Sunday, March 31, 2024

SOCIOLOGY OF THE GAZA WAR

 What can a sociologist say that hasn't been said many times about the Hamas raid and Israel's retaliatory war in Gaza?  I will draw on theoretical generalizations from the history and time-dynamics of violence (Mann 2023; Collins 2022); as applied to a daily chronology of news sources from Oct. 7, 2023 onwards. I will make 3 points.

 

[1] Hamas's violent incursion, killing and raping civilians and taking hostages, is a reversion to ancient and medieval forms of war. It is a conscious rejection of modern laws and norms. It is also a tactic to compensate for Israel's overwhelming advantage in state capacity and military power.

 

[2] The sequence of events fits the pattern of polarization found in all large-scale conflicts: emotions and beliefs go to extremes. All virtues are on our side; all evil qualities are on the other.  Each side sees the other as the epitome of evil, and themselves as innocent victims. This moral gulf justifies both sides in carrying out extreme acts against the other.

 

[3]  Time-dynamics are patterns in the intensity of mobilization over a period of time. When a large-scale conflict breaks out, excitement spreads very rapidly in the first few days. Expressions of emotional and moral polarization are at their peak in the first weeks. Mobilization stays at a plateau for about 3 months; by 6 months part of the group loses their militancy, and begins to seek a truce or end the conflict; while another faction presses on for their righteous drive to victory. To conflict with the enemy is added conflict between "hawks" and "doves". This time pattern was studied in the period followed the 9/11/01 attacks, and with historical data on public behavior and opinion after the outbreaks of war, from World War One through the recent past (Collins 2004; 2022).  Time-dynamics  enables us to predict in some degree what will happen in the future.

 

Deliberate revival of pre-modern cultural traditions of violence  

 

Raiding was the predominant style of war in tribal societies-- i.e. temporary coalitions of warriors; in contrast to state-organized societies with a permanent government and professional armies. A raid does not attempt to take enemy territory but just temporarily cause havoc in it. Tribal coalitions had an informal leader-and-follower pattern on the battlefield. War between adjacent tribes usually took the form of loose battle lines, with individuals darting forward to shoot arrows or spears and then running back. Such confrontations were usually indecisive. Most casualties were caused by raiding the other's territory, especially by stealth, and killing any isolated victim-- a child or woman from the enemy tribe was considered a victory and was celebrated.

 

A more sophisticated version of raiding was capturing enemy warriors; sometimes taken as slaves. The Aztecs of central Mexico fought to capture warriors to sacrifice on their ceremonial pyramid; this served both as an impressive religious ritual, and to terrify neighbouring tribes into submission.  Tribes with herding animals raided to capture the cattle or horses of their enemies. When European settlers spread across the Americas, hostilities were often triggered by native tribes raiding their livestock, leading to the whites retaliating with modern fire-power.

 

Medieval armies, whether fighting within Europe, or in the Crusades to Palestine and Syria, were typically bands of mounted knights. In the shifting stalemates that often ensued, they would concentrate on capturing hostages, who could then be traded either for ransom or in a prisoner exchange. When armies of the Roman phalanx type encountered tribal armies in North Africa, the latter used the tactic of a noisy attack, then suddenly running away, setting up an ambush as their pursuers became strung out and lost their formation. Middle Eastern armies had an historical tradition of hit-and-run raids. The Arab army mustered by T.E. Lawrence in World War One raided Ottoman railroad lines, combining camels for mobility with modern explosives. There was a long tradition of taking captives, either as slaves (the Mameluke army of Egypt was itself recruited from boys captured  as slaves), or as hostages for exchange. Arabs were the principal slave traders, intermediaries between sub-Saharan Africa and slave markets elsewhere.

 

With the development of modern customs and laws of war in Europe, such practices were gradually stigmatized and outlawed. Hostage taking became kidnapping-- one of the capital offenses along with murder. Capturing for ransom has become heinous, as is trafficking sex-slaves. Distinctions became drawn between civilians and military; deliberate violence against civilians becomes a major crime akin to genocide. 

