Oppressive innovation is the dark twin of subversive innovation. Both are born from the same technological womb but nurtured by different ideologues. While discussing the means to wither central authority, we must not live in illusions. State and corporate actors are working on technologies designed to deepen, not alleviate, your subjugation.
Cautious Optimism, Zealous Enthusiasm
If you agree with Steven Pinker's research from Better Angels of Our Nature, the use of violence and predation, particularly as an approach to resource acquisition, has trended downward over time. It's no accident that improvements in political organization and more widely distributed prosperity make us less likely to engage in war and political shenanigans, the latter being “war by other means.”
So we mustn’t forget that subversive innovation includes institutional innovations, such as enshrining individual rights, protecting private property, or applying the common law to internalize externalities.
So while we may never be rid of our paleolithic instincts, say to control resources or people by any means necessary, we might continue to mute or tamp down those behaviors through repeated application of markets and moral practice. That includes raising the costs for those who might be wired for predation and parasitism.
Imagine a population curve that goes roughly from COLLABORATIVE to SOCIOPATHIC, where most people are clustered in a mundane center (the top of the bell curve) called PEACEABLE. If Pinker is right, the curve has moved slowly away from SOCIOPATHIC toward COLLABORATIVE over time.
Will it always? I cannot say.
Happily, though, there are widespread incentives and historical momentum for that move in the long term, despite lurches, fits, and starts. To embrace subversive innovation, then, is not to resolve theoretical debates between minarchists and anarchists. These are pretty useless in a world that changes too quickly for academic arguments that move too few, or constitutional moments that never come.
We must show zealous enthusiasm in moving this human curve toward COLLABORATIVE. In other words, those who cherish self-sovereignty and self-organization have a duty to architect systems that move the curve away from SOCIOPATHIC, walking away from the finite game. Such will help us find ways for the world to get richer sustainably, offering more people higher living standards.
Fundamentally, though, we must find a way to arm the bees. That means discovering more post-political solutions. That means thinking about the world you want your kids to inherit.
That means embracing subversive innovation.
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