Haven't taken the test. Self-describing as an "authoritarian" can only really be understood in the wider social context where authority and hierarchy have been devalued.
I think that's really the crux of it. When someone says they are authoritarian, that doesn't necessarily have anything to do with present/past authoritarian regimes.
My general position on such systems is that all facets of human morality are valuable
Isn't that a bit recursive? Human morality defines what is valuable. Saying that a moral is valuable is implying some sort of meta-morality. If someone doesn't assign "respect for authority" intrinsic value (though it may have utility in furthering other values), isn't that ...just the way it is?
My ideal world has an nonhuman absolute god ruling all, a human nobility, and nonhuman servants and npc's
I think everyone's ideal world is one where all our actions were directed by a being with access to the CEV of humanity (or, more accurately, each person wants humanity to be ruled by their own CEV). On LessWrong, that's not even controversial - it would be by definition the pinnacle of rational behavior.
The question is intended to be answered with realistic limitations in mind. Given our current society (or maybe given our society within 50 years, assuming none of that "FOOM" stuff happens) is there a way to bring about a safe, stable authoritarian society which is better than our own? There's no point to a political stance unless it has consequences for what actions one can take in the short term.
If someone doesn't assign "respect for authority" intrinsic value (though it may have utility in furthering other values), isn't that ...just the way it is?
No. Generally people are confused about morality, and such statements are optimized for signalling rather than correctness with respect to their actual preferences.
For example, I could say that I am a perfectly altruistic utilitarian. This is an advantageous thing to claim in some circles, but it is also false. I claim that the same pattern applies to non-authoritarianism, having been there...
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.