Doug Casey on “The Diamond Age”

Guest Post by Doug Casey

Science fiction has always offered both a more accurate and more timely look at the future than any think tank. For one thing, a good book is the product of a genius, not a committee of suits trying to reach a consensus. And a format of fiction allows one to speculate in ways that a “serious person” can’t do in nonfiction.

Every educated person should have read the classics by Jules Verne, Robert Heinlein, Isaac Asimov, and Arthur C. Clarke, among others. Add Neal Stephenson to that list. I’ve been a fan of Stephenson’s novel The Diamond Age since it was published in 1995. I strongly recommend you read the book.

There are many themes in The Diamond Age, which refers to a near-term future (I’ll guess around 2050) when nanotechnology has transformed much of life. Although not nearly as radically as I believe will actually be the case. (See my essays on the future here and here.)

But one theme in the book is quite a breakthrough, and spot-on. It posits the creation of “phyles” as the major form of social and political organization. The word comes from the same root as phylum, from the Greek, meaning “tribe” or “clan.” But I think it’s also a pun on the word “filial,” with its connotations of family.

The book posits, I believe correctly, that in the near future most nation states will have broken down. Many will have ceased to exist. It’s quite logical, because they’re a dysfunctional way for people to organize. And it’s happening right before our eyes. None of the countries in the Middle East, Africa, or Central Asia have any coherence. They’re just the result of some ruler’s military prowess, or some politicians drawing lines on a distant map. Nation states themselves have really only been around since the 17th century. Before that, people weren’t loyal to a country; they were loyal to a chief, a king, or an emperor.

Loyalty to a country can make some sense, on at least a primitive atavistic level, as long as the inhabitants of the “country” share a common language, religion, ethnicity, and customs. But it makes no sense when they have little in common. So it’s natural, and salubrious, for the various religious, ethnic, racial, cultural, or economic groups within a country that’s become too big, too “diverse,” and too “inclusive,” to want to get out. Everyone recognizes – even if they don’t say it – that a national government is just a vehicle for theft, benefiting the group that controls it.

As the world becomes more educated, the average man becomes more acutely aware of that fact. And as jet travel and the internet become universal, people start to realize they might have almost nothing in common with their so-called “countrymen.” And a lot more in common with people who may be on the other side of the globe, many of whom will feel the same way about their own countrymen.

I can tell you that I have much more in common with friends in the Congo or China than I do with my fellow Americans living down the road from me in a trailer park. I have nothing in common with them. These people not only aren’t my friends, they’re liabilities. And may turn into active enemies under the right circumstances. I’d rather associate with people with whom I share common values and interests, not just the same government ID.

In any event, almost all the world’s nation states are terminally burdened with debt, taxes, regulations and increasingly, strife between groups fighting for either a teat on the milk cow or political power. The nation state is a dinosaur; it no longer makes sense in a world with today’s technology and demographics.

This explains what we’ve seen in the last generation: the breakup of states. The USSR into 15 components. Yugoslavia into six. Czechoslovakia into two. Sudan into two. This is just the opening round. Most European countries have secessionist movements. Russia should eventually break up into a dozen new states. China into at least a half-dozen. Brazil into at least two. Bolivia into at least two, etc., etc.

Military Violence and Terror

In fact, the primary reason that’s given for the very existence of the nation state is to defend its inhabitants. But, with the changing nature of warfare, that’s one of the things it’s least able to do. Can it defend against a nuclear attack? No. At best it can just threaten to counterattack.

In fact, a country with a big military stationed all over the world, not only can’t defend its citizens, but actually draws in attacks by making enemies among the natives in far off places. In the past, it didn’t matter – the natives were immobile and powerless. Today they can go anywhere and access a wide variety of weapons.

In fact, governments are so united against “terrorism” because it’s not just a very effective tactic against the nation state – it really can only be used against the nation state. Governments couldn’t care less about the few hundreds of people that might be killed in a terror attack. They care because it threatens their existence.

