Down here Natalia they would call you a welfare mom and Libertarians would
use you as the bogeywoman for their children.    They won't even discuss
these issues.   

 

REH

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of D and N
Sent: Monday, September 12, 2011 3:28 PM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: [Futurework] Are most jobs obsolete?

 

If food and shelter are to be considered human rights, I think that within a
shelter's function, energy to operate it should be included, and an internet
super-grid connection by which to both receive and send out info and energy.
This could have had a much broader scope, but is very interesting.

Natalia

In part, from:

http://www.cnn.com/2011/OPINION/09/07/rushkoff.jobs.obsolete/index.html

David Rushkoff, CNN - I am afraid to even ask this, but since when is
unemployment really a problem? I understand we all want paychecks -- or at
least money. We want food, shelter, clothing, and all the things that money
buys us. But do we all really want jobs?

We're living in an economy where productivity is no longer the goal,
employment is. That's because, on a very fundamental level, we have pretty
much everything we need. America is productive enough that it could probably
shelter, feed, educate, and even provide health care for its entire
population with just a fraction of us actually working.

According to the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization, there is enough
food produced to provide everyone in the world with 2,720 kilocalories per
person per day. And that's even after America disposes of thousands of tons
of crop and dairy just to keep market prices high. Meanwhile, American banks
overloaded with foreclosed properties are demolishing vacant dwellings Video
to get the empty houses off their books.

Our problem is not that we don't have enough stuff -- it's that we don't
have enough ways for people to work and prove that they deserve this stuff.

Jobs, as such, are a relatively new concept. People may have always worked,
but until the advent of the corporation in the early Renaissance, most
people just worked for themselves. They made shoes, plucked chickens, or
created value in some way for other people, who then traded or paid for
those goods and services. By the late Middle Ages, most of Europe was
thriving under this arrangement.

The only ones losing wealth were the aristocracy, who depended on their
titles to extract money from those who worked. And so they invented the
chartered monopoly. By law, small businesses in most major industries were
shut down and people had to work for officially sanctioned corporations
instead. From then on, for most of us, working came to mean getting a "job."

The Industrial Age was largely about making those jobs as menial and
unskilled as possible. Technologies such as the assembly line were less
important for making production faster than for making it cheaper, and
laborers more replaceable. Now that we're in the digital age, we're using
technology the same way: to increase efficiency, lay off more people, and
increase corporate profits.

While this is certainly bad for workers and unions, I have to wonder just
how truly bad is it for people. Isn't this what all this technology was for
in the first place? The question we have to begin to ask ourselves is not
how do we employ all the people who are rendered obsolete by technology, but
how can we organize a society around something other than employment? Might
the spirit of enterprise we currently associate with "career" be shifted to
something entirely more collaborative, purposeful, and even meaningful?

Instead, we are attempting to use the logic of a scarce marketplace to
negotiate things that are actually in abundance. What we lack is not
employment, but a way of fairly distributing the bounty we have generated
through our technologies, and a way of creating meaning in a world that has
already produced far too much stuff.

The communist answer to this question was just to distribute everything
evenly. But that sapped motivation and never quite worked as advertised. The
opposite, libertarian answer (and the way we seem to be going right now)
would be to let those who can't capitalize on the bounty simply suffer. Cut
social services along with their jobs, and hope they fade into the distance.

But there might still be another possibility -- something we couldn't really
imagine for ourselves until the digital era. As a pioneer of virtual
reality, Jaron Lanier, recently pointed out, we no longer need to make stuff
in order to make money. We can instead exchange information-based products.

We start by accepting that food and shelter are basic human rights. The work
we do -- the value we create -- is for the rest of what we want: the stuff
that makes life fun, meaningful, and purposeful.

This sort of work isn't so much employment as it is creative activity.
Unlike Industrial Age employment, digital production can be done from the
home, independently, and even in a peer-to-peer fashion without going
through big corporations. We can make games for each other, write books,
solve problems, educate and inspire one another -- all through bits instead
of stuff. And we can pay one another using the same money we use to buy real
stuff.

For the time being, as we contend with what appears to be a global economic
slowdown by destroying food and demolishing homes, we might want to stop
thinking about jobs as the main aspect of our lives that we want to save.
They may be a means, but they are not the ends. 

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