I wish I could believe in that better tomorrow, but there are too many small, 
stuppid hew-mons to make it feasible. They'll create ways to muck it up.

"If all the world's a stage and all the people merely players, who in bloody 
hell hired the director?" -- Charles L Grant

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQUxw9aUVik




To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
From: hellomahog...@gmail.com
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 09:51:41 -0800
Subject: [scifinoir2] blog post: Do we no longer believe in a better tomorrow?


















 



  


    
      
      
      
                
                        





By 
Peter Schwartz



 I wrote the following as part of an oped directed at the media industry.
 My profound belief is that we need to give people sense of vision and 
possibility. They no longer can imagine what a better future might look 
like. And while the news media necessarily surfaces all the problems we 
face, it has been the realm of the arts and sciences that have given us a
 sense of what could be. This initiative from the SCI FI Channel hopes 
to get the media’s creative imagination  going. It is easy to imagine 
how the world comes apart while it is much harder to imagine how we 
creatively address the challenges we face today. The conversation on 
this blog is about creating a fertile dialog on how to express our hopes
 not just our fears.


Today in the U.S. and most of Western Europe, a majority of people 
believe that our children will be worse off than we are now. According 
to the Pew Center, this stunning lack of optimism, ranges from 80 
percent in France to around 70 percent in Italy and Germany to 60 
percent in the U.S. and Britain. We are the first generation in over a 
century that does not share a vision of hope and progress, despite the 
fact that more people are better educated, and enjoying longer, 
healthier lives at higher economic standards. At the same time, our 
knowledge-enabling technologies continue to accelerate, empowering the 
individual and driving tremendous new value and opportunities. By any 
measure, we Americans are vastly better off than our nineteenth century 
predecessors. So why has our faith in the future faded?  Why do we doubt
 the march of progress and our own capacity to overcome the challenges 
of today and tomorrow?


                        
                                To understand the roots 
of this pessimism we need to consider our enduring sources of optimism. 
As Westerners we have long shared a belief in the continued, combined 
momentum of science and technology, the wisdom of democratic governments
 and individual citizens, and the fairness of free-market economies to 
create opportunities and improve our lives. In the U.S. especially, this
 virtuous circle between change, growth, and progress was the dominant 
ethos of the 1950s and early sixties. Such optimism—and sense of 
unlimited possibility—was exemplified by the space program and science 
fiction, which together inspired an entire generation to embrace and 
create the future. But now too many of us see change without progress 
and a world coming apart—more the dark dystopias of Blade Runner 
and Mad Max than the energy and adventure of Flash Gordon 
and Star Trek. 


During the last 40 years we lost faith first in science and 
technology, then in politics, and finally in the economic engine of 
progress. It was Silent Spring, smog, and Chernobyl. It was Vietnam, 
Watergate, hanging chads, and Katrina. It was oil crises, stagflation, a
 dot-com boom turned bust, and Enron. Now, with cloning, bio-terror, and
 cybercrimes, science and technology seem poised to cause, not solve, 
problems. Government is viewed as out of touch if not corrupt and 
incompetent. Business, according to many, is rigged to reward an 
undeserving few, while diminishing prospects for the rest. And let’s not
 forget global climate change. It seems even the Earth has turned 
against us. Is it inevitable that the future will be worse than the 
past?


The answer is no. The challenges we face are no more daunting than 
those encountered by earlier generations. Even the twentieth century was
 afflicted by two world wars, a deep depression, and the Cold War threat
 of nuclear destruction. Today’s challenges are certainly huge: climate 
change, managing the political tensions of a very complex world, and 
bringing the next few billion people out of poverty, among them.  But to
 address these challenges we must believe again in the future and the 
people and institutions that can build it with us: the scientists who 
will launch the next-generation Apollo projects and breakthrough 
inventions; the entrepreneurial business executives whose companies will
 provide good jobs, robust incomes, and high-value, low-carbon products 
and services; the emerging Jeffersons, Lincolns, Roosevelts or Kennedys 
who will provide visionary political leadership. Above all, we must 
believe in our power as individuals to make a real and lasting 
difference.


Already there are signs that we may be turning the corner from 
pessimism to optimism. But to firmly restore our faith in the future 
urgently requires credible results and powerful stories. For starters, 
the world of science and technology must deliver on clean, cheap energy 
and more affordable, quality health care for all. Businesses must 
embrace authentic social responsibility in a world of increasing 
transparency. And the innovation and energy that we see in state and 
local governments must infuse the moribund Beltway. The 2008 elections 
are an opportunity for us to demand that the candidates articulate and 
commit to their visions of the future, with concrete proposals, 
milestones, and metrics in support. 
Likewise, if each of us vows to make one new contribution—recycling, 
volunteering, funding a worthy cause—the multiplier effect on our 
civilization and our future will be profound. 


The media can also play a catalytic role by showing imaginative, 
inspiring visions of where science and dreams can take us, both here on 
Earth and in the frontiers beyond. Our better future is not a boring, 
pristine utopia, but a dynamic world full of drama: human desires and 
emotions, relationships and passions, aspirations and fears. The media 
can set these stories in futures where prosperity, freedom, clean air, 
and human dreams thrive rather than in shattered, polluted landscapes. 
Once again, science fiction can be used to engage and inspire a new 
generation to discover, explore, and innovate solutions, individually 
and together. Imagination—with a healthy dose of hope—is the resource we
 most need to make the future great again.
http://visionsfortomorrow.net/2008/07/peter-schwarts-entry.php

-- 
Celebrating 10 years of bringing diversity to perversity! 

Mahogany at: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mahogany_pleasures_of_darkness/




    
     

    
    






                                          
_________________________________________________________________
Hotmail: Powerful Free email with security by Microsoft.
http://clk.atdmt.com/GBL/go/201469230/direct/01/

Reply via email to