So I live in a very blue coastal state.  Every couple months I manage to get up 
into the mountains.  And every time I’ve been up there in the past couple 
years, I’ve passed a large truck in testing camouflage. It’s an autonomous 
truck, being run around and around and around the mountain to perfect 
self-driving technology.  When that technology is perfected, that’s 3.5 million 
jobs at risk in the US alone.

So that’s what I don’t get about the current discourse.  Sure, we can and 
should acknowledge the glaring deficiencies of capitalism and find ways to 
change the system and to ameliorate the impact.  But that’s not the whole 
picture.  Pennsylvania steel mills didn’t go out of business in the 70s because 
of cheap Chinese steel, they went out of business because their mills weren’t 
competitive against small domestic mini-mills.  Domestic auto manufacturing 
employment didn’t slump in the 80s just because Japanese cars were cheaper and 
better, it slumped because improving automation meant fewer workers were 
needed.  And right now my company is busy working with machine learning 
technologies, which we have to acknowledge will be disruptive to a lot of 
white-collar positions vulnerable to AI-driven automation. 

This change has worked out well for us out on the coasts, but it sucks for my 
family members back in the Midwest who are living through the hollowing out of 
their communities due to globalization, automation, and the emergence of 
capital-dominant business models.

We can’t just focus on the flaws of capitalism.  To me, Trump’s election is 
Exhibit A in what we can expect if we don’t find a way to give people 
meaningful lives in an emerging world of automation owned by big capital.  
Maybe that’s Basic Income, maybe it’s something else we haven’t come up with 
yet.  But the longer it takes, the more disruption we can expect in social and 
political realms when substantial swaths of the population continue to feel 
unmoored from their communities and themselves.

Eric

Eric Miller
PRINCIPAL  →  SQUISHYMEDIA
O: 503 488 5951 / M: 503 780 1847 / SQM.IO

> On Nov 9, 2016, at 12:44 AM, Brian Holmes <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> 
> Capitalism requires that everyone compare their earnings to your
> neighbor's. But democratic capitalism demands at least some
> redistribution, so that your neighbors do not become the object of
> envy and hatred. What's more, democratic capitalism demands from
> everyone some sense of higher mission, so that the competitors in the
> struggle of all against all can at least temporarily forget the fire
> of their competition. The Democratic Party has been unable to offer
> either redistribution or a shared sense of purpose. They claimed
> to support minorities, but they denied that support with their own
> actions. Their strategy has been an abysmal failure.



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