Don’t Fear the Future
Americans Must Learn Again to Make the Future, Not Fear It
For some, the future is terra incognita, foreign land that we cannot know until we arrive there — or rather, until it arrives here. But that’s not quite right, is it? Because while you can’t predict the future, you can catch glimpses of it right here in the present if you know where to look.
Optimists like to imagine a future in which today’s problems, difficult as they are, have been solved — and maybe we finally get our flying cars. Pessimists, on the other hand, maintain a darker view, one that’s extremes are replete with gray rhinos, black swans, and boiling frogs.
After a long, brutal year of endemic plague punctuated by widespread civil unrest, it’s easy for many Americans to understand and adopt the pessimist’s stance, that is, to see the future as threat. Glued to our devices, we have grown accustomed to daily reports of the world’s unraveling. The information superhighways that were supposed to lead us into a glowing age of prosperity appear instead to have left us at either dead-ends or worse — in smoking pileups. After perhaps the most contentious — and worse, incompetent — presidency in our history, the nation is as anxious, confused, and as dangerously divided as ever.