In today’s world, nation states are no longer the big risk to other nation states. Rather, it’s groups like ISIS and al Qaeda that are a much bigger threat. They can’t be destroyed by dropping a nuke on their cities; they don’t have cities. They can be everywhere and anywhere. But they can easily attack the cities of their enemy. And those are just well-known Islamic threats. There will likely be many others of many varieties, on templates as different as the Red Army Faction, Aum Shinrikyo, or FARC.

The safest way to avoid attack in the age of cheap and easily available atomic, biological, and chemical weapons is to be dispersed. At least not to be part of a geographic nation state. From a military point of view a nation is about as viable as cavalry before WW1 or battleships during WW2.

Benefits

Not being part of a nation state ameliorates a lot of problems for a person, but it’s not a total solution. What The Diamond Age posits, and I think is going to happen, is that people will form phyles, joining in an alliance according to what’s most important to them. Or the way they “self-identify,” to use a currently fashionable term. Jews famously stick together relative to the goyim. That’s one reason at least part of Israel (likely excluding the Hasidim and Palestinians) will survive as a nation. One reason Mormons are so successful is that they favor each other, like the Jews. Muslims (although rarely economically successful, for other cultural reasons) definitely do the same. Birds of a feather (all the outraged hysteria about racism notwithstanding) do, in fact, tend to flock together.

So here’s my prediction of what’s going to happen over the next couple of generations. Many nation states will simply collapse or disappear. Incidentally, I don’t think the U.S. will be a survivor. The country used to share a common culture, albeit with quaint regional variations. That’s no longer the case. The election of Trump has crystalized long-simmering, and growing antagonisms. It’s not that Americans just have a political difference of opinion. It now boils down to mutual cultural hatred, and on a visceral level. It’s only been exacerbated by the push for “multiculturalism,” always a stupid and destructive concept, from the usual suspects.

Take California, the Left Coast, for instance. Even now some of them are talking about divorcing themselves from hated Flyover Country. But even California makes no sense as a political entity. What does the Mexican population have in common with Silicon Valley? Nothing. What do the hippies in Humboldt County have in common with the Los Angelenos? Nothing. What do farmers in the Central Valley have in common with anybody else in the state? Nothing.

Incidentally, we can break down Canada and Mexico the same way. Much smaller entities within these (and all other) countries would be much more viable. But still anachronistic. And suboptimal.

So what will happen? Everywhere people will reorganize for mutual support, defense, insurance, companionship, and everything else. But it won’t have much to do with politics as we now know it. They’ll form phyles.

An outrageous concept, I know. Now you see why radical ideas are best presented in the form of novels.

-----------------------------------------------------
It is my sincere desire to provide readers of this site with the best unbiased information available, and a forum where it can be discussed openly, as our Founders intended. But it is not easy nor inexpensive to do so, especially when those who wish to prevent us from making the truth known, attack us without mercy on all fronts on a daily basis. So each time you visit the site, I would ask that you consider the value that you receive and have received from The Burning Platform and the community of which you are a vital part. I can't do it all alone, and I need your help and support to keep it alive. Please consider contributing an amount commensurate to the value that you receive from this site and community, or even by becoming a sustaining supporter through periodic contributions. [Burning Platform LLC - PO Box 1520 Kulpsville, PA 19443] or Paypal

-----------------------------------------------------
To donate via Stripe, click here.
-----------------------------------------------------
Use promo code ILMF2, and save up to 66% on all MyPillow purchases. (The Burning Platform benefits when you use this promo code.)
Click to visit the TBP Store for Great TBP Merchandise
As an Amazon Associate I Earn from Qualifying Purchases
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
15 Comments
hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
March 9, 2019 3:21 pm

“Nation states themselves have really only been around since the 17th century. Before that, people weren’t loyal to a country; they were loyal to a chief, a king, or an emperor.”

That’s false.

