Udhay Shankar N wrote, [on 1/2/2009 11:34 PM]:

>>> It was short. I hope next year's chat is longer.
>> Here is the next year's chat - and it is longer.
>>
>> http://www.well.com/conf/inkwell.vue/topics/289/Bruce-Sterling-State-of-the-Worl-page01.html
> 
> Here's this year's version, hot off the keyboards. Jon Lebkowsky lurks
> on silk, so you could add your questions to the mix, if you like.
> 
> 
> http://www.well.com/conf/inkwell.vue/topics/343/Bruce-Sterling-State-of-the-Worl-page01.html

A slightly more cooked version:

http://seedmagazine.com/news/2009/01/2009_will_be_a_year_of_panic.php

2009 Will Be a Year of Panic

>From the fevered mind of Bruce Sterling and his alter-ego, Bruno
Argento, a consideration of things ahead.

by Bruce Sterling • Posted January 29, 2009 06:19 PM

"Once people lose faith in the institution of insurance — because
insurance can't be made to pay in climate-crisis conditions — we'll find
ourselves living in a Planet of Slums."

The True 21st Century Begins

I'm always impressed by people's behavior during massive panics. They
rarely believe or admit that they are panicked. Instead they assure one
another that at last the wool has been lifted from their eyes. They are
seeing the clear daylight of rationality after years of delusion.

But a delusion that lasts for decades is not a delusion. It's an
institution. And these, our institutions, are what now fail us. People
no longer know what they value. They don't know what to believe. And
unfortunately, it's part of the human condition to believe and invest in
things that are demonstrably not true.

As 2009 opens, our financial institutions are deep in massive,
irrational panic. That's bad, but it gets worse: Many other respected
institutions have rational underpinnings at least as frail as
derivatives or bundled real-estate loans. Like finance, these
institutions are social constructions. They are games of confidence,
underpinned by people's solemn willingness to believe, to conform, to
contribute. So why not panic over them, too?

Let's consider seven other massive reservoirs of potential popular
dread. Any one of these could erupt, shattering the fragile social
compact we maintain with one another in order to believe things contrary
to fact.

1. The climate. People still behave as if it's okay. Every scientist in
the world who isn't the late Michael Crichton knows that it's not. The
climate is in terrible shape; something's gone wrong with the sky. The
bone-chilling implications haven't soaked into the populace, even though
Al Gore put together a PowerPoint about it that won him a Nobel. Al was
soft-peddling the problem.

It's become an item of fundamentalist faith to maintain that the climate
crisis is a weird leftist hoax. Yet, since the rain falls on the just
and the unjust alike, an honest fear of the consequences will prove hard
to repress. Since the fear has been methodically obscured, its emergence
from the mists of superstition will be all the more powerful. Unlike
mere shibboleths of finance, this is a situation that's objectively
terrifying and likely to remain so indefinitely.

2. Intellectual property. More specifically, the fiat declaration that
properties that are easy to reproduce shouldn't be reproduced.

Declaring that "information wants to be free" is an ideological stance.
A real-world situation where information can't be anything but free,
where digital information cannot be monetized, is bizarre and deeply
scary. No banker or economist anywhere has the ghost of clue what to do
under such conditions.


Intellectual property made sense and used to work rather well when
conditions of production favored it. Now they don't. If it's simple to
copy just one single movie, some gray area of fair use can be tolerated.
If it becomes easy to copy a million movies with one single button-push,
this vast economic superstructure is reduced to rags. Our belief in this
kind of "property" becomes absurd.

To imagine that real estate is worthless is strange, though we've
somehow managed to do that. But our society is also built on the
supposed monetary worth of unreal estate. In fact, the planet's most
advanced economies are optimized to create pretty much nothing else. The
ultimate global consequences of this situation's abject failure would
rank with the collapse of Communism.

3. National currencies. What do these odd numismatic relics have to do
with today's roiling global economy? There is no national currency
remotely strong enough to resist persecution by speculators. They're all
potential bubbles — panics in the making.

