Wednesday, June 19, 2019

G:TBook Review

Courtesy of our OBX correspondent, a thoughtful review of what appears to be provocative and complex argument about the very future of the human race. My take? We're all fucked, but some of us will pass on in time to not really have to worry about it. That's not sardonic flippancy. It's what I actually believe. Maybe our ancestors will get lucky.

Author and activist Bill McKibben has banged the drum about climate change and inequality for 30 years. He’s stood on glaciers and visited remote villages where electricity is a rumor. He’s met with Silicon Valley executives and with subsistence level farmers.

McKibben’s latest book, Falter, treads familiar ground, but he asks a larger question: Has the human game begun to play itself out? He cites the twin perils of unchecked climate change and artificial intelligence as potentially altering human existence irrevocably moving forward.

He cites science, history, personal reporting and anecdotes and plenty of outside sources. There’s ample gloom and doom, but he also offers suggestions for how we might still walk back from the brink. For its weighty subject matter, it’s an interesting, breezy, almost conversational 256-page read.

As he wrote at the beginning of the book: “A writer doesn’t owe a reader hope – the only obligation is honesty – but I want those who pick up this volume to know that its author lives in a state of engagement, not despair. If I didn’t, I wouldn’t have bothered writing what follows.”

Income inequality, McKibben writes, means that increasingly few people are making more and larger decisions about everyone else. Rising seas and expanding areas of drought mean that “the size of the board on which we’re playing will get smaller.”

He writes about a Randian, libertarian streak that has taken over the upper levels of the conservative movement for the past 40 years, from Reagan, Thatcher, the Bush presidencies, the Koch brothers, and now Trump. A triumph of the individual and the idea that a person’s value is measured by what they produce and what they earn, and that society and the collective are for suckers and mooches.

The oil companies, McKibben writes, were doing their own research about the possible damage from increased carbon dioxide levels as far back as the 1970s and essentially buried the findings. “Global warming is the ultimate problem for oil companies,” he writes, “because oil causes it, and it’s the ultimate problem for government haters because without government intervention you can’t solve it. Those twin existential threats, to cash and to worldview, meant that there was never any shortage of resources for the task of denying climate change.”

One of McKibben’s favorite words in the book is “leverage” – the outsized influence a small group of individuals or one industry wields. “The politics of one country for one 50-year period will have rewritten the geological history and crimped the human game,” he writes. “That’s what leverage looks like.”

The end of the human race, or our best hope for the future?
Discuss.
He also worries about artificial intelligence that smarts its way beyond our ability to control it. He writes that we may not be far away from the possibility of producing designer babies, who are smarter and stronger and better. Since that won’t be cheap, he says such a development could exacerbate inequality. And given the rapid rate of technological improvement, wouldn’t each batch of designer humans essentially become second-rate and less after a short time? If outcomes are programmed into people, doesn’t that diminish the human experience?

McKibben also writes that an inordinate number of powerful people in Silicon Valley are freaked out by death (who knew?), or rather obsessed with the idea of prolonging their own lives. There’s no shortage of start-ups involving new drugs or cryogenics or tech implants. An exceptionally smart gent named Ray Kurzweil, who’s the director of engineering at Google and who McKibben is fond of, hopes to live long enough so that nanobots can fix his aging cells and extend his life, or perhaps connect his brain to the cloud so that it may be implanted elsewhere and effectively live forever.

“The technologists at some level value individual humans too much,” he writes, “they value humanness far too little.”

But there’s hope, McKibben writes at the end of the book. It takes the form of solar panels and the non-violent protest movement. Solar panels can produce power cheaply and efficiently, particularly in places where there is none, such as African villages. Solar power can supplement and eventually replace fossil fuels, creating jobs and decreasing costs along the way. McKibben also takes heart from the non-violent movement, which helped turn the tide for women’s suffrage in this country, Indian independence under Gandhi, civil rights and gay marriage.

It won’t be easy, McKibben writes. Much damage has been done and we’re already a long way down the road. Many forces and much money are aligned against changing the status quo. But it’s possible and vital.

“The libertarian ideal of individual autonomy, which to one extent or another every modern human understands and cherishes,” he writes, “runs aground when the stakes get as high as ecological hell or human meaninglessness.”

Regardless of your politics, it’s a worthy read.

40 comments:

zman said...

We need more Fairbank around here.

TR said...

This sounds like an interesting read. Unfortunately, I have pretty much lost the ability to read books. Not sure if it’s kids, technology or job stress, but I struggle to finish books, or even dig into them much.

Whitney said...

Part of accepting this doomed fate? More karaoke.
Last night we ambled around the corner to an age-old dive a few blocks from my house:

King of Rock
Going Back to Cali
So What'cha Want

The bloke at the table next to me who'd predicted aloud that I would sing Def Leppard was highly amused that I knew the lyrics to each as well as he did.

Get out there and sing your guts out, people... before the climate or the robots get you.

rob said...

i didn’t see karaoke era whitney coming

Whitney said...

