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Learning from the Luddites: Lessons to Remember

Unveiling ⁣the Luddites: ⁣Rebels Against ⁣Progress or ‌Astute Observers?

Everyone knows about the Luddites. They hated technology;‌ they hated progress; they hated happiness. And what’s more,⁢ they were⁢ fools, thinking that technology would ruin everything, when it obviously improves all of our lots.

In the ‍tech bro⁢ equivalent of “They hate us for‌ our freedom,” ‌Microsoft’s attorney ‍perfected the ⁢caricature⁣ during the company’s 1998⁢ antitrust hearings: “The 19th-century reactionaries … ⁤fearful ​of competition,⁢ went ⁢around smashing machines with sledgehammers to arrest the march of ‍progress driven by science and technology.” Few of us know more than ⁢Bill Gates’s lawyer about the movement, but that hasn’t stopped people from brandishing the term ‍against anyone who‍ dares to think about technology before ⁤using ⁢it—or, scandalously, not using it.

Brian‌ Merchant’s​ Blood in the Machine: The Origins ​of the Rebellion ⁣Against ⁣Big Tech should do something to correct our ⁣collective ⁤ignorance. ⁢The ⁢book offers ​a⁤ rapid-fire history of the movement’s ⁣origins, ⁣motivations, and ⁣eventual defeat, with a heavy ‌emphasis on the‍ similarities between ‍the⁢ Luddites’ times and​ our own. This is no disinterested survey, for those readers ⁣looking to⁣ bone up on ⁣their British labor movements. Merchant’s mission is rather to draw explicit connections between the Luddites and us, so that ⁤we can apply ⁣their insights,⁢ strategies, and inspiration to ​our own rage⁣ against the ⁢machine.

A Glimpse into History

Still, the history must be told before we can draw any ‌lessons from it.‌ During the Industrial Revolution,⁣ British textile ‌workers found ⁢themselves‍ threatened by the new “wide frame,”⁢ a ⁣device that could boost garment production and, they feared, reduce ⁤wages. As​ shop ‍owners began to⁣ do just that, workers⁣ in Nottingham saw⁣ that the government​ would side with capital rather ⁣than labor in any disputes and so elected to engage in a bit of their own creative destruction, ⁣sneaking into a textile‌ factory in 1811 to break⁣ the hated machines. They took as their inspiration the Robin ‍Hood-like ⁤folk hero Ned Ludd, supposedly an apprentice who smashed his own knitting frame in retaliation ⁢against an overbearing master.

From there, ⁢the movement against automation took off, ‌as the ​newly dubbed ‍Luddites, by sabotaging factories, facing off against their employers, and agitating ‌for political reform, won the support‍ of both fellow‌ laborers‍ and an impressive ‌roster⁤ of artists.‍ Lord Byron and Percy Bysshe Shelley were champions of‍ the cause, and Percy’s wife Mary, in her Frankenstein, would give voice to the new⁢ anxieties over man’s relationship to his⁤ inventions. Perhaps the best summary of the strange fears of the age, though, was given ⁢by ‌one textile worker, anticipating the dread that this reviewer, at least, experiences when ⁤faced⁢ with an imminent software update: “There’s a conspiracy on foot​ to improve ⁢and improve till the working man that has nothing but ⁣his hands and⁤ his ⁤craft to feed him and his children will be improved off the face of creation.”

The Luddites’ True Motivation

Alas, Blood⁣ in‌ the Machine ​is no‌ Childe Harold’s ⁣Pilgrimage. The ‌story‍ is told rather breathlessly, with many one-sentence paragraphs and ​rarely ⁤a pause for ⁢commentary or summary. By focusing on the perspectives of discrete individuals, often not particularly important themselves, Merchant tends to lose the forest for the trees,⁤ only to⁣ then zoom out to the scale of the‌ biome for a ‌sweeping claim ⁢about the workings of‌ capitalism. Still, one argument ​comes through clearly: In Merchant’s telling, the‍ Luddites weren’t really anti-technology⁤ at all,​ or ‌at least not⁣ anti-technology⁤ tout court. On⁤ the contrary, they were astute observers​ of how one ‍innovation ‌could promote their well-being, while another could ‌hinder ‌it: “Luddism can and‍ certainly ⁤did‌ coexist with technology, and even a love of technology.⁢ The handloom, for example,⁣ made the Luddites’ way ⁢of ⁢life possible, long before they became Luddites.”

Rather, Merchant insists, ‍the Luddites ​were anti-boss—the Man who‌ found in‌ new technologies a means of‌ enriching himself ‌at his⁢ employees’ expense. Smashing machines ⁤was just the best‌ way of striking ​at the⁤ machines’ owners ⁣and their attempts at automation, whether by replacing ⁢workers with machines or by turning workers into machines. Merchant thus sees​ “King Ludd”⁣ as a kind‍ of proto-Dilbert, embracing technology but ⁣hating his servitude under the ⁢Pointy-haired Boss.⁢ Depicting ‍Luddism as driven by anti-technological ire, ⁢Merchant ‌suggests, might ‌be not ​just ⁣a matter of innocent ignorance, but part of a strategy ‌to bully skeptics into ⁤accepting the machinations of the ‌”entrepreneurial elite”—an elite that, if ‍you can⁣ believe it, stands to earn a pretty penny from our acquiescence.

