by Tinker » Sun Oct 10, 2010 10:28 pm
Alph The flaw in your thinking is that you don't take into account the deflationary principles behind logarithmic technological advancement. As technology gets more advanced its antecedents become cheaper. Most of American consumption is now virtual goods. Media makes up the bulk of our standard of living. So if a person can afford a domicile, food, transportation (public will do) some basic equipment, then the price of media will be fungible based upon what the market will pay for such things. Generally you can get tons of media at a fixed cost of about $ 150 a month and have a wide variety of choice. Choice will only increase as more people start putting their back-catalogues online just to make residual cash. Physical toys have already been taking major hits next to Video games for years. Video Games are the largest consumer entertainment business, beating out the film and music industries. As long as media is affordable, the standard of living will be relatively interchangeable in terms of amusements.
The canary didn't die because this mine is dangerous, it died because it's lazy and wasn't raised with a proper work ethic.