Let's not be confused here. Specialization is what allows for free time. If everyone has to farm and hunt, that's all you'd do. Specialization is a good thing for humanity and diverse institutions and industries to arise.
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actually, hunter-gatherer communities 'work' significantly less time than we do in our corporate jobs. farming is a different story: here's one study: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/05/190520115646.htm
You can read that study and see that it only represents one instance where hunter gathers were more efficient than farmers in the same region. You cant use that to say to our current system is less efficient. I hate pop science so much its unreal.
Yeah, OPs got the spirit but misses the point. We are being pressured to sell our time at a minimum of 40 hours every week. It's thanks to specialization (and the technology that developed from it) that this quantity of of time is grossly over-allocated. Trade and travel allowed people to create better products in less time, so people were no longer very literally working to live, day-in, day-out. Unfortunately wages are kept low, wealth is kept centralized and culture continues to place value on excess so that we're continually convinced that we "have" to work as many hours as we can find.
I work as a software engineer and I'm also one of these people that just gets a kick out of making things. So I'd probably do some more of that, just not for an employer. Even more contributions to open source would be likely as you've already highlighted.
Would probably build more physical machines/contraptions/electronic doo-dads that I don't have the time or energy to make today. That and I'd probably make more music, or more accurately, finish more music.
Probably grow more vegetables too, but currently that's limited by space anyway.
I would cut cars in half and weld them into the other halves of other cars
Humans do not like the same thing over and over every day.
Speak for yourself, I like routine and being rewarded for working hard.
Do you really get rewarded for working hard? Every time I've gone above and beyond for my job it becomes and expectation with no increase in pay. There is no reward for us "no skill" jobs that somehow are the very foundation of this god forsaken societal system we uphold.
I'd still be a programmer. I'd work on open source projects 100% of the time. It's something I love to do.
Man's got to eat though. I still work in an area that makes the world slightly less shitty though, so it's not all bad.
I run a goth night once every other month.
I visit friends quite often whenever I want to.
I get up and start my day when I feel like it.
I play with code and build web toys.
I'm a freelance IT guy. I could, if I wanted to, earn a lot more than I do, but my time is worth more than money. It is possible to do, even in this world where everyone is told that you need a 'career' and to work for a company, although a lot more work is needed to freeing other careers from the obligation of the grind.
Don't give up hope, unionise, demand respect, ~~buy a guillotine,~~ and keep an eye out for a way to get what you need and to contribute to society or your community without signing your life away.
(Yes, some people will never get the opportunity. And that, frankly, pisses me off no end. But don't lose hope until you're dead.)
I like my job. It's not a hobby, but it also ensures I don't burn out in my hobbies, which happened when I initially tried to make a hobby my job.
I'd have more time to become a better artist.
edit: what the fuck was that unwarranted shitty comment.
dont worry about that other commenter. They're angry that their argument in another comment was argued against, and now they look stupid.
Thanks. It was so out of left field. Like damn, I've never even posted my art on lemmy for anyone to know.
I'd rewrite the game engines for Command & Conquer games so that they could be modernized.
It's a perfectly doable task, but not with the amount of free time I have.
I think I would travel or wander a lot more. Not in an instagram backpacker kind of way, just in a dawdle from town to town road trippy kind of way.
I would be doing more programming and more open source work. I would also spend more time doing physical activities like sports. I wouldn't mind doing gardening for anyone, I also wouldn't mind automating all their systems. Definetely I'd sleep for one extra hour.
Why is there so much communist content on lemmy?
Not every criticism of capitalism is communism.
But also, is it any wonder that a platform built without a profit incentive and centred around the concepts of mutual voluntary interaction rather than hierarchical control would attract a more anti-capitalist userbase?
I would sleep a lot more, that's for sure.
If I wasnt working a job for money I wouldn't be doing anything that contributed to making food or providing infrastructure. What I did with my time would probably be considered useless by society and that's why I'm not doing it as a job currently.
I'd do what I'm doing now but I'd be helping hospitals and schools instead of companies.
Make art and hike more.
Id play more guitar and more piano, and record more. Id take pictures hiking and take videos and stuff. I'd fully automate the mundane from my life, finish my self hosting projects.
I'd be healthier, overall. By a lot. Mentally and physically.
I'd be that guy that makes all those useless inventions, except they'd be incredibly useful to me and like 2 other people.
Basic research. I left basic research because research in academia is a lost cause, killed by lack of funding, hyper toxic environment, rat race to the bottom, mafias and corruption.
It is so bad that I feel a much more morally cleaner environment working in finance.
I would go back doing what I used to do, but without the baggage that forced most of us to leave
I too dream of this same future:
https://sturlabragason.github.io/blog/2023/07/04/Decentralized-Autonomous-Communities.html
Quoting this:
"In DACs, knowledge, creativity, and innovation are communal properties. Whether itβs a new AI algorithm, a more efficient building design, or a breakthrough software update, all are shared freely among the network of DACs. This community-wide open-source approach fuels rapid progress and the spread of beneficial developments."