And as for working, I'd prefer not to force anyone to do so if they don't want to.
Agreed.
...so spending roughly a third of your waking hours for the majority of your lifetime working to survive sounds reasonable to you?
I think there are benefits in having jobs and duties, yes. Forced social encounters and self-discipline come to mind. Think of discipline with kids, they don't like it, but it's for their own good in the long run.
I'm no fan of capitalism, but technology reliant society + people with too much time in their hands sounds like a recipe for disaster.
You really believe that life is better in a system where most people are compelled by circumstance to give up a third of their waking life doing things they probably don't like in order to survive? That it would a
disaster if technology made life easier such that people had more time and power to do the things they really want to do? You think that would be
bad?
Wow.
Well hey, if we somehow manage to transfer into a society where the menial work is done by robots and most humans are free to explore sciences, the arts, and all that stuff, I'll be a happy guy.
Hell, even engineering and stuff would be good since you'd need to mantain th robot workforce.
Agreed. People having more time to do the things they
want to do sounds good to me. As for the people who would spend all their lives watching television without leaving the couch... *shrug* Personally I suspect that there would be
far fewer of those than some people are suggesting. But even so, some number of people living their lives watching television
by their own choice seems vastly preferable to me than compelling most everyone through circumstances to spend a third of their lives doing things they'd rather not be doing.
I'm not going to take any stance here on whether sloth is "bad." But I'm definitely going to take a stand that compulsory service via a system that requires it for survival is not something I would choose for others.
This view that it's "good" people to be compelled to work or die is...I guess I'll just say that it's not my worldview.
I really hope people realize that Utopia by it's nature is non-existent?
Literally the word Utopia wasn't originally greek. It was an amalgamation of two greek words meaning "Good place" And "Impossible place" respectively.
Why is this relevant?
We're talking about systems that might improve lives and socities. Arguing etmology is not productive here. I haven't seen anyone in this discussion claim that their view would engender an 'impossibly perfect' world.
Are you seriously suggesting that becauise 'impossible perfect' is not possible, that it's pointless to try to make thing
better?
What are you even saying and what does it have to do with what the rest of us are discussing?
And L.Bucket, your statements are starting to get more and more absurd. People want to go to restaurants and fast food because people can cook better food for them, faster.
Less Time.
Less Effort.
More Quality.
I think you're not looking at the whole picture. For those of us making over 100k/yr, sure....it's more time efficient and less effort to simply eat out. But I think that's not representative of most people.
If you really believe that it takes less time and effort for the average person to work a job to pay for eating out, then go ahead and get a
median $26,000/yr job, and eat out every meal to "save money."
Which is what is the original cause for capitalism in the first place. I can only assume that your 'ideal society' so far is one where everything is mass produced from factories and you have the option to go to the factories and take whatever goods you want?
Or is your ideal society one where people never leave their houses, have water taken out of the air outside and their sewage recycled. Their food is delivered and they cook it themselves and rely on computers for passing their endless days?
Are you even reading my posts before you respond to them? o.O
Because both of those are fundamentally flawed.
Well, fortunately neither of your examples are even remotely close to anything I've said, so those being flawed doesn't really affect me or my position at all.
The last few weeks i've spent working out here on the gas fields has majorly reenforced my view that the whole idea of "lets just automate all manual labor" to be terribly laughable, particularly the way its banded about as "well once we do that we can then go on and do x y z etc *cue wall of text and theory*"
Things that are impractical to automate, we don't automate. Saying that we can't automate
everything is not a valid reason to not automate what we can. Also, the goal is not specifically automating everything, but rather, reducing work. Automation is just one means of accomplishing that. Not insisting on doing things the hard way is another means of accomplishing it.
Your decentralized water system has several key problems.
1) You're not eliminating the jobs, you're redistributing them. Instead of a few dedicated people working on something, you'll turn it into a task everyone has to spent some time upon. (Maintenance, checking filters,...). While this doesn't seem that bad, do note that the majority of human societal evolution has been made possible due to specialization of labour.
2) Water condensers will fail in cities and suburban areas. Not only will the water be slightly polluted due to the air pollution, there will also be distinct shortages. Your average American family uses 400 gallons (more than 1500 liter of water a day*). New York has population densities of 10 000 people/ km˛ (Meaning you're extracting 14.8 liter/ m˛. Which is a lot.). Belgium has a population density of 300 people/ km˛ and lower water usage, but it will still be problematic. And that's not counting industrial usage. It will have an enormous effect on weather patterns, agriculture and might make city centers unliveable.
3) You can't fill a tank forever. Once a septic tank is full, it needs to be emptied. (Doing this with trucks defeats the purpose) Alright, there are biological ways to filter water, but those don't work for chemically polluted water. (washing machine, dishwasher,...). And even then, these methods are fairly spacious, making suburbs and cities an impossibility, and further increasing land usage.
1) Yes, I'm redistributing them. I've said that multiple times.
2) No, the work would be less
in this case with a distributed system as I described.
To demonstrate that, let's look at a ridiculous example: you brush your own teeth, right? So do I. What if, instead of brushing our own teeth, we were to create a toothbrushing service? Establish centers in every city, hire and train people to brush teeth, and have them drive every day to every house, and brush everyone's teeth.
Would this be more efficient or most cost effective, than simply having people brush their own teeth?
Of course not.
Septic vs sewer cost comparisons" when it comes to cost comparison of city sewer vs. septic systems – septic always wins. As we have discussed many times in the past, maintenance for septic systems only requires septic tank pump outs every 3 to 5 years. The cost for pumpouts ranges from $250 to $500."This should be obvious. A single on-location installation, once per house, and a cheap, easy pumpout every couple years....versus installed an underground pipe system
across entire cities, along with sufficient accessways to maintain those systems, drivers and maintenance crews to maintain those systems year after year, dedicated water purification facilities along with crews to staff them...it should be
obvious that the distributed water system I described would be less labor intensive than a centralized system.
LordBucket, I grew up next to a store that bakes and sells pies, literally. My grandmother started that business and it has provided jobs for people. I was friendly with people who own small stores who sells exactly what you can find in a large market, especially the one in front of my private highschool even if our school has a caterer to serve our lunch(meaning food isn't crap like in the US).
Apologize! Apologize to all the people who started those small business as a dream. Apologize to all the people who worked hard to realize that dream. Apologize to all of humanity!
Not really sure what you're asking me to apologize for. If people want to do something because it's what they want to do, I have no problem with that. I'm objecting to a society designed to encourage wage slavery. I'm not sure you and I are even talking about the same things.
I was going to make a post on the decentralised water system, but 10ebbor10 pretty much said everything I was going to and more. This may also be relevant.
And see my response to 10ebbor10. Again, it should be
obvious that building and maintaining all that infrstructure over entire cities would be more labor intensive than a simple distributed system.
Here is a
septic tank:
Now, do you believe it will be more cost and labor intensive to:
A) Install one of those on every house and clean it out or replace it every 2-5 years
or
B) Install an underground sewer system that connects every single house across countless square miles to centralized purification centers, build those facilities, maintain staff to operate and maintain those facilities, and build and maintain the pumping stations required to keep the water flowing through those pipes.
Just read pages 4 through 11. TL;DR : Automating everything and achieving utopia will be possible sometime
in the future and that's why capitalism is bad right now, OR capitalism work and there's nothing to improve.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nirvana_fallacy#Perfect_solution_fallacy