Difference between revisions of "Threats to civilization"
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* [[authoritarianism]] discourages individual initiative and isolates the decision-makers from the results of their decisions | * [[authoritarianism]] discourages individual initiative and isolates the decision-makers from the results of their decisions | ||
* [[health care in the US]] is increasingly run by private corporations whose primary goal is profit and who have few if any incentives to reduce bureaucracy | * [[health care in the US]] is increasingly run by private corporations whose primary goal is profit and who have few if any incentives to reduce bureaucracy | ||
+ | * [[media consolidation]] is another form in which self-interested companies are being handed "the [[keys to the 21st century]]", but in this case it's not so much a matter of the law not keeping up with progress as it is a matter of existing laws being relaxed and reversed by successful [[lobbying]]. Perhaps the most visible effect of this, recently, has been the near-total failure of the (traditional) media to report on the extensive [[corruption in the Bush administration]]. | ||
==Tools of Destruction== | ==Tools of Destruction== |
Revision as of 23:23, 9 March 2007
Overview
This page is for identifying and discussing issues which threaten to destroy civilization if not countered.
This page may also be more suitable as an Issuegroups-style page, but the status of Issuegroups is currently in limbo. See Issuepedia:Issuegroups.
Imminent Threats
global issues
- religious extremism, primarily Islamic extremism
- intellectual property law is not keeping up with rapid developments in information technology, and threatens to "hand the keys to the 21st century" to organizations more interested in using it for their own ends than for the good of civilization
United States
To the extent that civilization within the United States is itself threatened, that represents a threat to the world at large for the following reasons:
- Any force powerful enough to overcome the US, arguably "the world's only remaining superpower", is powerful enough to overcome any other country or alliance on Earth
- If the United States is taken over from within by forces inimical to the idea of civilization, then the US itself could become a threat.
Current threats to civilization within the US include:
- military readiness is currently (2007) at abysmal levels, leaving the US highly vulnerable to any substantial surprise emergency
- religious extremism, primarily Christian extremism aka "fundamentalism" (a misnomer):
- apocalypticism encourages thinking of apocalyptic events as a good thing
- divides popular opinion regarding issues on which there should be a clear consensus (e.g. abortion, gay rights, death penalty) and thus distracts attention away from real issues we need to deal with
- spiraling bureaucracy
- authoritarianism discourages individual initiative and isolates the decision-makers from the results of their decisions
- health care in the US is increasingly run by private corporations whose primary goal is profit and who have few if any incentives to reduce bureaucracy
- media consolidation is another form in which self-interested companies are being handed "the keys to the 21st century", but in this case it's not so much a matter of the law not keeping up with progress as it is a matter of existing laws being relaxed and reversed by successful lobbying. Perhaps the most visible effect of this, recently, has been the near-total failure of the (traditional) media to report on the extensive corruption in the Bush administration.
Tools of Destruction
Some of the tools via which the various threats are being propagated:
- terrorism provides a distraction by which democratic citizens can be fooled into unnecessarily trading their freedoms for apparent safety
- religion is often used as a tool for spreading attitudes harmful to a free civilization:
- discourages individual initiative
- squelches scientific investigation, especially in the biological and environmental sciences
- centralizes authority outside of the rule of law and beyond the reach of rational discussion
- encourages dogmatic thinking at the expense of rationality