Episode 2252: How to Unstick the Future
In today’s THAT WAS THE WEEK tech newsletter, Keith Teare asks what “civilization” is good for. Triggered by David Brooks’ “We Can Achieve Great Things” NYTimes piece, Keith’s editorial this week focuses on how we can “earn” the future through constant innovation. The problem - as everyone from Keith Teare to David Brooks to KeenOnAmerica guest Yoni Appelbaum all acknowledge - is that America has become stuck in camps, routines and ideologies. So how to unstick America? How to reestablish belief once again in the future?
Keen On America is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
Here are the 5 Keen On America take-aways from my conversation this week with Keith Teare:
* Civilization and Technology: Keith argues that civilization is deeply interconnected with technological progress, suggesting that innovation has historically enabled human advancement and that government's role should naturally diminish as abundance increases.
* David Brooks' Essay on Progress: We discuss Brooks' New York Times piece "We Can Achieve Great Things," which examines how progressives have built systems that inadvertently render government ineffective, and the need for a compelling narrative about the desired future.
* The "Stuck" Society: We explore Yoni Appelbaum's argument that America has become immobile, with people no longer moving for opportunity and becoming "stuck" in their locations, which contradicts the traditional American dream.
* AI Democratizing Coding: We discuss how AI tools are allowing non-coders to build applications, with Keith sharing his personal experience creating an app without knowing the programming language Swift, suggesting this might enable individuals to build significant businesses.
* AI Competition Landscape: Our conversation covers recent AI developments, including Perplexity's move to create an AI web browser, OpenAI's GPT-4.5 Orion launch (which Keith acknowledges has been rushed to market), and the intensifying competition between companies like Anthropic, OpenAI, and others in the rapidly evolving AI space.
Keen On America is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe
I am Still With You: Emmanuel Iduma's reckoning with the silence, inheritance and history of the Nigerian Civil War
Confessions of an Economic Hit Man: John Perkins on how China and the United States both seek world hegemony and what we can do about it
Remembering Africatown: Nick Tabor on America's Last Slave Ship and the Community it Created
An Affirming Flame: Roger Cohen meditates on life, politics and how to rebuild our age of undoing
ChatGPT gets sexy, Tesla fails to startup & Google gets ready for its Supreme Court showdown: That Was the Week in tech for 2/17/23
The Inside Story of Social Media: Steven Levy on Friendster, MySpace, Facebook and TikTok
Black and Queer on Campus: Michael P. Jeffries on what life is like for Black LGBTQ students in American colleges today
Purposeful Curiosity: Costas Andriopoulos on asking the right questions that will change our lives
Go, Dorothy, Go! Lynn Cullen on the woman who gave up everything and changed the world
Journeys in Earth's Extinct Ecosystems: Thomas Halliday on paleobiology, croquet and the inevitable end of our species
How To Remember Auschwitz-Birkenau? Wojciech Soczewica on why we must never forget this unique monument to evil
What Would Other Species Tell Us If They Could Talk? POD author Laline Paull on telling "humanimal" stories in the voice of other species
Why Stress Can Be Good For Us: Ben Ramalingam on turning pressure into performance and crisis into creativity