Cory Doctorow's 'Fully Automated Luxury Communist Civilization'
The author of Little Brother and Walkaway on dystopia, the end of scarcity, and what's going to get him arrested

Cory Doctorow, of BoingBoing and Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) fame, has returned to adult fiction after a long stint in the young adult hinterlands (Little Brother, Homeland). His new novel, Walkaway (Tor), circles back to the theme of his first novel, 2003's Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom: the question of what a post-scarcity world might look like. A fascinating cadre of John Galt–style opters-out form the core of the new novel, but the story is concept-driven, not character-driven.
As usual, Doctorow's politics permeate his writing. And, as usual, they're just heterodox enough to provide moments of delightful confirmation bias and squirm-inducing challenge for readers of nearly every ideological stripe.
Doctorow, a civil libertarian who identifies with the political left, has staked out a broad and eccentric territory for his fiction and nonfiction beats, covering topics from privacy to drones to Digital Rights Management (DRM) to open-source software creation.
The Walkaway audiobook is a particular delight, featuring guest appearances from a ramshackle celebrity cast, including Amber Benson, Justine Eyre, Amanda Palmer, and Wil Wheaton. All versions of the novel are free from distribution-restricting DRM protections. The downside is that standard providers like Audible won't carry it.
When Doctorow stopped by Reason's D.C. office in April, he handed out credit card–shaped USB drives loaded with the audiobook on his way out the door. Hardcover review copies also shipped with a similarly sized multitool. These little flourishes bring readers a few inches closer to Doctorow's subversive worldview, where it's always possible, even admirable, to thumb your nose at the rules imposed by governments, tech companies, and just about everyone else.
Reason: Let's talk about the word dystopia. It's a word no one knew 10 years ago and now everyone says all the time about pretty much every novel ever. Is this a dystopia in Walkaway, or a utopia?
Doctorow: I think that we mistake the furniture for the theme. We tend to think of books in which things are in crisis as being dystopian novels. But really it's a very hard job to write a dramatic novel—especially in the kind of pulpy science fiction tradition—in which things aren't going wrong. So for me, the thing that cleaves a utopia from a dystopia is what [essayist and critic] Rebecca Solnit says cleaves a disaster from a catastrophe: It's what we do when things go wrong. Do people pitch in and rise to the occasion? Or do they turn on their neighbors and eat them? That's the dystopian vision. The most dystopian thing you can imagine is that, but for the thin veneer of civilization, it would be a bloodbath.

Is Walkaway a prequel to Down And Out in the Magic Kingdom? It seems like a similar universe. Has the political take-away that you would want people to get out of those two books shifted, either because your views have changed or because facts on the ground have changed?
I think science fiction is not predictive in any meaningful way.
It's certainly not great at it.
We're Texas marksmen: We fire the shotgun into the side of the barn and draw the target around the place where the pellets hit. We just ignore all those stories that never came true.
But I also think that prediction is way overrated. I like what Dante did to the fortune tellers. He put them in a pit of molten shit up to their nipples with their heads twisted around backwards, weeping into their own ass cracks for having pretended that the future was knowable. If the future is knowable then it's inevitable. And if it's inevitable, why are we even bothering? Why get out of bed if the future is going to happen no matter what we do? Except I guess you're foreordained to.
I'm not a fatalist. The reason I'm an activist is because I think that the future, at least in part, is up for grabs. I think that there are great forces that produce some outcomes that are deterministic or semi-deterministic. And there are other elements that are up for grabs.
What science fiction does is not predictive, but it is sometimes diagnostic. Because across all the science fiction that has been written and is being written, and all the stuff that's being greenlit by editors or has been greenlit by editors, and all the stuff that readers can find and raise up or ignore—there's a kind of natural selection at work. The stuff that resonates with our aspirations and fears about technology and our futures, that stuff gets buoyed by market forces, by the marketplace of ideas, and becomes a really excellent tool for knowing what's in the minds of the world.
So the book itself, considered on its own, is a good way to know what's in the mind of the writer. The books that succeed tell you what's in the mind of the world. And if there's a lot of this stuff coming to a prominence at this moment, I think it does say something about the moment that we live in, that there's a certain amount of pessimism. There's a fear that we are being stampeded towards a mutually distrustful, internally divided future where we end up attacking each other rather than pulling together. I think even the most cynical person understands that if civilization collapses and you run for the hills, you aren't going to be a part of rebuilding it. The people who are part of rebuilding are those who run to the middle and get the power plant working again, reopen the hospital, and get the water filtration plant working again.
"That kind of coordination—where at the moment that something is needed, and at the moment where it's cheap to do it, it's done—is characteristic of the efficient-market hypothesis. It's characteristic of planned economy theory. It's the thing that everyone is shooting for."
This notion that my gain is your loss and that there's not enough to go around, and there's this big game of musical chairs and the chairs are being removed at speed, is a theme in a lot of the science fiction that's prominent right now.