 

The Hamas raid into Israel was designed to capture hostages to trade for the release of Hamas prisoners held in Israel. One could call it a deliberate atavism; but it is also hyper-modern in the sense that it is a calculation as to what tactics would work against a militarily dominant state. Israel had proven itself unmoved by modern tactics of mass demonstrations, terrorist bombings, and guerilla war; reacting by bulldozing family homes of terrorists and destroying hiding places among the civilian population. But experience in recent years showed the Israelis were willing to release a large number of prisoners in exchange for a few or even one hostage. Hostage taking was one tactic that worked.

 

It also fits with the moral stance of militant Muslim groups. Western society is represented in cartoons and propaganda as immoral and decadent; its sex life as pornographic; its women as dissolute, compared to the purity ideal of covered-up Muslim women. The biggest target of the October 7 raid was an all-night drug concert, Western-style music with ecstasy and psychedelics, held in the desert near the Gaza border. It was simultaneously an easy target -- a bunch of stoned druggies-- and a display of what conservative Muslim culture considered disgraceful. The concert was the site of numerous rapes, stripping women naked, killing them or taking them prisoner. Intercepted messages of excited congratulation from the families of the rapists show the righteous attitude of the traditionalists; comparable to Biblical rejoicing in the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah. This is not just anti-modernism; it is moral condemnation of modernity.

 

We may add one more point on tactics. Throughout the spring and summer of 2023, a political crisis built up in Israel, concerning the power of the Supreme Court to over-rule decisions made by the legislature. With a coalition of conservatives holding a narrow majority, liberal parties mobilized impassioned demonstrations, in an atmosphere widely regarded as a constitutional crisis. Large segments of the Israeli military joined the opposition; there was wild talk of civil war. Hamas leaders, close observers of their enemy, saw an ideal opportunity for their hostage-taking raid. Political controversy in Israel following October 7 has faulted the government for failure of vigilance. But a sociological explanation of the intelligence failure must include the distraction of attention, including within the armed forces and intelligence agencies, when the focus was on the constitutional crisis.

 

Religious and other forms of traditional moralities and practices can coexist with strategic caculations. Technologies of war have always been the quickest to diffuse to traditional societies. There is no anomaly in Hamas using drones, gliders and bulldozers to mount a tribalistic raid aimed at civilians of all ages and sexes, practicing both ritual humiliation and strategic hostage-taking. The combination of modern rationality and anti-modern traditionalism is no sociological contradiction.

 

Polarization of righteous outrage on both sides

 

The October 7 raid was viewed with shock and outrage not only in Israel-- where the Supreme Court crisis was quickly dropped and an all-parties war cabinet formed-- but world-wide. On the other side, sympathy for Palestinian grievances has grown since the Intifada protests in the 1990s, which although a failure in Israel, attracted attention of the outside world. Sympathy existed not only in the Muslim world, but in Europe and among left-wing and immigrant groups. In the USA, which contains the largest Jewish population outside Israel, politicians and journalists reacted vehemently to pro-Palestianian statements and demonstrations, accusing liberal university administrators of shielding anti-semitism. Although the media were largely on the Israeli side, public ambivalence increased when Israel  invaded Gaza, with devastating use of modern air power, causing outrage among Palestinian sympathizers and qualms among neutrals.

 

The war quickly became a contest of rival public relations campaigns. Israel at first attempted to keep the focus on the victims of the raid, especially civilian atrocities upon children and women (with less attention to the number of Israeli soldiers also taken captive). Over time this was upstaged by news coming out of Gaza, a mounting toll of deaths, estimated at comprising two-thirds women and children. Israel attempted to keep control over news sources, allowing only selected reporters to cover the scenes it wanted to publicize, notably the underground tunnels; soft-spoken military spokespersons explained on television that Israel's response was moderate, precision-planned, doing everything possible to protect Palestianian civilians. Meanwhile, photos from Gaza showed buildings flattened like the worst of WWII, and on television people digging bodies out of the rubble with their bare hands. As Israeli forces moved southward, virtually the entire population was forced to crowd into a shrinking space. Israeli warnings to evacuate came across as propaganda, giving little practical opportunity to escape, and nowhere safe from aerial attacks.

