| ▲ | munksbeer 19 hours ago | |
I just object to your reasoning on so many levels. I regard it as the current zeitgeist of anti-capitalism. Just lazy blame. We are objectively living in the best times of human history, ever. The global median person in the world is much better off than their predecessors. Is wealth inequality growing? Yes! This makes people angry. Does that automatically extrapolate to billionaires will murder people (actively or inactively) simply because they can? A resounding, emphatic, NO. It doesn't extrapolate to that. What will almost certainly happen is the same as every other time. The technology will disrupt, cause short term pain for some, but ultimately become just another commodity and push up the standard of living for the median person. Billionaires will continue to be billionaires, normal people will adjust, we'll find out ways to put human productivity to use, life will go on. | ||
| ▲ | the_af 18 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
> What will almost certainly happen is the same as every other time. This is what seems to me like a failure of imagination. As I said, I envision other possible and even likely futures. I'm not an oracle so I don't guarantee them, I'm just saying we should be aware of those possible futures, and if possible do something about them. There's no inevitability of progress. That's just wishful thinking. I respect that you come from a different ideological perspective, but don't disregard mine as lazy. Chalking this up to "lazy anti-capitalism" is, in itself, a lazy position to adopt. | ||
| ▲ | cindyllm 19 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
[dead] | ||