If a Robot Can Do it Why Should You? – Work Ethic in the Age of Automation

If the robots can do it….why should you?

Work ethic ‘Protestant’ or not has been engrained in the American psyche. Although ‘work ethic’ is valued by most countries it is particularly pedestalized in the United States. The idea being that since we are in the land of opportunity with abundant resources and manifold freedoms all that stands between us and success is doing the work.

This is an idealistic notion and many in the workforce will tell you that it doesn’t reflect reality.

I’m not here to argue that one way or the other.

Todays discussion will be about work ethic in the time of automation.

There’s a lot of hype about AI and the death of work. With lots of cataclysmic warnings about job loss etc.

But just because something is overstated doesn’t mean that it isn’t happening.

And the reality is that jobs have been lost due to automation.

Which begs the question I asked at the outset.

If the robots can do it why should you?

This question has implications for work ethic.

If we’re constantly bombarded with the virtues of hard work why is it that corporations, employers, and politicians are so eager to automate?

The simple answer is that they’re looking to please shareholders and donors.  

But the question and answer are really just a catalyst for the following observation:

Hard work isn’t valued.

It is the product of hard work that is valued.

If the robots can do it why should they hire you?

For now the answer is that for the most part it’s still cheaper and less troublesome to use you.

But what about when it isn’t….?

What do we do with our work ethic?

This isn’t a recent phenomenon and automation is far from the only culprit.

Outsourcing being a much older and bigger contributor to wage decline and stagnation.

Clearly if hard work is valuable than it should be rewarded with decent pay or at least livable wages. Yet for decades companies have rushed overseas to find the cheapest labor.

If hard work was so valuable than wouldn’t construction workers be rich? Yes, there’s supply and demand and all the rest but that’s beside the point of hard work being related to economic success or even survival.

So we’ve been told that hard work is valuable but haven’t seen much evidence for the stability of its value in keeping a roof over your head or food in your refrigerator.

Well, the fact remains that  it is a virtue! We value hard workers even if we don’t pay them well!

Do we though?

Think about the social standing of a McDonald’s employee.

It isn’t mentally challenging, or particularly physically intensive, but you do have to stand on your feet all day, deal with customers, etc. so after eight hours I’d say it qualifies as hard work.

Yet, there’s an embarrassment to working at McDonalds. It’s just a job for upwardly mobile teenagers that will go to college and find real work a cubicle or build the next Facebook.

And It’s not just our friends the short order cooks who are the bottom of our economic caste system.

Ever heard the phrase: ‘Bag my groceries.’

Now it’s perfectly innocent without context but now imagine a guy in khakis, and a polo, on an office break with a shit eating smirk saying it to his old high school classmate with a sarcastic lilt.

While this exact stereotypical sitcom Esque situation probably doesn’t happen too often many variations of it do.

Thing of it is there’s plenty of demand for food so our grocery and restaurant people are essential. These folks work hard. Yet we perceive them as peasants who ‘couldn’t do no better.’

 Sure there’s no short supply of folks who will be forced to take the job for socioeconomic reasons. But in a culture that values hard work…why is it that hard workers are scoffed at?

And just a brief caveat on the abundance of ‘low level’ workers. There are clearly food service and grocery people that work harder than their peers. Do they necessarily see a higher wage or at least greater respect? Not likely or at least not by much.

So clearly we don’t really value hard work.

And automation is just one other lens that puts this reality in a clearer perspective.

So what do we do with this concept of hard work?

What good is it?

For this we have to step outside economics and get a bit philosophical.

If the robot can do it why should you?

Really the only thing that remains is personal development.

We’re not at the stage where we can upload the ability to do Kung Fu into our brains like Neo did in the Matrix films. And I doubt that would be very fulfilling.

So learning a difficult piece of music or how to fix the robots are examples of the sorts of things hard work will yield. A fit body by training in the gym etc.

The results of this hard work iterate out via a deeper engagement with the world and other people. This hard work makes living life better and more fulfilling.

See we’ve been talking about values.

There’s another virtue that automation highlights.

That’s life itself.

If the robot can do it then why should you?

Because the robot is not alive. You are alive.

It is not hard work that defines you or your value it is your humanity. Hard work is only valuable in so far as it lets you live up to your human potential.

If the robots can take away the repetitive, drugerous, dangerous, and exhausting tasks from our lives so be it.

We definitely need to restructure this society as that happens. Step one is recognizing the inherent value of human life. A value not based on service or production.

