Take Back the Future
by
Bill Walker
by Bill Walker
"He
who controls the past, controls the future; he who controls the
present, controls the past"
~ Eric
Blair (aka George Orwell)
For
most of the 19th and 20th century, the future
was a place of hope for Americans. The future was a place where
many old problems would be forgotten, and where new challenges were
faced without fear. The future was a frontier, a frontier that Americans
expected to settle.
When
I was a small boy tending dairy cows in the early 1960s, the science
fiction magazines offered a glimpse into this future frontier. The
pages of Analog carried stories about asteroid mining, terraforming,
and biomedical marvels. Those stories were set in the far-off times
of the early 21st century.
Of
course the technological predictions of the Analog writers were
way off; they were far too conservative. In every technical field
we have progressed farther and more easily than the most optimistic
dreamer imagined. A practical nuclear rocket engine was developed
in 1967, before the pulp pages had even yellowed. Men landed on
the Moon in 1969. Robot probes have crisscrossed the Solar System.
Knowledge of DNA, RNA and proteomics has exploded; we can put new
genes into cells with viruses or electroporators, we can even take
them back out with cre-lox. Our drought-resistant wheat is now part
barley, our insect-resistant trees are now part bacteria.
And
computers! No one in 1960 thought we would all have computers as
fast as the one on your desk before the year 2200; most engineers
would have said 3000 A.D., or never. No one even foresaw word processing,
let alone the Internet. The most optimistic only saw early 21st
century computers as replacements for the slide rules of a few mathematicians
and engineers, and perhaps as an enhancement of the public library.
So
today we have physical tools far beyond what the optimists expected.
And we also largely avoided the catastrophes of the pessimists,
both physical and social:
There has been no major global war. There
have been a few big genocides during peacetime, but in recent years
even those have receded into the backwaters of the Fourth World.
The children of Mao’s destructive Red Guards and Pol Pot’s murderous
Khmer Rouge are now busy running factories to make products for
Wal-Mart. Despite Aid
To Dependent Dictators programs, totalitarian regimes worldwide
have mostly fallen into bankruptcy and been repossessed by their
citizens, or at least by a less-militaristic class of kleptocrats.
The
Earth was not covered by the ice sheets of the Final Ice Age, as
the 1970s Global
Cooling doomsayers had prophesied.
Pollution
did not destroy all life in the oceans. (Overfishing
of sharks did hurt some coral reefs; that is a result of the
absence of ocean property rights.)
Limits
To Growth turned out to be wrong; we did not run
out of all metal ores and fall into a Dark Age.
Even
the more pessimistic of libertarian futurists turned out to be at
most partly correct. The US government has continued to get bigger
and control more aspects of life in greater detail. However, around
the world governments have tended to loosen up their controls in
spite of themselves. The only way to maintain a closed society now
is to turn off the Internet, and that means consigning your economy
to the junkyard. Several dictators have elected to do just that,
but US foreign aid can only maintain so many such dependencies.
North Korea may simultaneously have oxcart agriculture and US-built
nuclear reactors, but even the World Bank and IMF don’t have the
money to extend this model across the globe.
Things
are not perfect, but the reality of present-day 2005 is not that
bad. We have all the physical tools we need to build a better future.
But the vision of the future itself is missing. We have returned
to the mental condition of the Roman Empire; there is no future,
only an unchanging, infinite Present. Hitler had the same static
viewpoint; he called it the "Eternal Return" and symbolized
it by the Swastika.
The
political classes in the US are focused on perpetual war in the
Middle East and simultaneous perpetual war against their own citizens.
In the name of preventing terrorism, we are stripped
of all privacy, all rights, all nail files. In the name of preventing
drug abuse, government agents invade even our bloodstreams. In the
name of preventing ecological change, regulations are promulgated
to prevent new technologies from displacing the old; "ecology"
organizations prevented nuclear power plants from displacing coal.
These wars are intended to last forever, to maintain the Eternal
Return of the same political faction to office.
The
Eternal Return is the vision that is forced into the defenseless
young minds in the public schools. "Ecology" in the public
schools says that Nature never changes, that the forests and oceans
would always teem with life if it were not for the evils of industry.
"Deep Ecology" is nihilistic; it teaches that human technology
is a cancer on the living planet. For Deep Greens, the proper remedy
for Mother Gaia is nuclear surgery and nerve gas chemotherapy to
remove the metastasizing humans before they spread to other worlds.
As
Orwell said, the future is controlled by the present, through its
teaching about the past. If Hitler’s Eternal Return becomes the
dominant vision, then we really will have a static future… or worse.
It isn’t really possible to stay static; societies can only grow
or die.
Physical
reality will intrude into even the most powerful politician’s dreams.
The world cannot be kept exactly the same forever. As an example,
the bans on nuclear power cause increasing disruption whether oil
supplies run out or not. If oil becomes scarce, that will force
change; if it does not, in a few hundred years the atmosphere will
be unbreathable (except for Jurassic Park escapees, who will love
it), returned to Mesozoic proportions and temperatures.
Rather
than wait for the passage of centuries and go through another Dark
Age, I suggest that the libertarian movement must create a new vision
of the future. We should not waste time arguing over the details
of socialized medical programs, Social Insecurity, or the color
of our electronic tracking collars. We must focus on reopening the
Frontier.
That
means homesteading the oceans, space, and perhaps even the 42% of
the US land area still controlled by government (most of this is
not parks or conservation area, but exploited and ecologically damaged
forest, mines, and grazing land reserved for the politically favored).
It means applying the First Amendment to the electronic media, as
should have been done in the 1920s. It means opening the medical
frontier under the control of the patient, the organ donor, the
doctor… rather than the bureaucrats who keep it closed today.
It
means that new technologies should be homesteaded, not pre-empted
by the "property rights" of obsolete bureaucracies. The
Sunday Supplement visions of flying cars could have been implemented
already by decentralized GPS air traffic controls… but not by the
1950s-style FAA system of overcaffeinated guys staring into radar
screens and yelling radioed orders to pilots driving 550 mph jets.
We
should be arguing about who owns what part of Mars, the near-Earth
asteroids, and prime ocean-farming areas. Instead, we are pretending
that nothing exists outside our existing real estate registers.
Hernando de Soto found in his Mystery
of Capital that the West has progressed because it recognized
the homesteaded property rights of its poor citizens. (I suspect
that this was because poor citizens in the West had first longbows,
and then squirrel rifles.) We need to make this part of the past
live again; we need to recapture the worldview of the English yeomen
and the American frontiersmen.
Our
frontiers are our future. Those who close them off are Nazis, whether
they wave the Swastika, the world-in-the-bombsight flag of the UN,
or the Stars and Stripes.
June
6, 2005
Bill
Walker [send him mail]
works as a Research Associate in telomere biology at an undisclosed
(thanks to legal threats from his tax-financed employer) location.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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