“I can tell you that I have much more in common with friends in the Congo or China than I do with my fellow Americans living down the road from me in a trailer park. I have nothing in common with them. These people not only aren’t my friends, they’re liabilities.”

The globalist speaks.

What a disgraceful article.

UPDATE: Just read this almost perfect counterpoint to Casey’s article over at Chateau Heartiste-

From the article-

“Your greatest loyalty should be to your family and your folk, not to the needs of a stranger. It is more heartless to abandon those who place faith in you than it is to neglect the needs of an outsider.”

https://heartiste.wordpress.com/2019/03/09/diversity-and-elitism/

JimmyTorpedo
JimmyTorpedo
  hardscrabble farmer
March 9, 2019 6:32 pm

If you read the Diamond Age, you would understand the concept of Phyles better.
Your quote from Heartiste is actually what Casey is speaking of. Not a counterpoint at all.
I highly recommend the book. The ending makes you laugh and cheer and get chills all at the same time.
Get a used copy off of AbeBooks for $0.99 with free shipping.
SERIOUSLY.
ALL OF YOU

e.d. ott
e.d. ott
  JimmyTorpedo
March 10, 2019 9:00 am

Thanks for the book recommendation. I’d like to think that was the real gist of The International Carpetbagger’s latest article. I’m ignoring the comment about white ex-pat commonality in the Congo. That’s BS.
Besides, Trailer Park Cledus might actually have some ammo he might be willing to trade.

jimmieoakland
jimmieoakland
  hardscrabble farmer
March 9, 2019 6:50 pm

I take your point. I come at this from the standpoint of someone who has 8 siblings, 30+ nieces and nephews, and an untold number of cousins, plus their families. We are united by blood, a common history, and religion, and could be considered somewhat of a tribe. We all know what someone means when they say it, even if an outsider would not. Of course, there are unwritten rules, customs that must be observed, obligations, and boundaries in place to avoid misunderstandings and giving offense. There is also support, generally coming in the form of advice, consolation, and at times, financial assistance. Some members may be, in a sense, liabilities, but as a part of the family, help must still be proffered. I also have many friends, who may share my interest in sports, or politics, or general outlook on life, but they are not and cannot be my family, which requires a higher loyalty. It is unclear what the “phyles” proposed by Casey are supposed to be based upon, other than some unspecified common interests. This sound suspiciously like the ‘social contract’ writ small. But familys and tribes are not based on contract, they form organically, over time, and are much more than legalistic agreements that ensure comity. And you just can’t order one up, like a pizza. They are based on a common history and a shared vision that encompasses the whole person and their relationship to something greater than mere individual interests.

niebo
niebo
March 9, 2019 3:48 pm

“salubrious”: favorable to or promoting health or well-being; salubrious habits

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/salubrious

At first, I was like, whoa dude . . . you just derailed the entire article by throwing in a word that you made up! So I went to Merriam and typed “salubirous”, which ain’t a word, and I said “Ha! I knew it!” but then I checked my spellerator and said “Aw . . . doofus!” So I retyped it and got the definition and finished the rest of the article without being hindered by anymore super-intellectualized wordiage. . . ness.

And I get what he’s saying, that one day, we will pledge allegiance to our local peeps and NOT to the faraway peeps that we may have once respected but who seldom EVER respected us except to tax and/or take our stuff, BUT I don’t see how, given all the transhumanism that (threatens) promises to take-over and take-us-over, that one day a bunch of semi-robots will be bowing down before some other semi-robots, lik e they are anything special. I mean, when we are ALL attached to and connected to the CLOUD, right, what need will we have of leaders, because, I mean, we will all be gods, or (at least) godlets, right?

When we are all machines, we will be free!

Right?

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  niebo
March 9, 2019 4:43 pm

Before we came up here ten years ago I had a bunch of old writing downloaded onto floppy discs. That was just for storage of words. Wanted to access it while I was laid up, there’s maybe ten people in the country that can transfer it to a USB, so I sent it out, waited a couple of weeks and got back a bunch of corrupted files out of which 10% was legible.

