267 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
267 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 783
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Title: HPR0783: Libertarianism + IT, a match made in heaven?
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0783/hpr0783.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 02:29:14
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---
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Music
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Hello this is dismal science coming with another episode concerning my
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predictions for the future. Then how long this episode will be because it's a
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broad topic.
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But I've been thinking a lot recently about how I am going to survive in the
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future and however, Brails will do the same. We're in very unusual times
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economically. We have just mismanaged ourselves for so long on planet Earth
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that you really wonder what the next stages are going to be. I could speak
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about jobs for instance. I think it's so interesting that borders bookstore has
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closed its doors. Another victim at the hand of information technology. So it's
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been amazing how information technology has just revolutionized the whole way
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that people work. And in response has been destroying jobs at a frightening
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pace. You know all of these new companies that we have now don't employ anywhere
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near as much people as the companies that we had before. You know we have
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companies now like Craigslist that has like 12 employees. Facebook has like
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2,000 employees but you know you look at a company like Amazon and you realize
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how many businesses have fallen due to their dominance. You realize that the
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world is going to be a different place very soon. Not only that we've been
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using our natural resources at a breakneck pace. When I speak of natural
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resources I'm speaking mostly of food resources, water resources, gasoline, oil, and
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those basic things that we've come to become so dependent on. Some of them we've
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been dependent on from beginning. Some have become more dependent on in recent
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times. But when you look at prices of things like food and fuel and even water,
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watch them as they rise so quickly. You realize that we're out of balance. And the
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question is how do we get back into balance? Or whether we go by normal means or
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by being forced to? I've been particularly interested in this concept of
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globalization that we've been living in. The idea of shipping resources and
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finished products around the world. And what things are going to look like when
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that process ends. I guess I could say on the bright side. The bright side to me
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I'm not sure if it'll be the bright side for you. But I think that the internet is
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going to be around. I don't think we're going to have problems with electricity. I
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think we'll get over that. We have lots of coal and we're getting better at
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solar and other such things. So I was feeling that we're going to have an
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internet, a vibrant internet internet. And it's going to be increasingly
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localized, I think. And it's going to try to help us manage our resources as
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best as we possibly can. And it's going to provide for us the employment
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opportunities that we're going to need. Not necessarily in programming the
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internet, but utilizing the internet to really try to save money or make money.
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You see, I'm a libertarian. And if you don't know what that means, it means that
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I don't really believe in governmental structures, socially engineering, our
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circumstances. We've been doing that now for many decades. And I think we're
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coming towards the end of that because ultimately the world is a world of
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markets. We sometimes wish it wasn't, but it is because there are shortages of
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things like beef, for instance. Beef is for most people in the world a luxury.
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And more and more in the West, it's becoming a luxury as well. And it would be
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nice if everybody could have beef every night for dinner, but
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there simply just isn't enough to make that happen. So it needs to be priced
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appropriately, which comes to this idea of the types of things we're
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going to be doing in the future. You know, right now a lot of things are
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legal. A lot of money-making ideas are legal. Things like selling your blood.
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Even though we have blood shortages all over the country, you can't sell blood
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in America. Which doesn't really make a lot of sense. You know, there's a lot of
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people who very much need blood. And apparently their chronic shortages of
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blood throughout the country. So it would only make sense that we would try to
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incentivize people to part with their excess blood in order to save somebody's life.
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This is one example of how free markets are blocked in the United States.
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You know, another example is gambling. We have very unusual laws concerning gambling. I'm
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strangely enough, all the states now are starting to legalize gambling to some degree or another
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in a desperate attempt to get money from taxes and such. But, you know, gambling is another
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highly regulated activity, which is also very profitable. And should probably be legal and not have
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much government interference. So how do we get to this end result? I think we're well in our way
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to breaking down many of these false restrictions of the government so the world have placed upon us.
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That is, if the internet continues to be a free place, which I'm betting it will.
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There are some people who don't want the internet to be a free place, but I don't know that
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they're going to gain the traction they need to clamp down on it. And what I'm saying is that
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there are going to be more and more markets evolving on the web. And I'm probably not telling you
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anything you don't know already. You've probably noticed the proliferation of web applications
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and web markets that are arising. Many of them doing illegal things like selling drugs.
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You know, the recent Bitcoin controversy where, you know, there was an online drug dealer
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willing to take Bitcoin's and send you drugs. That's a powerful concept, right?
