Spyke

Shame on you, Wired, for trying to write a piece that makes these sound like some sort of innovative or progressive ideas. These ideas are nothing more than billionaire wet dreams of reviving company towns, and directly controlling larger population centers. If this was such a good idea that benefits the country or the world at large, then why are they all hiding behind shadow corporations led by known eugenicists and neo-nazi aligned psychopaths with more money than they could ever spend in a lifetime.

https://www.smartcitiesdive.com/news/billionaire-smart-cities-update-elon-musk-telosa-utopia/699348/

https://apnews.com/article/silicon-valley-tech-investors-new-city-housing-35f91416dd7d84ecb03ed08199d87dd5

https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/solano-county-land-purchase-mystery-flannery-associates-silicon-valley-billionaires/

Again, Wired, GFY.

97

I've had this book on hold at the library for weeks and i'm so excited to finally read it

1
lemmy.world

Free from federal regulations?

What happens when you have to go see the company doctor who has been paid by the town’s management to ignore your health issue when that issue was caused by the town’s negligence. Maybe the town uses chemicals that are known to be toxic, or has eroded safety standards. They’re already trying to neuter workplace safety laws federally.

Americans just go smooth brained at the mention of freedom. This isn’t freedom.

55
lemmy.world

Why pay a doctor to ignore it when you can just not allow him the knowledge what you’re doing to everyone for free? Or just have a general threat to all employees that you can’t blame the company for any wrongdoing?

7

The doctor is really just an HR guy who decides how long you've got left and when they need to put up a new req.

4

Au contraire, comrade! This is total doubleplusgood freedom! This is Freedom 2.0 and soooo much better than the kind of freedom you thought you wanted! The dogebags at the Ministry of Efficiency (MOE) has hereby decreed it is so!

5
dubvee.org

We had those. They were called company towns, and you didn't get paid in real money; you got paid in company scrip that only worked in the company store. Anyone who voluntarily gets on board with this clearly needs to read a history book; that part of our history isn't even 100 years old yet.

47
lemmy.world

Or at least watch a good relevant movie, like Matewan.

I'm still surprised that movie was even allowed to be made and released in the United States, TBH.

5
dubvee.org

That's literally state history for me, and we actually learned all about it in WV History class in 7th grade. That was decades ago, and I wouldn't be surprised at all if it's no longer taught.

The frustrating and mind boggling part is that the miners here today are now hard-right and voting in people who want to roll back conditions to what past miners fought so hard against. Like, WTF?

5

Hello fellow friend of coal. We're in a sad sorry state of affairs. Hopefully you're in one of the four or five places in the state that aren't covered in traitor flags. Never forget, coal keeps the lights on! (In the mansions of the company owners)

3
60dreply
lemmy.ca

Okay, but these are totally different! They're a fresh new idea! They're not even called company towns! And we'll pay workers in crypto! No one will own anything! Except me! See?! Totally different!

/s in case it's not clear lol

3

You're expecting them to read. That's already a big ask. People want content spoon fed to them in 30 seconds clips by big breasted blonde women

3
ttrpg.network

Anyone else thinking of that book "a libertarian walks into a bear"?

19

Any of this overlap with the crazy thought leaders like Curtis Yarvin and their "patchwork" cities?

4

You reached the end