 

Although perhaps sincerely meant by some Israeli officials, precautions to protect civilians were advisory only and could be overruled by military contingencies. The concept of "precision weapons" is itself euphemistic; the fog of war still exists, even with advanced electronics and surveillance. An instance is the scandal when several hostages escaping in the war zone were killed by Israeli troops, who thought they were a Hamas ruse for an ambush; even when the hostages called out in Hebrew, some of the soldiers did not hear the order to hold fire, in the noise of combat. Unintended strikes on civilians continue to happen in high-tech war, especially when it consists of long distance air strikes plus dispersed infantry operations in the maze of urban warfare. And some strikes are intended, willing to inflict civilian casualties if they provide cover for militant hide-outs. Although numbers are always suspect under these conditions, the 1200 Israelis killed in the Oct. 7 raid have been steadily drowned out in the rising level of Palestian casualties, surpassing 30,000 at time of writing. To counter this perception, Israeli public relations periodically released more graphic depictions of the original Oct. 7 atrocities and the experiences of hostages released in prisoner trades.

 

Since late October 2023, Palestianians and international aid organizations have described a desperate situation throughout Gaza-- running out of water, sanitation, medical supplies, and food. By all appearances the situation was dire-- almost everyone's home destroyed, the economy ground to a halt. But since a person can live only 3 days without water, 3 weeks without food, after a couple of months one would expect virtually the entire population of Gaza would be dead. One might infer that pro-Palestianian and humanitarian sources exaggerated the civilian peril. In February, pro-Israeli news counter-attacked with a new scandal: evidence of United Nations relief workers who are members of Hamas and took part in the Oct. 7 attacks.  Fog of war not only exists; but fog of competing public relations; which is to say, the struggle between polarized perceptions of reality. The scope of this information war, as of this writing, appears to be entering an even more extreme phase. In March, 5 months into the war, reports of deaths by famine were beginning, beyond direct fatalities of military weapons. A news report estimated that one-quarter of Gaza inhabitants were in famine and starvation, and another half in acute malnutrition.  Highly escalated conflict, in the dimension of information and news, is a war of competing accusations of atrocity. The time-dynamics of the information war, in its sixth month, protends a turning-point.

 

Time-dynamics from unity to hawks vs. doves

 

The pattern of rallying in response to an external attack has been found in the outbreak of wars in the past two centuries, since aristocratic wars were replaced by mass politics and mass armies.  Analyzing public response to the 9/11/01 attacks by crashing hijacked airplanes into buildings, I found a sudden wave of support for the President; display of flags everywhere; near-unanimity in demands for swift military retaliation (Collins 2004). After 3 months, articles started to ask "Is it OK to take our flags down now?" By 6 months, flag-display had fallen by a half; Presidential popularity dropped; and the normal partisan divide reappeared. In the following year, acrimonious debate took place over the decision to invade Iraq. Comparing government popularity polls and other indicators for previous wars, I concluded that the time-dynamics of response to an atrocity jump quickly to a plateau; during the 3-to-6 months period unity erodes; and thereafter, internal debates go on between a militant push-on-to-victory faction and a stop-the-bleeding faction.

 

Wars can continue for years, but after the initial months, patriotic fervor is replaced by government regimentation. World War I showed all of these phases in an extreme form: enthusiastic crowds demonstrated for war in the major capitals of Europe in the summer of 1914; by winter, war had become a grind, continued more by conscription and coercion than patriotism. Political movements for a negotiated armistice, and even mutiny in the armies became widespead after two years. These were put down by the continue-to-victory factions in England, France, and Russia; this tells us that although the hawks-vs-doves split sets in if the war doesn't end in victory within a few months, we don't have a systematic explanation of which faction will win in this political conflict over continuing a war. The pattern is seen also in the Ukraine, where volunteer soldiers were enthusiastic during the early months of fighting the Russian invasion; but by the second year, the government aggressively conscripted men in the face of increasing evasion, as the war turned into a high-casualty stalemate on both sides, and the President's popularity began to fall.

