We must recognize the tech billionaire who has enough money in sovereignty to build a private space programme through which to secure his own safe passage away from the rest of us, says Imin. And i fully believe that we're headed for an earth track future, not this colonizing outer space. We've been shooting people up into space since like john glen and allan shepard, right? It wasn't the achievement. The achievement there was that a single dude was able to do this without nassau, without government, without collaborators, that he could do it himself. This whole thing, i think, is this dopomine carrot that is completely not grounded in reality.
On this episode, Author and Professor Douglas Rushkoff joins Nate to discuss how human behavior interacts with technology and how we have arrived at a place with enormous wealth and income inequality just as society is rapidly approaching biophysical limits.
Rushkoff unpacks parts of his new book, Survival of the Richest: Escape Fantasies of the Tech Billionaires, on the need to collectively break away from a top-down mindset to embrace circularity and resiliency.
About Douglas Rushkoff:
Named one of the “world’s ten most influential intellectuals” by MIT, Douglas Rushkoff is an author and documentarian who studies human autonomy in a digital age. His twenty books include the upcoming Survival of the Richest: Escape Fantasies of the Tech Billionaires, as well as the recent Team Human, based on his podcast, and the bestsellers Present Shock, Throwing Rocks at the Google Bus, Program or Be Programmed, Life Inc, and Media Virus. He also made the PBS Frontline documentaries Generation Like, The Persuaders, and Merchants of Cool. His book Coercion won the Marshall McLuhan Award, and the Media Ecology Association honored him with the first Neil Postman Award for Career Achievement in Public Intellectual Activity.
For Show Notes and Transcript visit: https://www.thegreatsimplification.com/episode/36-douglas-rushkoff