Oh...so basically the whole Dark Enlightenment school of thought?
I've only started reading this strand of thought recently, and haven't yet made the connection to authoritarianism. I get that they reject modern liberalism, democracy, and the idea that everyone has equal potential, but do they also reject the idea of meritocracy and the notion that everyone aught to have equal opportunity? Do they also believe that an elite group should have large amounts of power over the majority? And do they also believe that different people have (non-minor) differences in intrinsic value as well as ability?
EDIT thoughts after reading the sources you linked:
Perhaps an anti-egalitarian can be thought of one who does not value equality as an intrinsic moral good? Even if everyone is valued equally, the optimal solution in terms of getting the most satisfaction to everyone does not necessarily involve everyone being satisfied in roughly equal measures.
Basically, on Haidt's moral axis, the anti-egalitarians would score highly only on Harm Avoidance, and low on everything else...
...actually, come to think of it that's almost how I scored when i took it a few years ago. - 3.7 harm, 2.0 fairness, 0 on everything else.
you've given yourself the label "authoritarian". If you took Haidt's test, did you score high on authoritarianism? (just trying to pin down what exactly is meant by authoritarianism in this case)
Can't speak for others, but here's my take:
s/they/you:
but do they also reject the idea of meritocracy and the notion that everyone aught to have equal opportunity?
I think it's more important to look at absolute opportunity than relative opportunity.
That said, in my ideal world we all grow up together as one big happy family. (with exactly the right amount of drama)
Do they also believe that an elite group should have large amounts of power over the majority?
Yes, generally. Note that everything can be cast in a negative light by (in)appropriate choic...
Kevin Drum has an article in Mother Jones about AI and Moore's Law:
Although he only mentions consumer goods, Drum presumably means that scarcity will end for services and consumer goods. If scarcity only ended for consumer goods, people would still have to work (most jobs are currently in the services economy).
Drum explains that our linear-thinking brains don't intuitively grasp exponential systems like Moore's law.
He also includes this nice animated .gif which illustrates the principle very clearly.
Drum continues by talking about possible economic ramifications.
Drum says the share of (US) national income going to workers was stable until about a decade ago. I think the graph he links to shows the worker's share has been declining since approximately the late 1960s/early 1970s. This is about the time US immigration levels started increasing (which raises returns to capital and lowers native worker wages).
The rest of Drum's piece isn't terribly interesting, but it is good to see mainstream pundits talking about these topics.