Okay, let’s take a moment, because this right here is a prime example of how easy it is to dismiss challenging ideas by reducing them to caricature. And hey, I get it—talk of replacing democracy with something that acknowledges determinism can sound like the opening pitch for some grim dystopian screenplay. But let’s actually sit with the idea for a second before we throw it into the "teen dystopia" pile.FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Sat Dec 14, 2024 1:09 pm There's no way Mike is serious with any of this. He's definitely doing research for a dystopian young adult novel in which a teenager journeys through a terrifying post-democracy neo-fascist moral wasteland before learning that she somehow is the special one that gets to topple the wizard behind the curtain.
The point I’m raising isn’t about tearing down society or turning governance into some kind of technocratic nightmare. It’s about asking hard questions—questions democracy, as it currently functions, doesn’t want to face. If our decisions, our votes, our actions are shaped by forces we don’t control, how do we ensure governance that reflects those realities instead of clinging to the comforting illusion of free will? That’s the conversation.
Far from being dystopian, deterministic governance is about reducing harm, increasing fairness, and addressing the actual root causes of inequality, crime, and environmental collapse. It’s not about handing power to some wizard behind the curtain or stripping humanity of its agency. It’s about building systems that acknowledge how things really work—systems that use evidence, expertise, and data to create outcomes that serve everyone, not just the loudest voices or the wealthiest players.
So sure, you can picture the YA dystopia if you want. But in reality, the “post-democracy” I’m talking about isn’t a wasteland. It’s a system designed to solve problems rather than perpetuating them. If we’re going to push this off as fantasy, let’s at least acknowledge that the status quo isn’t exactly working wonders for us, either. Climate change, wealth disparity, rising political instability—these aren’t challenges we can fix with business as usual. Maybe the real dystopia is pretending otherwise.