The arrogance of Alex Garden an his robotic pizza maker compnay called

Chuck Woodruff
   The attempt to further create a reliance of the economy on all aspects of technology continues as some guy named Alex Gardon attempts to replace jobs for pizza makers. Even cheap paying pizza jobs are on the radar of the technocrats as a company called Zoom creating robots to replace more jobs people need to be employed so they can actually eat pizza Marta is one of two robots working at Zume Pizza, a secretive food delivery startup trying to make a more profitable pizza through machines."We are going to be the Amazon of food," said Zume's co-founder and executive chairman, Alex Garden. Garden, 41, is the former president of Zynga Studios. He wants to keep making pizza without the human element and have jobs for people.Alex Garden, co-founder and executive chairman of Zume. How exactly people will afford to pay and eat pizza when there are no jobs is not something this technocratic pizza dreamer has not envisioned as of yet. maybe Zoom will take up the public good and sell these robotic pizza at two cents a slice so people can enjoy the benefits of robotic pizza making machines displacing human workers for generations making pizzas by hand--most likely Alex Gardon will pocket the money and paychecks and actually use this technology to increase the price of pizza to the few who can afford pizza.  Before finding this techn-scam pizza robot company Zoom the jackass Garden he was a general manager of Microsoft's Xbox Live. Garden launched Zume in stealth mode last June, when he began quietly recruiting engineers under a pseudonym and building his patented trucks in an unmarked Mountain View garage. Basically the brainchild of this plan is to get even more reliance on technology and robotics keeping these engineers employed as they have successful done to the health care industry they now seek to repeat in food manufacturing.
   In October, Zume began working closely with Swiss robot maker, ABB, and a global crew of mechanical, electrical and software engineers. In April, the startup sold its first cyborg-constructed pie to an unsuspecting customer in Mountain View. Basically the idea is to keep money into the engineering aspects of society by making as many industries and companies include aspects of robotics into their business plan and replace workers as much a possible. Alex Garden and the people at Zoom in essence seek to replace people out of society if there is a way to profit handsomely for themselves. Zume though will not entirely replace workers and instead only have the mighty and the skilled working on the machines and eating their pizza their frankebotic monsters create from scratch. Two minutes from Google's main campus, Zume's headquarters sits in an unmarked concrete building that looks like an auto repair shop. The 8,000 square foot interior is divided into a large kitchen, where the robots are; and an office space, where twelve engineers, designers and product managers work. The building also has a machine and fabrication workshop. Obviously the workers ventures like Alex Garden and the technocrats want to preserve are their class and they seek to replace the lower-wage people who actually do the work in making the product. Alex garden can't comprehend the absurdity of his idea unless somebody were makin g robots to actually replaces engineers themselves and quite literally cut the middleman form the interactions with robots

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