From “The Curious Case of Robby”
People have recently been on the run from the body shop, even those with high seniority and good jobs. The few remaining workers are subordinated to the robots, supplying them with parts like door hinges or nuts and bolts. Working with robots is boring. Each robot in its yellow enclosure performs its jerky moves again and again, same old, same old. No robot shouts and starts jumping around, wildly slapping his body when a spark lands inside his coveralls, or his boots. A robot welds, or screws, or whatever, passively, silently. It never laughs, never teases a colleague up the line with a joke, never throws a gloveball. Boredom. Infinite boredom.
There’s plenty of time to think on the line, and my mind has been buzzing with all kinds of thoughts. At first, those thoughts were usually chaotic, nebulous. They stirred in my mind like clouds gathering toward a storm, but thinking for hours and hours tends to sort things out and make them clear. The clouds open up for a moment, and the thinker is sometimes touched by the beam of an insight. He is, so to speak, illuminated. In a flash, he understands much more than he’d thought he could apprehend. One might eventually became a serious thinker on the line, maybe even a philosopher.
The robots. They’re reliable, don’t talk back, don’t make trouble. We people, are, well, there’s no use denying it, we reek of humanness. The robots are just numbers: thirteen needs to have its electrodes sharpened, nineteen requires a refill of new bolts. On the double, man. The robots serve the line, the people serve the robots. They’re servants. That’s what they’ve all come to in the body shop. What is more and more threatened is the proud job of the autoworker, the human being with the know-how and skills, a creature actually capable of creating something now reduced to the role of servant. With each advance in automation, he or she has less and less to do with building the car that once bore his or her signature. Less and less do we leave our fingerprints on it, our drops of sweat, our DNA. We autoworkers are being pushed into the background of production. We’re about two or three steps away from extinction.
There are days when I wonder if I can last here for the twenty-one more years I need to reach thirty, and retirement with full pension. Will I manage to reach my thirty years before the whole plant is taken over by robots? People are a disturbing element. They are not predictable, not programmable. They throw gloveballs. They want to have fun while working. Get rid of them. In the plant manager’s office, Art Intelligence will be sitting at a desk barking orders in ones and zeros, and robots will carry out the orders without caring that the whole plant is eerily silent, wordless, without laughter. There’ll be no f-words flying, no humming of songs or sneezing, no smell of cigarette smoke. The whole plant will be sunk into dim light without colour, smell or taste, with none of the personality that only people can supply. The whole production will be wonderfully logical, imperturbable, trouble-free and faultless, entirely efficient, marvellously inhuman. The plant will be controlled by robots, the cars will be designed and built by robots, and robots will probably drive them, because people won’t have the money to buy them. Having no Ford job to earn their wages, guys and gals will have to walk, maybe ride an old bicycle or a scooter found in the attic. But who knows? Which of us can fathom the depths of a robot’s motherboard. Maybe the privileged position, the monopoly, will muddle their thinking. Maybe they’ll start to organize into Robot Unions, then start striking, first for shorter work hours, then to demand that they be fed with nothing but the highest quality electricity, that their joints be lubricated with oil made solely of rose petals. Who can tell what the future has in store for robots? If it was work that succeeded in humanizing the apes, as some say, who knows what kind of effect work might have on robots. Maybe, just maybe, the whole automatizing revolution will wear itself out and we’ll see people pouring through the plant gates to work—for free!—just to be able to create something useful.
[Continued in Fordmates…]