Greg Ip and professor Erik Hurst says technology has draw backs and young men are just computer game nerds

Otto Jansen
   Greg Ip is some writer of technology and he is starting to see the dark side. The dark side of technology and progress ultimately brings costs that are not always positive and the increase in car fatalities is part of the price people pay for the technology of constantly texting people who are not at your side. Image result for Greg Ip wall streetAlongside with increase opportunity for cyber identity theft crimes, viris, and helped spread the rise of the Islamic state and the spread of hate. greg ip also sees increase technological breakthrough in video games making young males even less appealed to ever get out in the real world and have a jobRelated image professor Erik Hurst says that young dummies without college degrees spent and not working spent 6.8 hours a week playing video games compared to men who are working and professor Hurst says the increased happiness of these young male dweebs is precisely because they are not productive and working living in their parents basements playing all the games they can get their mitts on. Both Greg Ip and Economics professor husr of the University of Chicago says technology is hurting young people whether hurting them physically in car accidents or smashing their career opportunities my having no motivation for anything that doesn't include a joystick and a battle game. The reason young men stay inside playing video game sis the corporate world has flipped in preferring women in the world of work and consumer and it is the men that are not staying at home instead of the women in many cases for these young men with no job prospect aside from warehouse or delivery positions while women at the office and other east bullshit public relations gigs.Image result for erik hurst Companies are also finding out technology can be costly having to battle increases in fraud and the cybersecurity industry pretty much about to erase productivity gains and improvement tech has given business through the years. Whether it is o be determined in the long run of technology's long term benefit or disruption one can clearly say changes come with both positive and negative consequences and if the negatives become more costly business and government may have to take a bite back against the forces that shoved and forced this change onto society as the costs start to outweigh the benefits ten fold. You don't have to be a professor of Economics or a journalist at the Economist to understand this.

No comments:

Post a Comment