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thegooddoctorben t1_ixjgrs8 wrote

>What potential does forced labor have?

The idea of "forced labor" (which doesn't mean actual slavery here) is so weird to me. Everyone who doesn't have a job is being supported by people who do. Maybe it's their spouse, their parents, their siblings, or the government, but the idea that people should be free to just quit work and expect other people to support them is odd. People have had to work to survive for the entire existence of humanity.

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Gremloch t1_ixk2tpm wrote

Your argument is "It's always been this way" and isn't really an argument. Things change. We have automation enough that farmers can feed millions more people with millions fewer workers. Why should those workers now go do other stuff "just because"? That is work for work's sake, not because it's needed.

We are quickly arriving at a time where food, energy, and many necessities could be provided by automated workers and there are no need for human workers AT ALL. Should we find more work for these people and force them to do something because we oppose "free rides" or should we clothe, feed, and house them and allow them to work on whatever makes them and their communities happy and fulfilled?

I would say that an environment where everyone can experiment without the fear of failure (homelessness, starvation, etc) will lead to huge leaps in innovation and quality of life for our species.

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