Does physical labor have a future?

American_Jihad

Flaming Libs/Koranimals
May 1, 2012
11,534
3,715
350
Gulf of Mex 26.609, -82.220
That's one way to slow/stop immigration, robotic revolution. You can bet la raza activists won't like that...

BRAWN IN AN AGE OF BRAINS
Does physical labor have a future?
July 21, 2017

Victor Davis Hanson
lki.jpg


...

One reason for our disdain for labor today is that the more physical work recedes in the twenty-first century, the more life superficially appears to get better, even for the vestigial muscular classes. Cheap cell phones, video games, the Internet, social media, and labor-saving appliances all make life easier and suggest that even more and better benefits are on the horizon. Formerly backbreaking industries, from the growing of almonds to the building of cars, are increasingly mechanized, using fewer but more skilled operators; in the future, this work might be all but robotized, without much human agency at all.

Anyone who has spot-welded or harvested almonds with a mallet and canvas has no regrets in seeing the disappearance of such rote drudgery, from the view of both the laborer and the consumer, who benefits from the cheaper prices brought on by labor-saving devices. But as we continue on this trajectory, initiated in the Industrial Revolution, from less demanding physical work to rare physical work, is something lost? Something only poorly approximated by greater leisure time, non-muscular jobs, and contrived physical exercise?

...

The notion of physical work, or lack of same, also underpins the United States’ massive illegal immigration problem. Yes, Mexico seeks to export its dependent poor, to create a powerful expatriate community in the United States, and to garner over $25 billion in remittances; and yes, corporations demand cheap labor in hospitality industries, construction, and agriculture. On the political front, La Raza activists want a steady stream of unassimilated immigrants in need of parity with U.S. citizens—and thus requiring self-appointed ethnic activists and a careerist industry of identity politics; and the Democratic Party hopes to turn the American Southwest from red to blue, given new demographics.

...
 
You want to bring back slavery!

I say fuck physical labor if robots can do it.

Time to rethink,
Going to need a guaranteed basic income when the machines take over. You'll have to be able to pay the robotic taxi-driver somehow when you no longer can find work because you are fit for little more than digging ditches and changing diapers.


That is what we need...A Basic income.
 
That's one way to slow/stop immigration, robotic revolution. You can bet la raza activists won't like that...

BRAWN IN AN AGE OF BRAINS
Does physical labor have a future?
July 21, 2017

Victor Davis Hanson
lki.jpg


...

One reason for our disdain for labor today is that the more physical work recedes in the twenty-first century, the more life superficially appears to get better, even for the vestigial muscular classes. Cheap cell phones, video games, the Internet, social media, and labor-saving appliances all make life easier and suggest that even more and better benefits are on the horizon. Formerly backbreaking industries, from the growing of almonds to the building of cars, are increasingly mechanized, using fewer but more skilled operators; in the future, this work might be all but robotized, without much human agency at all.

Anyone who has spot-welded or harvested almonds with a mallet and canvas has no regrets in seeing the disappearance of such rote drudgery, from the view of both the laborer and the consumer, who benefits from the cheaper prices brought on by labor-saving devices. But as we continue on this trajectory, initiated in the Industrial Revolution, from less demanding physical work to rare physical work, is something lost? Something only poorly approximated by greater leisure time, non-muscular jobs, and contrived physical exercise?

...

The notion of physical work, or lack of same, also underpins the United States’ massive illegal immigration problem. Yes, Mexico seeks to export its dependent poor, to create a powerful expatriate community in the United States, and to garner over $25 billion in remittances; and yes, corporations demand cheap labor in hospitality industries, construction, and agriculture. On the political front, La Raza activists want a steady stream of unassimilated immigrants in need of parity with U.S. citizens—and thus requiring self-appointed ethnic activists and a careerist industry of identity politics; and the Democratic Party hopes to turn the American Southwest from red to blue, given new demographics.

...
I have no clue what this rambling incoherent garbage is supposed to mean but Im assuming its supposed to make more people hate mexicans because of their skin color
 
Not really. Machines are getting better every day at replacing physical jobs.

That is a good thing.
How is it good when it only means fewer jobs out there for people to earn their income?

God bless you always!!!

Holly
Productivity increases with such technology which means that resources (aka money) is more plentiful and improves the lives of everyone.

A similar thing happened when we had the industrial revolution - the old requirements for labor and work vanished and there was a serious adjustment period. There will be another one again with this shift in the very basis of the worlds economy but on the other side of it will be a better place to live.
 

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