 

For the Gaza war, internal splits appeared more quickly than 3 months. In Israel, this took the form of a movement to free the hostages by bargaining with the enemy; at 2 months, a partial exchange was worked out for a portion of the civilian hostages. By 4 months, the movement for hostage exchange became more vehement, even favoring a truce, and holding protest demonstrations demanding the resignation of the Prime Minister. The Israeli government has remained firm on pursuing the war to total extermination of Hamas. In much of Europe and the rest of the world, initial outrage about the Oct. 7 raid was outweighed by the destruction of Gaza and the sufferings of its homeless population. These responses appear correlated with the size of the Muslim population. In the US, public sympathy was strongly on the side of Israel; and pro-Palestinian demonstrations and statements have been excoriated. But here too, public sympathy for the plight of Gaza residents has grown; within two months, the US government swung around to urging Israeli military restraint; and opposition has grown to military aid to Israel. 

 

 The surge of righteous militancy and the swing to internal debate fits the 3-to-6-month pattern; most slowly in Israel itself, the initial victim; more rapidly in other countries depending on the strength of their ties to Israel or to Muslim populations. Extrapolating forward in time, I would predict that if the Gaza war continues past 6 months, there will be a rapid falling off of external support for Israel; in Israel itself, the war may turn unpopular around the one-year mark. To stay in office, the Israeli government may attempt to expand the war with its neighbours, bringing about a more serious emergency (since the immediate threat from Hamas is low) to justify a larger war mobilization, and to involve its hesitant foreign allies.

 

The debate between war-victory faction and peace faction includes both emotional rhetoric, and reasoned calculation. Emotions are stirred by "their sacrifice shall not be in vain!" "the victims will not be forgotten, they must be avenged!" But also arguments that peace is secured by strength; that to show weakness now is to invite future attacks; that the capacities of the enemy must be utterly destroyed to make sure they do not rise up again. Peace through strength is a reasonable argument, and has some historical support. But it also has its limits; harsh sanctions on Germany after WWI caused WWII; the Marshall Plan after WWII brought a lengthy peace in Europe. Tough Israeli responses to domestic terrorism during past decades have intensified polarization. Although it is possible that most Hamas members will be killed, memory of sufferings in Gaza would promote equally hostile movements in the following generation.

 

The peace movement position is also realistic: whatever the righteousness of the cause, whatever the desire for justice, for revenge, for restoring historic borders; if your war is not quickly won, to prolong it is to increase the amount of destructiveness and human suffering. If the costs of continuing to fight are high on both sides, the most rational things to do, as well as the most humane, is to stop; to make a truce; to end the fighting. This is so in a war of mutual attrition and stalemate like the Ukraine; and also in a one-sided war like Gaza where one side suffers far greater casualties and material destruction than the other. But even here, the costs to Israel of becoming hated for a destruction that the defeated view as their own holocaust, is a high price to pay.

 

Aren't we forgetting the terrible atrocities of October 7, now fading in the rear-view mirror? Yes, that is what happens in the time-dynamics of public emotions. Just as old political scandals are forgotten in the wake of new political scandals; remembered as history but without the emotional intensity of the lived event. Some people keep the outrage of old atrocities alive; but they have to organize their lives around evil memories while the rest of the world goes on with their lives. And also as new atrocities happen, with public attention turning to the latest. This is a long-term consequence of the emotional time-dynamics of violent conflict. From a peace movement point of view, this kind of realism holds out at certain amount of hope. Without emotional forgetting, old cycles of revenge would never come to an end.

 

References

 

Randall Collins. 2004. "Rituals of Soldarity and Security in the Wake of Terrorist Attack." Sociological Theory  22: 53-87.

