PDA

View Full Version : Musk: Robots will take your job. Government will have to pay your wage.




Anti Federalist
11-04-2016, 03:53 PM
Can't copy pasta.

http://www.cnbc.com/2016/11/04/elon-musk-robots-will-take-your-jobs-government-will-have-to-pay-your-wage.html

What a future...wallowing around in a useless, superfluous existence, waiting on your government stipend, with all the strings attached to that, while under total surveillance, unable to do or think or act outside of set and well enforced parameters.

Brian4Liberty
11-04-2016, 04:36 PM
According to Musk, there really won't be any other options.

"There is a pretty good chance we end up with a universal basic income, or something like that, due to automation," says Musk to CNBC. "Yeah, I am not sure what else one would do. I think that is what would happen."

What else to do? For supposedly being a visionary, he seems to be severely lacking in ideas. This has been an ongoing issue. The solution so far has been to take the extra wealth created by increased productivity and give it to the oligarchy and cronies.

A much better solution would be to reduce work weeks as productivity increases. The 40 hour workweek is an arbitrary number. Reduce it to 32. Increase vacation time. There are other options rather than concentrating wealth in the hands of the government and plutocracy, for them to meagerly dole out to the peons.

Krugminator2
11-04-2016, 07:16 PM
It seems like a bigger problem is with the educational system. Having a degree in humanities isn't really worth anything in the marketplace and it will be even worth less in the future. But the more education is subsidized the more people choose easy degrees like that. Subsidizing higher education divorces the need to make money when you get out of college from the degree choice. American students don't do well in math and science. The scary part is the push for free college from Hillary Clinton. You are just going to have more worthless people in the labor force but at a huge cost.

Origanalist
11-04-2016, 08:34 PM
The Failures Of Elon Musk: Space Aliens Did It
written by Peter Ferrara November 3, 2016

With $5 billion from the taxpayers in my pocket, I could be a robber baron industrial mogul too. Billionaire Elon Musk prances around as the CEO or godfather of Tesla Motor Company manufacturing electrical cars, Solar City manufacturing solar panels to make electricity, and SpaceX manufacturing space rockets to launch satellites into orbit.

These companies are so cutting edge that they still rarely make a profit. How do they stay in business? With a stream of $5 billion in taxpayer funds.

With $5 billion from the taxpayers, I could be John D. Rockefeller, J.P. Morgan, and Andrew Carnegie myself. But those famous industrialists and financiers made huge fortunes on their own. They weren’t kept in business by a steady stream of taxpayer funds.

But a recent Los Angeles Times investigation concluded that Elon Musk’s companies have benefited from $4.9 billion in taxpayer support. That has come through government grants, discounted loans, environmental credits that Tesla can sell, tax credits and rebates to buyers of his electrical cars and solar panels, and other tax benefits. That doesn’t include government contracts, which are not supposed to involve taxpayer subsidies, but payments for services rendered.

But in two attempts to launch a rocket, SpaceX has failed to get off the ground. The rockets have blown up on the attempted launch, or while on the launching pad. Taxpayers lost not only launch costs, but also over $100 million in satellites and other equipment on board headed for space orbit.

Now Elon Musk wants to follow his boyhood dream to go to Mars. That dream currently includes sending a million earthlings there on SpaceX rockets at a current cost of $10 billion for each colonizer, to build a permanent city on the Red Planet. Musk puts up the bold, inspired vision. And taxpayers put up the cold, hard cash, in a proposed “public-private partnership.”

But if SpaceX can’t even get off the ground, how is it supposed to get to Mars? When the last scheduled SpaceX launch mysteriously blew up on the launching pad on September 1, destroying a $700 million dollar Israeli communications satellite it was supposed to launch into orbit, Musk tweeted that SpaceX could not rule out that the explosion was caused by a UFO.

Contracts with SpaceX do involve a form of government favoritism. The competitor to SpaceX is United Launch Alliance (ULA), a joint venture of top defense contractors Lockheed Martin and Boeing. In 10 years of operation, ULA does not have a single failed launch.

SpaceX can argue it charges less to launch satellites into orbit. But is that really counting the costs of SpaceX’s launch failures, in terms of lost equipment and resulting delays? Or the costs of cleaning up the resulting mess? And how do we count the potential of future lost lives of astronauts, given SpaceX’s record? Not to mention the lives of those million Mars colonizers.

Then there is the bad blood SpaceX seems to have with space aliens. Lockheed Martin and Boeing are not dogged by any such War of the Worlds.

Musk’s fantasy talk of going to Mars is just distracting from more down to earth Musk troubles and failures. Tesla is blowing through cash racing to complete a cutting edge battery factory in the Nevada desert for its mass market Model 3 electric vehicles it is supposed to be ready to sell next year.

Musk’s proposed merger between Tesla and debt laden Solar City is troubled because he is on both sides of the transaction as CEO of Tesla and Chairman and largest shareholder of Solar City. Short seller and financier Jim Chanos called the proposed $2 billion all-stock transaction a “walking insolvency” in Bloomberg Technology. That brings to mind other “alternative energy” failures such as Solyndra and Fisker Automotive, which each cost taxpayers over half a billion.

Is Musk building his own House of Cards paper empire that will only similarly crash and burn the taxpayers once again?
http://blog.heartland.org/2016/11/the-failures-of-elon-musk-space-aliens-did-it/