Walkaway is in some ways a prequel to Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom. I certainly reread Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom with a pen and a highlighter and some post-its and made tons of notes before I started work on Walkaway, and I have a whole file of themes that I wanted to pick up.
Some of that is the understanding that I've come to in the 15-plus years since I wrote it. And some of it is wanting to respond back to the people who read Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom as a utopia and who didn't understand that there were dystopic elements.
It was a very mixed future. Reputation economics have the same winner-take-all problem—the Pikettian [problem that says the] rate of growth is always less than the rate of return on capital—and that produces insane runaway wealth disparity and dysfunction with misallocation of resources.
In Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom, your ability to run Disney World is based on how much esteem people hold you in. And so literally you can walk in and start handing out tickets. And if the people treat your tickets as though they're the right tickets, then you get to be the Czar of Disney World, which is the premise of the book.
Yet I'm sure you get people coming up and saying to you, "Oh my God, you basically predicted Uber's reputational system!"
Yeah.
You weren't alone in thinking about those reputation mechanisms as a powerful force [in the early '00s]. Charlie Stross has a bunch of great stuff in his books about how that might look, too.
Yes. I stole it from Slashdot's karma [system].
Right. So it feels both normal and dystopian to people simultaneously.
But I think Uber is normal and dystopian for a lot of people, too. All the dysfunctions of Uber's reputation economics, where it's one-sided—I can tank your business by giving you an unfair review. You have this weird, mannered kabuki in some Ubers where people are super obsequious to try and get you to five-star them. And all of that other stuff that's actually characteristic of Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom. I probably did predict Uber pretty well with what would happen if there are these reputation economies, which is that you would quickly have a have and a have-not. And the haves would be able to, in a very one-sided way, allocate reputation to have-nots or take it away from them, without redress, without rule of law, without the ability to do any of the things we want currency to do. So it's not a store of value, it's not a unit of exchange, it's not a measure of account. Instead this is just a pure system for allowing the powerful to exercise power over the powerless.
Isn't the positive spin on that: Well, yeah, but the way we used to do that allocation was by punching each other in the face?
Well, that's one of the ways we used to. I was really informed by a book by David Graeber called Debt: The First 5,000 Years, where he points out that the anthropological story that we all just used to punch each other in the face all the time doesn't really match the evidence. That there's certainly some places where they punched each other in the face and there's other places where they just kind of got along. Including lots of places where they got along through having long arguments or guilting each other.
I don't know. Kabuki for stars on the Uber app still seems better than the long arguments or the guilt.
That's because you don't drive Uber for a living and you've never had to worry that tomorrow you won't be able to.
Talk about the quasi-anarchic properties of the universe that Walkaway exists in. What exists of the law and who are the people operating outside of it?
The mainstream Walkaway world is called Default, which is a term I stole from Burning Man. The Default world is one in which the rule of law is entirely tilted to the favor of a small cadre of super-wealthy people who have game-rigged the system. And everybody else—the 99 percent—is in this very precarious position, where some of them are needed to make the automated systems go and some of them are needed to make sure that the people who do the work don't get too uppity, because they can always be fired. And then everyone else is kind of surplus to requirements.
And a lot of them walk away. They can [take an] escape hatch into a kind of bohemian demimonde where they move into brownfield sites left behind by toxic post-industrial implosion. They use drones to find the leftovers of the civilization that had once been there. And then they use software from the U.N. High Commission on Refugees to figure out how to recombine that to build a kind of fully automated luxury communist civilization, where you go on a scavenger hunt, you find all the stuff, and you build a huge Dr. Seussian amazing luxury hotel that anyone can stay in and that anyone can be the czar of and that anyone can contribute to. And it's built like a wiki, where people add things and people remove things and you can see who added what and who removed what, and you can decide collectively through deliberation, and sometimes through shitty arguments, and sometimes through very reasonable arguments. One of the things that the walkaway culture aspires to is that kind of rationalist mode of argument, where we're talking things over rigorously.
And it's pretty stable because it turns out the Default doesn't mind having an escape hatch. Bohemians are cute, right? I mean, there's a reason that loads of fast-fashion places and designers go to Burning Man to make notes on what to knock off for the runway next year. Because bohemia is a cool thing to mine. Grunge went from Seattle's seedy underground to Sears in six months. Bohemians are living labs.
But then a group of scientists who've been working in Default, figuring out the secrets of practical immortality for the superrich, decide that they don't really want to be complicit in helping the human race speciate into these infinitely prolonged god-like humans while the rest of us who are just mayflies are receding in their rearview mirror.
So they engage in a Promethean act. They steal the secrets of immortality—which they, after all, discovered—and bring them to the rest of us, and then the superrich realize that they're going to have to spend the rest of eternity with people they think of as being unworthy. And that triggers the Hellfire missiles and all-out war.