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Yeah, so open source software has done a lot of things. I remember what computing was like before
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open source became popular. I remember buying application stacks, buying programming environments,
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like Visual Studio for Microsoft. Yes, I did buy that once upon a time. It cost a few hundred
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dollars. When they sold that in stores, you could go to a store and buy a programming language,
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like Visual Basic. Of course, not many people really are going to do that.
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Or in order to get, you know, powerful database software, you really had to be a large corporation.
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You had to buy very expensive software like Sybase or Oracle. If you wanted to play the internet
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game, you needed expensive Unix systems. That was in. This is now, now you do not need to buy almost
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anything if you have the right skills. The programming languages are now free, like Python.
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Perl, etc. The database applications are free, really free in every sense of the word.
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And they're powerful and flexible. And they're allowing us to start markets that we just could have
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never really ever expected for it going to happen. Think Craigslist. You know, we really didn't
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know how Craigslist was going to adjust the entire living arrangement of the world. Craigslist
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is run by very few people. And it runs its web presence on completely open-source software.
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In their case, it's Perl, MySQL, Linux, and Apache. This allows them to displace the entire
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classified industry worldwide. And they have done a pretty interesting job on it. The most
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interesting thing to come out of Craigslist, however, was the sexual revolution that Craigslist
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dropped upon us, not even sure if they were planning it or if they expected it. But it did happen.
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According to their movie, the Craigslist movie, there was a documentary made on Craigslist.
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It focused largely on the gay community in San Francisco. And how they started utilizing Craigslist
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as an exchange of sorts to facilitate sexual encounters. This eventually migrated into the heterosexual
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community and began the process of internet sex markets. Now, I don't know if Craigslist began
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it. I know there were things before. There were some super high tech people using various other
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types of messaging systems from what I understand. But Craigslist really put things into structure.
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And before long, the process of prostitution took a particularly high tech edge.
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This led many people to be nervous for a number of reasons. This went on for many years
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until various organizations and such started making accusations about Craigslist. A number of
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murders took place and accusations of trafficking and such things took place. But we do know that
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that's how the free market works. Resources are allocated and money is exchanged for goods and
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services. And what I'm arguing is that you're going to start seeing a lot more of this type of
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thing happen. This is going to become perhaps our new economy. An economy that's going to be based
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very much locally, very much around your neighbors. How valuable are you to them? You know, so far,
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you've had to be valuable to a company who really saw the world as its market place. The
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thing about these companies is that they actually don't need you anymore. They've outgrown you. They've
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found out ways to just manage without you. I'm actually surprised sometimes that I actually
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continue to have a job because these organizations are just becoming incredibly adept.
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I know of one company, a financial services firm in Baltimore, Maryland.
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And laid off one-third of its staff. And you're thinking to yourself, okay, one-third of your
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permanent staff is now made redundant. Obviously, things are going to just start falling apart. The
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wheels are going to start coming off the wagon. But after speaking to some people who remain there,
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they explained to me that a month later, you really couldn't even tell the difference.
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They had organized themselves through the use of technology and other such means that they
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actually could reduce their workforce by one-third. This has been the case all over the world now.
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We're starting to see companies just running extremely lean and doing a good job at it.
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The next stage we're going to see now is governments becoming lean. There's always thought that
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government employment was so stable, but apparently governments are not going to be able to afford
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to maintain a whole lot of staff very soon. And this is going to mean all types of staff,
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teachers, police officers, and other such things. And all the bureaucrats and paper pushers and
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people who just don't even know that they exist, but they do and they draw a living.
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What does that's going to mean is that we're going to have to start relying on each other again
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at a local level. And I say that because I'm not a fan of globalization really. I like it
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in some degrees, but I don't like most of what it is, which is the shipping of goods and services
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around the world. When you have dinner and one part of your plate was floating in from Chile,
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the fruits perhaps. The vegetables were trucked in from California. The beef was imported
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from Canada. And other beef products were exported to China. Well, I just don't know how much more
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of that we're going to have. The idea of all of this global trade requires an enormous amount
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of energy, mostly in the form of oil, which is becoming scarce and expensive and it's impacting
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the price and viability of all of these types of activities. So what comes into replacing things?
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Well, what comes into replacing things are food that is growing much closer to where you are.
