Despite innovations that make it easier for seniors to keep living on their own rather than moving into special facilities, most elderly people eventually need a hand with chores and other everyday activities.
Friends and relatives often can't do all the work. Growing evidence indicates it's neither sustainable nor healthy for seniors or their loved ones. Yet demand for professional caregivers already far outstrips supply, and experts say this workforce shortage will only get worse.
So how will our society bridge this elder-care gap? In a word, robots.
Just as automation has begun to do jobs previously seen as uniquely suited for humans, like retrieving goods from warehouses, robots will assist your elderly relatives.
Would you entrust grandma to Johnny 5?
(Score: 1) by crafoo on Tuesday August 29 2017, @04:20PM (1 child)
Maybe instead of dismissing it out of hand you should do a bit of research into who owns and controls the majority of investment banks and media corporations.
(Score: 3, Insightful) by DeathMonkey on Tuesday August 29 2017, @05:27PM
Generally speaking, the person making the claim is expected to provide evidence for it.
I see that you've already moved the goalposts from "corporations" to "banks and media" but I bet you can't even prove that reduced scope.