[FRIAM] Courtesy
glen
gepropella at gmail.com
Tue Mar 18 17:34:45 EDT 2025
Have you seen Mark Rober's lidar video? https://youtu.be/IQJL3htsDyQ?si=55HZk9Wn6MHLclXU
On 3/18/25 2:12 PM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
> All this talk about immigration and displacement of jobs of "native" workers. It will be nothing compared what happens in a few more generations of AI. I expect semi-trucks slamming into AI centers in a few years. Humans are done.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Friam <friam-bounces at redfish.com> On Behalf Of glen
> Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2025 2:05 PM
> To: friam at redfish.com
> Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Courtesy
>
> As a forcing structure, they can re-tune it to a different frequency or mode. But a dominant element of capitalism is to externalize costs (and internalize profits). So as long as there's a cost sink like mother earth, they can maintain the current mode. As that sink clogs and fills, they either need other sinks (Mars!) or they'll have to switch to a mode that involves some reciprocity within the proletariat, pit one against the other in a way that allows them to invisibly harvest the remainder. So while Bob and Alice tit-for-tat each other, the wealthy act like Visa and take a (maybe very small) portion of each transaction.
>
> They still need a source for new Bobs and Alices, though: Pro-Natalism! And there's still the practical issue of growing them and keeping them alive. But advances in big tech can do that. Soylent, a baby formula for adults ... maybe grow 'em smaller. We don't need the proletariat to be as tall as the bougies. And the only reason they're so fat now is because we haven't gotten the formula for Soylent optimized yet. We'll get there.
>
> On 3/18/25 1:41 PM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
>> Glen writes:
>>
>> < And the ultra-wealthy *know* this. They spam us with bullshit
>> (X/Twitter/LLMs), surround our cities with below-cost box stores to
>> destroy businesses, destroy unions, lobby legislators up and down the spectrum, etc.
>> They do this because they *know* we're resource poor. And we're
>> approaching the point where none of us can afford to be courteous ...
>> or at least we don't think we can afford it because our values and
>> priorities have been so bent by the forcing structure they've trapped
>> us in. >
>>
>> What's the long-term win for the ultra-wealthy? If much of the
>> population can't earn enough money to survive, they won't be very good consumers.
>>
--
¡sıɹƎ ןıɐH ⊥ ɐןןǝdoɹ ǝ uǝןƃ
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