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Amazon's Ring and Google's Nest Unwittingly Reveal the Severity of the U.S. Surveillance State
(greenwald.substack.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
This is why Fahrenheit 451 (and not 1984) is my go-to analogy for today’s plight: Bradbury correctly predicted that people would willingly walk themselves into an oppressive technocracy for the sake of entertainment and convenience.
i mean we could say we're living through 1984, brave new world, Fahrenheit 451, handmaid's tale, maybe lolita--i haven't read that one, but heard it's a bit child-rapey
whatever it is, no one source has really encapsulated the hell of actual reality today
I don't find Brave New World to be especially dystopian. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I haven't read it, what's not dystopian about it?
The first thing Wikipedia says about it is "Brave New World is a dystopian novel" 😅
Maybe you not finding it especially dystopian says more about the state of the world right now than the book... 😅
Keep in mind that the book is very old, published in 1931. DNA hadn't been mapped, information technology was limited, and so on.
In the book, people are born in factories. Working class people are born in from split cells, as quintuples if I remember correctly. Your role in life is largely determined by your genes - workers don't have the psychology for anything but labor.
In spite of that, it's not an especially oppressive society. There is a "perfect" drug, soma, which is sort of like a non-addictive, non-physically harmful heroin that can be delivered by gas. When there is unrest, security forces come in and get everyone high until they chill the fuck out.
Sex is open and easy, but always completely voluntary by everyone involved. When people are turned down they are sometimes surprised but never upset or aggressive.
Entertainment is presented as vacuous, but the people seem to enjoy it. There are movies, TV, and so on. Sports are engineered to require people take trains out of town to stadiums, and require deliberately-complicated equipment to play, in order to create demand for production.
So... is that a dystopia? There is no discussion of environmental damage, but overall it seems sustainable, not predicated on infinite growth. People are stuck in the role they were born to, but it seems like there are no artificial barriers to advancement... just that not everyone can be good at everything.