anon 0x44b said in #2553 4w ago:
Modern Americans have outgrown our republic.
The American federal government has, for 200 years, been the most powerful company in the world.
It won wars, offered a shared myth of freedom to its citizens and the world, created a global order, facilitated incomparable global trade, gave freedom to businesses (a weird + new kind of group entity), and generated wealth beyond compare.
It was a strong enormous spider whose legs smothered all current human civilization. It was the single strongest non-conceptual power that glued humans across the globe together.
Until the internet was born. The internet is that American spider’s web. And, unlike America’s eight strong but numbered legs, the web is infinitely intricate and more connected. Texts, books, images, and films are distributed to billions of people every second. Internet servers are the center of the world order, not Washington DC. That was true a decade ago.
But it takes more than a second for a bureaucratic institution to collapse. An institution with an ever-amending constitution, an ever-evolving identity, and more redefinitions of “the pursuit of happiness” than grains of sand on a beach. An institution with nobly architected buildings, politicians who wear the most formal attire, and committees that are presided over by arcane procedures and gavels. Noble, blood-born, shifty institutions hardly collapse overnight.
But over decades—yes.
People are moving to a new world, away from where the capitol building is located. The Capitol is located in the physical world. People are moving to the digital world.
40% of waking time in the US is spent online. Another 20% is spent digitally offline—in word-processors, photo-apps, and video games. Another 10% is spent listening to digital sounds—recordings of music, podcasts, subway announcements. People don’t yet, but are very close to, living in the digital world more than the physical.
And the institutions that have power over people are of course the ones that operate where people live. The federal government cannot extend in the digital world. Tech companies can.
The rise of simplistic populist dictators doesn’t come from some positivistic vision for what society can look like in the future of the digital world. People are not voting for any vision of the physical world.
The landslide election of a simplistic authoritarian who stands against the values of the most powerful company on earth to-date (US federal government) is no less than a vote to dismantle centralized physical power so that we might enter the digital realm. It’s a vote for physical institutions to no longer have hold on us. It’s a vote that corresponds to the greatest migration humanity’s ever seen—the digital migration. It’s a vote for decentralization in the physical world so that there may be centralization in the digital… centralization of digital institutions and platforms.
So: expect this.
The American federal government, and generally physical powers, will collapse.
Tech companies, and generally digital powers, will rise.
The greatest human migration to date is underway.
Different worlds make different requests of humanity.
What does the internet ask of us?
The American federal government has, for 200 years, been the most powerful company in the world.
It won wars, offered a shared myth of freedom to its citizens and the world, created a global order, facilitated incomparable global trade, gave freedom to businesses (a weird + new kind of group entity), and generated wealth beyond compare.
It was a strong enormous spider whose legs smothered all current human civilization. It was the single strongest non-conceptual power that glued humans across the globe together.
Until the internet was born. The internet is that American spider’s web. And, unlike America’s eight strong but numbered legs, the web is infinitely intricate and more connected. Texts, books, images, and films are distributed to billions of people every second. Internet servers are the center of the world order, not Washington DC. That was true a decade ago.
But it takes more than a second for a bureaucratic institution to collapse. An institution with an ever-amending constitution, an ever-evolving identity, and more redefinitions of “the pursuit of happiness” than grains of sand on a beach. An institution with nobly architected buildings, politicians who wear the most formal attire, and committees that are presided over by arcane procedures and gavels. Noble, blood-born, shifty institutions hardly collapse overnight.
But over decades—yes.
People are moving to a new world, away from where the capitol building is located. The Capitol is located in the physical world. People are moving to the digital world.
40% of waking time in the US is spent online. Another 20% is spent digitally offline—in word-processors, photo-apps, and video games. Another 10% is spent listening to digital sounds—recordings of music, podcasts, subway announcements. People don’t yet, but are very close to, living in the digital world more than the physical.
And the institutions that have power over people are of course the ones that operate where people live. The federal government cannot extend in the digital world. Tech companies can.
The rise of simplistic populist dictators doesn’t come from some positivistic vision for what society can look like in the future of the digital world. People are not voting for any vision of the physical world.
The landslide election of a simplistic authoritarian who stands against the values of the most powerful company on earth to-date (US federal government) is no less than a vote to dismantle centralized physical power so that we might enter the digital realm. It’s a vote for physical institutions to no longer have hold on us. It’s a vote that corresponds to the greatest migration humanity’s ever seen—the digital migration. It’s a vote for decentralization in the physical world so that there may be centralization in the digital… centralization of digital institutions and platforms.
So: expect this.
The American federal government, and generally physical powers, will collapse.
Tech companies, and generally digital powers, will rise.
The greatest human migration to date is underway.
Different worlds make different requests of humanity.
What does the internet ask of us?
referenced by: >>2579
Modern Americans hav