So human beings- in the next twenty years or so- are going to be downloading their entire lifetime/personality/brain onto whatever technology happens t be good that particular year and then they can live forever as a robot?

Okay.

And I thought people couldn’t go any further off the deep end.

This is all pie in the sky dreamy feelz. YOU CAN’T GET PASSING SAT SCORES WITHOUT LOWERING THE BAR EVERY COUPLE OF YEARS, BUT YOU’RE GOING TO ENGINEER A RACE OF SUPER HUMAN CYBORGS THAT ARE GOING TO LIVE FOREVER AND RULE THE WORLD WITH DOUG CASEY AND HIS FRIENDS FROM CHINA AND THE CONGO?

IS THIS NATIONAL LAMPOON?

STOP THE RIDE I WANT TO GET OFF!!!!

Darrell Dullnig
Darrell Dullnig
  hardscrabble farmer
March 9, 2019 6:39 pm

Hardscrable, no one is forcing you to read this Casey article. Are you trying to have the man crucified for having an opinion that runs counter to your view of the world? Do what you think is best and leave the other to seek his own. And, scrap the all caps communication; only God has that prerogative.

Pequiste
Pequiste
  Darrell Dullnig
March 9, 2019 9:24 pm

C’mon Darrell; let’s allow HSF to yell some. He’s been recuperating a whole long winter in snow country, needs to get some angst out of his system and will probably be feeling much better once some fresh maple syrup is boiled up in the sugar shack.

niebo
niebo
  Darrell Dullnig
March 9, 2019 10:57 pm

Well, to be fair to HSF . . . he WAS responding to my sarc/ post (no notification given by me), BUT if you hit a bong two or three times, the post I posted might actually make some sense in a low-IQ kinda way. MY point is that, Casey suggests that we will, as a species, REGRESS to tribalism when the entire REST OF THE WORLD is celebrating the eventuality of EVERYONE getting microchips in their belly-buttons. And nipples.

He can’t have it both ways (Casey, I mean). Humanity either resorts to neo-tribalism OR to trans-humanism. That is, to simplify, we become braves to some unknown chief, or we become “gods” who swear allegiance to none.

To me, both futures (in any long-term, more than a single generation, sense) are absurd. We will fuck trans-humanism up just as we fucked tribalism up – in this present narcissistic world, everybody want to be chief, NOT a brave, and that, near as I can tell, is how it always goes . . . eventually. So, when we are all implanted and interconnected, mark my words, the greater gods will prevail . . . and we will kill ourselves to kill each other.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Darrell Dullnig
March 10, 2019 9:25 am

The all caps is my way of showing outrage. How many times have I employed it over the last ten years, twice? He deserved it. This is one of the worst pieces I have read in a long, long time and it’s ostensibly from someone who ought to know better. And his faux social preening (all my besties live in the Congo) coupled with his bigotry against his own people (filthy trailer trash Whites are beneath contempt because of their economic situation) is doubly galling. I dislike progressives because of their ideology, but my righteous indignation is reserved to traitors and turncoats.

My beef with any writer who begins with false assumptions is that their conclusions are going to be flawed. Casey is a smart guy, he’s not new to this, but making the claim that nations are some kind of new development is absolute hogwash. And most of what he refers to as nation states are nothing of the kind, they are progressive experiments in mongrelized populations living in the same geographic area, the exact OPPOSITE of what a nation has always been historically. The root of the word is natal, related by birth, it’s not difficult. I hate it even more when a really smart guy with a very large readership tries to convince them of something that’s patently false, especially when he’s hawking a service for financial gain.

And this hallucinatory fiction of transhumanism is so completely off the wall it amazes me that anyone with an IQ above room temperature actually believes in it. They can’t cure cancer after spending a trillion dollars over the last 75 years but they’re going to be putting people’s brains into indestructible robotic shells so we’ll live for eternity in the next 20 years? Are you shitting me? You’ve got to replace your cell phone every two or three years, you think people are going to be satisfied spending forever locked in some Boston Robotics dog suit? Come on.

