Automated food production at the municpal level, tax funded. You solve a whole lot of other problems at the same time.
There's a lot of understandable barriers to implementing that, but it's the only reasonable path I see. Guaranteed minimum wage is fundamentally broken, because cash is not an innately useful resource. Food is.
Soylent highlights the path to solving the regulation nightmare that surrounds agriculture. It's a hell of a lot easier to verify a soylent mixture is to spec, and the processes that created it, than it is to verify agriculture.
Soon the miracle of rocks to bread will be as ordinary as instantaneous global communication.
I don't think you deserve those downvotes you seem to be getting. You're raising some interesting points worth further discussion, even though I don't agree with the concept of switching from normal food to soylent; it's not the world I'd like to live in (though it surely simplify food regulations).
> Soon the miracle of rocks to bread will be as ordinary as instantaneous global communication.
I'm really looking forward to it, it needs to be done sooner than later, or we're screwed.
There's a lot of understandable barriers to implementing that, but it's the only reasonable path I see. Guaranteed minimum wage is fundamentally broken, because cash is not an innately useful resource. Food is.
Soylent highlights the path to solving the regulation nightmare that surrounds agriculture. It's a hell of a lot easier to verify a soylent mixture is to spec, and the processes that created it, than it is to verify agriculture.
Soon the miracle of rocks to bread will be as ordinary as instantaneous global communication.