responsibilities to be productive. Sure, we'd have a lot more artists out there and a lot less people flipping hamburgers, but frankly? That's a huge improvement. Even discounting everything else.
Yes. Absolutely it's a huge improvement. Much of our economy is designed to be self perpetuating. People work to support their work habit. If people didn't need to buy cars and insurance and gas to drive to work, a lot of them could probably spend a third less time working. If people didn't feel the need to go into debt to get degrees, buy work clothes that are uncomfortable anyway, drink gallons of coffee just to keep going...so much money that is spent is spent solely to support the function of the working itself.
It's a bad system.
Now add in mortgages and rent. Plenty of people spend half of their income just on this. If people didn't need to work, didn't need to pay interest and rent and hold mortgages and go into debt...$500/mo would be plenty for just about anybody to live comfortably. The vast majority of "wealth" is spent simply perpetuating the system.
people flipping hamburgers
And that's the other side of this. A lot of
work is just unnecessary. Nobody really needs to be flipping hamburgers or waiting tables. I'm perfectly capable of making my own hamburgers, and I can just as easily carry it from the kitchen to the dining room. I don't really need somebody to spend a third of their daily life cooking or waiting tables for me. Society would function perfectly well if all fast food was removed completely. Society would function perfectly well if cashiers were replaced with automated tellers and checkout machines. Ask any office worker how much time they spend sitting around just trying to look busy. A
lot of "work" throughout society could very easily be done away with.
But...when you say that, people panic because they feel their livelihood being threatened. They
want to work. People rejoice when jobs are created. They panic when jobs are eliminated and workers are replaced with machines, because the system is designed to require people to participate in its self perpetuation. The whole system is dumb. But know that you're participating in it. And you're contributing. If you work a job, if you pay to support your work habit, if you lobby to keep your jobs rather than being replaced by machines...you're working to support the system that enslaves you.
I think it would be healthy if more people understood this. Maybe it's impractical to just walk off your job. Maybe it's impractical to stop perpetuating the system. But if more people understood how it worked, it might be easier to transition out of it.