Do you know who the only reliable/competent people are in my life are? Fast food workers and delivery drivers. Do you know what that means? Anything that requires more intelligence is impossible to achieve among that vast majority of the population.
1) First of all, almost every time I order a custom sandwich at places like Wendy's, it comes back wrong. Ask for no cheese, get cheese. The last time I got burgers they weren't even fully cooked.
2) The reason people in low-skill low-pay jobs are paid poorly and treated poorly is, more than all other factors, because they are not as intelligent as those who demand better employment and thus seek it out. That does not mean there aren't highly-intelligent people doing those jobs. Of course there are. They are not, though, the dominant statistic. Odd circumstances can and do put talented people in menial jobs. We don't have much of a meritocracy, particularly when it comes to pay distribution. However, the idea that low-skill low-pay employment represents the best humanity can do, in terms of matching the human intelligence level with the work is utter nonsense. Just looking at what has been in fields like chip design and space observation blows your opining out of the water.
I have personal experience in these matters. I have a high IQ and very high ambitions and yet I have worked at many menial jobs in my life because of unfortunate circumstances, like having been born into poverty. I have many files full of IP that will never make it to market, wasted contributions. It is extremely difficult to rise socially right now. We live in a country where it is openly mocked as fantasy, for instance, for people to be able to go to college without being plunged into massive debt — even though a college degree is not even a guarantee of suitable employment anymore for intelligent people. The idea of investing in our cultural intelligence (and thus competitiveness) is openly mocked here. In Austria, by contrast, college students think it's insane that we make college students go into heavy debt to get an education. This, though, is racism (because "those people" never deserve what "my people" deserve) and class warfare (class = race, basically — regardless of the optics). Barriers are put into place to prevent competition between the more elite families and the masses. Tokenism is used, like lotteries, to give people the illusion of an open fair playing field. It's not. Not even close. However, there still is the fact that the average IQ isn't so special and there are a lot of people with that and with IQs below it.
It's unfortunate that eugenics policy is nearly always advocated by people who are foolish. They don't advocate for its benefits and instead advocate for it based on its drawbacks, drawbacks that can be sidestepped a lot with attention. For instance, you have to start with the realization that IQ is not monolithic. So, you have to be able to value a lot of different aspects of human intelligence. That includes the arts. It includes the humanities. It includes empathy. It includes unpopular innovations, not just the consensuses of the status quo intelligentsia. Sociopathic narcissistic self-enrichment (the current model of the ideal person in a culture that is based on the concept of net worth, one where billionaire worship is right out in the open and people conflate organized charity with altruism) is definitely not the height of human intelligence. Yet, it is what is rewarded. The goal is to cheat the system as much as possible and get away with it as much as possible. Unfortunately, that kind of mentality ranks below the top tier(s) of human capability. Eugenics should not be about punishing people. It should not be about hate, bigotry, and other kinds of narcissistic insecure gloating. It should be about providing incentives to high IQ people to breed more. Some may argue that that's the same as providing disincentives for the rest but there are massive differences if this dichotomy is implemented humanely/efficiently. One common mistake, for instance, is to believe that efficiency is inhumane. The human definition of efficiency is humanness. It encompasses all aspects of humanity. So, it is not merely about enabling certain fortunate people (high IQ individuals) to exploit everyone else. On the contrary. The goal is for everyone to be able to contribute and to benefit. That's the basis of civilization itself: specialization and reciprocity. It's unfortunate that our current dominant civilization models are Machiavellian perversions.
Perhaps ironically, our best hope for rational policy is a takeover by AI.
No one seems to think about this, based on all the reading on this topic I've done, but a major concern seems to be that TSMC can now charge more.
People express concern about capacity but what about monopolist price increases. Less competition + increased demand = the ability to increase prices.
This could push more cost onto the consumer, contrary to the idea that GF's closure will save us money.