Post-Literate Society
The big tech companies like to see themselves as invested in spreading knowledge and curiosity. In fact in order to survive they must promote stupidity. The tech oligarchs have just as much of a stake in the ignorance of the population as the most reactionary feudal autocrat. Dumb rage and partisan thinking keep us glued to our phones.
And where the old European monarchies had to (often ineptly) try to censor dangerously critical material, the big tech companies ensure our ignorance much more effectively by flooding our culture with rage, distraction and irrelevance.
These companies are actively working to destroy human enlightenment and usher in a new dark age.
The screen revolution will shape our politics as profoundly as the reading revolution of the eighteenth century.
Without the knowledge and without the critical thinking skills instilled by print, many of the citizens of modern democracies find themselves as helpless and as credulous as medieval peasants — moved by irrational appeals and prone to mob thinking. The world after print increasingly resembles the world before print.
[...]
As power, wealth and knowledge concentrate at the top of society, an angry, divided and uninformed public lacks a way understand or analyse or criticise or change what is going on. Instead more and more people are impressed by the kinds of highly emotional charismatic and mystical appeals that were the foundation of power in the age before widespread literacy.
Just as the advent of print dealt the final death blow to the decaying world of feudalism, so the screen is destroying the world of liberal democracy.
As tech companies wipe out literacy and middle class jobs, we may find ourselves a second feudal age. Or it may be that we are entering a political era beyond our imagining.
Whatever happens, we are already seeing the world we once knew melt away. Nothing will ever be the same again.
Welcome to the post-literate society.
Notes:
Folksonomies: literacy illiteracy populism
Taxonomies:
/law, govt and politics/politics (0.974400)
/society/unrest and war (0.809642)
/education/homework and study tips (0.720026)
Concepts:
Democracy (0.993804): dbpedia_resource
Feudalism (0.956412): dbpedia_resource
Liberalism (0.921553): dbpedia_resource
Middle class (0.796133): dbpedia_resource
Monarchy (0.762594): dbpedia_resource
Ignorance (0.754789): dbpedia_resource
Wealth (0.728689): dbpedia_resource
Middle Ages (0.708265): dbpedia_resource




