In these people’s mind it’s always somebody else who is supposed to employ people and pay them salaries.
It’s roughly a Tragedy Of The Commons situation: each such individual wants to take without giving, and it is indeed sustainable if only a few do it, but as others see them gaining from doing that, they too want to do it - eventually in aggregate there will be too much extraction for what little production there is to keep up and the whole thing collapses.
This has already been going on with Globalization - notice how in the last 2 decades or so for the average person in wealthy nations it feels that money doesn’t go as far and the abundance of shinny toys still fails to make up for a feeling of constant pressure and uncertainty, and how what we are told is the inflation adjusted amount equivalent to a 1960s blue collar worker salary that paid for a house, car and a family of 5 bavk thrn, in the present day barelly covers housing.
IMHO, there is already too much taking and not enough giving back and the political direction, at least in the US is for things to keep on getting worse so it seems we’re bound for dystopia.
SlopppyEngineer@lemmy.world 1 year ago
You get what’s in the movie Elysium.
They don’t care. To them, the world is doomed anyway. It’ll all have to collapse before they can rebuilt it into a better world, so better to accelerate the collapse as fast as possible so they can start sooner on the rebuilding part of the plan. And if you have to break a billion human shaped eggs to make a tech bro wet dream omelet then that’s what’ll happen because afterwards they say humanity as a whole will be much better off.
It’s very cold hearted.
c0mbatbag3l@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Elysium has human laborers, though. The main character literally works at a factory creating the droids for the station’s uses.
fruitycoder@sh.itjust.works 1 year ago
It seems implied that they have labor and work as a means of control and less because they need to. Most of the work seemed to be just oppressing people like him.
c0mbatbag3l@lemmy.world 1 year ago
I don’t see any attempt at the movie’s part showing that the products they were making weren’t somehow used by the citizens of Elysium. The droids are everywhere, implying that they fulfill a need based on what remaining manufacturing can be done on world.
It’s not meant to portray a society that has a fully automated economy, it’s about one that relies on the other for creating goods that will be used and priced out of the range of the laborers who created it.