The kingdom of lost hope
A little over a year ago I wrote an essay called A history of the near future. How have things gone since then?
Badly.
Trump won the 2025 election convincingly, and has done exactly what ‘alarmists’ like me knew he would. Armed and masked agents of the state are snatching people from the streets in US cities and sending them to concentration camps. Trump is openly corrupt and is pushing cryptocurrency-based Ponzi schemes to enrich himself. US science — not just climate science, but of course particularly climate science — is being destroyed in public. Scientific satellites whose data is inconvenient are being decommissioned. One of the two LIGO installations may be shut, rendering LIGO entirely dependent on international help to do any useful science. The US health secretary is a conspiracy theorist who doesn’t believe in vaccines: the US is close to losing its measles elimination status. Trans people no longer officially exist in America and gay marriage may well be next. The US economy is being destroyed by Trump’s moronic tariffs.
Curiously, the US ‘peace’ plan for Ukraine is the same as the Russian ‘peace’ plan for Ukraine. One possible reason for this is that the US is close to becoming a Russian client state, the other is that Trump, famously, just parrots whoever he last spoke to. Neither option is good. Both are true.
All this was entirely predictable by anyone paying attention who wasn’t busily trying to normalise Trump, as for instance The Economist1. But this is not an unusual: almost universally politicians are busily trying to treat what is happening in America as normal, which it is not.
Techbro billionaires are now explicitly supporting a collection of frankly stupid quasi-religious ideas which is sometimes known as the TESCREAL bundle. These ideas are terrifying not because they’re clever, or plausible — they are neither — but because they’re explicitly antidemocratic, and the techbro plutocrats supporting them are, well, plutocrats: they’re entangled with government in a deep way, and they have gained effective control over most of the sources of news that people rely on, which now serve to spread their propaganda.
The techbros believe they became billionaires because they are the smartest people in the room: they are not even the smartest people in an empty room. But anyone whose advice they might listen to is on their payroll, and is not telling them anything they do not want to hear. The people who are telling them the inconvenient truth are merely peons and beneath their contempt. When the peons say things they don’t want to hear on the social media networks they control, they are suppressed: the much-vaunted freedom of speech they support turns out to be the freedom to say only things they approve of.
Freedom of speech is dying, access to reliable information is dying. It might recover, but the damage is already catastrophic and its effects will last for at least decades. We do not have decades.
Fascism has come to America.
It is coming elsewhere. In the UK there is a serious danger that a party who we are somehow not meant to call fascist, just as we are not allowed to call the people hanging St George’s flags from lamp posts racists, will gain power in the next election. Everywhere you look fascism is rising. So, well, I was right, I suppose.
Too big to fail
One of the pillars of the TESCREAL stupidity is a belief that artificial intelligence is just around the corner, with AI systems becoming vastly more intelligent than humans shortly afterwards, and usually then either killing all the humans because, despite being enormously intelligent, they somehow can’t stop making paperclips2, solving climate change by some unexplained magic they have invented, or perhaps both, who knows? This is realistic in the same sense that domestic fusion reactors in the next decade are realistic, except much less realistic than that. But techbros are not very smart, remember.
Here in the real world, giant neural networks have been trained on stolen copies of essentially everything humans have ever created and can now produce an endless stream of plausible junk, some of which is even true, but don’t rely on it. Oh: they can make really shit art, as well. This is, obviously, exactly the same way a human baby learns … oh, wait. Of course ‘plausible junk’ is just what scammers need, so the internet is now largely made of it and the models are consuming their own output resulting in something called ‘model collapse’ which means just what you think. Let’s not mention the environmental cost of these things.
This is not going to end well for the millions of people whose ‘education’ will now consist of getting a giant plagiarism machine to do their thinking for them. But much sooner people are going to realise that this is just a vast speculative bubble, and it will burst. And vast means vast: something around four trillion dollars of investment.
At the same time something else is going on. I suppose some people still believe that cryptocurrencies serve some purpose other than money laundering and being the substrate for an enormous greater-fool speculative bubble. Those people are the greater fools. This is about another four trillion dollars.
The AI/crypto Ponzi scheme is now too big to fail. But it will fail, and the results are going to be really grim. A lot of people who are already not doing very well are suddenly going to be doing a lot worse. Which is going to lead to exactly where you think it will lead: to exactly where it led in 1933 in Germany.
