Re: Sorry to rain on your parade Americans
@ esa
Interesting development: Obama's civil defense force, which will, in effect, free up national guard forces and allow more deployment overseas. Another effect will be that a civil defense force will result in more recruitment for the regular armed forces. Once they have you in the civil defense force system, they have a chance to market a military career to people.
Is there no opposition to the notion of a civil defense force in America? Or are both the left and right on board with this?
@ Zarf
> zarf syndicated wrote:
My responses have smile before them.
and mine will have a frown before them.
1: Elites can replace humans when possible, and can bribe humans when replacement isn't possible, which means oppression is inevitable because the elites don't have a dependence on masses.
Elites can replace humans when possible, and can bribe humans when replacement isn't possible, and, yes, this does mean oppression is inevitable. But gauge the level of 'oppression' we face today as opposed to the oppression faced by humans in Ancient Egypt. You must admit there is a trend towards a more equitable state of human dignity, human rights and liberty.
The cause of that was an increasing need for individuals as a result of technology. World war 2 proved that we need special individuals (scientists, in that case) for the state to retain power. Mass media and other tools become other "special individuals." The transition between Ancient Egypt and today isn't just an increase in knowing. It was an increase in specialization. Remember, in ancient Egypt, a slave was a slave. Farm, build pyramids, whatever. Now, however, specialization makes each individual special.
But in the same sense, it also makes some individuals less valuable. If I was the best crossbow-builder in 1700, and traveled to today to build crossbows, I would probably be a poor guy with lots of crossbows next to his cardboard box home. (But you better not try to steal my tin cup or I'll mess ya up, biotch!)
Now we're headed toward a technological shift: when technology forces people out of many niches into others. Low skilled labor is replaced with technology, which means the government isn't dependent on that low-skilled labor, so they're not representative of them.
Hold on a second here. You are suggesting that the only reason people became more 'specialized' in their activity is because the elite allowed them to. Are you suggesting that every innovation, every specialization, every 'improvement' was and is allowed to occur by the elite. Would you say the only way for technological innovation / increased specialization of labor to occur is for the elite to allow it? What convinces you that the elite controls - to such a complete extent that you suggest - the development of technological innovation / labor specialization / societal development?
Now in regards to more skilled labor, that's slowly going out the window. If there's any job that requires human intuition to fill, two words respond to that: artificial intelligence. Bam, the elites no longer need the people, even the highly skilled people, and they can do whatever the hell they want.
It's interesting you use the word 'human intuition'. What I think you mean by human intuition is the complex decision making process of which only humans are currently capable, a process based not only on rationality and observation, but also on moral and ethical notions, philosophical and political ideas, social and cultural ramifications, and a whole slew of other abstract, high-level thought processes, the very processes by which the elite justify their superiority. Let's also suppose that A.I. will be constructed in the future so as to be able to conduct such higher, abstract thought processes as well. Wouldn't the elite themselves be the ones rendered obsolete in such an event? The elite would no longer be able to justify their place at the top of the pyramid structure with the development of A.I.. It would be the maintenance technician in charge of repairing and the research scientist in charge of creating further innovations for the A.I. machine that would replace the elite, and would, in fact, create the innovations in the machine so as to usurp the elite and install themselves as the new elite: those who control, maintain and innovate the A.I. machine would become the new elite, and, as we saw in the Matrix, could only be usurped by the A.I. machines themselves.
2: The elites won't make the transition because, despite what may be best for society, it's in their interests to retain power.
The elites will make the transition, albeit far too often it is done too late, which results in wars, which results in their being killed off anyway, albeit along with millions of humans, too.
One fact remains: If elites already have an advantage over us in technology, they can live through the war, which means the rest of the losses are mere pawns at most.
Mere pawns in a game of chess, eh? I do not agree. I think you over-estimate the level of control the elites actually have over our society.
4: The elites have more weapons than simply brute force. Economic, political, or cultural warfare can exact the same goals as military warfare, and give the same power. Control of any important resource, spreading of a message, etc., can coopt your movement by fighting it tooth and nail.
But what good does this do them? New technologies are always re-engineered by the humans to suit their purposes rather than the elites, when, of course, the LAW allows them to.
But technology can serve good and evil at the same time, as long as there are markets for each. Let's use an example I personally love: nanotechnology. I can develop disease-curing microrobots if I like and give it to the public, or I can create an airborne disease that kills all non-white people. Or... I could create the disease-curing microrobots, then someone else could reengineer that to create the airborne disease.
The demand for both good and bad technology exists at the same time, which means both can be constructed at the same time.
Let's remember what this post is all about. This is about whether or not actual, beneficial social change can be expected as a direct result of Obama's presidency. My premise is that such change shouldn't really be hoped for very much because it is the politician's mandate - EVERY politician's mandate - allotted to him by the very social system which allowed him to attain political power in the first place to retain the societal circumstances as they are, so as to be able to retain political control of that society in the future. It is the essential quality of the politician to hinder rather than promote ANY kind of societal change. What ends up happening is that the politician only allows those social changes to occur which will allow him to retain political power rather than lose it. It is only at the last critical moment when he MUST allow change or lose his control over society that change occurs. The political system - any political system - is like a dam on a river of innovation, technological development and social change. The pressure for new technologies and their resulting changes on society builds up during so called 'wet seasons' when rapid technological development is possible and desired by the population, and the pressure diminishes during 'dry seasons' when innovation and new technology is either feared or unnecessary due to either complacent-in-fear and/or materialistically satisfied population. The politician's job is to release the gates or close the gates of the dam during the appropriate times of wet and dry seasons, and only to open or close them to a certain, pre-calculated extent. The politician would never allow the flood-gates to be opened completely, nor closed completely, for if either the former and the latter case were to occur the utter uselessness of the political system, the redundancy of the dam-system, would suddenly be apparent to all as it either overflows or dries up, for - and now we come to the heart of the matter - it is the purpose of the political system - any political system - to regulate technological development and the social changes that result.
What has been made clear to all thanks to the internet, is just how much water there is in the reservoir. We can now, with a couple clicks of the mouse, and a couple keystrokes, see just how much potential there is for technological innovation and social change. Yes, the water can flood us and destroy us all, and yes it can also bring water to countless of dry fields downstream.
But it is incorrect to assume that the elite make the water and are able to control it. You see, in fact, it is the opposite. They can't control it, for the damn is always over-flowing. There is simply too much human potential in the reservoir for it to be regulated any longer.
They cannot, you see, stop the rain; they cannot control the river. The river occasionally radically shifts its course, you see. This is just natural. This is just what rivers tend to do, you see. They take the path of least resistance. And although they might try to build more dams on the new courses of new tributaries, it is simply a futile effort. For, whenever new solutions and innovations to problems are desired by populations, one of them always comes up with a solution and creates it, and even one simply innovation of this kind can cause the whole river to shift, and, yes, it could cause a flood; it could cause the extinction of the human race in fact, or, it could be an innovation capable of freeing us so that every individual could suddenly travel to any star in the universe at will.
Once greater numbers, including their own population, becomes the enemy of the state, restraint for the purpose of protecting populations is meaningless since everyone is guilty. If the government wanted to, they could pick any number of ways of taking down populations, including:
A: Direct warfare.
This usually ends badly for Elites.
Answered above. Empirically, yes, it does. But when power can be consolidated due to technology reducing dependence on individuals, bam.
B: Control of food supplies or other key resources. Can't endorse a post-modern, harmonious society when you're all starving!
Yes. Which is why technology needs to be released by relaxing intellectual property and patent laws to allow humans to create an abundance of basic needs.
It will happen anyway, mind you, but it would be a nice gesture by the developed world.
Now we get to something interesting.
A prerequisite for stopping elite power is for the elites to surrender their power willingly. Notice a problem with that?
No. In fact, it is natural if you think about it. Any ethical professional physician, as an example, will have it as their mandate to cure the ill person and send them on their way, not keep them in the hospital indefinitely.
If not, I'm making two new threads today:
1: I know how to stop terrorism globally, and
2: Alot less people would have been killed during the Holocaust if the Holocaust didn't happen.
As for the "it will happen anyway," explain that further, please. Maybe a justification as to how resources can be decentralized and can be prevented from being taken over by authorities if, as you say, those authorities actively work to stop that from happening. Example: alternative energy.
I think I have explained how it will happen anyway (read above).