Let鈥檚 stop using the word 鈥渄ystopian鈥 to describe life since U.S. President Donald Trump took office on Jan. 20. We鈥檙e long past that.
Reality has high-jumped over a word we once used to describe science fiction or the weather in August or the vanishing of spring birdsong. Technology has moved faster than we dreamed it could. The U.S. is collapsing fast.
Take Mark Zuckerberg. Please. Always the leading contestant in the long-running Worst American pageant, he has already sold two million Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses, which are now as primitive as pinhole shoe cameras were for starter incels.
聽that a software update has given smart glasses a camera, speakers and a microphone as well as AI, 鈥渓etting users ask questions about what they were looking at, from zoo animals to historical landmarks.鈥
That鈥檚 not what the kind of men who wear these glasses, tech鈥檚 dopey acolytes, will be asking about. The answer will be 鈥渁dult human females, backing away.鈥
The more updates Meta adds, the thicker and heavier the glasses. Not good for the weird co-workers who are Meta鈥檚 target demographic but you know the glasses will become vanishingly slim and hide-able. Then everyone will wear AI glasses whether they need them to read or not, at which point smart people will shun them.听聽聽
But as I say, this tech damage is old. I was only thinking about societal collapse because I threw my back out and couldn鈥檛 hold the new 900-page print Robert Galbraith mystery on my lap. I read it on the dying Amazon technology that is Kindle and reread old paperbacks until the pain retreated.
I did this as I watched Anderson Cooper on CNN recite daily Trump news. My paperback of choice was Gary Shteyngart鈥檚 2010 聽about American self-destruction.
In his novel, people wear an 鈥渁pparat,鈥 a device that broadcasts net worth, health stats, etc. to every other apparat in the room, precluding conversation. With China being the supreme global power, the only reliable currency is yuan-pegged. Post-human services corporations sell eternal life to billionaires. Print books, considered 鈥渟tinky,鈥 vanish forever. A credit crisis swallows the U.S., riots begin, and the National Guard hunts down Low Net Worth humans to kidnap and kill.
And the U.S. is at war with Venezuela. The word jabbed at my brain from two directions, the book and the TV screen.
Everything Shteyngart predicted 15 years ago was coming true. It was as if Shteyngart鈥檚 fiction was being read by Cooper as current news: an angry President Xi; the wellness craze; Putin and Xi ;聽Trump endangering the dollar by attacking the Fed; the National Guard invading U.S. cities; and the American air attack .听
I became light-headed. Must be overmedicating, I told myself. Either CNN was making it up (possible), Cooper was speaking only to me personally via thought waves (maybe), or Cooper was reading the book aloud (possible on Audible).听
Venezuela? Simultaneously, via an old book and a dying American cable news show?
Or maybe the book was intolerably prescient (probable), thus proving my thesis that it鈥檚 not dystopian if it鈥檚 normal.
I was no smarter than the lazy 2010 book critic (they existed then) who summed up the novel as 鈥渢he bleakness of Super Sad鈥檚 over-surveillanced and politically restrictive America is relieved by a sweeping romance,鈥 massively missing the point.
I was just as unaware. I had called “Super Sad” a comedy. The joke鈥檚 on me.
American journalists who once survived by timidly calling MAGA Trump 鈥減olitically restrictive鈥 are today alone on their apparats, on Mediums and Substacks. AI rules. Will CNN survive? Will Trump鈥檚 missile attack become a Venezuelan land war?
Shteyngart, who emigrated from the old Soviet Union at age 7, predicted this 15 years ago. The saddest and funniest of Russian-American writers, he knows his history.
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