1/ First we jump at "robots eating jobs" out of unfounded fears. Now we dismiss it eagerly with structurally irrelevant near-term data.
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Replying to @vgr
2/ The structural shift IS happening and will continue. It's just invisible in the data we track. Robots will eat jobs and create new work.
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Replying to @vgr
3/ Plenty of questions can be asked to poke holes in "jobs back, nothing to see here!" counter-narrative: kinds of jobs, precarity, drop-out
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Replying to @vgr
4/ But the choice isn't between "robots eating jobs" and "robots not eating jobs" or even "robots eating jobs and pooping more jobs"
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Replying to @vgr
5/ Key questions that affect income security aren't about number of jobs, but nature of work. Free agency, gig economy are still the future.
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Replying to @eli_schiff
@eli_schiff has gotten more true every year for the last 15. Don't expect overnight utopia, fall back if you can't handle frontier reality1 reply 1 retweet 0 likes -
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Replying to @eli_schiff
@eli_schiff Benefits beating precarity (on tech-enabled side). Fall back = retreat to old-school job growth sectors like nursing, fracking1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
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@eli_schiff No. It's a bullshit concept that cannot work in social psychology terms. Humans are too restless for that.
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