As I recall it, a ticket vending machine first appeared in the early 80's at the nearest train station from my home in Japan where I grew up. There had been two ticket windows one of which was replaced with the machine. It was an exciting new gizmo especially for children that spewed out a train ticket by just pushing a button corresponded to the destination. The ticket gate was still operated by a clerk. The ticket examiner stood in an open booth with special clippers in his hand. Passengers would show the commuter pass to him, or have the ticket clipped by his clippers to get a hole or a nick on it. The examiner handled clippers skillfully, clipped tickets one after another so fast and rhythmically. When passengers broke off, he would turn clippers many times in his hand artfully as if he had been a juggler. Later on, the ticket booth was also replaced by the automatic ticket gate.
In those days, more and more vending machines had emerged here and there in Japan. They started with coffee and soft drinks, then cigarettes and beer. Soon pornographic magazines and condoms, hamburgers and noodle soup were all purchasable from the machine.
Nowadays, ordering at restaurants has been by a touch screen on the table, and check-out counters at the supermarket have been self-service registers. Either at a restaurant or a supermarket, I pay an incorrect total once in two or three visits when human servers and cashiers take care the payment and make a mistake. I know the odds because I look into the receipt very carefully right after the payment each and every time. Almost in every case I don't gain but overpay, which is a mystery, so that I claim at once. I understand I myself induce their mistakes by using every possible coupon and discount promotion in one payment that makes my total so complicated. When a machine handles service in place of a human, it's fast, convenient, clean and no mistakes. But on the other hand, no small talk or smiles are a little tasteless. Even so, machines may fit better for me since I often get annoyed with people too easily.
The day that machines take up most jobs of humans' might arrive sooner than expected. If it happened, the government would pay the people a basic income by taxing companies. Is it possible that people don't have to work? For the first time after the ancient times, humans would get liberated from money at long last. Everybody could live by doing what they want. I'm eagerly looking forward to seeing that day come. I'm strongly hoping. And I believe in a miracle as such.
Showing posts with label payment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label payment. Show all posts
Sunday, December 12, 2021
Liberation from Money hr649
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Sunday, October 16, 2016
Phone-Phobia hr579
When I was a teenager, a smartphone era was still years away to come. I
came from a large family that had one phone in the house, which meant a
scramble for a phone call. It was usually a three-way battle: between my
grandfather, my mother and me. My grandfather used to be the chairman
of a local senior citizen club and make and receive lots of calls. Once
his phone time began, it lasted forever. He would pull a chair from the
dining table, set it in front of the phone, sit in, spread some kind of
papers and start dialing. The stand where the phone sat turned into his
makeshift office desk while my parents, my sister and I were eating
dinner right beside it. The background music of our dinnertime was
usually his telephone conversation that sounded totally unimportant and
ridiculous. The minute my grandfather finished his phone time, the phone
rang that would be from my grandmother on my mother’s side. She would
call my mother almost every day to report her day. It would always
consist in complaining about her son-in-low. After my mother finished
listening to her endless nagging, it would be finally my turn. I used to
chat with my friends over the phone for hours as a habit of a teenager.
Although I did that so often, I have a confession to make. I hated it. I
was really loath to talk over the telephone, to be honest. But as
everyone knows, the phone call is a must among teenagers. If I had
confessed I didn’t like the phone and asked my friends not to call me, I
would have been instantly branded as a nerd. To be popular, I kept it
secret and talked with my friends by acting happy but weeping inside. I
forced myself to be funny and a class clown at school although my true
self didn’t want to. At least when I was at home, I wanted to return to
be myself who liked to be silent and alone. But the phone call would
intrude into my home and destroy my peace. I cultivated my dislike for
the phone during my teenage years like this. After I graduated and left
home, my condition got much worse. The phone attack from my parents
began when I started living alone in a small apartment in Tokyo as a
musician. Since they opposed strongly about my career choice, they
denied me, insulted me and cursed me over the phone. The ring became the
most distasteful sound in the world to me. I couldn’t take it any more
one day and turned off the ring. I stopped answering phone calls
altogether by setting the answering machine. Then playing messages on it
gradually got painful and even seeing the message lamp blinking made me
sick. My dislike for the telephone had evolved into phobia by then.
Besides the nasty phone calls from my parents, I sometimes got prank
calls. More and more, the telephone looked an entrance to hell. To this
day, I jump to the phone ring and talk into the receiver feeling
ultimately tense with my hands sweating and my throat drying. Every time
I see someone talking casually over the cell phone on the aisle of a
supermarket, I think I’m seeing someone from other planet. The other
day, I was shopping online at Amazon. When I was paying with my credit
card, an error message appeared on the screen that said, “The payment
was failed. Please contact your credit company”. I called the company
while I was twitched with fear, my fingers were trembling and even my
eyesight became blur and white. It turned out that my card had been
suspended because the balance in my bank account was short. My distaste
for the telephone has grown deeper…
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