by Pops » Fri 09 Dec 2016, 10:42:24
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Newfie', 'E')ither automation is good or it is bad. Ones opinion should not depend upon who makes the suggestion.
Good sentiment Newf but whether or not it should, it does. Logically, our motivations would be selfish, but I think reality is changing faster than most realize and we are stuck with, and beaten with, stale political talking points and fearful emotional opinions. We really seem to be in the middle of a big change in the owner/worker/consumer balance. It has happened in the past and caused lots of turmoil I don't know why this time would be different.
You can't demand government leave you alone then be surprised when it does. Complain about worker protections then be surprised when they disappear. Bitch about moochers then whine when you're down. When the government doesn't protect you, you are at the mercy of those more powerful "within or without" and when you demand the government butt out, you empower the powerful to do whatever they like to you with the full backing of the government.
This is a reactionary government now, elected to oppose the perceived tide of socialism, terrorism, science, islamism, otherism. The political sentiment seems to be that the educated, meritocratic people are at fault and what we need rather than a bureaucratic oligarchy is a plutarchy.
Someone here said we live in a time of entitlement, that is true, but more, we live in a time of presumption. We presume that "our way of life is non-negotiable" but everything is negotiable. We presume the protections government affords are somehow "natural" and that the institutions of democracy don't need defending, but they do. Worst of all, we presume the government is the enemy and life would be great without it, even without the first clue of how that might look. We presume that we have what we do because we deserve it.
We presumed too much, now we'll get what we deserve.
It won't be a robot tax.
I'll not be surprised that people are surprised by coming government actions. Nor will I be surprised that they twist themselves in knots to justify supporting the very things that harm them, we've done it forever. My tagline for years was "Time for the pitchforks." I wasn't surprised that an outsider won on a populist campaign. I was surprised when the pitchfork mob stormed the castle and yelled
"We're here to surrender our protections and cut your taxes!
The oligarchy is dead, long live the plutocracy!!"
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)