Wired for Anarchy: London School of Economics professor Ian Angell
 is a brilliant man with a dark and disturbing vision. And if he's right
 about the future, you'd better learn to think like a "new barbarian."
 Paul C. Judge
   
 10/01/2000 
 Fast Company 
 Fast Company, a Subsidiary of U.S. News & World
 Report.
 
 If Ian Angell is right about the future of the new economy, most of the
world
 is screwed. From his vantage point as professor of information systems at
 the prestigious London School of Economics ( LSE ), Angell, 53, spins a
 scenario of the future in which the world's business and technical elite
use
 the Net to live wherever they want and to do whatever they please, without
 government intrusion. Leveraging their wealth and their much-in-demand
 professional skills, the chosen few ( who really aren't so few ) can live
in
 countries that will bid to have them as residents -- through offers of tax
 relief and through promises of noninterference in their affairs.

 What will governments get in return? The unprecedented wealth-creating
 power of this group of charmed individuals, whom Angell calls the "new
 barbarians." And what will become of the billions of people who are left
 behind? For some unfortunates, it will be a world of chaos, run by gangs of
 thugs. Others will live under the "tyranny of democracies" -- societies
 where people will have votes, but where the majority will be ruled by
 racial, religious, and ethnic bigots.

 So much for teary-eyed talk about the "digital divide." Most of that
earnest
 but shopworn discussion focuses on the powerlessness of the have-nots. So
 what about the haves? After all, they are the ones who will be in charge --
 the agenda setters, the power brokers, and the virtual architects of the
new
 digital order. What will their world look like? Angell has thought a lot
 about that question.

 His answer reflects an unabashedly somber vision, sort of like Free Agent
 Nation on a global acid trip. Self-interest and security are the mantras of
 Angell's new barbarians. Commerce and communities are disembodied,
 existing for the most part on the Internet. Government's role is to shelter
new
 barbarians from the scourge of disease, to protect the food supply, and to
 provide a clean, well-lighted place for data, the plasma of the new
 economy.

 Who would want to live in such a world? Ian Angell, for one. His recent
 book, The New Barbarian Manifesto: How to Survive the Information Age (
 Kogan Page, 2000 ), conjures up a world that makes the brutal Darwinist
 ecology of Blade Runner seem downright benign. But Angell isn't offering
 remedies for rescuing society from such a fate. He believes that this dark
 world can't come soon enough.

 "I'm an anarchic capitalist," says Angell. "I believe that business should
be
 running the world. Every major technological shift creates winners and
 losers. Europe's a disaster because of a sentimental attachment to the
 welfare state, which is just a vestige of the Industrial Age, when
politicians
 extracted taxes to buy votes."

 Needless to say, Angell revels in being an extremist. He has used his
 position as a tenured faculty member at LSE to needle the British
 government on issues ranging from privacy rights to its proposal to levy a
 "bit tax" on information that passes through computer networks. When The
 New Barbarian Manifesto was published earlier this year, it created a stir
 among British intellectuals and led the Times of London to dub its author
 "the Angell of Doom." He appears to be enjoying the attention, but Angell
is
 still a long way from being mainstream. "Whenever large numbers of people
 start to agree with me, I think I'm wrong," he says.

 That's the attitude you might expect from a new barbarian. It also gives
 Angell a certain currency as a maverick. Companies such as A.T. Kearney,
 Cambridge Technology Partners Inc., USB Warburg, and Warner Lambert
 Co. have invited him to speak at their corporate gatherings, hoping that
he'll
 shake things up with speeches about the changing nature of work, the end of
 democracy, and, of course, winners and losers. "When the consultants want
 to rattle their technologists, I get up and talk about how methods are
 dangerous and statistics are worthless, because they make for tidy minds,"
 he says.

 Angell's own intellectual journey has been anything but tidy. His
 background and upbringing as a working-class intellectual would seem
 more likely to have made him into a champion of the little guy. Angell is a
 policeman's son who grew up in the coal-mining district in Wales. He
 credits his mother, who "lived in a working-class town and was too clever
 for her own good," with giving him an appreciation of anarchy and a
distrust
 of government.

 He started an academic career as a brilliant mathematician, but at the age
of
 30 he lost his faith in numbers and in their capacity to make sense of the
 world. That's one reason he believes that "most of what they teach in
 business schools is bunkum. Business is alchemy, anyway, not science."
 Math kept him too isolated from flesh and blood, so he switched fields to
 computer science. But Angell grew more and more disillusioned with
 Britain's modern institutions -- particularly with the government and the
 universities -- and he was nettled by the view that information technology
 was merely a benign force that would liberate humans from monotonous
 toil.

 Eventually, Angell says, he realized that businesspeople -- and
 entrepreneurs in particular -- knew of better ways to exploit information
 technology. The more time he spent as a speaker inside companies, the more
 fascinated he became with those companies' potential to detach themselves
 from their surroundings and to continue to flourish. And so, at the center
of
 the new-barbarian society is the virtual enterprise, the primary
organization
 in Angell's dystopia.

 "The information system is the firm; nothing else is permanent," argues
 Angell. If the system gets cracked, either by criminals or by governments,
 "the organization is finished." The threat of attack will be constant,
Angell
 believes, as disgruntled losers strike at the heart of the new-barbarian
 society, and as computer hacking takes on all of the dimensions of class
 warfare.

 A few years ago, Angell's special scorn for taxing authorities led him to
 propose a banking system that was out of this world. Satellites acting as
 depositories for digital cash would allow companies and individuals to
 move money anywhere, using computers or even handheld devices linked to
 satellite transceivers. With a secure system in place, commerce would
 move beyond the reach of any government's ability to tax it. Tax payment
 would then take the form of a negotiation between new barbarians and the
 countries that are vying for their citizenship. How much would you pay for
 security? For trees? For health care? "Companies and countries will be
 scouring the globe, competing with each other to attract this top-quality
 'people product,' dragging them off the planes if necessary," Angell
 believes.

 Even without bank accounts in space, Angell says, new barbarians are
 flexing their muscles in plenty of ways. He points to the U.S. government's
 HI-B visa program for top-notch technologists from around the world as one
 example. "The new rootlessness of economic mercenaries who are looking
 out for welcoming institutions that are in tune with their own aspirations,
 has the power to destabilize the wealth of any unsupportive community," he
 argues.

 Bad science fiction? It would be, if there weren't a serious core to
Angell's
 arguments: Who can really argue with the proposition that elite knowledge
 workers can dictate their demands to governments, as opposed to the other
 way around? At the end of his book, Angell offers a few pointers on how to
 become a new barbarian: Get an elitist education; keep your assets liquid,
 and spread them around the globe; familiarize yourself with economic hot
 spots that will be the most receptive to people like you. And finally, "Be
 ready to flee at a moment's notice."

 Spoken like a new barbarian.

 Paul C. Judge ( [EMAIL PROTECTED] ) is a Fast Company senior
 editor. Contact Ian Angell by email ( [EMAIL PROTECTED] ).

 This article is available online at
 http://www.fastcompany.com/online/39/ifaqs.html 
 Contact: This article is available online at
 http://www.fastcompany.com/online/39/ifaqs.html 

                              


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