The reverse may happen precisely because the battles over tying the vote to a regular income, forced sterilization, and so on, have already been fought and won before. The means exist for the underemployed public to resist; the question is whether they can be used. I would not be surprised if they are.Zixinus wrote:I think the same thing will happen that happened in the past, during the Industrial Revolution: there will be large sections of the population that will be forced to do illegal or otherwise socially disruptive jobs for no other reason that they cannot get any other kind. They were born to educational values that became obsolete by the time they reached adulthood (for example: you don't need to know how to read, but you need a plethora of skills needed around the farm and you'll always have work). For example, there will be a large number of women who will have no other option but prostitution if they wish to make a living simply because they cannot find any other job.
We have been here before and of course the lessons learned there will be ignored. The large number of unemployable people who want to be employed, will be looked down upon as scum. And because they will be treated as scum they'll end up as scum sooner or later. They'll tie the right to vote to having a regular income. They'll make up pseudo-scientific ideas as to why unemployable people are unemployable due to some inherent failure or fault on their part and thus deserve their status. Then they'll just ignore the large number of unemployable people as they have done in the past. The police will be given the right to treat all of these people like criminals, as they do with certain minorities. Then politicians will have the bright idea to just exterminate the unwanted, inherently-criminal, useless underclass through forced sterilization, letting an epidemic run through, raising food prices or whatever.
Then again, I'm fatalistically pessimistic about the future.
This changes essentially nothing- the point remains that if human society cannot continue to exist along capitalist lines, people will tend to revolt against and modify the system before it collapses entirely. The peasants don't keep starving indefinitely while the aristocrats eat cake, especially not in a society where famines are not normative, are not a customary thing that happens all the time as a routine affair.Except that the capitalist will not sell the device, they will rent it. To the capitalist, the best device is one that once brought will replace all human labor the capitalist has to pay for. Then the capitalist will have nothing to do but sit back, earn pure profits and complain about how he is unfairly taxed by the government so welfare-queens can live off his honestly-earned money.I once read something to the effect that the last thing capitalists will ever sell is a device that does all of our work, and thus makes communism/socialism mandatory for the continuance of human civilization. Wish I could find that quote now.
The flip side of this is that the lower classes tolerate the upper classes because the upper classes are needed to organize and control the structures that keep civilization running. Someone has to run the government and the economic enterprises that provide for our daily existence, and so long as they continue to do so in a vaguely satisfactory way, revolutions are very unlikely.Tribble wrote:I tend to agree with you there. The only reason why the upper classes tolerate the lower classes is because the lower classes are still needed to do work. If automation reaches the point where it can replace the vast majority of human labour, I don't fancy my chances very much.
But if the people in charge essentially abdicate their responsibilities, make it clear they aren't even trying to govern for the benefit of the governed, and tell (say) 50% of the population "we no longer care," then you get peasants storming the Bastille.
Necessary to what? A government that thinks this way gives nobody any incentive to be loyal to it. Why would people bother to fight for it or support it or even listen to it? Sure, in theory they can attempt to rule by force, but I see no reason to assume automation will make it more practical to rule by force, unless you get leaders who are willing to methodically butcher 80% of the population to protect the remaining 20%. And I really doubt that normal human politicans are going to order that kind of madness, or find it easy to do anything involving governing other humans if they try.Why would governments want to have to take care of billions of unemployed people? That's just asking for trouble. If human labour is no longer necessary, it makes more sense in the long run to simply eliminate the vast majority of the human population, either via starvation, sterilization, epidemics etc.
As a more general version of this, if automation means we have no need for skilled workers... frankly we have no need for owners either. Owners are only socially necessary insofar as they coordinate enterprises that the public somehow benefits from. Owners who fail to be beneficial may be tolerated, but that doesn't mean the toleration extends indefinitely.