How to Create the Sci-Fi World We Were Promised
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Discover this captivating and thought-provoking conservative roadmap for ushering in the epic sci-fi future we were promised. America was once the world's dream factory. We turned imagination into reality, from curing polio to landing on the Moon to creating the internet. And we were confident that more wonders lay just over the horizon: clean and infinite energy, a cure for cancer, humanoid robots, radical life extension, and space colonies. (Also, of course, flying cars.) Science fiction would become fact. But as we moved into the late 20th century, we grew cautious, even cynical, about what the future held and our ability to shape it. America became a "Down Wing" society. Too many of us saw only the threats from rapid change. The year 2023 marks the 50th anniversary of the start of the Great Downshift in economic growth and technological progress, followed by decades of economic stagnation, downsized dreams, and a popular culture fixated on catastrophe: nuclear war, environmental collapse, plague and the zombie apocalypse. We are now at risk of another half-century of making the same Down Wing mistakes and pushing a pro-progress "Up Wing" future into the realm of impossibility. But American Enterprise Institute (AEI) economic policy expert and long-time CNBC contributor James Pethokoukis argues that there's still hope. We can absolutely turn things around--if we choose to dream and act. How dare we delay or fail to deliver for ourselves and our children. With groundbreaking ideas and sharp analysis, Pethokoukis provides a detailed roadmap to a fantastic future filled with incredible progress and prosperity that is both optimistic and realistic. The Conservative Futurist invites readers to invent the future they want to live in and fight for a better tomorrow. Through an exploration of culture, history, and economics, Pethokoukis tells the fascinating story of what went wrong in the past and what we need to do today to finally get it right. Using the latest economic research and policy analysis, as well as conversations with top economists, historians, and technologists, Pethokoukis reveals that the failed futuristic visions of the past were totally possible. And they still are. If America is to fully recover from the COVID-19 pandemic and launch itself into a shining tomorrow, it must again become a fully risk-taking, future-oriented Up Wing society. It's time for America to embrace the future confidently, act boldly, and take that giant leap forward.
Reviews with the most likes.
Read this immediately after Abundance which was a cool, if not highly redundant, experience.
This book is a more aimless and repetitive “Abundance” that never really gets into the nitty gritty. I honestly couldn't tell you what Conservative Futurism even is.
In a sentence, I could explain Abundance philosophy. I could not do this same for Conservative Futurism as it feels like a redundant yet unspecified copy of Abundance with more affection for nuclear energy.
So much of the book is surface level I was shocked when I was 2/3 of the way through and realized that I still had no idea what the author was getting at.
Chapter 11 was better though as he finally started to get a little more in the weeds, but even there, it just felt like a worse copy of Klein and Thompson's book.
Now I'm not saying it's a bad book, it's fine. It just feels like one long chapter 1 that never gets to something more. Again, I don't even know what his claim or thesis was in this.
But to end on a positive, the biggest positive I have is how fun it was to read this as a companion piece to “Abundance”. The history in both books lines up almost exactly which makes it fun to see the dueling ideas for the future. The fun ends though when only Klein and Thompson provide a robust breakdown of their view while this book simply doesn't.