Real_Trouble
Posts: 471
Joined: 2/25/2008 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: aviinterra Reading the bbc, I came upon this article about a new technology that allows a restaurant to serve your meal without the need for waiters. ( http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7335351.stm ). The day before I was at the home depot- and the only cash registers that were open were the four self service ones- manned by one irritated and unhappy employee who looked like they were about to shoot the damn machines if they beeped once more. And they did beep, and told me to put things in bags that were in bags already, and then beeped some more, no matter what I and the continually irritated but very helpful employee did. After some ten minutes spent on a trasaction that should have taken two at the most, I left feeling that this is just not the way to go. All of these neat new advancements would be great and actually fun if we had too little people, but with unemployment increasing ( and please don't give me the silly govt. statistics which only count those taking benefits ), the population increasing, and the economy spirling downwards, should not new positions be made instead of eliminated?? Should not the govt. encourage the creation of jobs here in our homeland by easing employment taxes and making it finally illogical for the employer to try all means to sidestep the decision of actually hiring a human being? If we do use all of these new technologies fully, then what on earth are we going to do with all these extra idle hands? Back in the old days of Rome ( man I miss those togas! ), Marcus Aurelius flately refused to use the rudiments of a steam engine because, he reasoned, the obvious effect will be too many people sitting with nothing to do and no means to contribute. I think he is still right today. But I guess I have rambled on about this enough. Upon being confronted with a mechanzied backhoe, a man once said: "Oh no, these digging machines can do the job of ten men with shovels!" The economist standing next to him responded: "Yes, and if not for shovels, one hundred men with spoons would have jobs." There's no sense in doing jobs a stupid and inefficient way; when you subsidize labor positions that do not need to exist, all you are doing is lowering the overall standard of living in your country. I mean, think this through to the logical extent - why not replace computers with several hundred men or women with basic calculators instead? That would create a ton of jobs! Job substitution is not an absolute phenomenon. For every waiter eliminated, you are going to be adding a service-person to take care of the machines. The trick is to know what industries to be in...
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