What would people do with their spare time?
Why would reducing workload change what people do in their spare time? The primary difference would be that there would be
more spare time. Do what you want with it. You're not seriously suggesting it's better for everyone to work a 40 hour workweek so that they
have something to do, are you?
I'd like to see you try to fit several hundred of those in your average apartment building, yes.
1) Are you suggesting that because there might be individual, specific cases in which a particular solution is impractical, that we should therefore not use that solution in cases where it is? I already linked you guys the
perfect solution fallacy. Stop making it.
2) 5 seconds on google:
http://water.epa.gov/type/groundwater/uic/class5/types_lg_capacity_septic.cfm"In general, LCSSs may be found serving the following facilities:
Apartment buildings"
Unless you are contesting the veracity of the base statement (that there are ways to significantly reduce work while keeping output flat), then the argument of over what exactly the most effective means of sewage are is pointless.
Thank you.
I'm contesting the idea that decentralization is the way forward.
And I'm arguing in favor of efficiency, regardless of centralization or decentralization. Specific examples I've given do involve decentralization, like this water thing. If you can centralize to increase efficiency and reduce workload, that's fine. But "always centralize" is a bad policy. Like the hypothetical "centralized toothbrushing service" example I gave a couple pages ago.
If you don't like the decentralized water scheme, that's fine. Like lemon10 says, let's discuss the
idea rather than getting hopelessly preoccupied with one single example. I've given plenty of other examples, and I invited people to suggest their own.
The
idea here is that our present system encourages the existence of work, and it
fails if work is eliminated. If somebody invents a labor saving device that makes a million jobs irrelevant and puts those people out of work, that should be a good thing, but in our present system, it isn't, and work now needs to be created for those million people to keep them working so they have money and don't starve to death.
I see that as a failing of our current (capitalist) system. It's more complicated than simply saying that it's a flaw of capitalism. It's not, exactly. Capitalism itself is a perfectly functional system, under certain conditions. It works less well under other conditions, and our technological capabilities are pushing us in the direction of capitalism as well as the entire "work a job for money" system no longer being very relevant.
Obvious end-game example, which has already been given: if everybody had a nano-disassembler and "Star Trek replicator" quality 3d printer. At that point, our entire economy becomes largely irrelevant. But there's not necessarily an instant one-day-to-the-next transition between the system being relevant and not relevant. There's a more gradual (if bumpy) transition. Work can be made obsolete by technology, and it can be made irrelevant by cultural reform, and by simple "let's do something this way instead of that way." Like the flat tax rate example: it reduces the total required workload.
The only "problem" with my proposed methodology is one that I already pointed out: the bumpy ride. If you take our current system and make an entire industry irrelevant, you put everyone working in that industry out of work, and now they have no money to buy food. If you increase efficiency in an industry such that it only needs half as many people to do the same amount of work, then half of those people are now out of work and have no money to buy food. I acknowledge this problem. And I don't have an easy answer for it. But keeping everyone working in irrelevant positions seems like a bad solution to me.
And that's what we're doing.