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by mirimir 3370 days ago
Yes, but ...

It provides some jobs, yes. But mostly low-wage.

Broken glass is a key issue. It's especially hard to separate from paper. I vaguely recall that silicon is also an issue for aluminum.

1 comments

If your skills are limited binocular vision, object recognition, and an opposable thumb and n 2017, you're screwed. Hell, you've been screwed for 30 years. Everyone knows this.
Yes, and that's the problem. The US had welcomed them, because lots of dumb work needed doing. But now, not so much.

So how do societies deal with them? People with no prospects, especially young men, are dangerous.

Government make-work programs, but they're pretty much boondoggles by design, because you're intentionally not optimizing for cost-benefit? But rather maximizing headcount.

If I was in charge retrain people under 50 for something, with more education subsidies (including free post-secondary education) increasing as Age decreases (eg an18 year old goes to college, a 45 year old learns welding) but with the caveat that you have to move out of Methlandia. (Relocation package provided.)[0] People over 50 or those that don't take the offer get free carfentanil.

[0] https://newrepublic.com/article/131743/poor-get-trapped-depr...