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Food that is in season as well, all of these exotic fruits arriving to you in the middle of winter
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might just not happen very easily in the very near future. I don't see this as necessarily a
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bad thing, but it's going to take some adjustment on our part to manage this. And once again,
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I think information technology, more of my SQL or Postgres databases are going to be erected to
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help us do this more efficiently. How do we shop in groups? Right? Even where I live, you can buy
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food and bulk like tomatoes. Of course, it doesn't make sense for one household to do this by a
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box of 100 or 200 tomatoes. It doesn't make sense, but if you know how to do this and if you have
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good, neighborly relations, you can combine all of your needs and redistribute appropriately.
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So after when you're buying those tomatoes, you can come back to your community and you can
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distribute them amongst families and everybody save money and get product.
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Well, I think that's kind of what the future is going to look like.
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This is going to be good because I think it's going to rebuild communities right now. Everybody's
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very isolated, super independent. And that has a whole host of problems in and of itself,
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but I don't think we're going to be able to afford that much longer.
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Concerning schools, I think we're going to start seeing a paradigm shift there as well.
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We've been worrying about our schools for so long that they don't perform and we seem to have no
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control over them. I'm not particularly even happy with the school that my son goes to, even
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though it's supposed to be so wonderful by whatever standard. I didn't like the schools I attended.
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I felt I learned very few practical skills, very few skills that actually helped me in life.
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And you know, I would like my son to be able to learn things that are valuable,
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like personal finance management or proper nutrition management.
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How is this going to happen? I'm making a guess.
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Right now, homeschooling is becoming very popular. Many people are just not sending their children
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to school. And married couples, one of the spouses will usually stay home and educate the child
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themselves. And you can do this throughout the entire child's career. This has pluses of
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minuses. I think there's kind of like a negative social aspect of that because kids don't socialize
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as much, I don't think. But I think what we're going to see is homeschooling times 10. I think
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people are going to start making homeschooled businesses where they take more than just their own
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child, where they take several neighborhood children, and they run a communal health network.
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My health, I really meant to say a communal education network, where you're intimately involved
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with the nature of the education that your child gets. And it will be very personal, very local
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yet again. Of course, the internet is also going to play a part in this. One pretty impressive
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project is the Khan Academy. They've produced a web application which helps children learn
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mathematics and such. And they put it together in a fairly fun way that children don't seem
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to mind playing it. And these types of things in collaboration are going to be the solution to our
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ever degrading governmental selections. All of this is going to happen under the radar because
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and most, I'll just speak for the EU and the United States. Our governing structures are not
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nimble enough to adjust with time as we see right now. The process of actually changing laws
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such things can take decades or centuries even, or they probably just will never happen.
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So, what I suspect will happen is that a lot of these types of activities are going to start
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going underground. And people are just going to start to disconnect with the help of open source.
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Yeah, you're wondering like, you know, what's the technology slant to what I'm talking about is,
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you know, we are going to see your recurring theme. These MySQL databases and Postgres databases,
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they're going to keep dancing in the cloud. And yes, I used to work cloud. I like the word cloud.
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I know many people don't, but I do. I know it doesn't mean to everybody,
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what everybody thinks it means, but it means enough to me that it's a web presence that is
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universally accessible, rentable, however you want to put it. But these databases are going to
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continue to dance in the cloud. And you're going to start seeing homeschools of 10, 20 or 30 children
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organize on the web, market on the web, communicate on the web.
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This is going to happen for food resources as well. This is going to happen for sex resources as well.
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You know, looking at what's in the web right now regarding relationships and such,
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it's just so interesting to me that the world has changed so much since I was a child.
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Now it appears that a large proportion of people meet their spouses online.
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Not sure how many it is with proportion, but they have heard large figures, maybe as high as 50%
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maybe higher, who knows. But we know it's a lot, right? A lot of people are dating and
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marrying and meeting and selecting each other through online marketplaces. Of course, this is also
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happening in a non-marriage perspective as well in just raw sex, which is also being collaborated
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into mySQL databases and Postgres databases. It's not the most interesting business idea arise.
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It's called What'sYourPrice.com. A website where it's like a dating website, except for you pay
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the person to date you. Fascinating concepts, right? In order to get a date with a person, you agree on a payment.
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Well, it's a very new idea. I don't know if it will catch on or if it will survive.
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I can see a lot of pitfalls in conflating love and money and such things, so business-like. But
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nevertheless an interesting idea. This is all making everybody very nervous, the way that
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the internet's making the world completely uncontrollable from central authorities.
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And with reduced resources of the central authorities, you would think that they would come up with
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better ways to manage themselves. But we're still more or less doing the same old-fashioned thing.
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Trying to ban things like Craigslist, which eventually Craigslist did bring down its adult
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section after pressure from the United States Congress and various groups. The idea of being
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that with Craigslist, the adult section taken down, they've won some type of war. But of course,
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if we think about it, we know that nothing was actually won by that. The Craigslist duplicates
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or imitators multiply like rabbits almost. They're localized, they're national, they're international,
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and really the market's so much more powerful than the central authorities. And it's going to be
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very hard to see how we legislate or police many of these activities. Like drugs, for instance,
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you know, the idea of buying drugs with bitcoins is just so astonishing to me that I don't even know
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where to begin. I've never actually used a bitcoin before, but it's a fascinating idea and the idea
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that somebody will send you drugs for bitcoin is absolutely amazing. We've been doing drugs in the
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world for a long time. I mean, drugs go back to ancient times, every society in the world uses drugs
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in the Middle East, they use something called cat, which I believe you chew, and it's supposed to
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do something to you. In South America, they have various drug varieties, and in North America,
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we have varieties as well. So we know that this is something that's been going on for a long time,
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and we have very tremendous difficulties controlling people's actions. So you'd wonder why we wouldn't
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take more pragmatic approaches to some of these problems. There are things that could be done,
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things that would be humane and perhaps slower drug usage, but instead we generally just try to
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outright ban everything and police it and place people in jail.
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Oh, I mean, and the results of my argument is that without anything changing much these
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MySQL and Postgres databases will continue to ever expand, and they'll expand into every aspect of
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our lives pretty soon, and they're not going away. So that in combination with the decline of
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globalization, could lead to a fairly bright future, or I think we'll have a little bit of
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a stumbling point where it will have to make some serious adjustments. But I think in the end,
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it's going to bring people closer together in a strange way. We're going to learn that we actually
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need each other, that we don't necessarily need Walmart or Kmart, or whoever else, whatever
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other faceless corporation is probably not going to have our best interest in my head,
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hard because they don't even want to employ us anymore. There's disappointed that we can't
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afford to buy any other stuff. So if we can't afford to buy their stuff, we're going to have to
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buy stuff from each other, and we're going to have to perhaps even barter. I see a bright future
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for bartering actually. I don't know what the state of courtesy is going to be in the future,
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but bartering is definitely going to be part of the puzzle. Those who know how to do things
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like fix roofs are going to volunteer to do so in exchange for some type of good or service,
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like boxes of tomatoes, perhaps, or a live chicken. I know that sounds a little bit odd to
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people listening, but many things that are happening to us now would have sounded odd 10 or 20 years
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ago if you stopped to think about it. And things are only accelerating. We don't have to wait
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50 years anymore for things to happen. Things are happening, changing within a year or two now.
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We're starting to see the whole world change. Just look at Netflix, for example, in the way that they
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have just decimated the rental business, just displace the entire thing. All of those are jobs
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gone and Netflix will not be hiring all those people who will be displaced. These people will have
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to find new things to do and they will actually. Especially once government benefits start to run dry
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when safety nets begin to fail, things like Medicaid, stop working, things like unemployment,
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insurance, funds, going broke. People will learn to do other things and I've got to tell you
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that to a degree. I'm kind of looking forward to it. I mean, I don't want to be naive. I'm going to
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suffer like a son of a bitch during the process. But if I actually make it through, I think that it
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could be a much better planet, much more sustainable planet and a planet with much better
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interpersonal relationships than one that we've seen, than the planet that we've seen for the
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last hundred or so years. Well, thank you again for listening. If you've listened to this for R,
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this is a dismal science and I look forward to speaking to you, perhaps in another month or so,
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in the meantime, be safe.
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I don't want to be no man for me. I have other work I want to get done. I haven't
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traveled this far to become no man for me. No man for me.
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Because I'm tired of it. I'm so scared of it that I'll never trust again.
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Because a man can fake you. Take your soul and make you miserable and so much pain.
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My friends think I'm alone, but I got secrets. I don't tell everything about the love I get.
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I got a love in my bodies I swear in. He never does me harm, never treats me but
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he never takes away all the love he has and I forgive him for a million times.
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I'm never tired of it. I'm not scared of it. Because it doesn't cause me pain.
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Like a man can fake you. Take your soul and make you. Never be yourself again.
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I never want to be no man for me. I only want to be my own woman.
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I haven't traveled this far to become no man for me. No man for me.
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No man for me.
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No man for me.
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Thank you for listening to Hacker Public Radio. For more information on the show and how to
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contribute your own shows visit HackerPublicRadio.org.
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