This is an analogy to open-source software development. And the phrase open source is one that people use widely to just mean "vaguely collaborative."
Spooks use it to mean just "stuff in the newspaper."
I know you're a part of the open-source community. How much of this book, or your work generally, is a metaphor for that?
I'm actually working on the thing that underpins screen open-source software, which I think is like Coasian coordination.
Abundance is this triangle.
"Bohemians are cute, right?…Bohemia is a cool thing to mine. Grunge went from Seattle's seedy underground to Sears in six months. Bohemians are living labs."
Up here is what we want. [Economist John Maynard] Keynes wrote in 1930 that our grandchildren will struggle to fill their three-day work weeks because they will be able to produce all the things that humanity could reasonably want. And he grossly underestimated the elasticity of our demand. Now you have people like Marie Kondo making a cottage industry out of convincing us that really all we want is, like, a single smooth river rock that reminds us of our mother.
So how much you want is obviously elastic. It can go up and it can go down. And so that's one of the parameters on abundance that we have to think about.
And then over here is how much we can make. So 3D printing, automation, all that stuff. And both of those have seen significant changes in the last couple of decades. Marketing, A/B splitting, new additive manufacturing tools, automated milling, robotics. All of those have been profound changes in our world.
But all of the real action is over in this other corner, which is logistics. And that's getting the stuff that people want to the people who want it after you've made it. And figuring out how to remake it. And figuring out what happens to it when we're done with it.
Bruce Sterling wrote this very influential essay in the mid-2000s called Shaping Things, published by MIT Press, where he posits an object called a spime. And a spime is a good that is immaterial. It exists as information until someone needs it and then it's manufactured. But it's designed in a way to be gracefully decomposed back into the material stream when its duty cycle is over. And its use generates data about its efficacy and ways that it can be improved, so that every time it's made anew, it's better.
Spimes are a really provocative answer to the question of how we can realize the Promethean project of both the heterodox right and the heterodox left: letting every peasant live like a lord. As opposed to insisting either, on the left, that every lord should be made to look like a peasant, or on the right, that lords and peasants are an inevitable fact of the world, and there will always be lords and always be peasants, and maybe we incentivize people by having that difference.
The way that we get every peasant to live like a lord on a planet that only has one planet's worth of material is that we find better ways to connect the material that people need with the people who have it and where it is at any given moment. So rather than everybody having to own a car, we have cars that are services. But we also have completely negotiable moment-to-moment things that you might need a car for. And so when there aren't cars available, the things that you can do instead of being in a car are brought to the fore.
Google runs this data center in Belgium in a place where two-thirds of the time it's so cool that they don't need the air conditioning, and the other third of the time they just turn [the data center] off. And their file system is so good at migrating data away from places that are shutting down and into places that are running that it doesn't really matter.
A lot of places that do aluminum smelting, because it's so energy intensive, they use aluminum smelting as a kind of battery. They say: We need to smelt so many tons of this this year, and when we have lots of solar or lots of wind or lots of tidal power, and we don't have anything to use it for, we smelt the aluminum then, and not at the moment when other people are trying to turn on their lights or run their air conditioning or run their Google data centers.
That kind of coordination—where at the moment that something is needed, and at the moment where it's cheap to do it, it's done—is characteristic of the efficient-market hypothesis. It's characteristic of planned economy theory. It's the thing that everyone is shooting for.
The thing that free and open-source software has given us is the ability to coordinate ourselves very efficiently without having to put up with a lot of hierarchy. To be able to take things that we've done together, where we've reached a breaking point, and split them in two and have each of us pursue it in our own direction, without having to pay too high a cost or even have a lot of acrimony.
That's the free software world I'm trying to imagine. What would it be like to build skyscrapers the way we make encyclopedias in the 21st century?
So you're over here imagining the logistics part of the future. But we're currently culturally perseverating over there in the manufacturing corner.
Sure.
Conservatives are doubling down on the value in work—that's the conservative version of the panic about the robots taking our jobs. Then there's a liberal version, which is: How will people make a living when all the jobs are automated? But why is that the thing we're panicking about now?
Well, because I think that we tend to worry a lot about the first-order effects. And the second- and third-order effects tend to come a little too late. [Science fiction author and editor] Gardner Dozois very famously said that the job of a science fiction writer shouldn't be to just think of the car in the movie theater and invent the drive-in, but also to infer the sexual revolution.
But I say to Gardner: Once you've inferred the sexual revolution, maybe you could spare a moment to think that the sexual revolution happening in cars meant that, for the first time, people had a reason to carry a government-issued ID. Which was to get laid, right? The shibboleth of "papers, please," which historically has been a marker of the descent into totalitarian misery, became an everyday thing.
"Prediction is way overrated. I like what Dante did to the fortune tellers. He put them in a pit of molten shit…weeping into their own ass cracks for having pretended that the future was knowable."
