DYSPEPSIA GENERATION

We have seen the future, and it sucks.

Vertical Thinking

1st December 2018

ZMan ponders a new trend.

Vertical farming not only allows for greater yield per acre, you just keep growing up, it also allows for the distance between farm and table to collapse. Vertical farms are just buildings using hydroponics and can be as tall as you like. Almost every city has an excess of abandoned warehouse and factory space. Those spaces, in theory, can be turned into vertical farms. The area around them could literally be turned into farmer’s markets, where the locals can buy their food from the farmer.

There is one problem with all of this, whether it is self-sufficient cities run by robots or the future imagined by Huxley. That is, what would be the point? Ruling elites have the population they need to rule. They always seek to reduce that which is not useful to their grip on power. The proliferation of birth control is simply eugenics with a happy face. The societies to the South are sending their excess population north because they don’t want them. Every African potentate will tell you. He has too many Africans.

As we get closer to that world and drug addiction rates spiral upward, suicide rates climb higher and now life expectancy is declining, it suggests there is a stop between here and Huxley’s imagined future. That’s death. Humans, at least Europeans, are not built for captivity. This reality is probably what is driving the migrant invasions. What’s the point of defending your lands when you have no reason to get up in the morning? People don’t defend land. They defend the life that can be built and lived on that land.

ZMan doesn’t consider the evolutionary impact. Evolution weeds out those who don’t reproduce. Those who are attracted to drug addiction, suicide, and no-reason-to-get-up-in-the-morning would eventually breed such tendencies out of the population, leaving  only the Upper Crust and perhaps a larger (or smaller) servant class. They would all be reasonably intelligent, well able to create and maintain the robotic infrastructure that supports them. It’s hard to predict what such a society would look like, culturally, but there’s no reason to think that it would necessarily be a dystopia. We just don’t know.

 

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