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- Apr 1, 2013
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I am doing a Systems Thinking course and some of my fellow students are interested in and/or proponents of the Anti-Work movement/idea. This is a rejection of the "capitalist" system that forces people to work to earn enough to eat so that you can go to work. It does seem to be mainly younger people (from what I have seen on the internet) , many of whom would like to spend the day blogging or gaming rather than working, but this is an old idea going back centuries in Europe at least.
As I am of the view that I can never be sure I am right, I wonder if my views that this will never work are in fact just me being "stuck in my worldview". For me the idea, one of those being suggested, is that we all have investments (I suppose "the state" give the initial money) and live off them whilst doing what we want to do, is frankly nonsense, because for an investment to grow it needs someone to be doing something to generate extra money from the initial seed cash. For example, if I invest in a brewery, the investment would grow if the brewery did more sales or grew its market share by inventing and selling more/new popular beers that people wanted to buy. Even if the factory was totally automated, without someone doing something to sell and increase sales the same number of products would be produced every day and my investment would stagnate. The Soviet Union, even though supposed to be a workers paradise, actually still required people to do something everyday or starve.
I am interested to know what others think of this.
As I am of the view that I can never be sure I am right, I wonder if my views that this will never work are in fact just me being "stuck in my worldview". For me the idea, one of those being suggested, is that we all have investments (I suppose "the state" give the initial money) and live off them whilst doing what we want to do, is frankly nonsense, because for an investment to grow it needs someone to be doing something to generate extra money from the initial seed cash. For example, if I invest in a brewery, the investment would grow if the brewery did more sales or grew its market share by inventing and selling more/new popular beers that people wanted to buy. Even if the factory was totally automated, without someone doing something to sell and increase sales the same number of products would be produced every day and my investment would stagnate. The Soviet Union, even though supposed to be a workers paradise, actually still required people to do something everyday or starve.
I am interested to know what others think of this.