^^ continued, 3/?
She explains that it was their socialist utopia that brought about the cooperation necessary to invent the replicator, and that had it been invented during Earth's 20th or 21st centuries it wouldn't have worked, because the rich and powerful would have hoarded the technology.
As @BoomerNiner often says, we have enough resources on the planet right now, without a replicator, to give everybody food and housing - if we wanted to.The invention of a replicator wouldn't change that.
^^ 10/?
The beef industry would quickly draw battle lines with their donation money, congressmen from places like Texas would move to outlaw replicated meat from being served on the grounds that it hurts entire industries.
Conspiracy theorists would insist that replicated beef is full of additives the government is trying to sneak into them to feminize men and make you sick, even though *real* beef is full of antibiotics and hormones.
^^ 12/?
We're already seeing this type of thing when, like, Cracker Barrel tries to introduce plant-based sausage that's entirely optional to order. People FREAK OUT that you might take their meat away.
In short, inventing a replicator wouldn't save us - right now, it'd *ruin* us even faster, as the amount of bounty the wealth plays keep-away with would just grow even larger and more ludicrous.
@Nimthiriel As much I'd like to live in one, I don't see a radical change into an egalitarian/meritocracy kind of a world like in Star Trek/The Orville, without having to face a near extinction event.
And then the dice must be favorable still, not end up to yet another unregulated hyper capitalistic society. Greed seems to be coded into our being, from our primal urge to survive by domination.
@McWabbit I disagree. Capitalism is awful, but it hasnβt been around very long. Humans evolved in tribes and communities generally do well when they help each other. Nowhere is perfect, but that doesnβt mean everywhere is is a capitalist dystopian disaster.