We’ll
go all “good news, bad news” on you, today, contrasting one of the globe’s
astonishing bright spots with the decline of the erstwhile Leader of the West/
But first: Have you been floundering to get a handle on this weird time we are in? Lately there’s been a surge of interest in my “Horizons Model” to explain why our divides - especially in America, where market enterprise does better, under democrats - have less to do with any classic “left-right axis” than how far outward - in time and space - extend your horizons of worry, hope, and inclusion.
But first: Have you been floundering to get a handle on this weird time we are in? Lately there’s been a surge of interest in my “Horizons Model” to explain why our divides - especially in America, where market enterprise does better, under democrats - have less to do with any classic “left-right axis” than how far outward - in time and space - extend your horizons of worry, hope, and inclusion.
Why do so many of our neighbors seem drenched in fear, and thus are prey to angst-propaganda? Why do other neighbors seem obsessed with rights extension and nothing else?
Have a
look at my own incantation-explanation. And - whether or not it convinces - I
promise more new concepts that make you go “huh!” than anything else you’ll
read this month.
== A new leader of the renaissance? ==
Sometimes – as forecast in Earth and The Transparent Society – positive trends can be
rooted in sapient use of technology. And
this may be a big one.
According
to investment maven Raoul Pal: India’s Project Aadhaar became the largest and most successful IT project ever
undertaken in the world. As of 2016, 1.1 billion people (95% of the
population) now have a digital proof of identity, including biometrics of
fingerprints and retinal scans. The next phase was to get them into the banking
system. The Government fostered the creation of eleven Payment Banks, which can
hold money but don’t do any lending. To motivate people to open accounts, it
offered free life insurance with them and linked bank accounts to social
welfare benefits. Within three years more than 270 million bank accounts were
opened and $10bn in deposits flooded in.
(Note, if we did this
- or even just re-opened the Post Office Savings Account system with ATMs, poor
Americans would overnight be richer, no longer having to use parasitical
check-cashing services. Those who have opposed this in the U.S. are evil people.
Period and full-stop.)
Pal continues: "The Aadhaar card holds
another important benefit – people can use it to instantly open a mobile phone
account. Mobile phone penetration exploded after Aadhaar and went from 40% of the
population to 79% within a few years. Payments can now be made without banks, using
mobile phones, fingerprints and an Aadhaar number. And with IndiaStack it is all cloud stored and secure."
Prime Minister Modi then
risked his career on a sudden ban of the
100 rupee cash notes (with 1 month deposit deadline), which pushed the largely
cash Indian economy into Aadhaar and undermined corruption and the black
economy. To everyone’s surprise, it worked. (Russia is now the #1 cash economy.
Guess why?)
I have two quibbles with
this picture: First, India was not the first country to roll out such an
integrated system for its citizens and economy.
Estonia was there earlier (see e-Estonia). I would wager that Estonian consultants
played a big role in formulating Aadhaar.
Second and obviously, we
are propelling toward systems that could be horribly abused by national elites
who control the guts of such a system. Technologies like these are unrolling in
China, with added layers like “social credit” that seem chilling.
On the other hand, as the
world’s biggest (and possibly now greatest and most genuine) democracy, India
is positioning herself to be the leader of the “Western Enlightenment
Experiment.” Make
that “Global Enlightenment Experiment,” and hurrah for our successor!
With the USA floundering in mania, lunacy and phase 8 of its recurring Civil War, we had better hope that the seeds of liberty,
science, accountability and grownup maturity that we spread will bear wondrous fruits of
freedom and productivity and factual knowledge and adventure, in better
soil.
== Ah, La Belle France ==
It’s said that history repeats, as farce.
And India, it seems.
== Ah, La Belle France ==
It’s said that history repeats, as farce.
We’ll know in a week whether Vladimir Putin will achieve his hat trick, getting another puppet into a western presidency.
If so, then one of you who wrote in will be a prophet. "We might see a final confrontation -- with the US, Britain, France, and Russia lining up to impose fascism on the world... while Germany and Japan defend freedom."
And India, it seems.
Who wrote this simulation we're in?
== Alas, it couldn’t last for us ==
I’ve
referred before to novels that foreshadowed a possible hot phase of the
recurring American Civil War. Most phases have been tepid or cool, though the
1860s fever was near devastating, and some think that the current one (phase
eight, by my reckoning) could go volcanic. This was portrayed – in retrospect –
by my novel The Postman, which has been receiving a surge of attention lately,
for its depiction of “holnists” whose rationalizations sound very much like Steve Bannon.
(Note that the rebooted Omni-Online has featured Ten science fiction books that "changed the genre forever." Very flattered to be included on this list - though not sure I deserve to be.)
(Note that the rebooted Omni-Online has featured Ten science fiction books that "changed the genre forever." Very flattered to be included on this list - though not sure I deserve to be.)
One "new civil war" novel that I’ve touted is the recent Tears of Abraham, by Sean T. Smith, that takes you through a disturbingly hot and deadly struggle against ourselves.
