They are going to carry out a trial with driverless lorries
on British roads. Soon. Ten-truck, computer-controlled convoys will take to the
M6 in Cumbria and if the trials work out the job of ‘lorry driver’, as has
happened with so many blue collar jobs, will go the way of the wheelwright and
the cooper. Once were factories and fields teeming with workers who needed no
skills other than the common human ability to copy and carry on. The future
appears to teem with technology replacing people and throng with ever more humans
without means of making a living.
Oh sure, we’ll all become programmers, controlling the robots,
except that even parts of that job is already being done by the machines
themselves. Remember the Three-Day Week? Under the last days of Ted Heath’s
government the industrial base of Britain was compulsorily reduced to working
just three days a week from the start of January and into the first week of
March 1974 to conserve fuel. This was brought about by miners working-to-rule
and was indicative of the fear in the country one year before the first EU referendum;
back then the Common Market offered some hope of being free of the union
stranglehold. No wonder Labour swept into government on the gamble of a promise
of a vote to leave. And no wonder the unions were all for pulling out.
Times change, and how. But one thing that hasn’t changed
was the prospect of men being displaced by machine and what would we do when it
happened? Job-sharing was seriously considered, effectively doubling the jobs
available and offering a life of leisure supported by a mere three working days
a week, but of course, only half a wage would be due. Back then, a labourer could
support a family of two or three children on a single man’s pay packet without direct
assistance from the state. The power of the unions in negotiating pay deals was
demonstrated when in 1974 Labour increased miners’ wages by 35% and then again –
another 35% - in 1975. The source of that power was their ability to withdraw
labour – no wonder management wanted/wants more machines.
There was once some dignity in manual labour – a hard day’s
work for a fair day’s pay. But those days are gone. Now we have broken unions,
a glut of the low-skilled, with subsistence reliant on the ‘charity’ of higher-rate
taxpayers. Nobody earning less than £30k even pays in tax their own simple
share of the burden; the ruinous cost of the state is what it is largely
because of the economically sub-optimal. If you won’t countenance population
control then you have to consider how long we can go on like this. The national
debt will never be repaid in your lifetime – at what point will we just throw
in the towel? At what point will those who truly fund the economy ‘go Galt’ and
abandon Britain altogether?
The EU has exacerbated the population problem but at least
we have the Channel (for now). The French of course, are terrified of a Brexit
because then they will be left to pick up the funding gap, so they are
threatening to actually load the inhabitants of the Calais ‘jungle’ onto
ferries headed for Britain, who will be under no obligation to take them, but
will anyway. We seem to be incapable of preventing the rush toward a future
where ever increasing numbers of economically functionless people rely on a dwindling
pool of net taxpayers; a socialism where everybody gets progressively poorer.
The EU Juggernaut rolls on...
It is hard to imagine that this is the intention of the
EU, but it is where their policies and intransigence appear to be leading. By
the time the union is abandoned as an insupportable failure, the whole of Europe
will have been lost to a ruinous idealism. We must get out before it is too
late, while we still have the tiniest chance of wresting back control. Driverless
lorries seems an apt metaphor for the unelected leaders taking us down the road
to ruin.