blansky
Member
But most people miss the bigger problem that ever fewer people are needed to produce the same number of desired widgets in an economic calculus counting on an ever increasing population buying ever cheaper goods. Whole nations. The equation still plays out even in the presence of "new things". Buggy whips are a red herring.
s-a
But I think his point is also that they were personalizing it. We all know change comes. We all saw what globalization did.
We all saw what the industrial revolution did, but that was a historical thing.
Intellectually we get it. But now we get to see it first hand, and to some it's actually personal.
I talked to a kid the other day who said he was going to go into journalism. I thought, are you nuts.