You and I have both come to know an age of progression technology wise that make these types of statements very believable. However, it is still speculation at the end of the day. There is also the human price tag that waiting for fully automated society will cost: for example, the sheer amount of human life lost to simple lower bowel diseases in the third world due to a lack of clean water *cannot wait* for this automated society to come about.
I don't believe that's true. And even if it is, there are verifiable capitalist machinations at work keeping fossil fuels the dominant form of energy in the world. Paying off scientists to write favorable studies for climate denial and limit the effect the public will see of what exactly we're doing to our environment are one of the huge hurdles the current system of production put into action to combat profit loss. As of now, we could surely stand to invest more in wind and nuclear but that won't happen because people who control societal resources through private property are too selfish to allow to happen.
I mean, socialist revolution and technology are a long shot. I don't argue it. But socialist revolution is the one thing at this moment I can think of that will wrestle the control of our energy supplies away from private interests who could give no shits about selling our future for profits now, and instead giving the public the ability to make a decision to scale back production, progression, and frivolous commodity consumption in order to make changes to save our future world for upcoming generations.
As for solving the climate problem, private property does require defeat in order to effectively solve the climate problem. You again mention self replicating machinery and construction led by robots. That's all fine, but how many years do you really think we have before coral reefs around Australia are gone for good? Or how much of a rise in temperature do you think we can wait out in order to get these system going? I think that's where you and I disagree. We don't have time as a species, in my opinion.
I do appreciate your allusion to Marx, and I agree with your use of the passage. It certainly fits. However, I would interpret our relation to his words as we have already squeezed every ounce of necessary innovation our of capitalism already. I believe the bourgeois epoch to have served its time in doing what it needed to do, and conditions have been produced that make socialism possible.
Thank you for Lanier's article by the way, fascinating stuff.
I do mean a form of market socialism in my example. Realistically you're right, there would be a lot of political work to be done even in my scenario in which popular uprising toppled the current American government. Following this scenario, things would remain running in the way they are now in order to keep food in people's stomachs and other necessary functions to make sure we don't end up like Venezuela.
However, I would advocate switching things slowly from the current form of production we keep into a market socialist economy. Every business registered, from largest to smallest would be restructured into cooperatives in order to begin the democratic control of the means of production that socialism means to settle into. So I go with your latter scenario, in which all firms are required by law to be co-ops.
As for the present, people are much too influenced by the superstructure and the idea of "rising on my own to be a boss" to form cooperatives that would make up any sizable portion of the economy.
By the way, I want to thank you for your detailed and level headed responses. This board needs that kind of discourse if we want to advance socialism in any real way.