Arab News

The future does not look very bright

- HASSAN BIN YOUSSEF YASSIN

The computer scientist Alan Kay once knowingly said: “The best way to predict the future is to invent it.” It seems that today’s young generation of tech gurus heard him and bet all their chips on artificial intelligen­ce, only to turn around and warn us that their Frankenste­in creation could ultimately destroy human society.

In the meantime, those who are already wellversed at employing technology to confuse, control and subjugate us have been busy sinking their teeth into AI for additional ways to bombard our minds, in what I call the Zone of Confusion. It is a zone of false advertisem­ent, manipulati­ng minds and producing desired behaviors.

It would seem, then, that our future is more manufactur­ed than invented. This has always been the case for our past, which is reinterpre­ted and remanufact­ured every time to make a new point. Whatever we may have learned from the past is gradually lost to these reinterpre­tations, while it is also being employed to build a citadel of future arrogance. In the Zone of Confusion, neither the past nor the future have any real substance anymore; they are simply employed to serve the goal of false advertisem­ent. And instead of helping us produce a pound of wheat, they push us into wars that disrupt not only the world’s wheat production but the world economy and our global stability. These developmen­ts have again reminded us that the Apocalypse and end of the world, which were always said to be in the hands of God, are now firmly in the hands of us humans. Our atomic arsenals, chemical and biological weapons are capable of destroying our planet several times over, and their use as a threat is ever more prevalent after a post-Cold War lull. We are entertaine­d by a Mighty Mickey Mouse able to destroy the world, by destructio­n in general. We like to build fantasies of our beginning and our end. From Mickey Mouse to Mighty Mouse, to Superman and Wonder Woman, we enjoy destructio­n and will regularly react positively to its threat if we interpret it as in defense of our perceived interests.

Destructio­n, unfortunat­ely, surrounds us every day. Our environmen­t is relentless­ly destroyed, day by day. The animal world and its biodiversi­ty are being decimated, and natural disasters are hastened by the planet-heating poisons we continue to release into the atmosphere.

The oceans that represent the origin of all life are dying in front of our eyes, their seemingly endless stock of fish depleted and their capacity to provide us with most of the oxygen we need also dropping. Soon our oceans will contain more plastics than life, yet all we hear the oceans saying is a rush of powerful hurricanes that climate-change is extracting from them. Where did we go wrong, I wonder, as I watch an ever-bleaker future form ahead of us.

My thoughts are mostly with my grandchild­ren and their generation, who may be reading my words. I need them to know that we take responsibi­lity for the terrible failures, the arrogance and destructio­n we have brought upon our world. There are always those pushing against these forces with hope and ingenuity, but I fear they are not powerful enough when faced with what we have stacked up against them. Our job should be to lift hopes, to implement hope, and I would like to believe that the next generation can do a better job of it. As Mahatma Gandhi said so simply: “The future depends on what we do in the present.” I want to believe that the new generation will finally shake off our arrogance and finally take seriously the job of reducing emissions, reducing waste, reducing hatred and stopping wars to create better human beings — to be the stewards we never were.

I want to believe that the new generation will finally shake off our arrogance and finally take seriously the job of reducing emissions, reducing waste, reducing hatred and stopping wars to create better human beings — to be the stewards we

never were.

Hassan bin Youssef Yassin worked with Saudi petroleum ministers Abdullah Tariki and Ahmed Zaki Yamani from 1959 to 1967. He led the Saudi Informatio­n Office in Washington from 1972 to 1981, and served with the Arab League observer delegation to the UN from 1981 to 1983. For full version, log on to www.arabnews.com/thespace

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