| > Seriously? Yes. Communism's key attributes are that it is classless, stateless, and moneyless. > Who takes all the resources and allocates them "according to each person's need" then? We'd need to know more about how post-scarcity is achieved in order to answer that question. Star Trek says the replicator is responsible, although that seems unlikely outside of the imagined Star Trek universe. Based on what we can see today, I'd guess robots. But this is all speculative as we don't really know what post-scarcity truly looks like, or if it is achievable at all. > Communism predates the idea of post scarcity by a hundred years or more AFAIK. Are you referring to what is oft referred to as primitive communism? Although I find it hard to believe that humans have ever not thought about post-scarcity. It seems like the first thought/dream anyone would have when first faced with scarcity constraints. |
Did communist utopians realize it doesn't work so now they're adding "post scarcity" to it to make it work?
Will they add "AI" next?
Edit: "Based on what we can see today, I'd guess robots." Oh yea, "AI" is next.