Waking up at 11 AM in pyjamas to collect food stamps is a fucking job. How can you count that as unemployment?
Right now, I am working on an approach which completely questions libertarianism and market economics. In a sense, trying to burn down what I have been very much behind for the last 6 years.
While I am mostly human and susceptible to emotions and bias, resolving contradictions is a mission for me. Once I think I have spotted a contradiction, I am very unhappy until I can resolve it, and logic is one of those things that either yields a true or false condition. You can't really feel "logic".I definitely wish you luck with this. It's the hardest thing anyone can be asked to do and people usually fail miserably at it. They can't stop having a severe bias towards the belief system that they emotionally prefer.. it influences their logic, reasoning, etc.
This is a question that is answered by Austrian economics, but not by any other school. Again, that's my attraction to it. The ability to have a complete methodology for discussing and understanding human action should underlie everything any of us do (or else we may be flying blind).Off subject but I've been meaning to ask some of you strict free market capitalist libertarians about the impact of widespread future automation on that system. Lets say we can erase almost all labor jobs with robots and smart AI. Does extreme joblessness make that system bad for society or will people always find jobs doing something like entertainment, science? I think Marx argued this kind of thing is one reasons communism/socialism is almost inevitable. I've got no dog in this fight.. I just want to hear of a vision that's different from my Star Trek Next Generation vision which was very socialized automated society.
This frees up people to pursue intellectual, ideological, creative, spiritual, sexual, emotional etc pursuits.
When I said the future was libertarian, that's the trend.Sounds nice.
Short answer: Insatiably curiosity.G what do or did you use to learn economics ?