Weird how you interpret a propertyless society as being anarchy, intrinsically, when you did not use the word anarchy in the quote I responded to, and I did not use the word anarchy at all. You're trying to portray me as a proponent of anarchy now, because of it? Weird!!
Edit: I did use the word anarchy, on second look: I used it specifically to say that non-property isn't inherently anarchic. So you're either misreading or wilfully misinterpreting.
IDK, I'm not really portraying you as anything, I'm playing devil's advocate for most of the crap I'm talking about and I assume everyone else is doing the same.
I am seriously debating the idea of the abolition of property, though. Do you not see how chaotic and dangerous a society with NO LAWS OR PROPERTY RIGHTS is? You maintain a farm and somebody callously paves it over or digs everything up, runs donuts over it on their 4-wheeler. Why not? Isn't it their right to do donuts on their 4x4 and set their poison gas collection wherever it is convent? Who is there to say otherwise and what legitimacy would they have? What's to stop the offended farmer from building a killdozer and killdozering the 4x4 driving poison gas collecting people's homes into rubble? Nobody? Maybe one or the other hired a PMC to do the killdozering for them?
I'm being kinda silly on purpose, because the idea of anarchy as utopia is a very silly idea.
Literal post-scarcity is impossible, yes, so far as we're aware. Functional post-scarcity isn't, though it's not infinitely expendable. That's basically when you reach the point that you have more accessible resources than you can consume. When supply out paces demand, there's not really scarcity in a functional sense. That's pretty doable, and in a number of areas the primary issue is preventing it in the present less engineering than politics.
Nah, man, it's still pretty much impossible. Post scarcity is about impossible. We are already past the peak of production with things like oil, uranium and copper. These things will only become more expensive, harder to obtain. How much farmland is required to keep all 7 billion people on the earth as fat and happy as people in the USA? How about 14 billion people? 27 billion people? Can you conjure up food or farmland like a benevolent wizard? Resources are a finite resource, and preciously finite at that, even water and air are in jeopardy with our current consumption. You think MORE consumption is a good idea? We are living beyond our means enough as it is, it is unsustainable. Technology cannot replace resources, technology is a thing that consumes resources.
Post scarcity is far from pretty much impossible.
Peak production of oil, uranium and copper are irrelevant. Oil can be synthesized with enough energy. We throw away >98% of uranium fuel unused. And copper has plenty of alternatives and can be used more efficiently because current only really flows along the surface of a cable.
Right now, the USA has enough farmland to feed 7 billion people as fat and happy as we are if we tried hard enough.
What is stopping us?
The #1 thing stopping us is the lack of water. As it is we are rapidly draining the Ogallala to feed the 1 to 2 billion people that America is feeding already (we are the worlds largest food exporter, though I forget the exact numbers).
Solving the water problem means desalinating sea water and pumping it far inland. The #1 thing stopping that is power. You could double the power output of America with a square of solar plants in the Nevada desert less than 100 miles on a side (this includes transportation of all goods and people, the fleet of sea freighters, airlines, trains, trucks and personal vehicles). That is enough power to solve the water problem. Build another square in the desert, and you can use that power to crack hydrogen from water or create synthetic gas while shutting down every coal, oil and uranium burning power plant in the country.
Now you do the same thing in the Atacama, the Sahara, the Gobi, the Outback, etc. and you have suddenly uplifted and empowered the entire human race. We would have more power, and food and water than we would know what to do with it all. That is the start of post scarcity. And it really won't even take that much copper if we use it efficiently and use plentiful alternatives for viable use cases. It is known that uplifting a populations standard of living reduces the rate of population growth. Without immigration, nearly every western nation has nearly even or negative population growth. Even without the effects of post scarcity uplift, the human population is likely to plateau under 12 billion.
All that it takes is being smart, efficient and investing in the right areas.