Nobody did. I busted in like the Kool-Aid man.

zman said...

Oh YoWhitney, they don't believe me, but you won't let those robots defeat me.

zman said...

One of my favorite "Yo momma" jokes is "Yo momma so fat when people yell 'Hey Kool-Aid' she comes busting through the wall."

TR said...

I like Flaming Lips a lot less after reading Boomtown*. They straddled the line bw whimsical and pretentious to me, and I dug them at MSG for NYE 2004, but he comes across quite douchey in that book.

*full disclosure - I made it 2/3 of the way thru that one. Maybe he redeems himself by the end.

zman said...

If you don't like "Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots" (the album or either song) you probably aren't listening to it right.

Whitney said...

I like that album quite a bit. And seeing them live is a circus. Very fun.

Don't know about the pretentious, but TR may be right. I have a DVD about them called Fearless Freaks, but I only watched a little. And I'm watching somewhat fewer DVD's these days.

The greatest thing about the Lips (other than the fact that Dave saw them play in a little room at W&M) is that they displaced Color Me Badd as the most famous
band from Oklahoma.

Whitney said...

The Mets just hired Phil Regan as their pitching coach.

Phil Regan pitched against Ted Williams. That is not a typo or a joke.

Dave said...

i love the flaming lips! especially soft bulletin. and i didn't think they came off douchey in boomtown, TR. maybe you didn't finish that part of the book . . . they just wanted to paint some streets rainbow colored and they were totally willing to do civic stuff. in oklahoma. how pretentious can you act when you live in oklahoma city?

aside from the people from frederick. you're totally allowed to be pretentious towards those hicks . . .

https://www.roadsnacks.net/these-are-the-10-dumbest-cities-in-oklahoma/

Marls said...

Playing some Johnny Paycheck this evening.

zman said...

If it isn't a joke why am I laughing?

Mark said...

So excited for tonight’s NBA draft. Really hoping for chaos after the first 2-3 picks.

Mark said...

A new dispensary opened right near my office. So I had to go. Every time you visit one of these dispensaries for the first time they give you a huge discount. As a result, I currently have far more “medicine” than I can consume. In a variety of forms.

Mark said...

Already two big to semi-big trades. Giddy up!

Whitney said...

Johnny Paycheck. I’ve got TTJASI (which is a David Allan Coe song) and that’s about it. Marls, what else is in his canon?

TR said...

Did Marls shove his job? I am confused.

I too am excited about the draft. Will focus more on scotch for my couch party, but I like how Mark is thinking.

Marls said...

Job has been shoved

TR said...

Learning that Jarrett Culver’s dad is named Hiawatha is my favorite thing about the draft so far.

rob said...

marls! shovin' it.

Mark said...

Atlanta is building a fun, young team.

The Suns continue be a shitshow at every level.

Mark said...

Marls! Shovin it!

Marls said...

Where would you get the suit that Tyler Herro is wearing?

zman said...

Marls has been shovin it for years. I walked on him one time, it wasn't pretty.

Mark said...

I like Okeke. A lot. Did Orlando have to take him at 16 though?

Mark said...

Fashionable Male, Marls.

TR said...

That’s a big no, Mark. Anything higher than 25 would’ve been a surprise. Teams like Boston trade back when they are comfortable their guy can be had later. But not Orlando! Or the New York Giants, for that matter.

TR said...

Woj is the shit. He owns this draft.

Mark said...

That’s exactly how I felt, TR. I’m cool with Okeke. But shit 16 after a late March ACL tear? Nope.

Mark said...

Fucking Spurs, DeJountae Murray and Keldon Johnson fall to them in the late 20s in two of the last three drafts. They’re (close to) equal parts lucky and smart.

Whitney said...

Karaoke once again in VB.

Mark said...

My boy Vitas is on his way to Amsterdam/Norway/Lithuania.
If you need a Dead/Lithuania Basketball shirt, hit me up. It’s the best basketball T-shirt around.

TR said...

Local Starbucks in the ‘burbs playing Jodie Whatley’s Real Love this morning. I recognized the song and artist immediately and felt equal parts happy and sad.

Next up is En Vogue’s My Loving. The early 90’s R&B flavor is a surprise.

Whitney said...

Last night I butchered Kenny Rogers' "Ruby Don't Take Your Love to Town" and a trio performance of Human League's "Don't You Want Me." There was a long wait to sing, but they did a raffle to jump the line just for kicks and I won. No idea what song I sang that time.

It's really good that Vicky leaves town tonight or this dump would be my new go-to bar. Karaoke is fun but in small doses.

Whitney said...

And I would not know any Jodie Watley songs. Nice work, TR.

Marls said...

There is a whole group of early 90’s dance music that I still have an expectation of what the next song played will be based on the Lammie party mix courtesy of Zman and Juggs Carlesemov.

Whitney said...

This just in: I have now been informed the 3rd song was Rhinestone Cowboy. I know you all were on the edges of your seats.

rob said...

which was recently featured here on g:tb! worlds colliding.