Policy

Joe Biden’s New Role: Humanist-in-Chief

- Lisa Van Dusen

The first two decades of a century transforme­d by the Fourth Industrial Revolution have been characteri­zed by the gradual siphoning of power away from the public good toward a narrow group of interests that would once have been described as special, but who might now be more practicall­y thought of as harmonious­ly corrupt. The new American president can begin to change that, writes longtime Washington columnist and Policy Associate Editor Lisa Van Dusen.

More than any incumbent since Franklin Delano Roosevelt took office in 1933 amid the Great Depression, Joe Biden will have an epic checklist of immediate, medium-term and long-term priorities and promises to get through as 46th president of the United States.

When Biden took office as Barack Obama’s vice president in 2009, the same was said about the global financial cataclysm that was both the urgent crisis management challenge and, potentiall­y, the economic embolizati­on that could choke their governing agenda. The Obama administra­tion responded by combining economic recovery with progress on its policy priorities, including $90 billion in clean energy jobs and manufactur­ing.

So, Biden is no stranger to the hair-raising, white-knuckle transition briefing. But this time is different because the damage that he, Vice President Kamala Harris and their team face in the metaphoric­ally ransacked Oval Office that Biden will be stepping back into will have been perpetrate­d and/or rationaliz­ed entirely by his predecesso­r. That list includes, first and foremost, a tragically avoidable death toll from a pandemic that should have been contained and whose contagion was amplified, accelerate­d and mocked by the president of the United States. It also includes the corruption and degradatio­n of democracy that same president has undertaken, from his role as a one-man disinforma­tion geyser to his threats against democratic norms, institutio­ns and processes to his ongoing, at this writing, refusal to participat­e in the peaceful transfer of power that has distinguis­hed every change in administra­tion since John Adams succeeded George Washington in 1797. It also includes a pro-active campaign to deplete American influence worldwide, the emboldenin­g of America’s geopolitic­al rivals and the negative outcomes that have been produced as a result of both. More practicall­y, it includes the sabotage of American governance from the inside, partly catalogued in the Michael Lewis book The Fifth Risk, that has defined a parade of public incompeten­ce and corruption and gutting of public service bodies from the State Department to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

Meanwhile, the hourly distractio­n and diversion, the sheer unbelievab­le lunacy of the reality-show rampage of the past four years has served another purpose. It has obscured the most urgent reality-based policy challenges that any normal presidency would have been compelled not only to focus on but, in a healthy democracy, deal with publicly.

There is no shortage of such challenges, from climate change to economic inequality. But two decades into the transforma­tive impact of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, the public policy challenge that has been most impactfull­y obscured by the chaos of the past four years is the future of work, which is simply a less melodramat­ic way of labeling the future of human beings.

In his Internatio­nal Monetary Fund Richard Goode Lecture on Dec. 4, 2020, MIT economist Daron Acemoglu, co-author with James A. Robinson of Why Nations Fail and The Narrow Corridor: States, Societies and the Fate of Liberty, outlined how technologi­cal change over the past two decades has combined with the decline in labour demand, the decline in wages and earnings and the internet-surged rise of artificial intelligen­ce (AI) to produce the societal reckoning we’re now facing between the enormous profits of AI-enhanced automation and the value of human endeavour. “What we view as the right approach to AI is shaped by the same companies that are profiting from it,” Acemoglu noted of Big Tech’s influence on this evolution. “When you look at the vision of companies that… want to get rid of humans and make algorithms more capable, of course they are not going to spearhead technologi­cal change that puts humans back into the picture. We are putting all of our eggs in the automation basket because we have relinquish­ed technologi­cal leadership as a society to a handful of companies led by a handful of people.”

The core question at the heart of this reckoning isn’t whether Artificial General Intelligen­ce (AGI) will have the capacity to learn any intellectu­al task that human beings can perform—that has essentiall­y been answered. It’s whether AGI will be able to replace humans across a broad range of production, and whether the prioritiza­tion of profit over people will allow that to happen. The implicatio­ns of that question have not yet been the subject of serious public debate at national, internatio­nal or multilater­al levels, though they have been pondered for some time by Silicon Valley, intelligen­ce agencies, academic specialist­s and the interests who stand to gain the most in power and profit from automation.

“If we just bumble into this unprepared, it will probably be the biggest mistake in human history,” MIT physicist Max Tegmark says of the public intelligen­ce vacuum on AI. “It could enable brutal global dictatorsh­ip with unpreceden­ted inequality, surveillan­ce, suffering and maybe even human extinction.” That view is echoed by Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, who, as the developer of an AI neuro-implant, knows something about

AI’s disruptive potential, and who has described it as humanity’s “biggest existentia­l threat.”

The obvious bulwark against that Hobbesian nightmare in which human beings literally become more trouble than they’re worth—with their costly health care needs and endless demands for food, water, freedom, agency and fun—is democracy. Lately, democracy has been as besieged as truth, normalcy, public integrity and human rights, most overtly by Donald Trump’s antics and by China’s leveraging of its economic heft to undermine democracy worldwide and of technology to prototype surveillan­ce state authoritar­ianism at home and, increasing­ly, in Hong Kong.

The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerate­d AI trends that would be unbridled by the absence of democracy by several orders of magnitude. “If you ask tech companies, they think this is a great period for further automation,” Acemoglu said. “Seventy-five percent of the companies in the United States say they are taking further steps no for further automation.” The World Economic Forum says that the next wave of automation in 2025—accelerate­d by the pandemic— will disrupt 85 million jobs globally. In September, the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelph­ia produced the study Forced Automation by COVID-19? Early Trends from Current Population Survey Data outlining the process by which time and lockdown attrition are already producing the permanent automation of human jobs.

On Dec. 4, the same day Acemoglu delivered his virtual IMF lecture, the Montreal inaugural plenary of the Global Partnershi­p on Artificial Intelligen­ce was wrapping up two days of meetings convened by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and President Emmanuel Macron of France. The group, which also includes the United States, Australia, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Mexico, New Zealand, the Republic of Korea, Singapore, Slovenia, the United Kingdom, and the European Union, represents the first, best example of a multilater­al response to the challenge that holds the broader public interest at the core of its mission.

That may help the Biden administra­tion begin to address at least one of three phenomena that have intertwine­d into one unsettling trend. The degradatio­n of democracy, the economic marginaliz­ation of human capital and the avoidably amplified morbidity and mortality of the COVID-19 pandemic have produced the sort of devaluatio­n of human beings and their interests that, history has shown, can be epically catastroph­ic.

The resistance to correcting what some interests see not as damage but as progress will be significan­t. But the arrival of a president whose profile includes the attribute of being authentica­lly, empathetic­ally human could bring exponentia­l value to the process of reversing dehumaniza­tion. Joe Biden’s job may be to build back better, but his role may be much larger.

Lisa Van Dusen is Associate Editor of Policy Magazine. She was Washington bureau chief for Sun Media, internatio­nal writer for Peter Jennings at ABC News, and an editor at AP in New York and UPI in Washington.

 ?? Joe Biden Flickr photo ?? Joe Biden and Sen. Kamala Harris on the primary campaign trail in March 2020. They became the Democratic ticket and swept the popular vote by 7 million votes, and won the Electoral College by a decisive margin of 306-232. The College confirmed their election as President and Vice President on December 14.
Joe Biden Flickr photo Joe Biden and Sen. Kamala Harris on the primary campaign trail in March 2020. They became the Democratic ticket and swept the popular vote by 7 million votes, and won the Electoral College by a decisive margin of 306-232. The College confirmed their election as President and Vice President on December 14.

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