Votes of Confidence: A Young
Person’s Guide to American Elections. By Jeff Fleischer. Zest Books.
$13.99.
Future Smart: Managing the
Game-Changing Trends That Will Transform Your World. By James Canton. Da
Capo. $17.50.
Timely it certainly is, but
Jeff Fleischer’s Votes of Confidence
is more than that: it is a first-rate introduction to American elections in the
hyper-communicative digital age, designed for readers young enough to remember
only one or two presidential election cycles but – for that very reason –
extremely useful as well for their parents and for other “old hands” at
elections who are trying to figure out what all of today’s currents and
countercurrents mean. For the most part refreshingly nonpartisan, Fleischer’s
book manages to communicate the basics of the American political system while
keeping the civics lessons interesting through abundant use of anecdotes and
examples. A discussion of the pluses and minuses of the electoral college, for
example, comes with a box highlighting some of the obscurities of the system:
Maine and Nebraska divide their
electoral votes proportionally; the District of Columbia gets three electoral
votes, but other non-state territories such as Puerto Rico and Guam do not get
any; and it is possible to win in the electoral college by succeeding in only
12 states – provided that seven of them are California, Texas, New York,
Florida, Illinois, Pennsylvania, and Ohio, and an eighth is either New Jersey
of Michigan. This sort of information really highlights the strangeness of the
U.S. political process – but Fleischer chooses to be explanatory about such
oddities, rather than either approving or condemnatory. Some of the history
here is interesting on its own, such as a list of presidents from five (no, not
two) political parties: Republican, Democratic, Democratic Republican, Whig and
Federalist (plus the party-less George Washington). What is even more
interesting is Fleischer’s observation on the history: “Political parties tend
to take turns holding federal power for long stretches, and that includes the
presidency. Some of that is a natural ebb and flow between two parties, some is
because the parties’ positions evolve, and some has to do with changing voter
demographics.” Comments like this are thoughtful; others are thought-provoking,
such as the discussion of the bizarre things some people believe (4% in one
poll said that “shape-shifting lizard people have a hand in running the
government”).
A section called “Where to
Get Your Information” is a helpful guide to technology use and misuse in the
political arena, and includes an explanation of the value that newspaper reporting
continues to offer even though newspapers themselves are a fading medium. A
section called “Getting Past Fake News” is a guide to the use of
PolitiFact.com, FactCheck.org, Snopes.com and OpenSecrets.org, explaining what
sort of perspective on politics (and in some cases on other things) each site
offers. There is a section on “push polls” and the falsehoods they create or
perpetuate – sometimes with considerable success – and one on meaningless news
stories, such as “ones about who’s winning in the national polls before
primaries even start.” These sidelights to the main narrative about how government
is organized at local, state and federal levels appear so often that they take
over much of the narrative of Votes of
Confidence and, in truth, make the political process seem more interesting
– and even messier – than it tends to be on a day-to-day basis. Fleischer also
tells young readers (and any others) various ways to get involved in politics beyond
just voting, including volunteering during a campaign, becoming an activist
outside the campaign structure, even running for office oneself. Whether office-seeking
will be appealing to readers who absorb all the intricacies, misuse of power
and occasional outright malfeasance discussed in Votes of Confidence is by no means certain. But at least they will
know that they have the option to get deeply involved in a deeply flawed system
that, despite everything, occasionally produces some engaging leaders and even
some competent ones.
The extent to which
political leaders – or, for that matter, business leaders or other leaders –
can affect people’s everyday lives tends to be vastly overestimated, including
by the leaders themselves. The same may be said of so-called “thought leaders,”
such as James Canton, who heads a “think tank” that advises political and
business leaders on things that are likely to happen in the future and that
will affect them and their constituents. There is an inherent flaw in this
model, shown by the usual description of what think tanks like Canton’s do:
they provide advice on “future trends.” But a trend is an extension of something
already in existence, and it is a safe bet that many of the most significant
developments affecting everyday life in the future will come from people and
events that break with trends rather
than extending them. There is an excellent example in science fiction of the
1950s, which correctly predicted vast increases in computer power and the
increasing use of computers in everyday work and home life – but which did so
on the basis of computers getting bigger and bigger so they could handle more
and more of the tasks that they would surely be called upon to do. It was all
so right, and so wrong. Today’s predictions for the future are likely to be no
better. But it is nevertheless interesting to have some, and to think through
the implications if they do come to pass – or, for that matter, if they do not come to pass, but some contrary
approach takes hold. And that is why Future
Smart is a compelling read: the chances are that a lot of what it contains
will never happen, but some of what
it contains probably will, even if not exactly as Canton predicts. Thinking of
the book as a series of “what ifs,” and trying to follow the implications of
its notions, is a fascinating intellectual exercise, although any corporate or
government leader who uses Future Smart
as a procedural manual has clearly been promoted above his or her level of
competence. This is a book that is dense, difficult and debatable, and its
subtitle (“…that will transform your
world,” emphasis added) is vastly overconfident. But it offers intriguing ideas
about subjects with which readers will already be acquainted: globalization,
work and jobs, education, climate and more. In discussing robots, for example,
Canton writes that “cybernetic enhancement with robotic components will be the
norm by 2025,” which seems like a startling statement until you think about
exactly what a “robotic component” might be. How about prosthetic limbs?
Implanted defibrillators? Replacements for arthritic knees? Where you think we
go depends in part on where you think we already are. Canton reasonably
anticipates some of the difficulties that will emerge: “We will encounter
serious ethical, security, and social issues due to our robotic creations,” he
writes. But he is also confident that “we will be working hard to make robots,
androids, and virtual bots more like us or the ideal versions of humans.” Well,
perhaps – but there is a psychological factor that Canton ignores or is unaware
of, in which humans tend to find humanlike creations frightening or just plain
creepy to the extent that they approximate human appearance. An almost-human
robot would, for most people, be more frightening than one that could genuinely
be mistaken for a human being – but how to get to the genuine-seeming one
without first developing the approximation?
These are the sorts of
questions that Future Smart raises
constantly but never tries to answer. That makes sense: this is a very
broad-brush view of where things may be going if current trends in a variety of
fields continue without major, unpredicted “black swan” changes disrupting
existing patterns. Regarding medicine, for example, Canton foresees a move from
reactive medicine (used after a problem develops) to predictive medicine that
employs “the tools to predict and prevent disease” using “the new forces of
medicine such as stem cell therapy, bio-printing, and genomics.” To show where he
believes medicine is heading, Canton helpfully provides a 10-item chart of its
“game-changing future,” much of it (like much of what Canton presents
elsewhere) involving technology: 3D bio-printing, robotic surgeons, “the
coevolution of humans and technology,” “Big Data science,” “digital health,”
and so on. Some of these items will likely come to pass, although likely in
ways other than the mostly straight-line predictions of Future Smart. But other, even-more-likely developments in medicine
are not on Canton’s radar. For example, he states that “access to personal
genomic data will forever change society, security, work, crime, education, and
health care,” but so grandiose a pronouncement is scarcely necessary when it
comes to everyday medicine. The fact is that doctors already know, and have
known for many years, that identical medicines in identical doses affect
different people differently – and not just because of age-related changes in
the way the body processes them. People’s differing genetic predispositions can
show, and likely will show in the
reasonably near future, just which medicines in just what doses will be most
effective for each individual who comes down with a particular disease. This is
not as dramatic a development as predictive medicine, to be sure, but anyone
desperately trying to decide whether to take acetaminophen or an NSAID for pain
will benefit from it. The point is that Canton thinks big and presents ideas
entertainingly, notably in “headlines from the future: 2025” throughout the
book. One of those says, “Google Predictive-Life Knows Who You Want to Be.”
Another says, “Studies Show Consumers Prefer Virtual Doctors.” A projected
price list from 2030 lists “Kidney: Free with insurance; Heart: $1,500,” and so
on. An imagined 2030 headline about climate says, “Atmospheric Scrubbers Reduce
Emissions by 70 Percent.” And so on. A great deal of what Canton says is
intriguing, and he predicts so many things that some of them will very likely
happen, if not necessarily in the way he expects (remember those presumably increasingly
gigantic computers for handling what we now call Big Data). There is no
question, however, that much of what Canton writes about will not occur, and that other,
unwritten-about things will. That is the nature of the future:
unpredictability, no matter how hard we try to predict it and how much think
tanks are paid to make reasonable-seeming projections. Future Smart is an overwrought but undeniably intriguing vision of
a world that will definitely not come to pass – including some elements that
will. When read with that understanding, it is an intellectually exhilarating
experience.
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