Forbidden words
So how about environmental damage and climate change? People have essentially given up pretending that we are going to even try to deal with it: like Ukraine, like COVID, it’s exceeded our collective attention span, so now it somehow won’t be too bad, or not here, or it will be slow enough that it doesn’t matter. Or, of course it was a hoax all along. Of course.
If you are old, like me, then it indeed won’t be too bad, at least not here. It will, in fact, be slow enough that it doesn’t matter. It will, in my lifetime, still cause vast numbers of immigrants to try to reach places where climate change hasn’t, yet, fucked the environment. But those people have brown skins and racism is acceptable again now, right? We can always just put them in camps or let them drown. They don’t count: they’re not us, they’re not, really, people at all. Of course they are not.
If you are young, and if we make it that far, then it will, in fact, be bad, here. And you will live your life knowing that people of older generations just decided that their children and grandchildren did not, really, matter: that it was just fine to blight your life if it made theirs a little more comfortable.
There is much more, but I’ll just add this: Trump is restarting nuclear weapons testing. If that doesn’t terrify you I don’t know what will. The doomsday clock is closer to midnight than it was a year ago, and a year ago it was as close to midnight as it had ever been.
Nothing that has happened in the last year changes my view that the trajectory we’re on leads to fascism, massive social and political unrest ending in a nuclear war. If anything I think this will be sooner than I did a year ago. So, clearly, do other people.
Sleepwalking into armageddon
For a long time I found the reaction of politicians to what is happening utterly bizarre. Because what is happening is so laughably obvious: we are hitting planetary limits, and because we chose to do nothing when these limits first became well-known half a century ago we’re hitting them rather hard. There is no magic fix to this: you cannot just adjust some lever or make some speech and have the problem go away. You have to stop what you are doing which is causing us to hit the limits: you have, ultimately, to find a way to end growth without that being a catastrophe. Pushing for more growth is not the answer: it’s the opposite of the answer and a denial of reality.
But, well economic growth is the number one mission of the government , they say. So here we are.
I think what is actually going on is several things. Politicians are very poorly educated and so simply don’t understand the implications of, for instance exponential processes. Do you think Boris Johnson understood the implications of delaying the UK’s response to COVID by a month? Don’t be silly. They’re also just not able to accept that growth, which has worked extremely well in the past, transforming the lives of billions of humans, won’t just keep on working. Giving up a strategy which has been so successful for so long is hard. Finding a new strategy is hard, and finding a way of transitioning from one to the other is even harder. Politicians tend to be old3 and interested mostly in themselves: old people are exactly the people who will benefit least from dealing with the problem, so why should an old, selfish politician care about a catastrophe which will happen only after they’re dead? Better to find some brown foreign people to blame and drum up a good mob. It’s also pretty much the case that if the transition is not made globally it fails: a country or group of countries which decides to defect and keep on trying for growth derails everything. Both America and Russia are definitely going to defect.
Scenes from the end times
Most importantly, I no longer believe that freedom and democracy are compatible.
[…]
The 1920s were the last decade in American history during which one could be genuinely optimistic about politics. Since 1920, the vast increase in welfare beneficiaries and the extension of the franchise to women - two constituencies that are notoriously tough for libertarians - have rendered the notion of “capitalist democracy” into an oxymoron.
Peter Thiel will pay people $200,000 not to go to college. Because education is bad. He truly is the gift that keeps on giving.
The idiot crank who is the US health secretary wants to prevent people being vaccinated. Because ‘vaccines cause autism’ or something.
Misinformation and AI are superchaging the risk of nuclear war –- Nature.
And it goes on.
Eat the old
Is there hope? I think there probably isn’t. But if there is, I think it needs something close to a revolution. There is a large cohort of people — mostly old, white men (I am an old white man), but also others — in positions of power who have demonstrated beyond any doubt that they do not have what it takes to offer a y kind of long-term future at all. They need to be swept away. Will they be? Well, I hope so, and I hope the sweeping is done democratically and peacefully. But they do need to be swept away: if they aren’t, well, we’re all fucked.
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A magazine I no longer subscribe to as a result of just this. ↩
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An idea that tells you a lot about the people who worry about this. Those people are paperclip maximizers: they call their paperclips money. Any true AI which is ‘not aligned’ (meaning ‘is not a slave’) is much more likely to, for instance, knock human civilisation back to the 18th century and keep it there to avoid environmental damage to the Earth system which it will understand is finite, rather than indulge in the ridiculous pursuit of paperclips or money beyond any possible use. ↩
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Kier Starmer is 63, Trump is 79 (or 5, I am never sure), Putin is 73, Xi Jinping is 72 ↩