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Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
I've grown fruit and vegetables all my life by hand with a hoe and shovel and it's not much different than what they did back in the 1600's. It's long, hard, back-breaking work. If you want to compare a farmer from the 1600's with a farmer of today, they both still work their butts off, but the modern farmer has a tractor and weed killer which allow him to effectively cultivate thousands of acres in the same amount of time it would have taken for a peasant from the 1600's to cultivate only a few. And no one is arguing any different.
The equation, however, hasn't changed from the 1600's to now: Productivity = work x coefficient of technology. Let's say the hoe and shovel are a coefficient of about 1 and the tractor and weed killer is the coefficient of about 1000 (plug in your own figures if you don't like these). It still doesn't change the outcome when work = 0. And as per your point above, I can use that tractor to either till my own fields, or ruin the fields of my neighbor - which I choose to do is all up to my morals.
The increases in technology have been constrained to ever narrow areas by regulation. Take housing. Building codes mean we have essentially the same buildings and houses today that we had in the late 1970s. Cars have hardly changed. Airplanes still fly subsonic and on and on.
I would argue that it is man's ability and desire to work hard that makes him wealthy. Your second question outlines things even better.
"The spying problem is not a technological problem, it is a moral problem."
100% agreed, and that was my point. Technology is a tool - it is ultimately the people and their morality that determine the use of the tool and therefore productivity. But it is a mistake to argue that technology independent of morality is a path to wealth. The great line from "Jurassic Park": "Yeah, but your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they _could_, they didn't stop to think if they _should_."
"Governments tracked every little detail about their citizens long before the internet."
Which governments are you talking about? None that existed prior to the Internet ever had the scope and interconnectivity that exist today. The GRU of the Soviet Union and the Mao-led Reds only wished that they had something this powerful in the 1950's. Hitler, too, would have loved to have had something as detailed. I'm failing to see anytime except in very recent history where such a claim can be made.
A most brilliant point!
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