Directing Our Hammers

It’s therefore ultimately toward‌ the modern⁣ equivalent of the​ factory‌ owners—Amazon warehouse managers, gig app CEOs, and the like—that, ​Merchant⁣ concludes,⁢ we should be‌ directing our hammers. “As⁤ long ‍as we’re in thrall to the same basic economic ‌preconditions, attitudes toward technology ‍and entrepreneurship, and ⁣business-first policies that were inaugurated⁢ in the age of the Luddites, it will all happen⁢ again. ​… If ‌the Luddites have taught ⁢us anything, ⁤it’s that robots aren’t taking our jobs. Our bosses are.” Merchant is​ right to ⁤insist⁢ that reports of robo-unemployment are⁣ highly exaggerated, but his call‌ for a new⁤ “Luddite-style uprising” does not‍ sound promising, either. Is seizing the means of production ‍really ⁣a better plan‌ than destroying them?

What’s ​more, even ‍if one does hope‌ for a new “rebellion against Big Tech,” it’s not obvious that the Luddites offer a good model to follow.‍ After all, they⁣ lost⁤ handily: The British government​ eventually⁤ sent thousands of⁤ troops to quell the⁢ unrest, and‌ after a series of swift and prominent trials in 1813,⁣ which sent the ⁤guilty Luddites to the‌ gallows or to the Australian penal colonies, the movement quickly flickered out like a ​dying lightbulb. In light‌ of their failures, what lessons ‍do ⁣the ‍Luddites really​ have to ⁢teach us today?

Lessons from Defeat

Perhaps it is in their very defeat that we can ‍gleam an insight. Counterintuitively, the Luddites’ loss gives the lie to ‍the narrative that there’s ‌no sense trying to stop⁢ technology’s ineluctable⁤ progression—a “march,” as Microsoft’s attorney put it. In this contradictory myth, technology’s unstoppable, intrinsic nature​ has ⁢already settled how we will use it;⁢ but somehow ⁤we also have a‌ duty to welcome every new technology⁤ immediately‍ and‌ maximally​ incorporate it into our lives. ⁢Consider‌ venture⁢ capitalist Marc Andreessen’s recent ​”Techno-Optimist⁢ Manifesto,” which praises​ the “techno-capital machine” that “has been running for hundreds of years, despite continuous ‌howling from ⁣Communists and​ Luddites.” (Never mind that communists have been ardent‌ champions of technology: Lenin, a great ​admirer of American industry, insisted that the ⁢”Soviet Republic must at all costs ​adopt⁤ all that⁢ is valuable in the⁢ achievements⁤ of science and ⁣technology.”)

This is a masterclass in‌ owning the Ludds, but the truth is more ‍complicated. It wasn’t anything ⁢about the ⁣stocking frame⁣ and the spinning jenny themselves,‍ after all,​ that settled the struggle between the Luddites ​and the factory-owners, but rather‌ the state’s willingness to intervene and decide which side would win, and therefore‌ which​ direction the technology ⁣would ⁢take. Who‍ knows who‍ might have ‌won ⁢in a fair fight? One might think, like Merchant, that⁢ Parliament aided the wrong side, or​ be glad that the upstarts ‌were⁢ put in their place; either ⁢way, there ⁤was no neutral‌ domain in ​which the technology was free to simply work out its own magic.

It’s no different‍ today. For better⁣ or worse, technological innovation ⁣is a matter, not just of following the mysterious guidance of the invisible hand, and ​certainly not of coaxing into ⁤being technology’s inner destiny, but of consciously​ deliberating ​over​ how, and whether, a given tool⁤ should be used, in ⁢what circumstances, and toward what ends. This is more difficult than both the kneejerk rejection of ⁢the techno-skeptic, and the⁢ blind embrace of the​ techno-optimist—more difficult, but for⁤ that reason all the more vital.

Blood‌ in the Machine: The Origins of the Rebellion Against Big Tech
by Brian‌ Merchant
Little, Brown, 496 pp., $30

Robert Bellafiore‌ is⁣ research ⁢manager at the Foundation for American Innovation.

​ How can we critically assess the impact‌ of technology on our lives to ensure that it serves our needs and ​doesn’t cause harm?

Tps://a16z.com/2011/08/20/why-software-is-eating-the-world/”>Why Software is Eating the World” argument: He insists ⁤that⁣ every ​industry ​will soon ‌be disrupted by software,⁤ and urges us to embrace ‌this disruption⁢ without question. This ⁤argument⁤ mirrors the⁤ rhetoric of the 1990s, when‍ Bill​ Gates predicted that ⁢”banking⁢ is essential,⁣‌ banks are not.” Yet, ⁢as Merchant points out, the banks are still‌ very⁤ much with us, and ⁢few would argue that bankers‍⁣⁢ are on the brink of extinction. The Luddites’ failure reminds us that technology ⁣is not predetermined to follow a linear‌ path. Rather, ‌it is shaped by human decisions and actions, and our acceptance or ​rejection of it‌ ultimately depends on our collective choices.

So,⁢ perhaps ⁤the true lesson from⁤ the Luddites is not to reject technology ​outright​ but to ⁤critically assess⁣ its impact ⁣on our lives. It is⁤ important⁤ to hold technology accountable and ensure that it is serving ⁤our needs, rather than blindly accepting every new‍ innovation for ⁣the sake of progress. We should strive for a‌ balance⁣ that allows us ⁢to harness the benefits of technology while mitigating its potential harms, such as job displacement​ or the erosion of privacy. This requires proactive engagement, informed debate, and ‌responsible decision-making on both individual⁤ and collective levels.

While the Luddites⁢ may have been defeated in their own time, ‌their resistance to​ unchecked technological progress serves as a reminder that progress should ​not come at the expense of human well-being.‌ Their cautionary​ tale challenges⁤ us to question the assumptions and narratives that surround technology and to ‌advocate for a future that is both innovative and humane. In this way, the Luddites can be seen‍ not⁢ as rebels against progress, but as astute observers who beckon us to think critically about the world we are creating.


Read More From Original Article Here: Learning From the Luddites

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