The database nation is the progeny of that strange moment where technology and social mores came together, thanks to movie theaters and cars and the sexual revolution, and gave us all driver's licenses. Science fiction writers like to think past the first-order effect of what would it mean if there weren't a lot of truck-driving jobs.
Is it fair to say that science fiction writers are doing the same thing as a good economist or a good political economist in thinking about unintended consequences?
It's not just unintended consequences, because I think making all truck drivers into desperate xenophobic populists who vote for strongman leaders was not the intended consequence of the self-driving car project, right? And yet that's the fear that our political moment reflects.
It's more like the job of a science fiction writer is not to map the territory, but to point out that there's territory to be mapped. There is a game we play when we argue about policy or tell stories, and the game is What's in the Frame?
There's this famous science fiction story [by Tom Godwin] called "The Cold Equations." It's taught in engineering schools. It's about a spaceship pilot who's piloting a small craft full of vaccine to a planet where there is a potentially world-killing plague. If he doesn't get the vaccine there, everybody on the planet will die. And there is a young girl who stowed away on his ship and when he discovers her, he is aghast. Because he knows that the ship doesn't have any extra fuel. It has no autopilot. It can only land if he pilots it. If there's any excess weight it will crash, and everyone on the planet will die. And that's why he has to shove that girl out the airlock.
And they spend 15 pages trying to figure out why they don't have to shove her out the airlock. And then he shoves her out the airlock.
What's out of the frame is that the author set up the rules of this thought experiment. And the author decided that autopilots weren't a thing. That reserve fuel wasn't a thing. That sending colonists with a supply of vaccine wasn't a thing. All that stuff is out of frame.
Science fiction is about pointing out that there are things that are out of the frame [in real life] that don't properly belong out of the frame, whose ruling out is arbitrary—or customary, which is another way of saying the same thing.
Last question: When you go to jail, what will it be for?
What will the charge be, or why will they arrest me?
You may answer either way.
I have lots of different kinds of privilege that I think have kept me reasonably out of harm's way. Not just being, like, a white middle-class articulate dude with half a million Twitter followers. But also working at a civil liberties law firm filled with lawyers whose numbers I write on my arm before I cross borders.
You know what I worry about a lot? I'm a dirty foreigner. I'm a Canadian on a green card. And as we heard in the Supreme Court [in an April hearing about the case of a Serbian woman named Divna Maslenjak who is accused of misleading authorities on her application for asylum in the United States], it is virtually impossible to not have some way in which you are technically violating immigration rules when you are on a green card crossing borders.
The justices at the Supreme Court asked about listing known aliases: If I forget a childhood nickname, does that mean that I can be deported or jailed for immigration fraud? And the state's position was yes; regardless of whether or not the omission is material, the act of omission itself violates the statute and qualifies you.
Given the highly arbitrary nature of borders, and the very deep antipathy towards the people who cross them from many of the people whose job it is to inspect those people who cross them, that's the place where I have the most worry.
I don't know what I would do if I were required [by immigration officials] to decrypt my devices. I have a certain amount of purging I do before I cross borders so I'm able to decrypt my devices if I'm made to. But then there's this whole unknown area: What about making you log into your cloud services? And if you don't have the password, what about calling the people who have the password and saying, "Mr. Doctorow doesn't get out of immigration detention until you give us the password to his thing that he's left with you for safekeeping"?
Those are unknown unknowns. It's a complete black hole. I think by design the government has not pursued cases where those questions have come up, where it looks like the courts would find that they were acting unconstitutionally, because they want to see that ambiguity flourishing. Because they have so much leverage over you when you're at the border that that ambiguity really works in [their] favor.
After the Muslim ban, one of the things that immediately emerged when people said, "What should you do if…?" was, nobody even knows for sure.
So now I do ridiculous things. There's a form—I think it's called the G-28. Border guards have discretion as to whether to allow your counsel to see you when you're in border detention. That discretion goes away and becomes an obligation if this form has been signed and left with your lawyer before you cross the border. But it has to be on green paper.
So I have signed many copies of this and left it in our paralegal's filing cabinet at EFF. And I always let a lawyer know before I cross, and I always let them know when I'm on the other side. And I hope that they check their phone.
If they see that many hours have gone by and they haven't heard from me, they try to call me. And if they don't hear from me again, they go and they get one of these green forms and they bring it down to the border to see if that's where I am.
Maybe that's advice for all of our readers: Get a lawyer on retainer and a lot of green paper.
Yeah. A ream of green paper. I have some leftovers. My kid drew on a lot of it but I still have some leftovers.
This interview has been edited for length, clarity, and style. For a video version, visit reason.com.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Cory Doctorow's'Fully Automated Luxury Communist Civilization'."
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Doctorow, a civil libertarian who identifies with the political left....
Is he a civil Libertarian or is he a Democrat?
