Purple wrote:For purposes of measuring the harm caused by 'displaced jobs' caused by such a metahuman, what is our standard of comparison? Do we compare the metahuman to the thousand men with shovels it would take to dig the ditches by hand? Or to the ten of people it would take to dig the ditches with a few backhoes?
We set the standard for base human labor at "how many jobs does it take in a comparable company that does not have access to trench-dig-man". Again, easy as pie. Especially since in most cases the situation would be such that there would be a direct correlation between this guy getting hired and those workers being fired immediately before or after the event.
So how exactly do we legally define "X jobs in a comparable company" in a rigorous way?
And how can you depend on the assumption that a company will fire all their normal workers right before or right after this point? What about a start-up company that
never hired normal workers and never relied on them, because it was using Dirt-Juggling Girl from the very beginning? What about a company that keeps up its conventional ditch-digging operations for years, and simply expands its operating capability? What if Dirt-Juggling Girl herself owns a startup company that employs only herself? What if an existing corporation starts a new ditch-digging line
only after hiring Dirt-Juggling Girl?
In all these cases, it's hard or impossible to say "fifty men lost their jobs because of Dirt-Juggling Girl."
And if we choose to do the latter, then why doesn't consistency require us to ban the backhoes from being used because they "take the jobs" of 990 shovel-wielding laborers?
Don't be an idiot.
How is that any more idiotic than your idea? Backhoes are a much greater threat to the jobs of ditch-diggers than one particular company hiring Dirt-Juggling Girl. If we can legislate to ban
people from 'destroying jobs' by doing the work of 100 people, why can't we legislate to ban
things from destroying jobs? Does a machine have more rights than a metahuman, or more freedom to violate
my rights than a metahuman?
You're evading the question.
Stop evading those questions.
I am not evading anything. You are just trying to force logical consistency for the sake of consistency even if it destroys the entire point of the argument in question. I had a rant about this a few months back on this forum no less. Rules need to be made for maximum benefit and not maximum consistency.
Laws need to be consistent because otherwise they are likely to be challenged and shot down as unconstitutional, Purple.
Laws also need to be consistent so that the public will have reason to believe they are fair, and will respect them.
People don't make laws randomly. They don't make laws to be whimsical. Laws are written according to principles, and the principles have to stay the same from day to day. Otherwise the long term result is a breakdown of the legal system.
Should athletic organizations ...
No. Just like NASA should not be banned from hiring Superman to fly stuff up to the ISS. He would only be displacing rocket fuel. And, if you will permit the metaphor rocket fuel can't vote against me next election.
Are you kidding me? Building and launching booster rockets is a large industry. Each rocket costs tens of millions, and much of that money goes into the salaries of people who build rockets. If Superman starts doing the rockets' job, he removes the incentive to hire anyone to build rockets.
Sometimes I can't fathom your lack of perspective. Do you even know basic information about how society works?