when some US president once visited china, he visited a construction site where they used shovel to excavate the ground. he asked “why no bagger?” and the chinese president replied “sothat we create more jobs”. the US president said “next time, tell them to use a spoon instead!”
i think it’s a fitting description. why bother with workplaces; everything that can be reasonably automated should be automated; in the end, it will be anyways. who are we kidding? how long is this game of not-doing-things-the-way-they’re-better supposed to go on? 5 years? 10 years? 20 years? then what? we’ll face the future one way or another; why not try to face it in a clear and straightforward way?
when some US president once visited china, he visited a construction site where they used shovel to excavate the ground. he asked “why no bagger?” and the chinese president replied “sothat we create more jobs”. the US president said “next time, tell them to use a spoon instead!”
i think it’s a fitting description. why bother with workplaces; everything that can be reasonably automated should be automated; in the end, it will be anyways. who are we kidding? how long is this game of not-doing-things-the-way-they’re-better supposed to go on? 5 years? 10 years? 20 years? then what? we’ll face the future one way or another; why not try to face it in a clear and straightforward way?
funny that this has flipped around now, with china’s many entirely automated factories that can run without internal lighting