Maybe he's a cis-leftist or a non-binary libertarian
I dunno, but after reading this I'm fairly sure I don't want to read his books.
Somebody should write a sci-fi novel where civilization is buried under several feet of shitty crypto-socialist sci-fi bullshit.
For a guy who writes for a living he sure doesn't say a lot.
You sure don't read a lot, do you, 'tard boys?
Oh he uses a lot of words.
But that doesn't mean he says much.
Sorry I had to make that explicit, but it's clear you are a little slow with anything other than insults.
loveconstitution1789: the voice of libertarian purity.
You can't be both a civil Libertarian and a Democrat.
Of course you can. Anyone with any kind of beliefs can be a Democrat. All you have to do is register to vote as a Democrat and there you go. The political parties do not have the power to control thoughts and beliefs.
For you too literal-minded Aspies out there, let's rephrase this:
"It is inconsistent to adopt libertarianism as your preferred ideology and simultaneously support the Democratic Party because the Democratic party program is diametrically opposed to libertarian ideas and principles."
Rephrased for the consistency/logic obsessed Aspie.
People are frequently inconsistent. So it's still ridiculous to declare that this cannot be.
The Democratic Party program is whatever Democrats want to make it at a given time in their state or nationwide. 'tain't fixed.
The Democratic party program has never been libertarian, and it has lost most vestiges of any kind of liberalism.
Had the same ?, as I'm inclined to see those poles as mutually exclusive in most regards. I will read it out of curiosity.
He's big on the idea of the post-scarcity economy and the idea that with the advance of technology there's really no privacy left, so embrace it and get used to it.
If ever there was an impossible thing, 'post-scarcity' would be it. It is, in a word, fantasy. Not 'science-fiction'. Star Trek was guilty of the same fantasy, even if they tried to wrap it in science-words.
If you want 'science fiction' you'd need to read a bunch of dead guys, at this point.
Socialists are obsessed with this idea of post scarcity, because they're fully aware that it's one of the prerequisite things for 'socialism' or 'communism' to actually function. Yes, that's right, these ethos rely on unicorns to make their ethos work. There's probably a lesson in there for everyone.
Post scarcity solves so many problems for the utopians. It's their version of soma.
You wouldn't know utopia if it slapped you in the face with its big black cock, would you, 'tard boy?
Is this the return of the asshole DanO under a new handle?
IDK, was DanO the kind of idiot internet rif-raf that uses words like "'tard"? I don't seem to remember that. This one seems like your standard-issue mindless true-believer that hangs out in places like the SPLC or Breitbart.
I suspect he is a lefty who only cares about his liberties. It is the same as a democratic socialist. You can't believe in democracy and socialism at the same time. And I agree with Rhywun.
Come on, democracy and socialism go hand-in-hand. At least initially, until the government has so much power that it's safe to ignore majorities against government power, should those ever arrive.
You know the old saying: democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on what's for dinner.
Hmm, funny. So is Socialism.
For the Greater Good Comrade.
I thought it was a wolf, a sheep, and a sheepdog voting on who eats.
Or maybe it was a rabbi, a rabbit, a priest, a turtledove, and a beehive, who walk into this gay bar, and order a triple pitcher of bleached-beach-ball, blue-whale-challenge gorilla orgasms, with a wedding cake on the side...
Shit! I'm lost! I forget the punch line! HELP!!!!
"...democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on what's for dinner."
James Bovard is widely given credit for that, although he probably got it (or derived it) from someone else.
The addendum, in my opinion, is that after the sheep has been had for dinner, the wolves then turn on each other. That is the phase that we are now in, in the USA, at least. Guess what... It is NOT sustainable!
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/James_Bovard for ye of the incorrigible eggheaded autistic kinds...
Eat or be eaten, ye wolves!!! The defenseless sheep have already been had!!!
(Some of us might be poisoned-flesh-bearing sheep in wolves clothing, so watch yer insatiably ravenous butts, ye mangy wolves!)
Some words and phrases can be taken several ways. I expect most members of the ACLU would identify as both "civil libertarians" and aligned with the political "left". "Adult fiction" is another term with several interpretations; I'm pretty sure he's not writing porn.
"Some words and phrases can be taken several ways. I expect most members of the ACLU would identify as both "civil libertarians" and aligned with the political "left"
And most members of the ACLU are pussy-fied politically correct SJW's. They can "identify" all they want. As a wise man once said, 'just coz you say it, don't make it true.'
Individuals don't matter, but biased definitions of labels do.
Says you.
Yeah, 'civil libertarian' is not libertarian. At all. Usually its just a socialist who wants to smoke pot. A lot of these guys - like the modern ACLU - have no problem with the 'wrong' liberties (like freedom of speech) being restricted. For the greater good, of course.
Yep. The whole 'post scarcity' thing is just a way of getting past all those sticking points that otherwise prevent the right people from ordering everyone else's lives.
