Disposable multiblade razors are objectively worse than safety razors, on all counts. They shave less smooth, while causing more burns. Theyāre cheaper on initial investment but get more expensive very quickly, making you dependent on overpriced replacements and gimmicks that barely last a few uses. Thatās not counting the āexternality costsā, which is an euphemism for the costs pushed onto poor countries and nonhuman communities, thanks to the production, transport and disposal of all that single-use plastic (a safety razor is 100% metal, and so are the replacement blades, which come packed in paper).
About the only advantage of disposables is that theyāre easier to use for beginners. And even that is debatable. When youāre a beginner with a safety razor you maybe nick yourself a few times until you learn the skill to follow the curves of your skin. You skin itself maybe gets sensitive at the start, unused to the exfoliation you get during a proper smooth shave. But how long do you think you stay āa beginnerā when you shave every day? Like itās not like youāre learning to play the violin, itās not that hard of a skill, a week or two tops and it becomes automatic.
But this small barrier to entry is enough, when paired with the bias and interests of razor manufacturers. Marketing goes heavy on the disposables, and you canāt find a good quality safety razor or a good deal on replacement blades at the grocery shop, you have to be in the know and order it online. You have to wade through āmanly art of the masculine manā forums that will tell you the only real safety razor is custom-made in Tibet by electric monks hand-hammering audiophile alloys and if you donāt shave with artisinal castor soap recipes from 300BCE using beaver hair brushes, your skin is going to fall off and rot. Which is to say, safety razors are now a niche product, a hipster thing, a frugalistās obscure economy lifehack. A safety razor is a trivially simple and economic device, itās just a metal holder for a flat blade; but its very superiority now counts against it, itās weaponised to make it look inacessible. People have been trained to think of anything that requires even a little bit of patience or skill as not for them; perversely, even reasonableness can feel like ānot for my kindā.
Not by accident; since the one thing that disposables do really well is ātransferring more of your monthly income to Procter & Gamble shareholders.ā
I could write a long text very similar to this about how scythes can cut grass cheaper, faster, neater, requiring no input but a whetstoneāand some patience to learn the skill but how long does it take to learn that if youāre a professional grass-cutterāwhen compared to the noisy motor blades that fill my morning right now, and every few months, as the landlord sends waves of poorly-paid migrant labour to permanently damage their own sense of hearing along with the dandelions and cloves that the bees need so desperately. But you get the point. More technology does not equal better, even for definitions of ābetterā that only care for the logic of productivity and ignore the needs (material, emotional, spiritual) of social and ecological communities.
You get where Iām going with this analogy. I keep waiting for the moment where the shoe is going to drop in āgenerative AIā. Where the public at large wakes up like investors waking up to WeWork or the Metaverse, and everyone realises omg what were we thinking this is all bullshit! Thereās no point at all in using these things to ask questions or to write text or anything else really! But Iām finally accepting that that shoe is never dropping. Itās like waiting for the moment when people realise that multi-blade plastic Gilettes are a scam. Not happening, the system isnāt set up that way. For as long as you go to the supermarket and this is the ānormalā way to shave, thatās how shave is going to happen. I wrote before on how āthe broken search bar is symbiotic with the bullshitting chatbotā: Currently Google āAIā Summary is better than Google Search, not because Google āAIā Summary is good or reliable, but because the search has been internally sabotaged by the incentive structures of web companies. If youāre a fellow āAIā refuser and youāve been struggling to get any useful results out of web searches, think of how it must feel for people who go for the chatbot, how much easier and more direct. Thatās the razor we have on the shelves. āAIā doesnāt have to work for the scam to be sustainable, it just has to feel like it more or less kinda does most of the time. (No one has ever achieved a close shave on a Gilette Mach 3 but hey, maybe youāre prompting it wrong). As long as āgeneratingā something with āAIā feels like it lets you skip even the smallest barrier to entry (like asking a question in a forum of a niche topic). As long as it feels quicker, easier, more convenient.
This is also the case for things like āAI translationsā or āAI artā or āvibe codingā. The real solution to āAIā, like other forms of unnecessarily complex technology, would involve people feeling like they have the time and mental space to do things for pleasure. āAIā is kind of an anaerobic infection, an opportunistic disease caused by lack of oxygen. No one can breathe in this society. The real problem is capitalisā
Now donāt get me wrong, the āAIā bubble is still going to pop. Thereās no way it canāt; investors have put more money on this thing than on entire countries, contrary to OpenAIās claims the costs of training and operating keep exploding, and in a world going into recession at some point even capitalists with more money than common sense will have to think of the absence of ROI. But the damage is done. Weāre in ELIZA world now, and long after OpenAI is dead weāll still be reading books only to find out the gormless translation was āAIā, playing games with background āartā āgeneratedā by āAIā, interacting online with political agitators spamming nonsense who turn out to be āAIā, right until the day when electricity becomes too scarce to be cost-efficient to spam people in this way.
I wouldnāt say that thereās a clear 1:1 advantage of safety razors over multi blade razors. Certainly the locked in business model of most multi blade razors is bad but there are generics you can get out there. Safety razors do have their advantages but Iāve found they have trouble with longer hair which in my experience usually requires an electric razor to chop down.
your third sentence here is a non-sequitur ā do you mean to say disposable razors better work on longer hair that safety razors?