"Lack of respect, wrong attitude, failure to obey authority. The Farm, immediately. - death sentence in Ellison's book 'A Boy and His Dog'
Awesome book. The whole series was good, except the last one.
Can we choose? I'll pick the Matrix. Yes we are slaves to the machines, but at least they give us happy dreams
Our history sounds shockingly similar to Animal Farm.
Get invaded by the Saud dynasty, an ultraconservative, wahhabist group
Become an absolute monarch, where criticism = death by beheading
Pretend how it's great here, and how nothing ever goes wrong here
Become a lifeless country, where all our work and natural resources are reserved for the Sauds
By islamic law, we are all equal. But some of us, are more equal than others.
Next step, is probably to centralize all power to MBS, which he partially already did.
All of the negatives from Metropolis 2001
Metropolis (2001): How Capitalism Produces Fascism
The Temporal Messages of Metropolis
Elon Musk = Duke Red
Blade Runner
A combination of all the worst bits of the worst ones
The Simpsons
If we don't dodge that bullet, Years and Years. Or Neuromancer.
Neuromancer would be an improvement at this point. Gibson underestimated just how bad corporations could get.
As bland and forgettable as it was, the film adaptation of "Tomorrowland."
The premise (or at least my takeaway) basically being that, we might have been headed toward a techno-utopia of optimistic and bright developments, but greed and cynicism took over the spirit of invention, and everyone collectively became cynical and pessimistic about the future as a result.
Technology and those who claimed to wield it became enemies of the people.
Many of our most popular "near future" stories and entertainment are about societal collapse, disaster, the worst of humanity turning on themselves, and technology being used for its worst purposes. We almost enjoy morbidly indulging in forecasting our own bad ending, over and over and over. Warnings became franchises co-opted by the bad powers they warned against.
Partially, we'll get a crappy future because we've all been conditioned and used to the idea that it's inevitable and there's nothing we can do about it. This reduces our will to fight it, and instead we settle for merely enduring it.
If we had hope and fire and a taste of something better, we'd stop giving in to doomerism and just accepting it when it keeps getting worse.
This is why I really like the emergence of Solar Punk. It's a hopeful and bright rebellion against endless neon acid rain tumbling down towering corporate fortresses, rusting everybody's work-leased cyber-limbs as they gig-work 24/7 to afford neural software updates.
Instead, it's about embracing communitarianism, careful stewardship of natural resources, sustainable existence in tandem with nature instead of against it, open and free knowledge to all, endless invention with human thriving in mind.
If people actually believed, not merely that's how it should be, but that it could be ...we could make some real progress.
The Road.
Price of obsidian gonna skyrocket.
Beat me to it!
Penultimate Truth. Predicted containing the cattle using fear of something that doesn't even exist in reality.
How far ahead do you want to go? The Borg are a more likely future phase of humanity than Star Trek's Federation, though without FTL travel, we're gonna be stuck crawling from rock to rock in our own neighbourhood for a very long time.
There's also a bit in old kid's TV show The Girl From Tomorrow where, at one point, something mucks up the timeline so badly that the future she comes from ceases to exist and all of the Earth's land ends up an uninhabitable desert, devoid of life. That seems pretty likely too.
These two things are not mutually exclusive either.
I don't know about closest, but definitely most likely, Tank Girl. Basically, water and power will be extreme scarcities for the majority and a corporation that bottles up the water to keep it from becoming free through rain and owns all of central power grid will be the effective government. It will take a few more decades for the water to get bottled up by Nestlé, et al., and the water infrastructure to fail in more cities. And then the fossil fuel industry to run out of resources and collapse and thus leave only the few nuclear reactors as the only major power sources, without renewables investment, which can be grabbed by the water owners by saying they need the power to collect the water bottles and they need to "secure" the dangerous reactors with the military hardware they collected to protect "their" water sources from protesters and poor people over the years.
Contagion and Children of Men - while they didn't look far into the future and dealt with existing problems, it's still horrifyingly accurate.
People are talking about really wonderful interesting things, but I can't even choose between those I'm thinking about.
Star Wars EU - because that's what I see around. Lots of stupidity, evil and decay, but in the end there's the sky and the life with all its beauty. The old part of it, which mostly was happening after Empire's institution while the rebels were not something close to victory in anyone's opinion.
Vacuum Flowers - that's the "worse is better" evolutionary optimism. That it will all become only worse, there's no good defeating evil, we will all die, but - life finds a way, humanity finds a way, and so on. It will go on.
Heinlein's Door into Summer - some parts are too much like our reality.
Actually I think all 3 have the same general idea, I just can't quite catch it.
Funny, I’d have said we’re closer to the new Star Wars cinematic trilogy than the EU.
You think you’ve won, then a few years later, oh look, fascism is back and it’s killing people in job lots again.
"Wow, I can't believe it, after all that sacrifice, we've won against the fascist empire!"
"Somehow Putrumpatine returned. :("
Honestly though, I think we're seeing a lot of the prequel trilogy ring true, especially since it has a lot of similarities to historical empire corruption and collapse.
Except the bad guys in government are ridiculously, cartoonishly obvious and don't even need to hide anymore.
fElon is trying to make droids.
I think that it'd have to be one of those countless near-future works that are set in what basically amounts to being the present-day world.
I think that if you're looking for something other than that, something more in a far-out setting, you'd need to ask something like "what futuristic work do you think society will most resemble in 200 years" or something like that. That forces things down the road a bit, and makes one pick among different predictions about how society will change in the future.
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