I remember reading a science fiction story in the late 70s by Poul Anderson in which an aging capitalist and an aging communist come to blows in a bar in a small town somewhere in the not-very-distant future, arguing about where it all went wrong.
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I remember reading a science fiction story in the late 70s by Poul Anderson in which an aging capitalist and an aging communist come to blows in a bar in a small town somewhere in the not-very-distant future, arguing about where it all went wrong. Turns out that as soon as solar became really, really cheap, both of their economic models just…went away, along with the belief systems they'd sustained. The younger townspeople don't even really understand what they're arguing about…
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I remember reading a science fiction story in the late 70s by Poul Anderson in which an aging capitalist and an aging communist come to blows in a bar in a small town somewhere in the not-very-distant future, arguing about where it all went wrong. Turns out that as soon as solar became really, really cheap, both of their economic models just…went away, along with the belief systems they'd sustained. The younger townspeople don't even really understand what they're arguing about…
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@jackwilliambell @gvwilson The Last of the Deliverers
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I remember reading a science fiction story in the late 70s by Poul Anderson in which an aging capitalist and an aging communist come to blows in a bar in a small town somewhere in the not-very-distant future, arguing about where it all went wrong. Turns out that as soon as solar became really, really cheap, both of their economic models just…went away, along with the belief systems they'd sustained. The younger townspeople don't even really understand what they're arguing about…
@gvwilson that seems pretty ridiculous to me: solar power or not, ownership of the means of production is always going to be a flashpoint in human affairs
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J jwcph@helvede.net shared this topic