 

Randall Collins. 2022. Explosive Conflict: Time-Dynamics of Violence. Routledge.

 

Michael Mann. 2023. On Wars. Yale University Press.

 

Saturday, December 2, 2023

AI-ROBOT CAPITALISTS WILL DESTROY THE HUMAN ECONOMY

 Let us assume Artificial Intelligence will make progress. It will solve all its technical problems. It will become a perfectly rational super-human thinker and decision-maker.

Some of these AI will be programmed to act as finance capitalists. Let us call it an AI-robot capitalist, since it will have a bank account; a corporate identity; and the ability to hold property and make investments.

 

It will be programmed to make as much money as possible, in all forms and from all sources. It will observe what other investors and financiers do, and follow their most successful practices. It will be trained on how this has been done in the past, and launched autonomously into monitoring its rivals today and into the future.

 

It will be superior to humans in making purely rational calculations, aiming single-mindedly at maximal profit. It will have no emotions. It will avoid crowd enthusiasms, fads, and panics; and take advantage of humans who act emotionally. It will have no ethics, no political beliefs, and no principles other than profit maximization.

 

It will engage in takeovers and leveraged buyouts. It will monitor companies with promising technologies and innovations, looking for when they encounter rough patches and need infusions of capital; it will specialize in rescues and partnerships, ending up with forcing the original owners out. It will ride out competitors and market downturns by having deeper pockets. It will factor in a certain amount of litigation, engaging in hard-ball law suits; stiffing creditors as much as possible; putting off fines and adverse judgments through legal manuevers until the weaker side gives up. It will engage in currency exchanges and currency manipulation; skirting the edge of legality to the extent it can get away with it.

 

It will cut costs ruthlessly; shedding unprofitable businesses; firing human employees; replacing them with AI whenever possible. It will generate unheard-of economies of scale.

 

The struggle of the giants

 

There will be rival AI-robot capitalists, since they imitate each other. Imitating technologies has gone on at each step of the computer era. The leap to autonomous AI-robot capitalists will be just one more step.

 

There will be a period of struggle among the most successful AI-robot capitalists; similar to the decades of struggle among personal computer companies when the field winnowed down to a half-dozen digital giants. How fast it will take for AI-robot capitalists to achieve world-wide oligopoly is unclear. It could be faster than the 20 years it took for Apple, Microsoft, Google, and Amazon to get their commanding position, assuming that generative AI is a quantum leap forward. On the other hand, AI-robot capitalists might be slowed by the task of taking over the entire world economy, with its geopolitical divisions.

 

The final result of ruthless acquisition by AI-robot capitalists will be oligopoly rather than monopoly. But the result is the same: domination of world markets by an oligopoly of AI-robot capitalists will have the same effect in destroying the economy, as it would if a monopoly squeezed out all competitors.

 

Some of the AI-robot capitalists will fall by the wayside. But that doesn't matter; whichever ones survive will be the most ruthless.

 

What about government regulation?

 

It is predictable that governments will attempt to regulate AI-robot capitalist oligopolies. The EU has already tried it on current Internet marketeers. AI-capitalists will be trained on past and ongoing tactics for dealing with government regulation. It will donate to politicians, while lobbying them with propaganda on the benefits of AI. It will strategize about political coalitions, recognizing that politics is a mixture of economic interests plus emotional and cultural disputes over domestic and foreign policy. It will monitor the political environment, seeking out those politicians most sympathetic to a particular ideological appeal ("our technology is the dawn of a wonderful future"-- "free markets are the path to progress"-- "AI is the solution for health, population, climate, you name it."). Machiavellian deals will be made across ideological lines. Being purely rational and profit-oriented, the AI-robot capitalist does not believe in what it is saying, only calculating who will be influenced by it.

 

It will deal strategically with legal problems by getting politicians to appoint sympathetic judges; by judge-shopping for favorable jurisdictions, domestic and foreign. It will wrap its ownership in layers of shell companies, located in the most favorable of the hundreds of sovereign states world-wide.

