Originally Posted by
ramAnag
Well said, mista.
I’m not looking for a ‘big argument’, Geoff.
The question of how dispensable human labour is is an interesting one. Think we’ve been here before with Swale who has a different ‘take’ on it.
My own...having worked for many years with school leavers who would have been the first to be replaced by AI...is that human beings are sometimes irreplaceable and that society has to be ready for having such large numbers of possibly the less able having infinitely more time on their hands.
To illustrate the benefit of humans over technology I offer you the example of one man buses. When you and I were growing up every bus would have a driver and a conductor. Then (in the seventies?) the conductors were replaced by technology which presumably halved the number of people who needed to be employed but also simultaneously ruined the ‘service’ in so much as it now takes about ten times as long for passengers to board the bus and the passengers now appear at greater risk from poor behaviour because there is no longer any member of staff in any sort of supervisory capacity.
Beyond that I suppose we all like to think of a world free from work but do we really want constant leisure? There were many days during my working life when I may have answered in the affirmative to that but there’s also sense in the notion that ‘the devil makes work for idle hands’...and idle, poorer hands in particular.
Complex problem in rapidly changing times...maybe Corbyn’s three day week wasn’t as daft as was made out.