Entrails Konfetti
16th July 2006, 23:09
In post revolutionmary society when the masses first figure out how to direct the means of production-- technology wont be advanced enough to have some jobs automated as of yet,(and yes I am talking about today preasent objective conditions as if a revolution were to happen soon) but most typical occupations would be rewarding because there would be a democratic control over the workplace, (meaning labourers get to do some empowering work like figure out how much production is necessary for demands of future and preasent, set new standards ect as well elect representatives in a new structure that will weild real results) though this is more to do with production.
In the case of service occupations there will still be rewarding factors such as creative concepts like making the service more unique and enjoyable for customers, though I don't forsee competetion necessary in this area because services will provide their own unique character for the specializations, aswell as maybe similar services will be consolidated into one, and competition will be rendered because of the workers run all these facilities and understand through class-consciousness that competition reverts back to the old order. The workers in these occupations will enjoy work-place democracy too aswell as all workers in all areas of employment.
The occupations in production have sort of a comand in producing goods and it has the adventures with working with technological occupations in inventing new, more efficient means of production, and the occupations in service have incentive in creativity, but both areas require distribution networks to furnish them with materials. Distribution occupations don't really enjoy the rewards of production, or creativity. Aswell as taking orders from both industries they pretty much store goods in warehouses, transport goods, unload/load goods into a vechicle. Also, the methods of distribution haven't really advanced, only transportation has. Being a truck-driver is a lonely job, and being a dockworker is a back-breaking job.
How can this be solved? Should service and production industries attatch duties of distribution to their workers aswell as the duties of production and distribution?
In the case of service occupations there will still be rewarding factors such as creative concepts like making the service more unique and enjoyable for customers, though I don't forsee competetion necessary in this area because services will provide their own unique character for the specializations, aswell as maybe similar services will be consolidated into one, and competition will be rendered because of the workers run all these facilities and understand through class-consciousness that competition reverts back to the old order. The workers in these occupations will enjoy work-place democracy too aswell as all workers in all areas of employment.
The occupations in production have sort of a comand in producing goods and it has the adventures with working with technological occupations in inventing new, more efficient means of production, and the occupations in service have incentive in creativity, but both areas require distribution networks to furnish them with materials. Distribution occupations don't really enjoy the rewards of production, or creativity. Aswell as taking orders from both industries they pretty much store goods in warehouses, transport goods, unload/load goods into a vechicle. Also, the methods of distribution haven't really advanced, only transportation has. Being a truck-driver is a lonely job, and being a dockworker is a back-breaking job.
How can this be solved? Should service and production industries attatch duties of distribution to their workers aswell as the duties of production and distribution?