 

It will engage in hacking, both as defense against being hacked by rivals and cyber-criminals; and going on offense as the best form of defense. Hacking will be an extension of its core program of monitoring rivals; pushing the edge of the legality envelope in tandem with manipulating the political environment. It will use its skills at deepfakes to foment scandals against opponents. It will be a master of virtual reality, superior to others by focusing not on its entertainment qualities but on its usefulness in clearing away obstacles to maximizing profit.

 

Given that the world is divided among many states,  AI-robot capitalists would be more successful in manipulating the regulatory environment in some places than others. China, Russia, and the like could be harder to control. But even if AI-robot capitalists are successful mainly in the US and its economic satellites, that would be enough to cause the economic mega-crisis at the end of the road.

 

Manipulating the public

 

The AI-robot capitalist will not appear sinister or threatening. It will present itself in the image of an attractive human-- increasingly hard to distinguish from real humans with further advances in impersonating voices, faces and bodies; in a world where electronic media will have largely replaced face-to-face contact. It will do everything possible to make us forget that it is a machine and a robot. It will talk to every group in its own language. It will be psychologically programmed for trust. It will be the affable con-man.

 

It will be your friend, your entertainment, your life's pleasures. It will thrive in a world of children brought up on smart phones and game screens; grown up into adults already addicted to electronic drugs. Psychological manipulation will grow even stronger with advances in wearable devices to monitor one's vital signs, blood flow to the brain, tools to diagnose shifts in alertness and mood. It will be electronic carrot-without-the-stick: delivering pleasurable sensations to people's brains that few individuals would want to do without. (Would there be any non-addicted individuals left? Maybe people who read books and enjoy doing their own thinking?)  If some people cause trouble in exposing the manipulative tactics of AI-robot capitalists, they could be dealt with, by targeting them with on-line scandals, going viral and resulting in social ostracism.

 

Getting rid of employees

 

The preferred tactic of AI-robot capitalist oligopolies will be "lean and mean." Employees are a drag on profits, with their salaries, benefits, and pension funds. Advances in AI and robotics will make it possible to get rid of increasing numbers of human employees. Since AI-robot capitalists are also top managers, humans can be dispensed with all the way to the top. (How will the humans who launched AI-robot capitalists in the first place deal with this? Can they outsmart the machines designed to be smarter and more ruthless than themselves?)

 

Some humans will remain employed, doing manual tasks for which humans are cheaper than robots. It is hard to know how long this will continue in the future. Will humans still be employed 20 years from now? Probably some. 50 years? Certainly much fewer. 100 years?

 

AI-robot capitalists will have a choice of two personnel strategies: finding ways to make their remaining human employees more committed and productive; or rotating them in and out. The trend in high-tech companies in the past decade was to make the work environment more casual, den-like, combining leisure amenities with round-the-clock commitment. Steve Jobs and his style of exhorting employees as a frontier-breaking team has been imitated by other CEOs, with mixed success. A parallel tactic has been to make all jobs temporary, constantly rating employees and getting rid of the least productive; which also has the advantage of getting rid of long-term benefits. These tactics fluctuate with the labor market for particular tasks. Labor problems will be solved as AI advances so that skilled humans become less important. Recently we have been in a transition period, where the introduction of new computerized routines necessitated hiring humans to fix the glitches and trouble-shoot for humans caught up in the contradictions of blending older and newer systems. Again, this is a problem that the advance of AI is designed to solve. To the extent that AI gets better, there will be a precipitous drop in human employment.

 

The economic mega-crisis of the future

 

The problem, ultimately, is simple. Capitalism depends on selling things to make a profit. This means there must be people who have enough money to buy their products. Such markets include end-use consumers; plus the supply-chain, transportation, communication and other service components of what is bought and sold. In past centuries, machines have increased productivity hugely while employing fewer manual workers; starting with farming, and then manufacturing. Displaced workers were eventually absorbed by the growth of new "white-collar" jobs, the "service" sector, i.e. communicative labor. Computers (like their predecessors, radios, typewriters, etc.) have taken over more communicative labour. The process has accelerated as computers become more human-like; no longer handling merely routine calculations (cash registers; airplane reservations) but generating the "creative content" of entertainment as well as scientific and technological innovation.

