JM Greer: The Death of the Internet
[font size=5]The Death of the Internet: A Pre-Mortem[/font]
The mythic role assigned to progress in todays popular culture has any number of odd effects, but one of the strangest is the blindness to the downside that clamps down on the collective imagination of our time once people become convinced that something or other is the wave of the future. It doesnt matter in the least how many or obvious the warning signs are, or how many times the same tawdry drama has been enacted. Once some shiny new gimmick gets accepted as the next glorious step in the invincible march of progress, most people lose the ability to imagine that the wave of the future might just do what waves generally do: that is to say, crest, break, and flow back out to sea, leaving debris scattered on the beach in its wake.
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a strong case can be made that the internet, like the SST, doesnt actually make economic sense; its being propped up by a set of financial gimmickry with a distinct resemblance to smoke and mirrors; and when those go awayand they willmuch of what makes the internet so central a part of pop culture will go away as well.