I like his work and have read most of it, but got 40 pages into Walkaway and tossed it at the wall. He's keen on predicting the New Future in an almost didactic way. It's annoying
Thanks; I will NOT start with Walkaway; of what you have read, what would you recommend?
Little Brother is good, although it's a juvenile. But it can be enjoyed as an adult reader. Rapture of the Nerds isn't bad.
I moderately enjoyed Little Brother. It's the only book of his I've read. I read it due to mentions here at Reason.
I'll say this: his heterodox views are interesting, even if I think a lot of them are shit. But I've noticed, I'm having a harder time reading and dealing with ideas that don't confirm what I already believe.
The older you get, the more evidence you accumulate that certain ways of thinking are bullshit and/or dysfunctional.
Apparently, this is known as 'confirmation bias' to some people.
Apparently for you BYODB, the older you get, the more stupid you become, right?
"Doctorow, a civil libertarian who identifies with the political left"
As civil libertarians on the left look around and find that there are no other civil libertarians on the left anymore, I hope they start to think about what it is that their progressive, fellow lefties hate about free markets.
Being a civil libertarian is like being an agnostic--an excuse to feel like you're against one side without actually being on the other.
How can you support the right to terrorists not to be tortured, the free speech rights of racists, and the Fifth Amendment rights of rapists, on one hand, and oppose people being free to make choices for themselves within the context of a market as unacceptable on the other?
P.S. Do civil libertarians know that progressives and SJWs think that free speech is racist, that freedom of religion is homophobic, that the right to confront your accusers is misogynist, etc.? They're sleeping with the enemy.
No, it's just an attempt to take over the meaning of the word "libertarian" just like these people took over the meaning of the word "liberal". "Liberal" now stands for what was most of the party program of the NSDAP, but the word is getting increasingly used up.
This is far from the first time. The idea that the state protects you totally, that people behave socially, that they were bound together in thriving communities ("it takes a village"), morphed into terms that started out with positive meanings that quickly turned negative: totalitarianism, socialism, fascism, communism.
Doctorow is a fool or a liar; take your pick.
it's just an attempt to take over the meaning of the word "libertarian" just like these people took over the meaning of the word "liberal"
I don't think so. "Civil liberties" is a concept that existed before the current American sense of the word "libertarian" was common. And the word "libertarian" has also been used in various ways in the past, some quite contrary to what we think it means today.
True. The oldest organiz'n w "libertarian" in its name is the Libertarian Book Club. It's not what you think (unless you know of it). Meanwhile the earliest use of "libertarianism" was the Catholic doctrine of free will, as opposed to "necessitarianism".
The history of the word doesn't change the intent of the people misusing it today.
I don't think you really get agnostics, or why it might make sense to an empiricist.
Doctorow is the sort, upon listening to "Temples of Syrinx" who thinks the priests are the good guys.
ThomasD and BYODB are the sort that upon watching Game of Thrones, identify with Walder Frey. Stupid sonsabitches.
I have a stalker.
This is sooo exciting!
P.S. Do civil libertarians know that progressives and SJWs think that free speech is racist, that freedom of religion is homophobic, that the right to confront your accusers is misogynist, etc.? They're sleeping with the enemy.
And Senator Cruz was Attorney General of Texas when the state was defending it's sodomy law in Lawrence v. Texas (2003). The ADF, the Christian lawyer group that keeps defending Christians from non-discrimination laws, pushes for stricter sodomy laws abroad. The Republican party's platform is opposed to my marriage. Lots of Republicans stood up to applaud Kim Davis when she inserted her religious beliefs into her government duties.
Face it, if you're looking for reasons to label someone an "enemy", you'll never stop finding them.
From a medieval point of view, we live in a post-scarcity world. So, we can easily answer that: people will be complaining about inequality, they'll find things to be upset about and feel victimized over, some people don't make it anyway because they become addicted to something, and laws will require everybody to consume so much that people still have to work.
What Doctorow fails to understand is that human societies are driven by greed, envy, lust, and power, no matter how much material wealth they have.
The fictional world of Star Trek proves your point. I'm a big Trek fan, but its politics is stupid.
They've supposedly conquered poverty and war on Earth. That's because scarcity has been eliminated due to the discovery of nearly infinite cheap energy provided by the warp drive.
Except, the whole premise of the show is that the universe is still filled with conflict. You still need di-lithium crystals to run warp drives. People still run quaint eateries that have limited seating. Not everyone gets into Star Fleet Academy. On and on.
Star Trek: TNG was Gene Roddenberry attempting to explain how socialism could work, and in fact it was another attempt at 'post-scarcity' thinking.
It failed even on that basic premise, but furthermore he had to introduce those conflict elements or it would have been the most boring bullshit in existence. You'd think Earth could just be like 'oh hey Klingon's. We know you guys like honor and war and all that, but here's the miracle Replicator device that solves all problems. Welcome.' and that would be the end of that.
