Comment by dml2135
4 days ago
Why should one be entitled to do one thing for their entire career?
The world changes. Those changes cause a need, a job fulfills that need. The world changes again, the need disappears. Why should the job then persist?
> Why should one be entitled to do one thing for their entire career?
Because if you pursue a career and invest time and money into it over the course of your life, especially in the highly Americanized way which involves both a substantial time and MORE substantial outlay of money to achieve that, and you then go on to live in a society that demands you earn a living or starve/freeze to death, it is unconscionably immoral to fuck with other people's means to earn that living for your own profit.
And to be clear, that doesn't mean "you can never change your career," that's nonsense. People do that all the time, out of necessity or just desire. However currently the ability to do that is heavily gate-kept via the income of the person wanting to do the switching, and for a lot of the people most likely to be automated, they barely make enough to survive right now, where in the hell are they getting capital to retrain themselves on a new career?
And that's not even going into the physiological challenges. You objectively, factually, learn better when you are younger, and it's also worth noting that society at large benefits more from you learning at a younger age like we traditionally do, because you spend the first few years rolling around your house annoying your mother, you spend up to age 18 (usually) in mandatory K-12 education, you spend between 2 and 8 years in college after that if you decide to go or alternatively, a few years learning a trade or something, and then you have what we generally aim for about 40 years of being a productive member of society. If you have to retrain in the middle of that, that's just less efficient on every front. It costs you money and time, it costs society your productivity for however long you leave the workforce and return to education, and of course that's assuming you can afford to do it at all, and don't end up just lurching from one job that's about to nix you to the next, being miserable and depressed, until you can't find another and then you end up in the homeless system.
In my mind at least, the only way I can comprehend anyone being in favor of this sort of system is they imagine themselves one day being on the top of it, because that's the only group of people who are actually benefiting from this sort of instability. The looming threat of and execution of job automation has massive boons for employers; fewer employees can produce at higher rates, the job market is flooded with recently laid off people which lowers the value of labor and lets employers pay the ones who are hired on after less money, and the overall instability "vibes" present makes employees more willing to tolerate bullshit from their employer because they know how much the job market sucks and they don't want to find another, or, who knows, maybe they are trying and literally can't for the previous reasons.
Like in my mind, this just comes down to whether you think you're more likely to be the boot or the neck under the boot, and that's going to decide how you feel about this.
I think this is all a great argument for a strong social safety net. It’s not a great argument for keeping people in pointless jobs doing work that has been made obsolete by automation.