Then maybe one day automation will free all of us to live lives of pure cultivation and contemplation.

In the meantime workers rights, respect for labor, and structuring economies to benefit tangible producers over financial slight of hand is essential.

That’s all I have to say on this at the moment.

Now go work hard at living life!

Look Out Boss! It’s the Bots!

 

 

 

 

 

 


The closing paragraphs of ‘The New Yorker article, ‘Machine Hands’ (John Seabrook), contain this little nugget:

“It’s also possible that this second wave of A.I.-based mechanization will automate the farmer’s job long before it removes the need for hired labor. In the indoor farms I visited, the brain work of farming-when to plant, irrigate, fertilize, and harvest-has been automated, but not the grunt work.”

This is something I’ve long suspected and have recently blogged about:

“I dunno how well versed these journalists and talking heads are in robotics but the level of sophistication required for a machine to load a UPS truck or do road work is insane. Fine motor function is a tricky business.” (Everyone should Code?)

While I hate to play Freud I think this all has to do with libido. The folks proposing a labor apocalypse delivered on the chrome horse of automation might know a bit of Java. They’re ‘men of letters’, socially savvy (read manipulative), and pathologically concerned about abstract futures.

It’s sexy to worry about the peasants not being able to keep up with your ability to write a Vox article.

But perhaps the effete should be worried about themselves.

Not about being accidentally racist, or sexist, or spilling their lattes on the latest issue of Entrepreneur.

They should be worried about their jobs.

Honestly, it should have been obvious from the start. Which tasks lend themselves to mechanization?

“The repetitive ones that those sweaty truckers and stockers do! You know the kinds done by people who make boner jokes. O shit is that the HR lady…I was using boner to describe how the lower classes talk…”

No, my precious orchid.

The sorts of jobs that lend themselves to automation are computational. They’re things with decision trees that don’t require the trees to sprout hands. In a nutshell: brain work.

Stuff that requires the fast and accurate scanning of vast reams of data, the analysis of that data, and a decision. Sure, QuickBooks hasn’t made accountants obsolete. It has however necessitated a bit of scurrying:

“Technology is rapidly reshaping the accounting industry, making certain skills and knowledge obsolete but at the same time creating opportunities for accountants to offer new services in the marketplace. For future accounting leaders, perhaps the biggest determinant of success is staying ahead of the technology curve so new innovations enhance one’s business, not replace it.” (https://quickbooks.intuit.com/ca/resources/pro-taxes/new-skill-sets-future-accounting-leaders/)

This suggests that it’s not truckers that will be thinner on the ground but research assistants, HR people, and stockbrokers.

Basically people who have to repetitively dig through data and perform basic logic. Things that a robot (computer) can do much better faster and cheaper than it can pick a strawberry.

This article isn’t here to gloat about folks losing their jobs. It’s here to point out that we need to think more deeply about what we value as a society. About what brings purpose to people’s lives.

Why haven’t we seen Glenn Gould in decades?

The answer is people define themselves through their jobs. Their self-worth is wrapped up in the ability to do work that’s more sophisticated and important than the schmuck in the truck (hence student loan crisis). Society values an insane mechanized orgy of buying and selling where Universities serve as bargaining chips rather than bastions of cultivation.

All the while engaging in self-congratulatory pity for the class of people who can actually change the oil.

Whoda thunk that the finesse of picking a strawberry just right is akin to the finesse of sawing a violin bow on a string? Whoda thunk that boolean operators handled statistics better than a hungover analyst?

Automation is inevitable. Let’s not let class pretensions blind us to where it’s most likely to happen. Now that we are getting a grasp on how to feed, clothe, sanitize, and house our teeming billions maybe we can start getting pre-industrial.

No, I don’t mean going Amish. I mean a return to craftsman culture. The sort of attention to detail, originality, and quality that flourished in Benjamin Franklin’s day. The sorts of activities that enrich lives and communities while being fulfilling in a specifically human way.

This isn’t writing code, or optimizing SEO, it’s the manipulation of matter. Manipulation – manus – doing it by hand. Hands honed by experience and guided by well-trained human minds and well trained human hearts.

The future is ‘The Goldberg Variations.’


 

 


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Fractal Radio | Episode 12 – Public Safety Nervous System?


A brief overview of some grim realities of the street trades and one companies proposed solution to violence.

The connection between Mr. Reed’s points and The New Yorker article by Mr. Goodyear will become more apparent in later videos.

Apologies for the ‘minimalist’ approach today but I’m pressed for time.


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