Editing Gladiator-At-Law
Appearance
Content that violates any copyrights will be deleted. Encyclopedic content must be verifiable through citations to reliable sources.
Latest revision | Your text | ||
Line 78: | Line 78: | ||
==The GML House== |
==The GML House== |
||
A GML House is an invention, a [[Le Corbusier|"machine for living in"]] that brings together the "high technology" of the 1950s, these being plastics, electronics and [[cybernetics]]. The house has movable walls, shape-shifting components and an "electronic brain" allowing it to adjust to its inhabitants |
A GML House is an invention, a [[Le Corbusier|"machine for living in"]] that brings together the "high technology" of the 1950s, these being plastics, electronics and [[cybernetics]]. The house has movable walls, shape-shifting components and an "electronic brain" allowing it to adjust to its inhabitants needs, even to cooking meals, and to be configured according to their whims. It was created to satisfy a vision of housing for Everyman, similar to the [[Levittown]] ideal. |
||
However, the inventors were unable to interest any corporations in building the houses to sell at a price the average person could afford. The operation was taken over by a man named Moffat (the "M" in GML) who masterminded an operation which leased the houses to large companies to house their workers. Eventually the lease arrangements began to include shares in the client companies, so that GML came to own major interests in almost every company in the world, giving it effective control. In turn the GML house enabled companies to impose terms amounting to [[indentured servitude]] on their workers, the alternative being to live in a slum on public assistance. |
However, the inventors were unable to interest any corporations in building the houses to sell at a price the average person could afford. The operation was taken over by a man named Moffat (the "M" in GML) who masterminded an operation which leased the houses to large companies to house their workers. Eventually the lease arrangements began to include shares in the client companies, so that GML came to own major interests in almost every company in the world, giving it effective control. In turn the GML house enabled companies to impose terms amounting to [[indentured servitude]] on their workers, the alternative being to live in a slum on public assistance. |