by SimbaKovu » January 7th, 2012, 9:52 pm
[quote="DGFone"]^ I have to agree with that.
And for the argument of "how many Ferrari's does one need to have", I have the answer: Like it or not, but these exotic, extremely expensive machines are what drive the future. Look at computers. They started out as large, bulky, building sized behemoths that only governments could afford. Now computers fit in your pocket.
You never know what little thing the $1000000 car will introduce that will someday be used by all cars. And who can afford to buy these cars and keep the companies researching? Not me. Just look at the Teslas. And so far, all hydrogen vehicles are also expensive. Your cheap cars all run on petroleum for now.
So to put it at another way, you cannot limit the wealth of people, because they are the ones who can afford to take risks, and drive society technologically forwards. And I think today, everyone know that our current level of technology is not good enough.[/quote]
The fact is that we no longer live in a society where the wealthy actively work to ensure the livelihoods of their employees. We haven't had a society like that since the 1960s.
During the 1960s and 70s, there was this interesting dialogue taking place in the United States about what the future would look like and how Americans would live. Because what had happened was that from the invention of the cotton gin in 1793 to the time period I'm talking about, the productivity of American workers had increased nearly unceasingly and, at times, exponentially. What had also happened was that wages tracked productivity, as in wages rose as worker productivity rose. And every time there was this new breakthrough in how workers interacted with their employer and their working environment, productivity made a corresponding massive leap forward. For instance, the invention of the cotton gin, the abolition of slavery, the Industrial Revolution, the development of assembly line production, etc. And with each of those breakthroughs in worker productivity, leisure time for the average American worker increased, to the point where, in 1967, it reached its peak where, for the first time in American history, the average worker enjoyed more leisure time than time spent at his or her place of employment.
So, what was going on in the 1960s and early 70s was that analysts were beginning to realize that the imminent introduction of computer technology to the workplace would result in another massive leap forward in terms of worker productivity. So the dialogue that was taking place was all about The Coming Leisure Society, and what that society would look like. By this point, people were working 40-hour work weeks with very good, livable wages, mainly as a result of government regularly increasing the minimum wage since the advent of the New Deal programs as well as the advances in worker treatment and leisure time brought about by the prominence of labor unions. So, the analysts were thinking that, as worker productivity made another massive leap forward, wages would continue to increase, and therefore, leisure time would increase to the point where people would be working perhaps 35 or 30-hour work weeks or even the expansion of the work weekend to 3 days. The Jetsons TV show was all about this Leisure Society that people at the time envisioned we would be experiencing by now.
And then, a funny thing happened. With the election of President Ronald Reagan and his efforts to completely dismantle labor unions in the United States as well as further the interests of corporations, wages suddenly flatlined. So, as worker productivity continued to increased, wages remained comparatively flat up until today. So, here is this yawning chasm that is opening up in the productivity-wages graph. And in the widening gap between wages and productivity is all this extra wealth that did not go to the average American worker. Instead, since 1980, it has nearly all gone to the richest 1% in this country.
So, here we are, with another massive leap forward in worker productivity imminent thanks to the development of smartphone technology. And yet, leisure time for the average American worker seems to be inexplicably falling, to the point where people are working 2 or 3 jobs, working 50 or 60-hour work weeks, thanks to the theft of wages which began under Reagan and continues to this very day. The question is: Will the citizens and labor unions of this country seek to correct this wrong and demand a return to sustainability with respect to wages to where it was in the 60s and early 70s? Or will Americans accept this and be willing subservients of their new corporate masters and their allies that dominate government?