A non-negligible part of humanity is just plain lazy, they'd be perfectly content to spend their whole lives on couches.
But why is that a problem? Why is occupying people with pointless busy work preferable to people sitting on a couch because that's what they'd rather do doing? Is it because you believe in the so-called
Protestant work ethic? That "hard work" is a sign of virtue? Can you engage in some speculation and imagine where that way of thinking can lead?
there is just too much deeply ingrained preconception and hysterical blue-pill psychological defense mechanisms
Like I said a few pages back, the middle class tends to derive a great deal of self worth out of this notion of work. When one proposes to reimagine society in such a way that work is not an end unto itself, it's like you're attacking their personal sense of worth.
I've actually been hushed by co-workers for describing how stupidly pointless my job is
Of course. They live in fear that the treadmill might go away. So they busy themselves by running on it and deluding themselves into believing that there's some kind of virtue in running circles.
LordBucket, the entire time I've been reading your posts I can't help but think that if you replaced loaded words like slavery and manipulation with the words 'worker' and 'getting services in return for payment' the whole thing would seem perfectly acceptable.
Imagine a slave on a plantation. He works very hard in the fields and his master feeds and clothes him. He is dependant on the master for his survival and he is aware that if he didn't do good work his master wouldn't need him anymore. If you told him he could live in a society without slavery, he might call you crazy and ask you how he would eat in such a society with no master to give him food.
Now let's replace our "loaded" words with yours:
Imagine a worker at a company. He works very hard in his cubicle and his boss gives him money with which to buy food and clothing. He is dependant on his job for money to survive and he is very aware that if he didn't do good work his boss wouldn't need him anymore. If you told him he could live in a society without work, he might call you crazy and ask how he would get money to buy food with no job to give him money.
"None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free."In an environment of scarcity, if a man with an abundance of one thing, such as time, chooses to give some of what he has in abundance to another in exchange for something that they have in abundance, I find little fault in this. But I also perceive the dangers inherent in designing a society based on this premise.
I think a lot of people become lazy as a response to an environment
that turns work into a shallowly justified, forced obligation
Could be. But what's wrong with laziness? If my survivals needs are met and I decide to sit on a couch and contemplate my navel, why is that any less desirable a choice than busying myself with productivity? If I want cookies, it makes sense to go make cookies. If I don't want cookies, making cookies to "busy myself" seems silly.
When one attributes value to the act of "work" that can lead to all kinds of silliness on the societal level. Look at what some people in this thread have said:
People need to work meaningless jobs.
The natural state of a human creature is to do something.
I'm currently unemployed, and it's driving me insane with free time.
Are you truly so incapable of coming up with something of your own choosing to do that you need to live in a social environment that requires you to fill up your time with meaningless work to keep from going crazy? That seems unhealthy to me.
If you want something to do, ask yourself what you'd like to be doing, then
go do it. We don't benefit from designing a society to require that vast quantities of useless work be done simply for the sake of giving us something to do.