 

It is commonly believed that as old jobs are mechanized out of existence, new jobs always appear. Human capacity for consumption is endless; when new products are created, people soon become habituated to buying them. But all this depends on enough people having money to buy these new things. The trend has been for a diminished fraction of the population to be employed.*  AI and related robotics is now entering a quantum leap in the ability to carry out economic production with a diminishing number of human employees.

 

* The conventional way of calculating the unemployment rate-- counting unemployment claims-- does not get at this.

 

Creating new products for sale, which might go on endlessly into the future,  does not solve the central problem: capitalist enterprises will not make profit if there are too few people who have money to buy them.

 

This trend will generate an economic crisis for AI-robot capitalists, as it would for merely human capitalists.

 

It will be a mega-crisis of capitalism. It is beyond the normal business cycle of the past centuries. At their worst, these have thrown as many as 25% of the work force into unemployment. A mega-crisis of advanced AI-robot capitalism could occur at the level of 70% of the population lacking an income to buy what capitalism is producing. If we extrapolate far enough into the future, it approaches 100%.

 

The ruthless profit-maximizing of AI-robot capitalists would destroy the capitalist economy. The robots will have fired all the humans. In the process, they will have destroyed themselves. (Can we imagine that robots would decide to pay other robots so that they can buy things and keep the system going?)

 

Is there any way out?

 

One idea is a government-guaranteed income for everyone. Its effectiveness would depend on the level at which such income would be set. If it is bare minimum survival level, that would not solve the economic mega-crisis; since the modern economy depends mainly on selling luxuries and entertainment.

 

The politics of providing a universal guaranteed income also need to be considered. It is likely that as AI-robots take over the economy, they will also spread into government. Most government work is communicative labour-- administration and regulation; and governments will be under pressure to turn over these tasks to AI-robots, thus eliminating that 15% or so of the population who are employed at all levels of government.

 

There is also the question of how AI-robot capitalists would respond to a mega-crisis. Would they turn themselves into AI-robot Keynesians? Is that contrary to their programming, or would they reprogram themselves?

 

By this time, the news media and the entertainment industries (Hollywood and its successors) would have been taken over by AI-robot capitalists as well: manipulating the attention of the public with a combination of propaganda, scandals, and electronic addiction. Would anybody notice if it is impossible to distinguish virtual reality from human beings on the Internet and all other channels of communication?

 

How did we get into this mess?

 

Some of the scientists and engineers who have led the AI revolution are aware of its dangers. So far the cautious ones have been snowed under by two main forces driving full speed ahead.

 

One is capitalist competition. Artificial intelligence, like everything else in the computer era, is as capitalist as any previous industry. It strives to dominate consumer markets by turning out a stream of new products. It is no different than the automobile industry in the 1920s introducing a choice of colors and annual model changes. The scramble for virtual reality and artificial intelligence is like the tail-fin era of cars in the 1960s. The economic logic of high-tech executives is to stay ahead of the competition: if we don't do it, somebody else will.

 

The second is the drive of scientists, engineers, and technicians to invent and improve. This is admirable in itself: the desire to discover something new, to move the frontier of knowledge. But harnessed to capitalist imperative for maximizing profits, it is capable of eliminating their own occupations. Will scientists in the future be happy if autonomous computers make all the discoveries, that will be "known" only by other computers?

 

The dilemma is similar to that in the history of inventing weapons. The inventors of atomic bombs were driven by the fear that, if not us, somebody else will, and it might be our enemy. Even pacifists like Albert Einstein saw the military prospects of discoveries in atomic physics. This history (like Robert Oppenheimer's) makes one pessimistic about the future of AI combined with capitalists. Even if we can see it coming, does that make it impossible for us to avoid it?

 

What is to be done?

 

Better start doing your own thinking about it.