OPINION

Your Place in the World of Tomorrow

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Two news items that will buzz throughout the week actually have greater long term implications and are intricately linked to one another.

> News Item: Jeff Bezos sees drones delivering parcels within five to ten years.
> News Item: Fast food workers prepare one-day strike, demanding $15 minimum wage.

Mankind has always dreamed of a utopian world of universal peace, prosperity, and leisure.

In the 1800s, the idea took off initially as a scheme pushed forward by Robert Owens who had an idea of a social system (socialism) in which everything was shared versus the individual system (capitalism). In Owens' system, the outcome of competition dictated class structure and lifestyles. This scheme seemed attractive as a thesis. It was put into practice through the creation of a factory village called New Lanark, which Owen presided over from 1800 to 1825.

It was considered a success as wages were increased, infant education was promoted and a wellness fund for the sick, injured, and aged was established. The village of 2,500 was organized into neighborhood divisions that elected representatives to handle disputes. Heralded as a model of how to treat workers with greater respect yet continue to prosper, New Lanark was owned by Owen. Owen oversaw the village with the kind of paternalistic silk fist Michael Bloomberg attempted to exercise over New York as mayor.

Owens moved on to America to establish several other villages of New Harmony, but none met with even the partial success of New Lanark, which serves as the World Heritage cultural center today. Still, the idea of wages that supersede those of free market principles has always been part of the promise of a utopian society as envisioned by enlightened thinkers that embrace and promote socialism.

These thinkers wanted to go a step farther than the Owen model, which still prescribed hard work. In fact, New Lanark policed against pilfering and slackness while discouraging illegitimacy. In other words, there was individual accountability. Over the course of the century and with the dawn of the Industrial Revolution, the stakes were high. As prosperity enhanced the lives of individuals even on the lower rungs of society, those at odds with the individual system had to come up with new promises to sell their utopia.

Paradise on Earth

Under socialism the people could have their homes in great grand and magnificent palace is built and placed on the fairest spots of our country and placed away by themselves clear from all works factories and all other establishments of this class where they would not be annoyed by the smoke and dirt which they cause in from thenceforward they would be surrounded by pure air in nature in all her glory and beauty.

Man! Oh man! In thy brutal selfish greed what art thou not doing by thy love of gain in thy unquenchable thirst for grab we are forced to live as brutes when we might live as gods. Our earth is made a hell when it might be a paradise and a heaven upon earth for every living being.

Think, you my reader, think, learn to read and understand, in the following pages I shall unfold a new system, in new life, and the ways and methods by which we may have a New and Happy land.

"A Prospectus of Socialism, or A Glimpse of the Coming Millennium"
William Thomson

Robert Owen called New Lanark the "happy village," and 70 years later William Thomson sweetened the pot with his promise of a new and happy land.

In real life, these systems have never worked, as the only thing evenly distributed has been misery. Nonetheless, as you read the words of past socialist dreamers used to promote their utopia, you can hear words and phrases currently spoken by President Obama and his political ideologues. They continue to romanticize the theory rather than to see the actual outcomes from New Lanark to North Korea. The so-called social system never worked because it allows for sloth, promotes indifference, and punishes excellence, which is soon squashed altogether.

Still, the movement toward $15.00 minimum wage is a step toward a utopia where all wages will be the same or not exist at all. For now, it would be a giant leap that tests just how frustrated Americans are with capitalism. Like arguments for all facets of the White House agenda, parts of the debate are cloaked in the veneer of capitalism but it's simply not the case. Doubling the minimum wage takes power from the free market and goes beyond redistribution of wealth to redistribution of accountability.

More from William Thomson:

Our system of values are ruled by circumstances and conditions which fix the value and rule the market. These circumstances and conditions are what political economists call supply and demand. They alone are of value and not the commodity or service to be sold. They alone rule prices or values and apart from them no person can tell what his possessions or service may be worth. Under such a system of values justice is impossible, because values of every description are changing daily and everything in connection with them is fleeting and uncertain. By such principles a man may be a prince today and tomorrow he may be a beggar.

It is clear the argument today is that the free market has no place in judging a person's worth in the workplace. That determination shouldn't be held hostage to corporation bottom lines or even to the will of shareholders and managers. The minimum wage hike demand is more than a desperate attempt at a money grab. It's a race against the clock of natural attrition. This is the kind of race that goes hand and hand with creative destruction. This is the other part of utopia born side by side with consumerism and American Exceptionalism.

The Industrial Revolution Part III

When Amazon founder, Jeff Bezos, told 60 Minutes during an interview he expects drones to one day deliver parcels, jaws dropped. Yet, it would be the logical conclusion to the evolutionary pace of drones and the demands of a spoiled consumer.

In fact, this would be the logical step in a long line of steps that involved man and air-travel.

Icarus reminded man of the hazards.

Da Vinci reminded man of his own brilliance.

The Montgolfier brothers showed man piercing the sky was possible.

Ferdinand Zecca put it on film to inspire man to cut through the skies with ease.


One day drones will deliver parcels that will be retrieved by the house robot that was built on an in-home 3D printer from a kit zapped directly into embedded computer chips in our brains. How will worth be valued then? How many minimum wage jobs will still exist? Those robots will need to be maintained and fixed and improvements will never stop. The same will happen with drones and 3D printers. There will be jobs, well-paying jobs for those with skills.

For me, the current push to reward and encourage mediocrity is a travesty. It's not how you show real love and concern. It may clear the conscience of the rich or shift political power to a certain group of people or party but rewarding the actions that led to a person only able to work minimum wage is lying to those very people. It is excusing them for not changing aspects of life that landed them a disadvantaged position or exacerbated them being born there.

The so-called economic justice being preached says taking from others is fine if you have less. This system of redistribution destroys the only real vehicle to long term prosperity and comfort. William Thomson was right about one thing...you can be a prince today and beggar tomorrow in this system we call capitalism. By the same token, you can be a beggar today and a prince tomorrow with the right work ethic and determination. You can certainly become a building block for your children to reach even higher. Supply and demand works and as innovation evolves to its own state of utopia the debate over minimum wage will be moot.

The rabble rousers scare the masses the way tales of Icarus scared man from the notion of flying. It is true there is an innate worth to all mankind that is precious and unique. When some are told to fight for higher minimum wages rather than fostering those innate gifts with the imagination of Da Vinci and daring of Montgolfier brothers they are being lead down the wrong path. The end of that road isn't a new and happy place but one of continued misery and dependence.

I'm sharing an honest glimpse of the coming millennium.