Our technologies permit us to manipulate time and space. They leave distance annihilated, cause things to grow, and improve productivity.
As the nation approached its bicentennial, Americans looked forward to electricity too cheap to meter. By the end of 1972, 30 nuclear plants were operational, 55 were under construction, and more than 80 were planned or ordered. That same year, the Apollo 17 astronauts became the 11th and 12th men to walk on the moon. Five years before, the X-15 rocket plane had set a speed record for a crewed aircraft of Mach 6.7. America was flying higher, faster, and farther than ever before…
Today, however, energy prices still burden producers and consumers alike, and the grid remains precarious. Over the past 30 years only three commercial nuclear reactors have been built and 10 have been closed. Despite spending almost twice as much on healthcare as peer nations, we have the lowest life expectancy. Apollo 17’s steps on the lunar surface have proved mankind’s last. The X-15’s record still stands, and the Concorde was decommissioned more than two decades ago. Our passenger planes are slower than they used to be. Our trains crawl compared to those in other parts of the world. Our cars do not fly.
Advances have not stopped, but something has gone wrong.
Stagnation was a choice.
Reminds me of Eric Weinstein's talk at the 2023 bitcoin conf: #343894
Eric: "I think one of the things that we're in danger of finding out is the truth. We have a lot of very old people [in the USG] it's typically thought that they're clinging to power because they're power crazy. I want to throw out a different possibility, the difference possibility that there are a lot of secrets that are holed up inside of our government, and we yell at people as conspiracy theorists, and paranoids, and lunatics... and it may be that there are a lot of secrets that are gonna change your entire conception of your country, your planet, your world, your safety, and what threat your family is under."