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by dsheets
504 days ago
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In your simplification, you have removed everything that isn’t labor (i.e. demand for commodities) as well as labor. It is unsurprising that working to bury gold is a bad investment in this scenario. Instead, you should have invested in a farm and some robots. Sorry, there’s no free lunch if you can’t steal it from younger generations. Edit: you’ve revised history and now added a bit about “similar arguments” and inflation. The answer is simple: yes, you might get back less real value than you put in. Yes, there might be inflation. This is fine and normal and would be preferable to the present system and is not dependent on future labor in the same way as direct redistribution. There are no guarantees. ‘Enforcing’ guarantees is a recipe for disaster as we are now seeing unfold. |
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Incorrect, I'm definitely including demand in there.
I'm saying there's no supply.
It's n/0, not 0/0.
> Instead, you should have invested in a farm and some robots. Sorry, there’s no free lunch if you can’t steal it from younger generations.
(1) OK, but that's not what you were saying before
(2) (a) The AI to control those robots does not yet exist, (b) when that AI does exist, we can set the pension age to zero — doing so is called "UBI", and AI is often suggested as both a mechanism to enable it and as an economic transition requiring it.
> Edit: you’ve revised history and now added a bit about “similar arguments” and inflation.
It was intended for clarification, not to "revise history"; FWIW, the para in which you wrote this edit was not present when I clicked "reply".
> This is fine and normal and would be preferable to the present system and is not dependent on future labor in the same way as direct redistribution.
You asked "Please explain how this (obviously naive) strategy is dependent on future labor." — I believe I have demonstrated that it is.