Another just hitting the shelves – that I haven’t yet read – is American War by Omar El Akkad - a dystopian novel about 'a Second American Civil War breaking out in 2074, after a presidential assassination, a virulent plague arising from a weaponized virus and a militantly divided North and South. A doomed country is beset by refugee camps, guerrilla raids and relentless violence.' In other words, a triple whammy, like the one I look back on, in The Postman."
Another just hitting the shelves – that I haven’t yet read – is American War by Omar El Akkad - a dystopian novel about 'a Second American Civil War breaking out in 2074, after a presidential assassination, a virulent plague arising from a weaponized virus and a militantly divided North and South. A doomed country is beset by refugee camps, guerrilla raids and relentless violence.' In other words, a triple whammy, like the one I look back on, in The Postman."
Also
worrisome, given recent absolutely proven efforts by foreign powers to sabotage
our democracy and economy, is The Cool War, by Frederik Pohl. In fact, I deem no novel to be of more
immediate pertinence to any member of our defense and intel communities. Even the popular WWIII novel Ghost Fleet does
not penetrate as deeply to reveal a nasty way the whole world might turn.
== You
don’t think there are world leaders that crazy-fierce? ==
“The brazen daytime slaying of a Russian politician
outside a Ukrainian hotel this week brings to eight the number of high-profile
Russians who have died over the past five months since the US presidential
election on November 8,” reports CNN.
Hey, fools who claim “we’re no better.” How about an actual tabulation-comparison of freedom and productivity and happiness and any other
measure of humanity between America and Russia?
And yes, democracy and behavior in the world?
You: "we're all the same" jerks are really something. You dropped American Exceptionalism like a live grenade, when it inconveniently pointed at your Russian pals. Sure the U.S. has done some bad things, that we ourselves usually uncover and criticize, in order to improve. We are doing that now. With your weird choice to lead us.
You: "we're all the same" jerks are really something. You dropped American Exceptionalism like a live grenade, when it inconveniently pointed at your Russian pals. Sure the U.S. has done some bad things, that we ourselves usually uncover and criticize, in order to improve. We are doing that now. With your weird choice to lead us.
Oh but clarity can be found: "In a fiercely defiant
statement, White House press secretary, Sean Spicer, denied that
any member of the White House staff has ever worked “in any way, shape, or
form” for the benefit of the United States." (Okay, that’s a snork! But
we’ll need laughs as we gird ourselves.)
== Want a clear view of the problem? ==
Last time I revealed eight underlying factors driving our current civil war. Some are deeply painful. A couple of them are even "our" fault.
Last time I revealed eight underlying factors driving our current civil war. Some are deeply painful. A couple of them are even "our" fault.
A disturbing and credible description of the rock-ribbed obstinacy that underlies
hard-shelled rural-white-christian-fundamentalist Red America. It verifies what I’ve long suspected, that
these neighbors and fellow citizens of ours will never admit that we are
neighbors and fellow citizens. They passionately support the most opposite-to-Jesus person they could ever have
found, for one reason – he galls and infuriates and hates the same smartypants
types that they hate. And that's good enough to ignore everything else.
It is the same underlying – confederate – fever that has periodically tormented our national character since 1778.
It is the same underlying – confederate – fever that has periodically tormented our national character since 1778.
This doesn’t
mean we should stop empathizing! Indeed, as I described last time, one of those eight underlying reasons for civil war is deeply traumatizing -- the "theft" of our neighbors' children!
One can feel for the rural(ish) trauma that happens every June, when the local High School -- center of all life in most towns -- holds graduation. The teens who are the pride of the community hug and cry... whereupon the best and brightest then streak out of town as fast as their legs can carry them, heading toward the city strongholds of The Enemy.
That implicit rebuke happens every single year and it must wear on the souls of those who stay behind, who thereupon create a mythology of the city-as-Mordor. A cesspit of iniquity, lacking all the wholesomeness of small town America...
...despite the real truth about which America has higher rates of teen sex, teen pregnancy, domestic violence, divorce, STDs, unwed mothers, dropouts, gambling, alcoholism... and if you leave out a few truly dismal cities, higher crime rates. See the New York Times bestseller, White Trash: The 400-Year Untold History of Class in America by Nancy Isenberg.
One can feel for the rural(ish) trauma that happens every June, when the local High School -- center of all life in most towns -- holds graduation. The teens who are the pride of the community hug and cry... whereupon the best and brightest then streak out of town as fast as their legs can carry them, heading toward the city strongholds of The Enemy.
That implicit rebuke happens every single year and it must wear on the souls of those who stay behind, who thereupon create a mythology of the city-as-Mordor. A cesspit of iniquity, lacking all the wholesomeness of small town America...
...despite the real truth about which America has higher rates of teen sex, teen pregnancy, domestic violence, divorce, STDs, unwed mothers, dropouts, gambling, alcoholism... and if you leave out a few truly dismal cities, higher crime rates. See the New York Times bestseller, White Trash: The 400-Year Untold History of Class in America by Nancy Isenberg.
The
remainder of Blue America pays vastly more taxes, gets less back (yet whines
far less) while Red America suckles net benefits, then bitches about taxes.
Oops! Facts are inconvenient to the narrative
. And hence...
...fact-based thinking itself becomes the enemy.