If cash becomes king, what happens when market forces smash the cash?
Was that inky paper really, truly supposed to be worth more than real
estate, or unreal intellectual property, or shares in productive
companies? Why should anyone honestly believe that local treasury
departments are somehow more credible than global bankers? What on earth
were people thinking? Flee for the hills!

4. Insurance and building codes. Every year, insurance rates soar from
mounting "natural" catastrophes, obscuring the fact that the planet's
coasts are increasingly uninsurable.

Insurance underlies the building and construction trades. If those rates
skyrocket, that system must keel over. Once people lose faith in the
institution of insurance — because insurance can't be made to pay in
climate-crisis conditions — we'll find ourselves living in a Planet of
Slums.

Most people in this world have no insurance and ignore building codes.
They live in "informal architecture," i.e., slum structures. Barrios.
Favelas. Squats. Overcrowded districts of this world that look like a
post-Katrina situation all the time. When people are thrown out of their
too-expensive, too-coded homes, this is where they will go.

Unless they're American, in which case they'll live in their cars.

But how can dispossessed Americans pay for their car insurance when they
have no fixed address? Besides, car companies are coming apart with the
sudden savage ease of Enron's collapse. Indeed, the year 2009 is shaping
up as a planetary Enron. Enron was always the Banquo's ghost at the
banquet of Bushonomics. The moguls of Enron really were the princes of
contemporary business innovation, and the harbingers of the present day.

5. The elderly. There's nothing so entirely predictable as demographic
change. Obviously we're facing enormous booming hordes of elderly. Yet
no one is confronting that issue. People remain in denial. They're
hoping a miracle will turn up, like, for instance, the sudden
disinterest of a demographic majority who always vote.

Even elders who have long-garnered private nest eggs quite likely no
longer have them in 2009. There is no sound way to live off the hoarded
efforts of earlier labor. Inflation looms, ready to destroy fixed
incomes. The elderly, supposedly the calm, serene, seasoned elements in
our society, have every right to panic. They will not go gentle into
that good night.

6. The Westphalian system. Why are so many great military powers losing
a war in Afghanistan? Afghanistan isn't even a nation-state, yet it's
defeating all comers. Why do we even pretend to have nations these days?
Hollow states, failed states, non-states... The European post-state!

No flag, no currency... People no longer have to believe in these
effigies. Why do they persist? The benefits of believing in nations are
slim. The planetary slum-dwellers of failed states may find the
rollicking life of a Somali pirate far more attractive than the hard
work of state-building. The nation-state is torn from both above and
below. The global guerrilla and the Davos globe-hopper are cousins.

7. Science. To be a creationist president is not a problem. A suicide
cult is the most effective political actor in the world today. Clearly
the millions of people embracing fundamentalism like to make up their
own facts.

Standards of scientific proof and evidence no longer compel political
and social allegiance. This is not a return to the bedrock of
faith — it's an algorithm for ontological anarchy. By attacking
empiricism, the world is discarding all of the good reasons to believe
that anything is real.

If science is discredited, why should mere politics have any
intellectual rigor? Just cobble together a crazy-quilt mix-and-match
ideology, like Venezuelan Bolivarism or Russia's peculiar mix of spies,
oil, and Orthodoxy. Go from the gut — all tactics, no strategy — making
up the state of the world as you go along! Stampede wildly from one
panic crisis to the next. Believe whatever is whispered. Hide and
conceal whatever you can. Spy on the phone calls, emails, and web
browsing of those who might actually know something.

If that leads you to a miserable end-state, huddling with the children
in a fall-out shelter clutching silver bullion, then you can
congratulate yourself as the vanguard of civilization.

So 2009 will be a squalid year, a planetary hostage situation surpassing
any mere financial crisis, where the invisible hand of the market, a
good servant turned a homicidal master, periodically wanders through a
miserable set of hand-tied, blindfolded, feebly struggling institutions,
corporations, bureaucracies, professions, and academies, and briskly
blows one's brains out for no sane reason.

We can do better than this.

 — Bruce Sterling is the author of the forthcoming novel The Caryatids
and a renowned commentator on design and technology. His hometown is
Austin, Texas.
-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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