As the cheery title of the post suggests we can see the one universal maxim that all of humanity can get behind in action – “greed is good”.
“Trafficking, forced labour and modern slavery are big business generating profits estimated at $150 billion a year, the UN labour agency said Tuesday.
The report by the International Labour Organization finds global profits from involuntary workers — an estimated 21 million of them — have more than tripled over the past decade from its estimate of at least $44 billion in 2005.”
So friends, the number of slaves, or those in debt bondage is growing in our world. I really need the optimistic technology orientated futurists to shut the fuck up about our supposedly rosy future and how supposedly, technology “x” is going to fix things.
“We need to strengthen social protection floors to prevent households from sliding into the poverty that pushes people into forced labour,” he said. “We need to improve levels of education and literacy so that household decision-makers can understand their own vulnerability to forced labour and know their rights as workers.
It says 55 per cent of the victims are women and girls, primarily in commercial sexual exploitation and domestic work, while men and boys were primarily in forced economic exploitation in agriculture, construction and mining.”
Futurism and its variants ply one of the most earnest of human vulnerabilities namely, “hope”. We can look past all of the evil that is currently being perpetrated against humanity, to gaze on a brighter world where the fundamental inhumanities we face now have been solved and all is peachy-fracking-keen. What is missing though, is the intermediary steps that get us to said bright rosy future.
We have more than enough resources to properly feed, clothe, and shelter all of humanity. With poverty reduction and education we might be able to stop one of the drivers in our keen drive toward human extinction – overpopulation.
With regards to population control finally giving women full human being status the world wide would be huge stride toward preserving human civilization, that should go without saying, but again it is the world we live in.
My optimism about our collective future is quite low at the moment.



7 comments
November 21, 2017 at 7:26 am
Steve Ruis
So much for “all lives matter”. Have they ever when there is great profit to be made?
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November 21, 2017 at 7:36 am
john zande
technology “x” is, sadly, only going to make things worse. As AI replaces tens of millions of jobs (virtually overnight) the cost of labour is going to become virtually nominal. A biscuit for a days work. A biscuit with butter for 4hrs overtime.
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November 21, 2017 at 10:34 am
The Arbourist
@JZ
The AI/Technology hit is going to be huge. The potential, as you’ve stated, is an epoch changer. The hopeful futurists I’ve mentioned would like us to believe that tech ‘x’ is going to free us from menial labour and unleash the creativity of the human race.
Why is it though, at every turn, the dystopian choice is made? (other than base avarice of course) I mean I would so much rather have Star Trek future than a Bladerunner future, but the chasm seems so large with regards to a optimistic outcome for us.
On a darker note, stuff like this really highlights the Fermi Paradox and only adds to my errr…less than optimistic outlook. :/
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November 21, 2017 at 10:36 am
The Arbourist
@Steve Ruis
I’m not sure lives have ever mattered. I mean a little more now if you happen to be white and in North America – but overall – our system is geared toward the ruthless exploitation of resources and people the world over.
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November 21, 2017 at 11:04 am
john zande
As to the Fermi Paradox, Greg Egan (awesome writer) proposes 2 probable answers: 1) many high civilisations simply bed down inside black holes, waiting till the universe is full and interesting, and/or 2) after realising they cannot travel/explore the universe in any meaningful way, they go digital and retreat into VR run by Matryoshka brains, living out fantasy after fantasy.
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November 22, 2017 at 12:23 am
raunchel
As long as there is any kind of gain to be made by exploitation or any kind of crime, it will be done. The only way to prevent it is to enforce good behaviour, and that is precisely what’s lacking.
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November 22, 2017 at 1:43 am
makagutu
My optimism about our collective future is quite low at the moment.
Mine has always been low
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