That's before you even get into the fact that Transporters functionally could, and several times did, make people effectively immortal.
"That's before you even get into the fact that Transporters functionally could, and several times did, make people effectively immortal."
And of course there was the consistent habit of ignoring the downsides of the Transporters.
"Captain, the shields are down, should we send a boarding team?"
"Oh why? Just send over an anti-matter warhead. We'll be headed home in 3 minutes."
And as in any good socialist state, those favors are handed out through brown nosing and bureaucracies in the Star Trek universe. Anybody with any sense either tried to become a captain, or they tried to get away altogether.
"Post-scarcity economy might look like"
So he writes High Fantasy?
So he writes High Fantasy?
I'm not entirely clear that he's not a teen fiction writer.
I think, technicaly, he is. I'm pretty sure the majority of his fiction output (and this is what, his 4th book) is in the YA market.
I think, technicaly, he is. I'm pretty sure the majority of his fiction output (and this is what, his 4th book) is in the YA market.
Having read none of his 'other fiction' works, I see nothing explicitly denoting him as 'adult' either. To be sure, I don't know where the hard and fast lines are, or that there are any, but I don't see any topics that put him squarely in 'adult fiction' and when I think 'high fantasy' I think more Tolkein, Jordan, Martin, etc. Doctorow's work seems to put him more in line with Suzanne Collins, Stepheneie Meyer, and Rowling.
I mean, maybe he does portray characters as victims of rape and brooding over abortions or feature a Hannibal Lecter-type character as the protagonist or something but I don't see any indication of that.
What I meant by "high fantasy" is that it is premised on magical contrivances that do not and cannot exist in the real world. You know, like a "post scarcity economy".
Exactly. Post-scarcity can not exist, no matter how much they want their unicorn. Thus I find it somewhat offensive that they refer to his work as 'science fiction'. We should probably get over it though, since modern 'science fiction' usually just means 'fantasy, but with lasers'.
Way to generalize, moron. Perhaps you should read some Heinlein?
BYODB is offended by a work of fiction that he had nothing to do with writing, editing or publishing being labeled some broad category he doesn't agree with! Society must conform to this douchebag's ideals, OR ELSE!
BYODB OR BUST!
Tronald_Dump|7.12.17 @ 3:17PM|#
Who didn't flush the toilet?
Reason: Let's talk about the word dystopia. It's a word no one knew 10 years ago and now everyone says all the time about pretty much every novel ever. Is this a dystopia in Walkaway, or a utopia?
What?
WHAT?!
There have been dystopian views of the future and descriptions of them as such going back a lot farther than ten years ago. Nineteen Eighty-four, Brave New World, Erehwon, Logan's Run, Silent Running -- and that trend has been accelerating ever since the late 1980s when dystopias went from just fashionable to practically a requirement and optimistic views of the future few and far between.
This isn't a strong opening, Ms. Mangu-Ward. And there's no excuse for your editors to have missed this.
In fact, the word took off in the 1960's:
I believe it went back further than the 60's. After all H G Wells wrote The Time Machine in the 1890's.
Look at the graph. Yes, it went back further, but it took off in the 1960's in popularity.
That presumption is something to wrap your mind around. "Star Wars" was was considered a breath if fresh air when it came out because so much genre fiction at that time were pessimistic dystopias. But as they say, Leftists have no inteelectual history.
And for some reason, schools like to assign dystopian novels to kids. Both of my kids read The Giver in middle school. I remember reading a disturbing novel about a destroyed world where all the kids lived underground and a girl was brought to tears and wonder at the sight and taste of an ear of sweet corn. This was in the late 70s.
And there's 'A Boy And His Dog' of course.
Those stories were not familiar to me, but seem interesting.
Mind you, I'm not against assigning dystopian fiction to kids. I shouldn't have said "For some reason...". I actually think it's pretty obvious. I think people are somehow nervous about their comfortable existence. They worry about their ability to cope if the fragile goodness around them shatters. So, we read stories about people actually dealing with bad shit and imagine what we would do.
Back in 2008, I was hit by hurricane Ike. Power's out, no problem. Turn on the faucet, very little water. I thought, ok, I'll be dead in 3 days. A couple hours later, the water came back on.
"Luxury communist civilization" is an oxymoron.
"Communist civilisation" is an oxymoron.
He doesn't know that Picketty was debunked. Thoroughly. Multiple times. That at not time in history has the rate of return on capital ever produced insane runaway wealth and that the places with the most wealth disparity and dysfunction and misallocation of resources are the ones that try the hardest to ensure everything is distributed fairly?
"He doesn't know that Picketty was debunked."
Unpossible.
/sarc.
And, don't forget, these are the people who think themselves the ones to decide everything.
