Reset
One of
the worst things about the American political scene is its fascination with
gossip, scandal, and personal cults.
That was true before Trump became president, and he has ramped up the
drama to unprecedented levels. Every day
is a new crisis that threatens the norms of democracy, and every news cycle is
a frantic hand wringing over what went wrong today. We can’t even remember what seemed so
important three days ago. Some of this
is surely by design, but whether it’s intentional or not, the result is that we
never spend any time talking about the real issues, the real political concerns
that we are on a collision course with.
We should be preparing ourselves for dramatic changes on the horizon,
but instead we’re playing this endless game of Duck Duck Goose with an orange
clown.
We
should be preparing for the end of oil and the end of work. We should be talking about the impact that
both of these all but inevitable events are going to do to radically change our
lives. Sweden has announced that it is
outlawing fossil fuels in 2020. The EU
is seriously considering banning the use of plastic in packaging. Meanwhile, we’re trying to figure out who
Trump is going to pardon next. One of
the consequences of an utterly incompetent president is that we fall further
behind the rest of the world when it comes to preparing for what’s next.
It’s
not a new thing to contemplate the end of oil.
James Ridgeway was writing about it back in the early 70’s. What is new is that some forward- thinking
nations are actually starting to plan for it.
It not only means that we have to rethink the sources of energy that we
use, we also have to rethink how that shift alters economic, political and
social structures that have been built around the use of fossil fuel. Oil is a centralizing technology, and using
it to generate heat and power requires a fast infrastructure of extraction and
distribution. When oil goes away, how
does the new energy source both allow and require us to rethink and restructure
our relationship to that infrastructure.
If we think about the military consequences of oil alone, it is clear
that there are new opportunities and new challenges ahead.
If new
energy is more diffuse and more local, if it doesn’t depend on energy grids and
distribution networks designed to serve the petro-chemical industry, what can
we do that was hard to do before? If
everyone could ‘own’ their own energy, even if they had to buy the means to
produce it, what would that mean to our patterns of settlement and trade? The risk is that we’ll plod along thinking
that tomorrow will be mostly like today and miss the chance to get out ahead of
that change. The end of oil is going to
be the largest economic and social shift since the beginning of the Industrial
Revolution, probably even bigger than computers.
The
same thing can be said about work. No
country in the world has ever been more dominated by ‘work’ than we are. It’s how we judge someone’s worth, their
position in society, and it determines what standard of living we expect to
have. It is deeply ingrained in our
cultural values of personal morality – it’s what Locke said made it ok to take
someone else’s land, if you were ‘working’ it and they weren’t. We are facing the replacement of human
workers with AI, robots and computers.
There simply won’t be enough jobs for the number of people who need
them. Whenever a politician says that
their goal is create more jobs, mark them off as a liar and a fool. It ain’t happening. What are we going to do?
We
can’t just continue to hope that the tomorrow will be mostly like today mantra
will apply to this issue. Should we be
moving to guaranteed work, as some have suggested. Should we reprioritize work to put more
emphasis on education, childcare and the environment? It this the mechanism to redistribute wealth
in a way that makes democracy sustainable?
These issues are not just cosmetic.
They are deeply structural and game changing.
The
next time you turn on the news and see Trump’s face, forget about the scandal
of the day and think for a minute about what we’re not talking about. Whatever happens to him, we’re still going to
have to face and work our way through at least these issues and probably more. Let’s spend our time thinking about what is
possible instead of always focusing on what is so obviously wrong.