harmless wrote:I can't fucking wait.broken iris wrote:BurtReynolds wrote:The problem is that could have happened decades ago, but our population quickly expanded to create more need, and moderating consumption isn't going to happen voluntarily. I'm more cynical about population growth declining than most people. I see 90% of the problems on N&D as really symptoms of the one larger problem that no one wants to talk about.stip wrote:BurtReynolds wrote:Is a welfare state inevitable? An ever increasing pool of unskilled labor, technology eradicating the need for it, and skilled positions not even coming close to making up the difference. The end of work and all that.
But we're all going to drown in 30 years anyway.
It probably is. It's not necessarily a bad thing either. If we've advanced technologically to the point where we can meet people's basic needs, even moderate luxury needs, without having everyone needing to work all the time why not construct a society where people work less and have more time to, you know, live?
Society will have this talk soon enough. Science is proceeding pretty rapidly at mapping the brain and correlation studies showing relationships between things like IQ and political persuasion with genetics are become more common (something no one dared touch for years after The Bell Curve). At some point it will become apparent what an "optimal" human consists of and the suboptimal will be left to rot eliminating their consumption in what is likely in involuntary manner.
As a member of the suboptimal class myself, I hope this gets put off for a while.