I think that applies to a lot more than just immigration. In fact, I'd even go so far as to say that applies to every area of law. Ambiguous laws are easier to apply selectively or because FYTW. And that's how we go from a nation governed by Rule of Law to one governed by Rule of Man.
It's how lawyers make their living. Seriously, if law was simple & clear enough, who'd ever need a lawyer?
RE: Cory Doctorow's 'Fully Automated Luxury Communist Civilization'
The author of Little Brother and Walkaway on dystopia, the end of scarcity, and what's going to get him arrested
1. I doubt there will ever be the end of scarcity, at least not in my lifetime.
2. "Fully automated luxury communist civilization?"
That's hysterical!
It all makes complete sense so long as you understand they will tell you the true meaning of luxury.
Your own opinion is immaterial.
You evidently have no experience with communism. What they actually do is eliminate or imprison anybody who disagrees.
Only direct experience is some visits to China and Vietnam. But I have read The Gulag Archipelago and I'm pretty sure what they did to Solzhenitsyn told him everything they wanted to say.
Action louder than words and all that.
Listen: any system of value could result in a small group of powerful people, with control over everyone.
Market capitalism? Yes.
Reputation economy? Yes.
Dictatorship? Yes.
So, the real question is, what is more likely to enslave you?
And history shows us that corporations like Uber are much more likely to enslave you than populist communist revolutions.
This is known.
Not incomprehensible enough.
"And history shows us that corporations like Uber are much more likely to enslave you than populist communist revolutions."
Really?
Can you give me an example how a corporation enslaved a nation?
Because I can certainly give you plenty of examples of how "populist" communists revolutions turned their governments into slave states.
Your sarc filter needs calibration.
For a small fee I could provide such a service...
Damn!
I just had it re-calibrated last Friday.
My filter has been wildly mis-calibrated on a couple of occasions. That's what happens when you're a libertarian with a hair-trigger to prove someone wrong.
"Your sarc filter needs calibration."
Not in the case of THIS commenter. It seems I B truly IS such an ignoramus.
No, it doesn't. Incomprehensible Bitching's post is indistinguishable from the actual beliefs of many progressives and socialists.
Yep, closer to parody than sarcasm.
The only time I ever thought I got through to a Leftist about communism (He was a supporter/fan of current socialist governments who thought they should eventually transform to pure communism) was by arguing that even if he was right and such a thing was possible, history has shown that the attempt to move to communism has terrible failure modes. Even if communism was a good destination, it appears impossible to arrive there, and every nation that has attempted the journey destroys itself or turns back. Or destroys itself and then turns back.
What he described as small-c communism is probably better called communalism.
Yeah communism has a lot of baggage. If people can voluntarily live in a communal way, good for them. I don't think it's likely to succeed or last at any kind of scale, but they are welcome to give it a shot.
Well, yeah. Any sort of utopian community requires a "release valve" for dissenters to use, otherwise the dissenters stick around and agitate against the status quo and ruin the utopia.
Same problem with "Libertopia", really. Even if you could make a country into Libertopia, unless you have another country willing to take your dissenters and malcontents off your hands, then your utopia is going to be tainted within a generation.
I have always assumed the 'taint' of dissenters and malcontents to be a signature aspect of any sort of libertopia.
"people can voluntarily live in a communal way" Yes, that certainly is an option people can choose. But, absent scarcity, exactly what is it that they would need to share?
Because if all he is saying is that "post scarcity all we have left is free association' then, well, sure. But that only begs the question of why ho doesn't simply say as much?
he not ho
And, to cut to the chase, it sure seems to me that Doctorow only foresees achieving post scarcity via some sort of communist ordering of society.
But then you would have people like Bernie Sanders who would only talk and not work.
What he described as small-c communism is probably better called communalism.
That depends, when he describes a "bohemian demimonde" he's describing what I would call communal-style communism.
If you have a luxury hotel that can accommodate anyone, there's no reason to track who contributes what and make decisions on that information (or technically even really possible). When you have a luxury hotel that you're advertising as being able to accept anyone, tracks who contributes what and who removes what, and is governed by an amorphous group where anyone can be the czar... it's listing pretty heavily in the not-libertarian-style communist direction.
Doctorow didn't like "The Cold Equations" because he didn't like that it was a story about the no-win situations scarcity often puts you in. Communism is the ambition to never leave childhood: there is always going to be an all-powerful parent to satisfy your needs.
'We're Texas marksmen: We fire the shotgun into the side of the barn and draw the target around the place where the pellets hit. We just ignore all those stories that never came true."
Hey asshole. I challenge you to a shooting match. Pick your firearm.
Sincerely,
A Texan.
"So now I do ridiculous things. "
Like choosing to live in the USA.
like Todd responded I'm blown away that a single mom able to get paid $480000 in four weeks on the computer . go to the website????
I got as far as "Amanda Palmer"