One of the dark histories of mankind is the Nazism in Europe. Six million Jews were killed. Though it is not the exact number, it is enough to remind us of the dark situation.
Now, on the European continent, 13 million unemployed people are counted, more than twice as many as the victims of Jews, but a similar figure given the world population, which has more than doubled since the Second World War. In addition, job substitution and unemployment by technologies all over the world seem to have subtle similarities with racial policies of the Nazi era, which controlled human grades.
The power of the Nazis was in the technology. It is no exaggeration to say that Germany's steel, automobiles, precision machinery, and medicine, recognized in the world market, are the result of the Nazi R & D. Technology is a double-edged sword that helps people and on the other hand, squeezes people in the Nazi era and now. The difference is that technology in the Nazi era was aimed at killing people effectively, but now technology is aimed at turning the world into a better place. But unintentionally, the loss of life for those who lost their jobs by technology does not differ significantly from the R & D output of the Nazi era.
New jobs are likely to be born outside the 'expected range' of robots. The underlying creativity comes from cultural backgrounds such as diversity, openness, and respect for minority opinions. It is because culture is an area where technology cannot be seen. Let's recall the fact that the world economy is in the influence of Jews and that the Jewish "Hutzpah culture" even though an enormous number of Jews were sacrificed.

Nazism dreamed of the only Germanic nation, rejecting ethnic minorities including Jews for reasons of life and religion. However, the world's leading companies, including Google and Tesla, are putting diversity at the top of the value to discover and collaborate with creative talent. Hannah Arendt said the following three reasons for the conviction of Eichmman, who devised death camps and gas chambers as Nazi coders, were guilty. The inability of speaking, the inability of thought, and the inability of thinking in the position of others. Are not Hannah Arendt's three abilities a condition for creative talents in the robot era?
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