Eric Miller on 6 Dec 2000 04:50:47 -0000 |
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RE: <nettime> Fw: Enemies of the Future |
the analogy I keep coming back to is that of the auto manufacturers and the postwar "car society" in the US. --highways = networks (obvious) --rest stops, cloverleafs, = servers, routers, and hubs (obvious, again) --"Nobly building our future" ca 1950 = "nobly building our future" ca 2000 --Manifest Destiny of empowerment via transportation = Manifest Destiny of empowerment via information --a shared sense of infallibility --avoidance of corresponding social questions. (read a copy of Business 2.0 lately? it's frightening how naturally they can avoid any recognition or discussion of the social impact of the businesses they discuss.) --workers believing that it's their ticket to everlasting prosperity --advertising extolling the mechanical virtues of the product and implying that the Joneses will leave you behind if you don't buy a new machine --segmentation of society based on access cars + whites + 1950 = flight to suburbs, urban decay left behind computers + education + 2000 = high-paying info economy jobs for some, low-wage service industry jobs for the rest --witch hunting those who would subvert what is good and ethical for the US 1950: communists 2000: monopolists --busy building a future that doesn't take into account human nature and social needs 1950: the American Dream resulted in class stratification, large-scale waste as we built temporary housing/public works, and isolated individuals in mass-produced boxes (read: suburban tract housing) 2000: the American Dream doesn't take into account that we are social creatures. we need interaction, not facimilies of interaction. again, we are being isolated in mass-produced boxes in the name of a brighter future. this time the box is just beige plastic instead of 2x4s and drywall. thought I'd throw it out there. I just remember growing up in Flint, and seeing the same sunny optimism back then that we've had recently in the Information Age. any thoughts? Eric # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net