[TheForge] The Undiscovered Country
[email protected]
[email protected]
Wed Feb 25 11:47:01 2004
In a message dated 2/24/2004 11:37:33 PM Pacific Standard Time,
[email protected] writes:
That is one of the reasons
there was such a big glass industry in this region before NAFTA and
China killed it.
Jay
Jay
Every Trekie knows that "the undiscovered country" is the future, even if
we don't know who the quote is from. Your final sentence summons both the past
and the future, and so will my reply.
In the past craftsmen were displaced by factory production. That method
created an abundance of material goods, making life more comfortable; it has also
been a blight in many ways.
Today the self anointed are doing their best to ship our jobs overseas and
invite us to live Mclives. This isn't happening because they hate us (they
hardly think of us at all). It is happening because they have no better plan.
Factory production itself is a worn out idea. It is certainly capable of
providing material goods, but it mostly created miserable jobs in which people were
trapped, hoping for a few good years of retirement at the end of a long boring
"career." It is dying because factories need constantly increasing markets in
which to dump goods. Constantly expanding markets in an ever shrinking world
isn't much of an economic plan.
I'm not trying to argue that mass production was a bad thing. It was what
it was. I am saying it is no longer a workable thing. At least not in the sense
of being "the engine of industry." There will be factory goods and factory
jobs in the future, just as in the past. But, the factories will be scaled back,
and much more flexible. When the pain is done, people in them will be
technicians, and engineers. Hopefully, their lives will be as improved as the
products they make, but there are no guarantees. There won't be many of those jobs,
either. So, what will the rest of us do?
Again, to speak of the future, we must start in the past. This time we can
stop at grade school. That was where you first ran into the in-crowd. Take a
minuet to remember the charming little darlings, but stop short of clenching
your teeth. Onwards and upwards; they were with us through the whole journey,
high school, college--they were always there and always dedicated to one
thing--rising above it all; in other words, walking on our backs. Today, they are
shipping our jobs overseas, etc., etc. Really, did we expect something better
from them?
At last we arrive at the undiscovered country, for the future is now. Every
one of us is living in the future at this moment. We are sitting two feet
away from it, and typing into it. The little box that's connected to the world.
This is the first era in history where craftsmen can talk to one another clear
around the globe. If nothing else, you can sell your wares on Ebay. We don't
need the approval of department stores; just our customers. Control of
information and markets is freedom. There is going to be plenty of discomfort.
Frontiers are frightening places, but the in-crowd cannot ship craft work overseas.
Economies are like rip tides. The undertow always has them firmly in its
grip even as we think the tide (prosperity) is coming in. If the tide came in
forever, we would all drown. Every economic model of prosperity is just as
unworkable as a one way tide. The best we can do is to plant our feet firmly and
deal with change. It is as inevitable as incrowds :o)
Mikey
Truly, it is a Brave New World, just as it always was.
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