User: Davepape
– Public Domain
But in this case, there's more to the name change than meets the eye:
Facebook's new moniker 'Meta' is shorthand for 'metaverse', a major new technology and culture shift that Big Tech is trying to force feed anyone who uses the Internet.
And in the words of a friend who works for
another Big Tech giant, this new direction is "terrifying"...
It's useful to note that this is a seismic shift,
comparable to the Internet in scope and scale, and it's planned to
become the dominant paradigm for human communications, transitioning
our business, social, and cultural life from physical to online
environments.
This new reality can be accessed, of course, only by paying customers and those in a position to afford and understand it.
It is a technology designed by elites and for
elites and implicitly leaves behind much of humanity in its
wake.
But that's about to change and, if Big Tech has its way, it will have huge implications for all of us.
This radical change in how we live our lives is
something that no one will get to vote on as a new and unprecedented
kind of technocratic governance begins to replace many of the
functions of traditional government and, I believe, even democracy
itself.
Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos are exploring the realm of space and Musk has a Mars mission planned.
Globally oriented elites have a huge head start on the rest of the population for one simple reason:
These elites looked out for themselves which is what they do best.
And governments just kicked the can down the
road, something they're also quite adept at doing (and are still at
it as the results of
COP26 have shown).
No problem…we'll just kick back and don our Meta
headsets (or worse get a brain implant) and escape into an
artificially fabricated world that lets us turn our back on the
massive ecological and environmental problems we now face.
This organization is the official mouthpiece of the billionaire class.
The Davos elite is also promulgating its agenda through the mainstream media, ownership of which has been gradually appropriated by representatives of Big Tech.
(Time, incidentally, recently ran a special issue on climate change which served up a very long-winded article on the importance of developing lab grown meat.)
Other huge technocratic changes are in the works.
Everything in sight is targeted as a huge profit-making opportunity including the,
If re-designing animals stretches your credibility, here's what a recent WEF newsletter said about the need to genetically modify animals as a beneficial way of dealing with the climate "crisis"...:
Originally, it did empower us with a rich array of resources. Many of those resources still exist even as some are being gradually clawed back, modified to suit corporate interests, or in some cases outright censored.
On balance,
As more and more corporate control was levied, Internet-based technology began to intrude subtly on our personal spaces in exchange for the Faustian bargain of a new set of technological "conveniences".
Now Big Tech is aiming to not only extend this intrusion with technologies like Alexa but to make life impossible to live without it…hence the notion of a metaverse.
Working in conjunction with elites and Big Tech social engineers, this next big initiative will be even more intrusive and dehumanizing and is being carried out under the rubric of a specious "philosophy" called transhumanism,
The first wave of transhumanism's new invasiveness will come with so called wearable devices i.e.,
The next phase will be an attempt to physically wire our bodies into an electronic alternate reality where privacy and individual autonomy will be nonexistent.
(The WEF received a huge wave of pushback when
they posted a video with the message: "You
will own nothing, have no privacy, and be happy".)
Rather they relate to our right to shape, safeguard, and control the quality of our own lives and the future direction of humanity at a precarious moment in history.
On a more personal note, I've studied and written about the cultural impacts of technology for many years including essays on the flight from physical into virtual in my book Digital Mythologies.
I believe that these issues require critical
thinking skills for deciding what kind of world we want to live in
since the mass of humanity is not being asked if these invasive
technologies are acceptable or desirable.
Rather, I believe that the true path forward is to reconnect with the beauty of our planetary home and the natural world or, in the words of cultural historian Morris Berman, to "re-enchant the world."
We need to somehow, through the seemingly
unstoppable momentum of runaway technology, find a way to return to
a way of living that retains the use of limited and intelligent
technology where appropriate without allowing it to run roughshod
over the core values of humanity we still cherish...
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