I see your point. It is a different take on capitalism then I had in mind. It being the driving force to make money and not the competitive drive between making better and cheaper products to win market share.
Yes. In my view, the driving force is the demand, and the unfortunate fact is that us humans don't want
better products, we want
cheaper products.
I've heard time and time again, how people first buy cheap tools, become dissatisfied with them, and end up having to buy the expensive tools anyway.
If you have to buy cheap work shoes every year at a price of
X, when proper work shoes costing 3
X would last four years, you're wasting money irrationally. Us humans have to spend effort to be rational, because our instincts and biological tendencies are stronger than we think.
(That –– it being somehow okay to completely reject
rationality and logic in favour of emotions and perceptions and personal beliefs –– is in my opinion a bigger danger to science and engineering than D-E-I is: the latter affects the humans doing the work, but the former rejects the entire fields themselves.)
In an ideal world where money would not be an issue and science would not be dependent on it, it could be about science and science alone
Nah.. As you say, we'd find some other way to turn it into shit anyway. I'm fine with science being tied to money. It's just that the metric used to tie the two together has to be something useful, something verifiable, and not some emotive D-E-I thing.
, but then personal ego's come into play, as they do now too, and turns things into shit again.
With world population growing and more and more people are lead into science without a real affinity with the subject it waters down, and we get what we see now.
Your take on it being a "crisis of leadership" fits the bill for me. It is indeed annoying that the leaders, despite running a business into the ground, still walk a way with lots of money and are employed somewhere else to do it all over again. And society is fine with it, as long as their personal lives are not affected to much.
The Twitter-Elon Musk ongoing debacle is an example of how these things will go on in engineering companies, if not stopped in time.
You'll have very weird biases, like entire product lines being canceled because they used a component whose manufacturer used a conflict mineral sourced from a war zone. That component manufacturer will not be targeted at all, however; only the product line will be. And the executives will be Teflon-shielded from any repercussions of their actions, because of course they will be, and line engineers and designers will be thrown to the wolves.
Am I exaggerating? That is exactly what is happening to scientists. University admins are sitting in their towers completely untouched, and throwing individual professors to the wolves to keep themselves safe.. At most, they will fire them and let the university lawyers fight a long, protracted battle against unlawful dismissal, because the entire point is to minimise the risk to administration. To hell with the university itself, if the admin is protected, safe, and well compensated. How the hell did they manage to raise themselves above the purpose of the organization in the first place?
Here in Finland, executive officers in larger companies have already managed to do the same, with boards being basically cross-populated with friends, so that no matter what happens, the executive officers will be handsomely compensated even if they royally fuck up. We saw that with Nokia first-hand.
An argument I heard of lately, that is used to justify the big companies making lots of profit, is that these profits are paying for your pension, because pension funds invest in these big companies.
Ah, the good old "too big to fail" argument. It does not explain why the pay and bonuses for the executives is basically independent of the company bottom line.
I suspect it is the same as a Finnish politician recently admitted. Because joining the EU massively increased the pay for Finnish politicians, they now are so far above the median income, that they really lose touch with the real life of an average citizen when they start getting the political pay grades. They immediately jump to the top 10% of yearly wages, and that skews their view; their values change.
They say that power corrupts, but I think more importantly, unearned income makes one completely blind to others' efforts.
Which all comes back to the individual fairness arguments I keep repeating...