WTH is he fantasizing about?
True

time ...
This past spring my employer announced that over the next year and a half it was going to gradually close our facility and move its product to one of two other locations, one in SoCal, and the other in an East Coast state. For me it meant I had a choice between shutting down 4 decades of life in Silicon Valley - family, wife's job (full-time permanent, not contract), friends, the house we've owned for over two decades, church, doctors - or finding a new job. I chose the latter. After a previously planned vacation, updating my resume', and such, it took me a little less than 3 months between sending out my first resume' and starting at my new job. And during that time I was one of the main - if not
the main - prospects for another company looking to fill an opening, but which put it on hold because of so many relevant employees going on vacation. My new job is full-time permanent, and probably the best I've had in at least 15 years.
Because I used several job boards as part of my search - e.g. Monster, Glassdoor, ZipRecruiter - I get daily emails about opening in my field. There's a lot of tech companies hiring. A few are 6 month or 12 month contracts, but most (by far) are full-time permanent. The closest I've seen to TMN's fantasy
Uber Model contract-worker economy is companies who hire new people on contract for 1-3 months and hire them as permanent when they know the person is suitable. That's been a common practice, that I know of personally, since
William the Indolent's MALAdministration, and probably much longer. As for temporary and contract employment, that's been "out there" and common for about as long as I've been in tech (i.e. since at least the Carter Administration). When was the last time TMN had a non-government job?
What's really happened in TMN's hate-filled, bitter, paranoid mind is that it's latched onto Uber's part-time, non-union, drive-your-own-car business model (kind of like the pizza delivery business model Domino's started doing in the Kennedy or Johnson administration) and fantasized it as the way all employers are going. It doesn't take 30 seconds of thought to see how utterly ridiculous this is. Whether it's a computer, a farm tractor, a car ..., you have to have substantial full-time staff doing the designing, manufacturing, and administering.