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- From: treitel@gracie.IntelliCorp.COM (Richard Treitel)
- Subject: Re: The Marching Morons (was Re: Cindy the Disco Queen)
- Message-ID: <1992Dec23.151708@gracie.IntelliCorp.COM>
- Date: 23 Dec 92 23:17:08 GMT
- References: <pete.724297489@extro.ucc.su.OZ.AU> <_1j24x#@rpi.edu> <pete.724415390@extro.ucc.su.OZ.AU> <1992Dec19.002432.28274@newstand.syr.edu> <pete.725064249@extro.ucc.su.OZ.AU>
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- In article <pete.725064249@extro.ucc.su.OZ.AU>, pete@extro.ucc.su.OZ.AU (Peter Alexander Merel) writes:
-
- [stuff deleted]
-
- |> However, I think you're missing the point. The cultured hoard their culture
- |> not by keeping secrets but by controlling the resources required to
- |> promulgate their culture.
-
- Close enough. Let's switch from Kornbluth (yes, I did read him) to
- Vonnegut, not famous for his optimism, and specifically 'Player Piano.' In
- that book, an educated elite of managers and engineers coexisted smoothly
- with a proletariat who were not actually morons, but might as well have
- been: they were given no opportunity to do anything except the things that
- machines could do for them. The resulting society was prosperous and
- (mostly) contented, though naturally Vonnegut created some rebels in it.
- The elite occasionally used the masses as grunt labour or cannon fodder,
- and provided them with a fair standard of living otherwise.
-
- Also read, if you can find it (I can't), 'A Torrent of Faces' by James
- Blish and Norman somebody-or-other.
-
- My point is: what's *wrong* with having a lot of morons as long as there
- are still some smart people around? The problem, if there is one, is
- correctable in a few generations anyway.
-
- [Of course I can think of some things wrong with this. Can you?]
-
- Personally, I rather like Larry Niven's notion of "birthrights." You get
- an automatic right to have one child, and can obtain more in various ways.
-
- - Richard
-