JimmyTorpedo
JimmyTorpedo
  hardscrabble farmer
March 10, 2019 7:41 pm

I think Tribalism has a much longer history than nations HSF if you look at the past 100 000 years.
I think you have a touch of cabin fever.
Read the book and get back to me in the morning.

niebo
niebo
  hardscrabble farmer
March 9, 2019 11:11 pm

HSF –

BUT YOU’RE GOING TO ENGINEER A RACE OF SUPER HUMAN CYBORGS THAT ARE GOING TO LIVE FOREVER AND RULE THE WORLD WITH DOUG CASEY AND HIS FRIENDS FROM CHINA AND THE CONGO?

. . . no. I failed to designate my BS as sarc/, and that’s on me. I apologize for not being more specific. My point is that, according to the current zeitgeist, humanity and machines will meld within the very near future and we will all be cyborg-godlets. Casey suggest that we will, to simplify, revert to neo-tribalism. To me, we choose one future or the other. The two cannot co-exist. No trans-human, cloud-based “god” will bow to another trans-human, cloud-based “god”. We will all be gods and will destroy each other to be the ONE, or we will be braves to some as-yet known chief(s).

I just happen to disagree with Casey. Barring an EMP that reverts us all to the stone-age, I think (fear) that we will realize the promise of the serpent in the garden . . . and become “like” god. Which, I am sure, will attract HIS undivided attention and in biblical proportions.

CCRider
CCRider
March 9, 2019 4:55 pm

This is a most intriguing futuristic vision I have ever read. I’ve resented Casey in that he’s rich enough (like Stockman) that his constant pitching get-rich-quick schemes are unbecoming and tawdry. Speculation is a guessing game; a reasonably educated guess but a guess just the same. Don’t try to bullshit me that you KNOW what any market is going to do in the next month. You don’t. It’s a stab in the dark. But this long range vision has genuine appeal. At almost 70 I, like the other Boomers, were shaped by WW2. It was the high water mark for nation state credibility. The nation state was exulted by a war that started with our naval base in Hawaii getting attacked in total surprise and ended resoundingly with a government sponsored nuclear devise used against the hated Japs. They were squinty-eyed, buck toothed monsters and we were the good guys motivated by pure goodness.

As time went by we gradually realized that most of what we were taught was total bullshit. World War 1, the ‘Depression’, World War 2, the JFK assassination, Vietnam, 9/11, etc, etc. All bullshit. Now we don’t believe a fucking word that comes out of ‘official’ sources. We now realize that it’s all about the narrative. If you can control what people hear you don’t have to give a shit about truth. That’s irrelevant. All that matters is that they can get enough people to believe whatever story they’re pitching to shape events. We came to realize the truth W spoke when he called the Constitution ‘a goddamn piece of paper’ as did Andrew Cuomo when he said that ‘America was never that great’. Yes, they’re both deceitful, power mad pricks but they were right. We were chasing false idols and reality was destined to straighten us out. And now as this country grinds down to it’s last chapter we can, after a painful realignment, perhaps find a new and more honest way of managing ourselves.

So we either sink into another dark age or find our way to societies governed by the only way of dealing honorably with each other: Voluntarism. And that means the nation state must die. Good bye and good riddance.

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
March 10, 2019 12:41 am

“What The Diamond Age posits, and I think is going to happen, is that people will form phyles, joining in an alliance according to what’s most important to them. Or the way they “self-identify,” to use a currently fashionable term. Jews famously stick together relative to the goyim.”

Race and religion will be what phyles will be based on. Especially if it goes nuclear, so to speak. Laugh but race is #1 on the list of like kind. How else did we get borders with like kind inside of those borders for thousands of years?

Onnie
Onnie
March 11, 2019 12:49 pm

“Every educated person should have read…”

Oh go fuck off.