Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit login

> If the world doesn't need a particular task to be done by humans, then the task should be performed by robots.

The problem is, our society isn't ready for that shift, not even close. Employment opportunities for the low skilled have all but gone down the drain - there is a reason why Walmart, Amazon and the other usual suspects love to set up shop in devastated communities: they have a captive audience that has no other realistic opportunities for gainful employment and thus is much, much less likely to resist when faced with exploitative and/or abusive conditions.

Warehouse work and logistics in general is the last employment opportunity many of these people have, and while it being replaced by robots may be better for society as a whole (if one follows the belief that all work should be done by machines so that humans can follow their individual interests), just standing by idling around while the markets enforce the shift is going to be a political disaster.




Everyone cheering for automation and AI always says "oh we'll just implement UBI" but none of them ever seem to actually be working to help make that happen; I doubt we will get a glimpse of that until things get bad enough for CEO-murder to be a much more common thing.


UBI at this point is entirely a political decision to be made by the legislators. How do you expect others to "actually be working to help make that happen"?


Give money to people working to persuade lawmakers to make UBI happen.

Get your AI-boosting company to spend some of its money buying lawmakers and telling them to make UBI happen.


MCD still needs middle class people to buy their Happy Meals.


I worked for a Walmart store as a young man. It was well run, and they were adamant that you took your breaks throughout the day. I faced no exploitative or abusive conditions and was well paid.


Was this 80s Walmart, 90s Walmart, 00s Walmart? Their corporate culture has changed dramatically into a cutthroat business.


This is the same experience a friend of mine had working for Walmart for a couple years, until they moved earlier this year. I suspect each ___location is going to vary, though, just like any chain store.


I believe you other than well paid


How long ago?


> The problem is, our society isn't ready for that shift, not even close.

Percentage of US labor force working in agriculture by decade: https://www.gilderlehrman.org/history-resources/teacher-reso...

1950 was 15.2%, 1970 was 4.7%


Yeah, but manufacturing picked up a lot of the slack... until that went down the drain when China came, so Amazon et al picked up the slack, but now there is nothing left.


The US Navy is rebuilding to fight a war with China. There are jobs available in the shipyards, mostly unionized. It's tough work, probably harder and more dangerous than an Amazon warehouse.


>It's tough work, probably harder and more dangerous than an Amazon warehouse.

My buddy who is a union welder at a shipyard doesn't have to piss in a bottle to make his quota. His job is fucking fantastic, thanks to the union, and the hardest part of it is navigating controls around what the navy allows civvies to touch.

It's predominantly a lot of professional work by tradies, NOT grunt work. Use the proper PPE and you probably won't even have any lasting injuries or bodily damage. Take your time and follow the rules and you won't even be the cause of death for a hundred sailors like with the Thresher.


>> the hardest part of it is navigating controls around what the navy allows civvies to touch.

Well, that and using the proper PPE so that you probably won't even have any lasting injuries or bodily damage and taking your time/following the rules so that you probably won't even be the cause of death for a hundred sailors or coworkers.

Compare that to putting the wrong shipping label on the package. I'd rather piss in a bottle than be a welder, to be honest.


If the only jobs available are to help kill more Chinese people, what does that say about our society?


That's good for the coastal towns that have shipyards, but useless in the flyover states.


Most of my recent business and personal travel has involved flying to "flyover states". But whatever.

People are allowed to move for work. I have. Shipyards are expanding in the Great Lakes region.

https://maritime-executive.com/article/navy-expands-shipbuil...

The shale gas revolution has created a lot of blue collar jobs. The chemicals industry is booming in Ohio.

https://www.jobsohio.com/news-events/news-press/energy-chemi...


The US Navy, like all parts of the DOD, knows that the best way to build support for any weapons system is to have part of it manufactured in a Congressman's district. The most unsinkable projects are built, little by little, in 435 districts.

So, yes, the shipyards need to be on the coast. But much of the material on the inside of the ship may be built elsewhere.


>while it being replaced by robots may be better for society as a whole (if one follows the belief that all work should be done by machines so that humans can follow their individual interests)

While "robots" are a fairly recent concept, the advancement of human civilization has been predicated on ever increasing efficiencies of human labor.


> While "robots" are a fairly recent concept, the advancement of human civilization has been predicated on ever increasing efficiencies of human labor.

Agreed. But in general, the efficiency gains got redistributed to the people - usually, by (bloody) revolutions and strikes.

Across the Western world, we haven't seen any meaningful progress in that redistribution in a fucking century - the 40 hour work week got introduced around 1926 [1]. Instead, all we got was that women now get exploited by employment providers as well, so the pool of available labor power virtually doubled, driving down wages while over the last few decades housing costs exploded and the demand for labor went down, further driving down wages. It remains open if the rise of pacifism and "non-violent action" in general that has happened in parallel in the same timeframe was coincidence, causation or consequence.

We are in for a wild ride over the next years. Luigi will not be the last one of his kind, I think this was just the start...

[1] https://www.cultureamp.com/blog/40-hour-work-week


The problem is, since the beginning of time, all the improvements were in mechanical work, allowing humans to shift towards more intellectual work.

Now the "robots" are replacing intellectual work, and humans have no where to go.


Is that really the case? So far all the examples I've seen were closer to "change X caused people to shift to another type of job, or to a new area opened up by X". Very recently some creative work has been impacted by LLMs, but apart from that, are there real stats on the intellectual work being taken over?




Join us for AI Startup School this June 16-17 in San Francisco!

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: