Post Labor Economics for more of the macro-economic perspective: kzbin.info/www/bejne/b6qxaGtuathoqKM
@mnrvaprjct Жыл бұрын
“In practice as well as theory the society was beyond considerations of wealth or empire. The very concept of money-regarded by the civilization as a crude, over-complicated and inefficient form of rationing-was irrelevant within the society itself. Where the capacity of its means of production ubiquitously and comprehensively exceeded every reasonable (and in some cases, perhaps, unreasonable) demand its not unimaginative citizens could make. These demands were satisfied, with one exception, from within the society itself. Living space was provided in abundance, chiefly on matter-cheap O’Neill Cylinders & Stanford Tori; raw material existed in virtually inexhaustible quantities both between the stars and within stellar systems; & energy was, if anything, even more generally available, through fusion, matter-antimatter annihilation, or from stars (taken either indirectly, as radiation absorbed in space, or directly, tapped at the stellar core). Thus the society had no need to colonize, exploit or enslave.” - The Hydrogen Sonata, Ian M. Banks.
@eldsentinel7323 Жыл бұрын
Where do you get 15% GDP growth, with 70% unemployed? Who is buying all the output, with 2K?
@DaveShap Жыл бұрын
B2B
@carkawalakhatulistiwa Жыл бұрын
@@eldsentinel7323before the communists came. Education is only for smart people and have money. people usually go straight to work at the age of 5 years. after communism came everyone could get education up to university. regardless of wealth, ethnicity, and gender. even the dumb and crippled could pass school. many capitalists ask the communists why they send stupid and disabled people to school who will not give a return on the amount of investment given. (waste of subsidies) because for the communists it is not important. if people don't have talented, it doesn't matter whether they graduate they will still be unemployed, it doesn't matter even if they are women after graduating from university paid for by the government and only working as housewives. Something that is good for everyone does not have to be seen whether it will generate profits based on the amount of investment that is given. Free education does not make people smart or creative and make money, but free education makes everyone not stupid, open-minded, learn ethics and loyal to the nation and state. compared to people who attend private capitalist schools who only study subjects that they like and make money.(USA) and never touched subjects such as history, geography and mathematics.
@Anomalyy66610 ай бұрын
Also would you be able to move and live in another cheaper country?@@DaveShap
@hbrown656310 ай бұрын
David, I am 79 and have been retired for 17 years. I live on two checks totally $1,370 a month with a little rescue dog. My housing is subsidized as I'm a vet and costs $302 a month. In 2007 I ran for Mayor of San Francisco. I've run for Supervisor 5 times in different districts and School Board. Never spent dime on campaigns and friends pay my entries. My dog and I pickup trash around our block every morning and all morning Sundays. I do it for writing material as that is my love. I walk 90 minutes a day up steep hills so don't worry about being bored after 'retirement'. Just spend all of your time doing what you wanted to do in the first place anyway.
@brittney31568 ай бұрын
Love this comment.
@macrumpton7 ай бұрын
Im guessing having a good life on a fixed income is a lot easier with rent at $302/mo.
@TheMillionDollarDropout7 ай бұрын
@@macrumpton Yup. Imagine Rent being what it is normally in CA for this guy? Isn't it like $1500 a month lol? Here in TEXAS it's around $1,000 - $1,200 a month.
@JollyJoe135 Жыл бұрын
We need to start a ai apocalypse dating website or something cuz it’s really hard to find someone who cares about this stuff lol
@allenromine-nr6cz Жыл бұрын
lol
@kingarth0r Жыл бұрын
Holy crap this is a genius idea
@sauronthegreat4899 ай бұрын
@@sinnwalker I'm okay with that personally. I've actually found chat bots rather interesting at times.
@hunger4wonder7 ай бұрын
Japan is doing this right now. Using AI to get people to find a romantic companion.
@foolishcoyote.3 ай бұрын
Humans evolve.....ways of living evolve. This could be in America 🇺🇸 furure.
@ernestmac13 Жыл бұрын
As someone once said "the nerds shall inherit the earth", be they car nerds, gaming nerds, or boat building nerds. As 3D printing, CNC machines, etc, improve so too will our ability to make our own personalized items.
@TechCarnivore111 ай бұрын
I would rather die than live with roommates again or in a pod or van.
@rifz4210 ай бұрын
with UBI you could move to some small town and have place for yourself. it would stop towns from becoming ghost towns.
@susanlippy100910 ай бұрын
Yeah I think the idea that anyone is going to want to give up their McMansions is silly. Sure there is a small percentage of folks who desire a tiny home but that's a tiny fraction. Most live in small accomodations simply because they have no choice. Same for bunking up with others. Yeah you do it when you are poor and must do so to not starve but it's not a life most dream of. I thought the purpose of AI was to provide us a better life not cause mass downsizing. The concept of comunes like he suggests was done many times in the past. It's not a viable lifestyle for many folks.
@Rimpala9 ай бұрын
One thing I always wanted to do with the tiny house villages is have a common area in the middle of each handfull of them. I think they're a perfect oppertunity to have a central meeting place where the residents can be a community again vs the current suburban trend of being shut up indoors and never knowing your neighbors. The common area can also have several amendities that wouldn't fit in the tiny houses, think swimming pools, rec rooms, banquet halls, gym, maybe a pub or cafe. It'll be a third place just outside your home basically.
@KS-jz4qq Жыл бұрын
Your content is amazing, such high quality! I have believed this future potential was coming since 2010, it’s amazing to see it actually playing out in real time. Thank you for keeping us up to speed with your presentations!
@smack_dab Жыл бұрын
Same
@nikokapanen82 Жыл бұрын
This is a fantasy that has been promised by the optimist futurists for decades, yet the life has been getting more expensive, people more depressed and hateful by everything and the end for degradation is not seen anywhere.
@philbertius Жыл бұрын
My fear with UBI is that prices will be driven up by it, especially housing. It may be if you want to live the “UBI lifestyle” that you’re either shacking up with eight roommates or avoiding urban life entirely. It could also be the case that urban centers are abandoned as rural areas grow, since we’d no longer be tied to cities for specific job markets (e.g. programmers living in West coast cities.) Remote work could also have this effect.
@Recuper8 Жыл бұрын
Keep in mind that there won't be other jobs. Meaning, the amount of funds available is still finite. UBI won't be a supplemental income, it will be The Sole income. Thinking this way should help to better grasp the world we are heading into.
@philbertius Жыл бұрын
@@Recuper8 I think initially there will be plenty of supplemental income, but less and less as time moves forward, at least for a large majority of people. But at that point, UBI may be able to afford absolute luxury as automation drives the cost of everything to zero. The only cost that will remain is the scarcity of finite natural resources, like land. (There are also natural resources we view as finite today that may be less finite in the future, like gasoline. But the point is that it’s scarcity makes competition between buyers a relevant factor.)
@levibruner617 Жыл бұрын
Hi i know you probably can’t edit a video after uploading it. But I want to recommend that you discuss the effect AI could have on those that have disabilities. For me being deaf, blind. I use chat, GPT and other AI technology to help me with my challenges.
@poutingmarslast601 Жыл бұрын
How did you access the content of KZbin?
@luxuryviridian547 Жыл бұрын
@@poutingmarslast601 😂😂😂😂
@BlackTakGolD Жыл бұрын
@@poutingmarslast601 it's chatGPT talking
@levibruner617 Жыл бұрын
@@poutingmarslast601 good question. I am not completely deaf blind. It means I can still see and hear a little bit. I can’t see and hear well enough to get the small details. I use voice over and voice. Dictation to interact with the KZbin app.
@levibruner617 Жыл бұрын
@@GioGio14412 good question there is technology that helps us communicate with the work. I should mention that I’m not completely deaf blind.
@MrJimthespider Жыл бұрын
Thank you! It's good to hear you are excited for the future.
@danjensen9425 Жыл бұрын
I’ve been to a few countries in Europe. St Petersburg getting around on the metro wasn’t difficult to learn. The door opens and the marble on the wall in the station is different in every stop. On the street you stick your right arm out palm down and someone maybe a taxi will take you where you want to go after negotiating price. Germany has an awesome train system as well as local trams. The train system is awesome in Europe and Russia .
@zurgmuckerberg Жыл бұрын
"stick you right arm palm down" 🤔😬😳
@DavidGuesswhat Жыл бұрын
Russia is Europe
@spol Жыл бұрын
Not sure if you mentioned it but Time Banking is a very interesting solution for people to still work and feel connected to producing their own value. May end up being vital while people get adjusted to this new style of living.
@coreywiley3981 Жыл бұрын
I wholeheartedly support the implementation of Universal Unconditional Basic Income (UBI) as a crucial social policy. However, I firmly believe that in addition to UBI, we must also prioritize the provision of guaranteed housing for all individuals. It is concerning to think about the potential consequences of limited affordability, leading to people being confined to cramped micro-apartments or living in substandard trailer park-like tiny house villages. We should strive for a society where everyone has access to secure and comfortable housing that meets specific standards related to space, aesthetics, and proximity to essential facilities and public centers. When envisioning the future of housing, I consider the transformative potential of AI, robotics, 3D printing, and the exploration of eco-friendly building materials. These advancements offer us exciting opportunities to go beyond mere adequacy and create housing solutions that truly enhance the lives of individuals and communities. By combining these technological advancements with well-designed job programs aimed at constructing and maintaining housing, we can realize the vision of providing high-quality, affordable, and sustainable housing for all members of society. It is essential that we prioritize housing as a fundamental human right and work towards creating inclusive communities where individuals can thrive. By combining UBI, innovative technologies, sustainable building practices, and robust job programs, we can build a future where adequate housing is not only guaranteed but exceeds the expectations of what a home should be.
@tractorpoodle Жыл бұрын
If AI is not a threat, it could truly transform the planet and life in an extraordinarily positive way. I also keep thinking about the 1951 sci-fi film The Day the Earth Stood Still where robots were given full authority to prevent violence and war.
@SeanieinLombok Жыл бұрын
Iain M Banks Culture series are how i think things will pan out.
@starblaiz1986 Жыл бұрын
I totally agree. It's valid for people to raise concerns about the potential dangers of course, because if it goes badly then it's likely to go super badly. But a lot of people seem to turn "hey here are some issues we should try to mitigate" into full doomerist "WeRe AlL gOiNg To DiE 100% gArAuNtEeD!!" which is just silly and hysterical. People seem to mistake blind cynicism for "realism" and "intelligence" these days. The reality is that there will most likely be a few bumps and scary situations, but it will overall work out in the end and we will end up in a better situation as a species. Objectively life has gotten better on average by every metric. Yeh, the gap between rich and poor is bigger than ever, which is an issue. But even the poorest today live measurably better lives than most of the kings and queens of just a couple centuries ago. We will look back a century from now and say that AGI was a big watershed moment that resulted in a big improvement in human lives.
@lievenvv Жыл бұрын
I worry about the Forbidden Planet scenario (1956)
@christopheraaron2412 Жыл бұрын
@@lievenvv monsters from the ID.
@type1thiccasso Жыл бұрын
Thank you once again David for your excellent and thorough research I've directed quite a few friends and family towards your channel so far keep up the excellent work. :)
@alan2here Жыл бұрын
sometimes dogs don't like the sound of machines motors, this suggests a way to solve this issue
@cmdr.shepard Жыл бұрын
Honestly this was boring. If you think you will get a UBI of 2K and that's it, then you're doing it wrong. What are you going to do to earn more than that 2K, when there's no jobs around the world left you to do? Acting? Done by AI. KZbin? Done by AI. Labor? Done by AI. Programming? Manager? CEO? CFO? All done by AI. Science? Art? Music? All freakin done by AI. Do you think when 70% of the population goes unemployed, 30% will remain? You have to rethink about UBI all over again. Heck, you have to acknowledge we won't even have UBI before we lose the concept of money all together. By the time we have UBI means we have the world ruled by AI. That means concept of money quickly goes away. Because AI will definitely not need that. And if you think you will still dictate what happens when AI is in control, well good luck. But yeah, what happens when there's no jobs and no concept of money, now that's the question. Do everyone have tiny houses? Vans? Mansions? Spots in space? Mars? Somewhere else? Do everyone live equal lives? Do actors and NBA players continue living their lives even when they don't make any new money while the others keep their status quo? Who knows? Now those are things I want addressed.
@soisas2811 Жыл бұрын
"That means concept of money quickly goes away. Because AI will definitely not need that." this. this video was not fully thought through, it thinks about ubi without considering all the other effects that AI will have on earth. the whole 2k seems laughable in a world where AI has transformed the world so much. super shortsighted
@harmonizedigital. Жыл бұрын
They already have tiny home sub division in Dallas because regular size houses got too expensive.
@kevinhansford39299 ай бұрын
Wow looks like a massive drop in standard of living what with living in a garden shed and no car! Not exactly living the dream is it
@BIasphemer Жыл бұрын
why are we talking about sharing tiny houses and living in boxes to save money if AI causes production to skyrocket?
@AirKiter Жыл бұрын
I personally cannot imagine a future with AI where housing is a problem. From my understanding of how the market works: higher supply leads to lower prices. If we're living in a world where AGI has replaced all workers, then housing should become another booming autonomous industry, just like others that are being automated. Particularly with 'free' workers building houses, excavating, and perhaps even constructing cities underground, I really can't envision a future where AI has taken over and there is a housing crisis. This contradicts my model of post-labor economics in an AGI-dominated era. Please correct me if I'm wrong, but the argument for downsizing really troubles me as it seems to go against my model of how AGI and post-labor economics should function.
@sevenseas71683 ай бұрын
@@AirKiter Economic resources are Land, Labour, and Capital.... Who will own the land on which houses are built..??
@madalinradion3 ай бұрын
The reason there isn't enough housing is because of the boomer generation that had created anti housing increase regulations to stop the building of new houses to keep the value of their houses high, you can blame the greedy old farts for these problems
@lordkresh10 ай бұрын
The job giving your life "meaning" thing is odd to me. Most of us work for someone else, we give their lives meaning and enrich their lives far more than they do our lives. So UBI at least would provide time to find real meaning, making someone else a lot of money while just barely scraping by while using all your free time should in fact make you question whether your life means anything.
@rifz4210 ай бұрын
exactly, what's your favorite art, novel, song or movie vs what's your favorite excel spreadsheet?
@tchadcarby8439 Жыл бұрын
This is going to be an Awesome episode!
@christopheraaron2412 Жыл бұрын
I so appreciate the definition of the difference between socialism versus a Ubi. It is a real pet peeve of mine out there in the world where people misuse socialism all the time is it things like social security Medicare and so forth are not socialism especially when you take into consideration that even though Medicare pays for medical care it is private Enterprise it provides the doctors or hospitals and so forth and the research thank you thank you so much for such an intelligent and articulate definition for a lot of the people who may be unclear on this
@Apjooz Жыл бұрын
If basic income is socialism so is insurance I guess.
@JohnDoe-ef3wo Жыл бұрын
It's communism actually. So it's Even worse.
@urphakeandgey6308 Жыл бұрын
People also need to stop thinking Scandinavia is socialist.
@christopheraaron2412 Жыл бұрын
@@urphakeandgey6308 Scandinavia is a capitalist economy a social welfare state. Social welfare is more about income distribution and not about who owns the means of production
@mikeburton106411 ай бұрын
@@urphakeandgey6308Or, and hear me out on this, Americans in particular need to stop thinking socialism is anything they don't like. Socialism, like capitalism, democracy, and most other socioeconomic systems, exists on a spectrum - one with more than one axis, no less.
@antonjoubert6980 Жыл бұрын
"Here slaves, heres a basic income for you, while we claim everything that exists for ourselves" and a dr evil laugh at the end.
@spencervance8484 Жыл бұрын
When enough money is stolen from the market, wealth becomes relative
@robinshood12688 ай бұрын
It‘s already like this, but we have to work fulltime just to survive. I mean maybe we‘ll still be slaves under UBI but at least it would be a little more pleasant 😅
@hunger4wonder7 ай бұрын
Slaves?! slaves that are actually *free* to pursue their own interests?| You have a strange definition there.
@bgtyhnmju7 Жыл бұрын
Lots of good ideas in this one. Yup, we're gonna have to make some changes to make it all work, but a lot of those could be fun and rewarding. I've made a few, probably gonna have to make a bunch more. Thanks for the video.
@otorishingen8600 Жыл бұрын
"What will I do without my job" has got be one of weirdest question ever heard
@jonlegasa2482 Жыл бұрын
I love your videos man I hope everyone watches them!
@jonlegasa2482 Жыл бұрын
Also just wondering, do you think there will be any need for entrepreneurship in a post-AGI world? Will it look the same? Different?
@DaveShap Жыл бұрын
I think that human initiative will always have value. I don't think it will look the same, though
@antpoo10 ай бұрын
Everyone living with others sounds like the makings of gangs of New York.
@FinGeek4now Жыл бұрын
Sadly, UBI will not be a thing with the current political climate even though it will be needed and is probably needed now tbh. Reaganomics and trickle-down economics is the rule-of-the-day and will be so in the foreseeable future. In order to fund UBI, as you mentioned, would be done through the redistribution of wealth from corporations to the civilians and since the corporations won't like giving their profits away, they will just have any laws/regulations related to it to be buried by bribing (I mean, lobbying) the politicians. Honestly, if I was a betting person, I'd place my bets on the future being a dystopia since there are too many corporate interests involved.
@AAjax Жыл бұрын
I am sad to agree. Increases in productivity gains used to result in compensation gains for labour, until 1971, at which point compensation flat-lined. Corporations, the billionaire class, and their government lobbyists will protect this status quo. Psychopathic traits are much more common in CEOs. (studies have shown) As personal wealth goes up empathy goes down. (again, studies have shown) Billionaires will laugh and compete for high score, as people starve in the streets.
@kevincrady2831 Жыл бұрын
@@AAjax "Billionaires will laugh and compete for high score, as people starve in the streets." Exactly--just like they already do.
@MikeCrowe-s3l8 ай бұрын
UBI may happen eventually but there will be serious social unrest first.
@jamesbarbour84005 ай бұрын
Just like at the present time then.....
@FinGeek4now5 ай бұрын
@@MikeCrowe-s3l Did a brainstorm / think tank session with Gemini (which was the last nail in the coffin - stopped using corporate-based LLMs in favor of uncensored, locally hosted versions) with the main factor of allowing humans to evolve past our tribe-based instincts, with a generalized utopian society as being the end goal. The results were.. not pretty, not for a very, very long time (~5,000 years).
@erikdahlen2588 Жыл бұрын
As a Swede I really think it is interesting with the concept of a Walkable City, the concept of having a non-walkable city is something outside my imagination. I really need to visit US to experience this crazy thing myself. 😂
@joeurbreviewandcopyvids Жыл бұрын
Pure insanity. It makes my blood boil every time I see a strip mall.
@jamesgrey13 Жыл бұрын
With enough time and willpower, any city can be walkable!
@peterng2511 ай бұрын
Montreal too is walkable, no need for a car. That is if you like walking on ice and snow
@CarlosGoga9 ай бұрын
¡Gracias!
@ImpossibleTrades-dl9be Жыл бұрын
The problem with U. B. I is inflatiion/lost buying power. If everyone gets its, more currency is chasing same amount of goods. If it's given selectively, those who get it are robbing buying power from those who don't. Govt will introduce price controls, and this will create shortages. We're heading into a lose/lose game, where only a very select few will reap massive long term benefits.
@susanlippy100910 ай бұрын
This assumes production capability stays the same. The theory is production capability expands exponentially thus abundance is the result. Your result depends upon demand exceeding supply which is unlikely to be the case with production being cheap. Under our current system, yes the result of increasing wages is indeed inflation.
@Leshpngo Жыл бұрын
I've added this to my limited list of favorites in my favorites folder.
@CarlosGoga9 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for this open thinking! I deeply enjoyed it. In my perspective, everything matched so well #lovetopia approach that I had a big smile in my face and my heart 😉 Muchas gracias, buen hombre
@grnbrg Жыл бұрын
One thng I would add to the UBI framework would be to incentivize education. $2000 month, with no strings attached as a start. If you can sell your skills or goods that you create to other people, great. However, whatever organization is providing the $2000 base amount should also reward time and effort spent on self-improvement. Whether that is studing university level physics or studying blacksmithing and forging. This will encourage progress and guard against societal stagnation.
@andrzejpienkowski1066 Жыл бұрын
Useless knowledge is instantly forgotten. The incentive would have to be real and stable. Give an edge, prestige. Like retesting and rewarding with money every single year.
@madalinradion3 ай бұрын
You don't really get this whole ai thing do you, there will be next to no jobs in the future, if you can learn a new skill that can make money the ai will also be able to learn it except way faster and better
@grnbrg3 ай бұрын
@@madalinradion I've spent 30 years in the open source community. People can and will spend a lot of time and effort doing things that they enjoy doing, with no need for a monetary reward. And if AI has changed society to the point where there are almost no jobs (which I agree is very likely, although the timeframe is uncertain) then it is likely that most people will have their basic needs covered somehow. And while AI might be able to do pretty much everything faster and better, there will also be a market for non-AI goods. Just as an example, if you're furnishing your new apartment, you can order a new couch from AI-Mart, and a perfectly built couch that meets your specifications will arrive the next day. But what if you've got a friend who got interested in furniture making, and since they don't need to work offers to make you a couch. It'll take longer, and won't be as perfectly constructed, or exactly what you expected. But it's hand made. If there is no cost difference, which would you pick? If there was a cost difference, how much would you tolerate?
@carloandreaguilar591611 ай бұрын
Not just bikes! A huge eye opener
@Seehart Жыл бұрын
Why tiny houses? Why not cheap big houses? Construction cost isn't an issue, and cheap real estate is just a matter of deploying a more ecological implementation of desalination.
@sharethelove93166 ай бұрын
The government (govern-mind) never cared about us ...they have ONLY ONE PLAN and nothing else
@booksandvideos6 ай бұрын
If I have to live in a tiny house due to losing my job to AI, I'm going to be pissed off, lol.
@DavidTitus_ Жыл бұрын
I made a video on it as well. Interestingly high numbers. I personally think it should probably start low, in general for public support purposes, but also lower by age that increases by age. And removing minimum wage. More may be possible, but the job = honor feeling is really strong. Interesting what AI may do.
@jamiledunn5175 Жыл бұрын
This sounds incredibly dystopian. The assumptions are quite ambitious as well.
@hunger4wonder7 ай бұрын
dystopian? What do you mean?
@SilentScholar10236 ай бұрын
Not sure you understand the idea of a dystopia.
@jamiledunn51756 ай бұрын
@@SilentScholar1023 It sounds nice but we do not live in a society that can/will move gracefully into a post-work paradigm. Ppl would end up reliant on government basic income which the government would surely use to control their behavior. Meanwhile you would have mega wealthy trillionaires directing society based on their idea of how things should be which of course would mostly only be a direction that entrenches their wealth and power.
@chrisradano Жыл бұрын
I am a loner who lives in the country. Even my wife is too many people sometimes. I would rather do physical work so I can maintain my lifestyle and have more "me" time. I'm keeping my 2004 Subaru and our 1972 built "used" house. City life is not for me and there are many country folk besides me. What about houses and cars that already exist?
@robkramarz4015 Жыл бұрын
My purpose is the long-term survival of intelligent life. I can't imagine any idea more destructive to the future of intelligent life than UBI. My own experience on the road leads to the clear conclusion that almost all homeless today are unemployable and not contributing to others or to society in any way, not because of a lack of jobs, but due to drug addiction, disability, or simply no desire to be a contribution to others. A world with UBI will simply enlarge this underclass of the non-contributing who become an ever-increasing burden on the contributing. UBI creates an ever-accelerating vicious circle of non-contribution where the children of the non-contributors never learn the habits and sense of purpose that lead to wanting to make a contribution to others and instead live in a perpetual child-like world of expectation, hedonism, selfishness, dependency and fear. Your passing point that UBI might lead to a lack of productivity and self-actualization is an understatement. Let me say in closing that UBI won't even be necessary, as any student of economics knows, since the opportunities to serve other people and society productively only increase as the cost of goods and services decrease. Spend any time in a typical household today (the 99%) and you'll observe the need and demand for services of all kinds: childcare, elder care, tutors, psychotherapy, physical therapy, fitness training, music, art, cleaning, landscaping, repairs, school teaching, work training, etc. Any one of these professions could use 10% of the adult population when people can afford it, which will be soon. So, even if 70% of the current workforce were to lose their current jobs, the remaining 30% become so much more productive that every household with at least one working member can afford all these additional services, thus putting all the previously underemployed to work serving the needs of others in productive ways, doing work which is much more satisfying as well, but only ONLY if they have not already been caught in the trap of hedonism, dependency, and laziness so that they are unable to contribute to the lives of others. UBI is not a safety net, it is a trap. David, a smart guy like you should take a moment and consider what a hell you are advocating,, and at least wait to see if I am wrong before advocating a solution without a problem. I'm available as @mrfunding on twitter.
@FinGeek4now Жыл бұрын
You're wrong in your assessment. Had a job, lost said job, ended up homeless myself - and it sucked; badly. I did have some money saved up and so I self-studied for the CompTIA Security+ exam (I was already A+ and Net+ certified) - got that cert and... nothing. No hits on sending out a few hundred resumes for anything related to IT (even basic IT). Decided to get my Cisco CCNA and.. still nothing. I got an offer to interview from a defense contractor across the country, however, they would not pay me to move and only reimburse me (I didn't have the money to do so). So, to make a little bit of, well, I'd say money, but I traded my services (laptop and desktop repair at Burger King) for food. Wrote a couple of books for Kindle, etc.. It wasn't until the pandemic hit that I finally got some help and I was able to find my current WAH job. I'll probably end up homeless again though seeing how the student loan repayments will kick in again (don't get paid enough for rent and wage garnishment) which means I'll lose this job since I won't have a home from which to work out of.
@7200darkcharm Жыл бұрын
While I understand and respect your perspective, there are some counterarguments to consider. Firstly, it's crucial to remember that UBI is not intended to replace work, but to provide a basic level of financial security, effectively eradicating extreme poverty. This could foster an environment where people have the freedom to pursue jobs (or lifestyles) that they are passionate about and where their skills can be better used, rather than just taking any job to survive more choice is always good. All of those jobs you mentioned can also be done more efficiently by an AI, giving people busy work for it's own sake is a great way to cause the society to stagnate, they expect 70% unemployment over the next 5-10 years, yes there will still be people working at that time but for how much longer? The assumption that UBI recipients will automatically become unproductive, dependent, and hedonistic can be challenged. Studies, such as the one in Finland where they trialed UBI, showed that the recipients continued to work. They also reported lower stress levels, better health, and higher confidence in their future prospects. This suggests that UBI could potentially lead to a healthier, happier, and even more motivated workforce (while it last) and population .
@soni794910 ай бұрын
I'm not giving up my vehicle, period.
@HayHay-uo1rb Жыл бұрын
Big fan of video and UBI in general. Although I do not think it’s an adequate “end goal” as to where we go from ai. Socialism needs to be the answer. The capitalists (owners of the means of production) will always have an incentive to undercut bargaining power, cut ubi and other social welfare to save on taxes, capture public goods through privatization, and monopolize industries. It’s time we look into both ubi as well as how AI can play a hand in central planning and economic decision making. Additionally, worker owned enterprises have a greater ability to equitably and rationally respond to automation than traditional shareholder and wage worker companies because the incentives align more easily with it.
@cmilkau Жыл бұрын
I've thought about the idea that when we can automate every task, what value could humans provide to the economy? It's their humanity. Their values, their preferences, their appearance (language, voice, motion patterns), everything that distinguishes humanity as a whole, individuals specifically or groups of them, from just any conceivable sentience, or from each other. And it's funny because it's already happening. It's how social media make their profits. It's how AI is trained. Human labor is providing this information, usually without or with minor compensation, but it is still something that has to be done. And as of yet, it cannot be fully automated, because simulating humans without human input is well beyond contemporary computational capabilities. And you have to keep doing this, as humanity changes, culture changes, even our bodies change.
@JohnKruse11 ай бұрын
I had lunch at work once with Stephen Wolfram. He was asked what role humans will have in the AI/robotic future. He said, _"We will be the goal setters."_ I think it all hearkens back to what John Naisbitt called it “high tech/high touch.” The technology will recede into the background and we will spend less time wrestling with it and more time doing what we, as humans, want to do. The movie "Her" gives a nice vision of this iMHO.
@Electric_camper5 ай бұрын
UBI seems a great idea on its own for communities. In your example I would do less GBP growth, since we all need to tune down consumption too. So reducing UBI over time and set goals to a better environment. That will boost health and cut healthcare as well.
@spencervance8484 Жыл бұрын
I put my son through college on a single income...thats great for a person like my grandfather. The value of the dollar was TEN TIMES what its now when first started working
@stevedavenport1202 Жыл бұрын
Wouldnt the real world limited supplies of basic commodities place constraints on economic growth?
@matt_milack Жыл бұрын
If UBI gets established, will all of us get the same amount of money? If yes, who will establish and how will be established what amount of money we will get? If no, who and based on what will decide what amount of money will be given to each individual?
@DasRaetsel Жыл бұрын
It would have to be the same in order for it to be legitimate. The bureaucracy that gets added the worse. Best to keep it simple and one value for everyone and let everyone make their own choices with it (like where to live).
@matt_milack Жыл бұрын
@@DasRaetsel So a guy who has an IQ of 140, a PhD and 10 years of experience working as a neuro surgeon will have as much money as an imbecile? I hope I will not live long enough to be part of that world.
@starblaiz1986 Жыл бұрын
There's a couple of ways it can be calculated. 1) Look at the cost of living for an area, and base it off of that. In the short term that would be why you wouldn't want it to be equal for everyone, as different areas cost different amounts to live in, so you'd want to balance for that until things even out. 2) You could instead take the size of the pool of UBI money, and split it equally among everyone on UBI with no questions asked. Automation tax is one way to generate the pool for UBI, and David talks about some other methods in the video. This would be the most fair when cost of living has largely evened out across the board. You could do this right off the bad at @DasRaetsel essentially suggested, but that's likely to cause lots of disruprion and mass migrations as people can no longer afford to live in certain places. But then because they're migrating to cheaper places, prices there start to shoot up and people get displaced again. Yeh it would settle down eventually, but it would cause a lot of chaos and probably death and destruction before it does.
@joelgraff6550 Жыл бұрын
There are lots of small towns in America with populations of less than 1000. They are very walkable with grocery stores, restaurants, parks, schools, etc. Large lots could be purchased and revamped to create the "coaster" communities you mentioned. With how spread out the current houses are, it would be possible to triple the populations without expanding the borders of the towns.
@rho_dan_us Жыл бұрын
For various reasons and sheer number of requisite underlying assumptions, UBI will not work in this form. Also, never underestimate political pork barrel politics that will ruin this.
@christopheraaron2412 Жыл бұрын
Possibly the AR revolution and automation might also make it possible to build housing or structures exceedingly less expensive than they are presently and then also a variation updating on Elon musk boring equipment could also give us the ability to excavate really cheaply and build downward and then therefore bring down the cost of housing that way as well possibly..
@kahnmann9 ай бұрын
Where do you put handmade trinkets or furniture if you live in a tiny house?
@booksandvideos6 ай бұрын
Exactly. And who will have the money to spend on trinkets if you only get $2000 a month, unless the price of everything else drops so significantly that your services may be $5 or something low like that.
@Steponlyone Жыл бұрын
Great presentation, thanks for sharing with us! What about local Security / law enforcement, peace keeping, firefighting and other natural disasters / accident response teams are also going to be still needed in a UBI world, won’t they? What about legal, justice, etc? Do you put all that under the umbrella of health and services?
@7200darkcharm Жыл бұрын
Why can’t the robots do that stuff?
@MihaiBalint Жыл бұрын
This, came here to ask about this. Also what happens when a neighboring community decides they want your spot and user their robots to overpower your robots?
@Steponlyone Жыл бұрын
@@7200darkcharmthey could, up to a certain point, but they all need to inspire trust, empathy and respect, and my take is that there is a human aspect to those feelings.
@stevedavenport1202 Жыл бұрын
@@7200darkcharm They will, eventually.
@AboodCohen Жыл бұрын
Awesome video, thanks David ❤
@GNARGNARHEAD Жыл бұрын
I think your fundamentals are spot on, but you're kind of missing it, the adventitious aspects of such a society is that our commitment to creativity skyrockets, that can be in one off boutique solution, or optimizations, the general exploration of the possibility space is comparable to a singularity all by itself.. to the shrinking population sizes, I think it's important to keep in mind the advances in medicine, research into senescence and bioreactors is still in its infancy, very promising developments happening at the moment that have enormous potential to provide vastly improved healthcare to all also, there's already WAAY too many people hiking the Appalachian Trail 😆 I've heard you almost can't get a permit to hike the last leg of it anymore, it's becoming like Everest, most uncouth. maybe once vertical farming blooms we can start reclaiming farm land and sculpting more places to be in nature 🤷personally I'd love to live in a high density apartment spire in the middle of a forest
@adamsplanet6 ай бұрын
David , you are by far my favourite KZbinr atm. But have you seen Simon Reeves recent documentary on Australia ? He visits a community of Aborigines who are based near Darwin. 90% of the community are on UBI (they call it "Sit Down Money"), and unfortunately it has made the whole community spiral downwards into domestic abuse, drug and alcohol abuse etc. Its a very real indicator of how things could go
@chairde3 ай бұрын
This is wonderful.
@nomadtv6009 Жыл бұрын
Great overview but I think the crux is drilling down on the change over. All the hobbies in the world won't mean a thing if we can't safely transition to a post AI economy. Labor, Unemployment, UBI, Housing, transportation, and dressing social and economic stratification and the transition of wealth, taxes, social support structures ect are the absolute main issue that needs to be discussed fully and repeatedly. It literally is just as if not more critical than the alignment discussion. Keeping AI from killing us all is critical. But just as critical is keeping humans from killing each other as we face this existential transition. We need a deep and constant conversation about this most important subject.
@SeanieinLombok Жыл бұрын
Always viewed it as post scarcity/ post 'year zero event. Love your takes. Would like to follow you on twitter?
@Eric.Morrison Жыл бұрын
I think the biggest thing missing from these videos is acknowledgement that most people don't work in silos. Replacing our careers with hobbies will not be fulfilling, as humans are highly cooperative, and working together in a structured environment to achieve a common goal is rewarding and extremely meaningful. It's not (just) about status - it's burned into our DNA. A more likely future would be one in which AIs/robots and humans (who wish to) work side by side. Or at the very least the machines will give us tasks that make us feel productive and helpful, and provide secure structure and competent/compassionate leadership. Deaths of despair (suicide, drug overdose, etc) are rising at an alarming rate, and it's got nothing to do with income. I'm actually pro-UBI, I just think we're not considering how important it is for the psyche to belong to a cooperative, productive enterprise, be it a tribe or a corporation.
@7200darkcharm Жыл бұрын
There will be space exploration for people that want that, setting up new colonies would be challenging and a collective goal.
@Ambrosia2830 Жыл бұрын
I don't know where you are getting any of this "burned into our DNA" and hobbies can also be carried out in a structured cooperative environment so just weird. Deaths of despair as you put it have a significant correlation with income as the most disenfranchised and unempowered in society are the most likely to commit suicide or fall to drug addiction which is shown in statistics of my own country (India) where manual labour workers and house-wives are the most common victims with farmers, students following. Maybe you are coming from a privileged background but humans don't usually work in a well structured environment for a common goal because they are completely aligned, this is the rare scenario where employees are connected to the company at a deeper level than renumeration. They do it so they have enough to sustain their way of living or elevate it. Ain't nobody working as a janitor at microsoft because they believe they are contributing to a technological innovation to change the world, mostly none of the people in large companies have any sort of significant connection or attachment to the final products they play a part in producing.
@gijane2cantwaittoseeyou203 Жыл бұрын
Someone clearly never tried to make/keep their hobby profitable. Shit is so hard it would fulfil you for thousand years.
@susanlippy100910 ай бұрын
Most jobs no. I'm a custodian. I would cheer if you free me from my daily torment. There are many ways people work together to achieve goals, have you forgotten sports? Games? Hobbies? This would allow people the ability to go do the things they wish to do above the things they must do to survive. Trust me I'm not missing cleaning the mess these kids make.
@catvisiontv855 Жыл бұрын
The thing is this is a starting point money type of the situation so it's not like this is all you get for the rest of your life or anything people are starting with that and getting that on a monthly basis like you would in a Monopoly game basically and if they want to try to do something with it they can it's a starting point they can go get a job they can get a place to live and then get a job they can just do whatever they need to do from the starting point and I think that's what they're trying to do here at least for this starting point until other things happen in the future which you might want to look up Robby Wells and the creative society that could be the future which is very interesting.
@juansgalt Жыл бұрын
waw that was the most depresing thing I've ever heard.
@thomasruhm1677 Жыл бұрын
And now a serious comment: I would not change much. I have the things I like doing, and would not want to change them.
@Seehart Жыл бұрын
"It's not enough to cover rent" is not a rational argument against UBI. We currently have a $0 UBI. A $1000 UBI would cover more rent than a $0 UBI. Make sense? Even a mere $1000/mo would make a huge difference for people who currently can't afford rent. UBI doesn't cause jobs to go away, and it doesn't even disincentivize work. So it's a false dichotomy to use such an argument as a reason not to have UBI. A $1000/month UBI would be easier to get into law than a $3000 UBI, so that's what I would push for. Once we have that, increasing the amount would be relatively easy. Meanwhile, if it isn't enough, get a job too. But when you get that job, you are doing so with a better negotiation position that you would otherwise have with a $0 UBI. As automation continues to increaee, it will become easier to fund larger UBI, while deflation makes each dollar go further. Yeah deflation. But UBI causes inflation right? Sure, but automation causes deflation. They balance out. UBI is the best means to address the total disruption of labor.
@cfltheman Жыл бұрын
Greed will ruin it because prices of everything will rise especially rent. So it will be just like before.
@bigbadallybaby Жыл бұрын
My concern is how myself and many others with large mortgages would be able to pay them on a UBI. But my head hurts thinking through the situation. Many wouldn’t be able to pay, but no one would be able to buy the house if the bank tried to sell it…. How do people move up the housing ladder if they can’t earn more money?
@andytheriault9383 Жыл бұрын
what keeps you from earning more money or value? would being resourceful be illegal under UBI?
@johnstevenson5084 Жыл бұрын
@@andytheriault9383 No, but AI will be better than you at anything and everything, no matter how hard you try or how resourceful you are.
@SeanieinLombok Жыл бұрын
Ownership of any resource in an equitable society is the real discussion, WHen the WEF suggest you will own nothing and you will be happy, this is what they are actualyl referring to. IF everything belongs to everyone, but we have the ability with an abundance of fuels, resources, and time, we can spend more time in metaverses, with all the same 'trappings' of alleged luxury, and the most luxurious thing of all, time, as long as our basic maslows hierarchy of needs are satisfied.
@Steponlyone Жыл бұрын
It is true that ownership is often primarily a way to retain autonomy and privacy. When autonomy and privacy are guaranteed, ownership becomes secondary
@roseagain2 Жыл бұрын
@Andy Theriault your digital money will expire if you don't spend it where and when they want you to spend it. Government owns you, and you pay for it.
@homeyworkey Жыл бұрын
While some zoning laws are obviously needed, it does seem alot of them are in place to maximize profits... Also, what are your thoughts on taxing energy/other utilities? many people use aircon when they could just wear a couple more layers of clothes, keeps the lights on longer then they should, have long showers, etc. obviously its disadcentivized with the cost it brings, but if the cost was ramped up higher it would result in a more strict culture.
@Frankiigii Жыл бұрын
I think it would be better to focus on energy efficiency than to limit people's use of energy. If we built based on the environment we wouldn't need as much energy per household anyway.
@chrisradano Жыл бұрын
$2K USD is slicing it a little thin. I think 3K net or even 2.5K would make a difference. In the evolution of things, we may evolve into less greedy species when there is no more fear of scarcity or even death. When I was a kid 50 years ago I wanted to be rich. As an adult, the responsibilities involved with being being wealthy sound like a headache. For me to make the most living within our means seems like plenty. So even within our individual lifetimes we can go through changes and evolution.
@sidequestsally6 ай бұрын
A lot of the solutions suggested sound like pre-industrial subsistence living. I'd...prefer not. Not saying youre WRONG, just saying I don't think I like where this is going.
@Seehart Жыл бұрын
Cars will drop in price rapidly with automation, and car ownership will rapidly decrease in popularity with ubiquitous robotaxis. But rent/mortgage will still be significant, at least until desalination and other tech decreases land value disparity.
@braichu479 Жыл бұрын
See you on the Appalachian dawg ✌
@HagiaFantasia Жыл бұрын
This time when updating zoning laws to accommodate tiny homes, walkable cities I sincerely hope they don't do it the way FDR did segregating the housing by race via redlining, walls and invasive highways dividing neighborhoods, that's not progressive nor is it humane
@rettiOrlock Жыл бұрын
Hello! I wanted to express my appreciation for your work and the valuable content you consistently provide. As a huge fan of your stuff, I am truly thankful for all the effort you put into your presentations. They are not only informative but also exceptionally well done. I was wondering if you have considered sharing your slide presentations. They would be immensely helpful for me in explaining various topics to my friends in a concise and clear way. Your expertise and the quality of your slides would undoubtedly enhance my ability to communicate complex concepts effectively. Thank you once again for your hard work, and I hope you consider making your slide presentations available to your audience. It would be an incredible resource. Keep up the fantastic work!
@peterng2511 ай бұрын
I think a robot with precision vison and dexterity should be in the dentist/ dental hygienist roles. 'She/h'e' will provide top near perfect dental care all over the globe
@alwardslab8732 Жыл бұрын
But automation and 3d printing should also lower housing prices, vertical farms and zero kilometer food production and distribution, also should keep food prices in check. Most crucial part right now is energy, all AIs, Robots and technology are power hungry...
@paulhiggins5165 Жыл бұрын
It's ironic that AI might end up doing all the interesting work leaving humans to decend into a race of rustic craftsmen and farmers. There's this neat narrative arc in which our species ascends from simple hunter gatherers toward technological sophistication to the point where we create AGI -then slowly reverts back again to the point that we may no longer even understand the machines that come to run our world- sounds like a lot of the golden age sci fi I read as a kid. In reality I suspect that the 'useless eaters' meme may overtake this more positive outcome as those in control work out that they have absolutely no use whatsoever for the redundant millions that clutter up their world and continue to drain it's dwindling resources, even as they add very little economic value to it's future. Cue your favourite dystopian varient of 'soylent green.'
@paulhiggins5165 Жыл бұрын
Replying to my own comment to add that I have no idea why that strike through line appeared in my text- perhaps the AI that no doubt moderates these posts objected to this part of the paragraph?
@hi-gf5yl Жыл бұрын
@@paulhiggins5165 I would think ai would use more abundant materials and more efficient energy production to continue growth.
@paulhiggins5165 Жыл бұрын
@@hi-gf5yl You assume that this growth would be willingly and equitably shared by those in power. Is there any evidence that even the current level of prosperity has been shared in this way? I don't think there is. There has always been an uneasy truce between capital and labour because those with the wealth and therefore the power recognised that they needed the great unwashed to labour on their behalf. What happens to this truce when capital realises that they no longer need most of the human labour force? Perhaps human nature has changed enough to make a utopian outcome possible- I hope so. But the more likely outcome I fear is that those who have no economic value will be gradually stripped of their rights to the point that they will at best be marginalised and desperately poor, or at worst be 'disposed of' in some way or another. Ironically the AI's may end up having more rights than the humans they displace since their contribution will be of more value to the elites who run the world.
@Frankiigii Жыл бұрын
@@paulhiggins5165 wealth redistribution is very common in Western nations. We have innumerable social programs that are funded by taxes. Even the healthcare system, while not universal in the US, has many assistance programs for the poor. It's certainly not perfect, but this is largely due to logistics and corruption, both of which can be addressed by AI. Besides all that, do you think people of the West, who are famous for their rebelliousness will simply allow themselves to be ground into such abject poverty, the likes of which can barely be found outside of a third world country? People have been mislead to believe that life is much worse than it is. There's definitely room for improvement but I think this doomer mentality comes down to negativity bias.
@Ambrosia2830 Жыл бұрын
@@Frankiigii I think you've gone too far up your arse to see the suffering of millions on a daily basis while you type your youtube comment. At least I can recognise this and move on but you have been mislead to believe the sort of life you are witnessing around you is the truth of existence which it clearly isn't. By the very fact alone that healthcare isn't universal should be a significant alarming sign, its not a negativity bias its the reality of existence for millions of individuals and billions worldwide. Compared to how much wealth and value is being generated and enjoyed by the wealthiest in society, the rest of us might as well be living in abject poverty for most intents and purposes
@chrisradano Жыл бұрын
A lot of the images proposed have to do with the "fashion" of us imagining 70% unemployment. For instance, the "taxi" thing I think has been leaked out by the US auto manufacturers. OK, this would work in a city. But there are still going to be rural and other needs the "taxi" thing won't meet. Are people going to have to wait half a day for a taxi in a remote area to haul something a short distance? What about work vehicles? There is not going to be a "one size fits all", the way large industries try to push on us. "Tiny houses" are also good for some. Traditionally, in the US Northeast, a "starter home" would be a row house in a city or town. These houses were originally built in walking distance to a factory or somewhere that employed a large group of people. Here we have Winters. Wintertime may be a time when outdoor activity is less, and indoor projects take place. In a tiny house, there's not much room to lay out materials to let's say paint. This is going to bring on cabin fever. Tiny houses are cute and ideal for seasonal residence. But once again, what about stuff that already exists? Are row houses going to be demolished for tiny house communities? Or will existing houses be refurbished? Also 60 years from now the population will be less than toady. Right now my wife and I live in a house about 1590 square feet. It's fine for us. We have a garage and a shed. The heating bill is a little high because we are in a windy area during Winter. Point is, many people live well within their means today. If we had between 2-3K UBI we are pretty much already there. Many things outward appearance wouldn't change drastically, at least not right away, if UBI was implemented for 70%. 70% unemployment would still be a major shock to 100% of the people.
@stacyfoote9032 Жыл бұрын
Us filipinos and other minorities live in multi income households , already multi-generational . There is no pressure on moving out .
@fR33Sky Жыл бұрын
I haven't finished the video yet, but I'd like to share my story, since I live with a kind of a basic income for the last year or so. I used to pursue a PhD in Physics, you know, accelerators and stuff. Unfortunately, I happen to be from Russia. I used to do some free work for a research institute (I'll call it INR for no reason), but then was employed for 10hr week for half a salary. Which was ~250$ at the time. To put this in context, (for a single person) in Moscow I've averaged 290$ per month for mobile internet, food and other FMCG. My housing and home internet were basically free because my uni priced the dormitory at around 15$/month. So, with a uni stipend (~150$) and some help from my parents, I managed to get by and save a little. After Russia started the war in Ukraine (again), INR was dropped from some research grants and my salary went down to 120-150$. The upside is that I never showed up at work since February 2022 and they still pay me. Bureaucracy and overall reluctance to fire a random student made it possible for me to try to export my startup (which ultimately failed) and find a temporary shelter in Tbilisi, Georgia. It made it real to leave Russia, crash land in a foreign country and unsuccessfully look for a job for over half a year without a penny of savings. I even paid the rent for my friend (which I ran with) for the first two months because exchange rates were really high. After a few tries, he found a place to hang onto. Currently, I'm averaging my expenses 150$ for rent and 120$ for food per month. INR still pays me ~110$, uni did pay ~120$ until this June (guess, I'm expelled now). If the basic income is good for anything, it's this: escaping the governments that are aggressively making you comply. For anyone wondering, my first exchange program was planned for the autumn of 2022. And yes, researchers of my grade in Germany do earn like 3800$ per month, or 950$ per hours that I worked.
@fR33Sky Жыл бұрын
One of the premises of the UBI is “no question asked”. The problem here would be to transfer your funds abroad In my case we still have Unistream working just fine. Others opt for cryptocurrencies
@macrumpton7 ай бұрын
The idea of the humans becoming a race of hobbyists is pretty depressing. My hope is that we use AI to improve humans continuously physically, mentally, and emotionally. We can imagine being better and now we have the tools to make it happen. The alternative is to become bystanders watching AI improve itself, like a dog watching its master doing things it can't comprehend.
@clusterstage Жыл бұрын
Whats your update on the AI from Israel, Faception?
@anandchudavala10 ай бұрын
Please talk about CBDC and personal property in a post-labor economy.
@joeurbreviewandcopyvids Жыл бұрын
What rules are likely related to starting a business while receiving UBI. ?
@DaveShap Жыл бұрын
I suspect it would be highly encouraged. If you can spot an opportunity to create market value, go for it.
@NikoKun Жыл бұрын
I fully support UBI! However, I think long term, the implications of AI, require classifying AI as something everyone in society collectively owns. Maybe that's "socialism", but if we don't do that, I'm not sure how we don't end up with a few wealthy AI-owning families, ruling us forever.
@DeimosSaturn Жыл бұрын
If automation leads to deflation and deflation leads to goods, services, products that are essential to life being pennies per ton, then it begs the question: What is the point of UBI? wouldn't everyone just need the loose coins in their couch cushion to be able to comfortably retire? consider if universal constructors or drexler devices become common, what would be the point of money? You could make nearly any device, product, food, drug out of air, dirt, water, and sunlight. you could substitute rare earth minerals like cobalt or gold with common elements. Fullerene is theoretically a batter semi-conductor than gold and fullerene is just carbon. so then what is the point of UBI? I imagine that no more than 2 months after the technological singularity, everyone in the world will have their own personal universal constructor. It might not be the premium version of it. It might be slower, less efficient, not have access to as large of a library of things it can make, but it can make an origami-style pop-up house out of thin-membrane transparent graphene, insulated with aerogel, with air purifier, water purified, solar panel, sink, toilet, bed, Air conditioner, heater, bullet-proof and fire-proof. You can make thousands of drugs to treat, cure, or prevent thousands of common diseases. It can synthesize potato starch and amino acid paste to sustain life. Can turn raw sewage into pure water. So then what do they need UBI for? Will they live 'well'? Well, they wont have their own ranch-style home in the suburbs with a garden, but what would it even mean to "tax" someone who owns a post-singularity factory? What price would they sell their dirt-cheap products and services for? If it costs you 16 cents to make a truck-load of ground beef, and you made it out of just air, water, and sunlight, and it took your factory just a few seconds to produce it, who are you going to sell it to? What would be the point of selling it? Would someone capable of producing that much food bother to do the work of selling something like that for that price? I think you're not seeing the forest for the trees here.
@MasKpt Жыл бұрын
Grandma still prefers a human to take care of her, yeah, but hopefully medicine will evolve up to a point in which grandma doesn't need any robot, because she reached longevity escape velocity xD
@mrd6869 Жыл бұрын
39:06 Bruce Willis did a movie like this called Surrogates. Humans were neurally plugged into robots outside. 1st stage deep dive VR will happen next year when generative AI merges with VR.
@JoeHacobian Жыл бұрын
Yeah, no. Will move out of the US if that happens. Have fun being a new serf class.
@captainoctonion9045 Жыл бұрын
This lol
@waterlevelroute7 ай бұрын
I think you are missing an important thing about cars. That is, if you are no longer driving 20k miles a year to a job and you choose a common model with good parts availability, your cost to own a car becomes pretty cheap. As an car enthusiast, I'm rather keen on the idea of maintaining and detailing a car while it sits in the garage 6 days a week.
@dunmwarupreachan45679 ай бұрын
There doesn't seem to be an option for those who want a solitary lifestyle. I want to own large acres of woodland. Clear a spot and build a small roundhouse. Also, every winter hedge off the land as much as possible.
@RikiB Жыл бұрын
23:40 grandma would rather you take care of her and not a robot. This part I kind of disagree with. A lot of older people don’t want to burden their family/friends with taking care of them. If a robot could do the cooking/cleaning/care and family then could just visit and hang out - that would be the best of both worlds I think.
@basicprogrammer61478 ай бұрын
If AI replaces a high cost-to-consumers industry such as doctors, for example, then that cost gets put back into everyone's pockets. And health insurance costs would drop dramatically because AI would do a better job, and there would be no one to sue. My point is that sure, a SPECIFIC industry might collapse, but who cares? THAT money stays in our pockets.
@unconsistentone5385 Жыл бұрын
I feel like Dave is advocating for Socialism but not willing to say it, capitalism is centered around profit, the fact that these plans are people first and not profit first shows that this is not capitalism but socialism. Guys, there's nothing wrong with not wanting capitalism (aka worshiping profit) and actually care about human
@Bilangumus Жыл бұрын
It is capitalism, because you gove the poor a chance to consume more goods. Socialism is centering everything.
@susanlippy100910 ай бұрын
It's not in theory socialism. That has more to do with who owns the means of production. In socialism it's generally the worker, communism it's the state( government), capitalism it's the owner class. Social safety net is not socialism. UBI isn't socialism. Worker owned co-ops are socialism, government run central planned industry is communism. Many democracies already provide far greater social bets than the US yet are not socialist countries. If businesses are remaining owned and operated by the owner class it's still capitalism. The owners would still profit quite handsomely. Alaska already does a form of UBI in that they distribute a portion of the oil proceeds to every Alaskan citizen annually. You get a check, just for being Alaskan that comes from charging the oil producers to drill the oil. UBI would be similar in that producers of goods would have to pay a tax(VAT) on what is produced and all citizens would qualify to benefit from it. It in no way prohibits folks from making more, not stops owners from profiting. Government isn't seizing control of production and not much changes fundamentally.
@marywingo7700 Жыл бұрын
Also adding to this comment, you can buy used travel trailers and full-size mobile homes for literally Pennies on the dollar, and get a redneck guy with a dually to call the travel trailer to a decent trailer park, or for a full-size used mobile home, you can pay a mover a couple Grand. This is how I got around very expensive apartment housing during my University days. Especially for travel trailers, you can slap a couple solar panels since they are getting so cheap. There are also a ton of workamping opportunities on ranches and state and national parks. So this is a very clever way to live cheaply in the US
@BlessingsfromBridget11 ай бұрын
Won’t there be people who spend free time learning? I know I would
@Ryoku1 Жыл бұрын
Great points but i strongly disagree with your premise that the majority want to downsize their home. There are people who do, yes, but I strongly doubt it is higher than 30%. And personally I want more space.
@DaveShap Жыл бұрын
Consider that homeownership is beyond the means of most young people.
@natecodesai Жыл бұрын
Are you going to do the rest of your videos in full Star Trek regalia (ref to your latest videos)? I like the message because yes... we are living in the future. We now have the tools, or are very close to having the tools that can lead to a post-capitalist society. I personally don't feel UBI is the best bet because we have to work out proper Governance in our nations, handling things like corruption, etc. before that happens. We must "get our house in order" if you will, before we can enjoy such things as a fair and balanced global subsistence minimum. Rather than UBI I'd rather go to directly for a money-less society, let all of these legacy institutions die by ignoring them. Banks, financial institutions and politicians will not help with anything besides to try to continue to hold their death grip on their position in society as it currently runs. If we have UBI before we heal all of that corruption, we will only ever end up in a society where the powerful oppress the weak. Whether they gain power through being centralized and being the organization that is supposed to hand out this "basic income", or by placing some other type of mob rule over this, unless UBI is the same as an inalienable right (for someone to mess with your subsistence would legally be like attempting to murder you)... it will be completely impossible to properly regulate. This current financial framework and bureaucracy we live in doesn't have any direct transitions to a post-capitalist world, but I think UBI done right would not include any institution who has ever taken advantage of a population of people within the capitalist framework.
@KenzieLaMar Жыл бұрын
This is a dystopian nightmare.
@PokeUrFace Жыл бұрын
we already live in it, why not try another one?
@hunger4wonder7 ай бұрын
What exactly do you feel dystopian about this future, if you don't mind me asking? 🙂
@FaithfulFumoFan236 ай бұрын
Your perspective of a dystopia is very warped and quite a sensitive one. If want to see a dystopia take a look at some of the slums that exist as a result of people having absolutely no access to any means to improve their situation.
@Sunster069 Жыл бұрын
One thing I think you may be missing is longevity. If we’re going to be living longer mortgages and car payments should be able to be stretched out to 50 yrs or more. So with that being said I would think we would be able to afford bigger houses not smaller houses. Same with cars. What do think David?