Originally posted by ahinton
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Should all radio work be unpaid?
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostThe unsustainability of capitalism and its inability to deal with things like climate change for a start. Capitalism relies on about 3% minimum of compound growth per year to sustain itself (otherwise it crashes) - we live on a finite world, growth cannot go on infinitely - that's perhaps the greatest contradiction of all. Plus growing automation will soon make great swathes of society utterly redundant and impoverished (it's already doing it to an extent) - unless the benefits of automation are socialised. Socialism or barbarism. Fully automated luxury communism or dystopic nightmare!
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostThe unsustainability of capitalism and its inability to deal with things like climate change for a start. Capitalism relies on about 3% minimum of compound growth per year to sustain itself (otherwise it crashes) - we live on a finite world, growth cannot go on infinitely - that's perhaps the greatest contradiction of all. Plus growing automation will soon make great swathes of society utterly redundant and impoverished (it's already doing it to an extent) - unless the benefits of automation are socialised. Socialism or barbarism. Fully automated luxury communism or dystopic nightmare!
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostThe unsustainability of capitalism and its inability to deal with things like climate change for a start. Capitalism relies on about 3% minimum of compound growth per year to sustain itself (otherwise it crashes) - we live on a finite world, growth cannot go on infinitely - that's perhaps the greatest contradiction of all. Plus growing automation will soon make great swathes of society utterly redundant and impoverished (it's already doing it to an extent) - unless the benefits of automation are socialised. Socialism or barbarism. Fully automated luxury communism or dystopic nightmare!
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Originally posted by gradus View PostSocialism or barbarism as in the following example.....?
For developed economies the sweeping change of automation, only just started, is surely an unprecedented challenge - previous transformations have involved occupation and purpose for humans. Automation divides us into the fortunate in employment and a steeply rising (ultimately a majoriity) classified as burdens on the state endlessly looking for paid work that does not exist. And the handsome profits from automation will be routed through those tax havens into the hands of the ever present 1%.
For decades there has been limited work for those who can labour but have limited literacy or general capability. Now entrants into the work force are being advised to consider creative occupations as the last redoubt of paid work for.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostBut what in your view is the - or at least an - alternative to capitalism when every state has practised it since time immemorial - or immoral - or whatever? Just curious! I'm not even suggesting that there could never be one, although I do believe that, if there were, some humans somewhere would turn it into capitalism Mk. × before you could say knife...
The alternative to capitalism would be socialism, where the means of production is owned in common.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostCould we be clear what the OP meant by "all radio work"? All presenters, all musicians, all actors/readers, all producers/production staff, all technical staff? Or what? I'm just not clear why radio work should be unpaid.
Thought it was you and yours but it seems that it was probably me and mine?
Other websites worked fine, though.
I am happy to exclude musicians, actors and technicians from non payment in the theoretical scenario that is open to discussion.
Also happy if others wish to disagree.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostSocieties used to be feudal, didn't they? I am pretty sure they thought that would be around forever. Now we only have vestiges of that. I guess it is all part of capitalist ideology to believe ardently that this is how things have always been and always will be, that capitalism is just human nature...
The alternative to capitalism would be socialism, where the means of production is owned in common.
What is meant by the common ownership of the means of production? Common within each country or common globally? And how would the means of production necessarily mean or lead to the common ownership of everything else? Moreover, one could question whether it's morally defensible to force shared ownership of this or that upon individuals who do not want it (did any of us who were not already RBS shareholders want to be made to "own" a chunk of it, especially now that it seems clear that, when that ends, a loss will have been sustained by all?).
UK's NHS - the nation's largest employer by far - is dependent upon private capital and private enterprise; how else would it procure and maintain its buildings and equipment, purchase pharmaceuticals and the rest? It's still a state run industry (owned by the government of the day, not by the individual taxpayers that help to fund it) and so it should remain, but its dealings with non-state organisations are an example of capitalism at work even though run by the state.
The various communist régimes that have come and (largely) gone have all depended to some extent on trading with non-communist ones. Unless the entire world can be persuaded that the capitalist system as a whole has to be fundamentally overhauled, I can see the only sensible solution as ensuring that capitalism works (in ways that it often doesn't at present) rather than trying to throw it out altogether with no viable internationally agreed alternative on offer. That said, there are many lessons to be learned from the history of socialism and it behoves people to learn them.
As to the growth element, this is surely inevitable, whether the world's economies are run on a capitalist or non-capitalist basis? It's all very well claiming that permanent growth is unsustainable - which it will be if not handled with intelligence - but as long as medical science, better food production and the rest enables more people to live longer, the demands upon the world's resources will continue to grow whether anyone likes ot or not. The only solution to this would appear to be to develop ways to get more from less. The gradual wholesale abandonment of fossil fuel production and use in favour of increasing renewable sources of power is just one vital step towards this and UK and US are at present going in the exact opposite direction, in their respective "wisdom"; it can also lessen individuals' dependence upon vast corporations, which has to be a good thing.
But as I hinted before, none of this bears much relation to whether or not radon work should be paid for and therefore probably belongs to another thread that someone might want to create...
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Originally posted by Lat-Literal View PostI have been trying to access this website since about 6am to no avail.
Thought it was you and yours but it seems that it was probably me and mine?
Other websites worked fine, though.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostI have had the same problem, lat, but looking at the times of other messagers, it does not appear to have been universal.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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