Dreams and Nightmares
A Silicon Valley Story
I woke on Tuesday to Doug Leone of Sequoia Capital on X saying:
I have become increasingly concerned about the general direction of our country, the state of our broken immigration system, the ballooning deficit, and the foreign policy missteps, among other issues. Therefore, I am supporting former President Trump in this coming election.
Doug has the right to support Trump. It is also clear that the immigration system is broken, the deficit is ballooning, many things are wrong with foreign policy, and there are “other issues.” Trump as the solution is less obvious. But there it is—hot on the tails of Chamath Palihipitaya and David Sacks announcing a fund-raiser for Trump on the All-In podcast (they said they would do the same for Biden).
Reid Hoffman followed up a day later with:
On one level, this is a straightforward choice, but any literate attempt to analyze Leone’s issues might arrive at the following conclusions:
Voting for Trump is a big no-no for me. But voting for Biden is, at best, a lesser evil instinct, not a belief system. The election will not be where the future is built, but it is important. Politicians are collectively disappointing.
This week’s video of the week from Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz is called “The American Dream” and champions their view about American Dynamism. And I must confess that this comes closer to a vision of the future than either political outfit. Their vision requires political support, massive government financial commitment, and private capital investment. I see no evidence of those happening.
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The real winning effort seems to be happening on the ground. This week, Nvidia hit $3 trillion, eclipsing Apple as the world's second-most valuable company. This is even though Apple has 7 times the revenue of Nvidia.
This week’s first essays also focus on prospects for boom time. Rex Woodbury’s ‘The Consumer Renaissance’ examines the impact of consumer spending on our lives. In ‘The Creator Economy on AI Steroids, ’ Nathan Lands focuses on how emerging tools will transform creativity. But in ‘AI Is Transforming the Nature of the Firm, ’ Evan Armstrong gets closest to a future vision.”
AI is the first universally flexible technology. It can interact with our digital environments in similar ways to humans, so it can have all the flexibility that we do. In that way, it may be the last technology we ever need.
This seems to be the crux of hope in a world where dreams and nightmares are strangely devoid of detail. What the world needs (not only America) is hope. And hope is born from optimism. Optimism is born from success. The most likely success of the next decades will result from specific uses of AI that improve human life.
I know and like Doug Leone. I know and like Reid Hoffman.
Doug's bar for success needs to be higher. Voting for Trump is not right, and even if it were, it would not be sufficient.
Reid also needs a higher bar. Voting for Biden will not be sufficient even if it is right.
Let’s focus on where success can be found, grow optimism, and breed hope. There is a need for a broad technical revolution and the social rebirth it enables. Silicon Valley and its friends globally need to invent the next version of human existence to the benefit of all. The social rebirth requires a conscious effort; technology will not magically bring it about. More in this week’s video.
Contents
Hat Tip to this week’s creators:?@reidhoffman,?@dougleone,?@credistick, @rex_woodbury, @NathanLands, @ItsUrBoyEvan, @berber_jin1, @cityofthetown, @keachhagey, @pmarca, @bhorowitz,?, @signalrank, @steph_palazzolo, @julipuli, @MTemkin, @geneteare, @lorakolodny, @jasminewsun, @JBFlint, @asharma, @thesimonetti, @lessin
CEO, Founder at Essential Aero - Safe Autonomous Robots for Airfield Operations
5 个月No doubt that dreams can turn into nightmares if poorly executed. Consequences for startups is fatal. Consequences for govt seems to be accolades.
Intriguing insights—this really highlights the complexities and dualities within the tech industry's trajectory.
Interesting spin. Neither Biden nor Trump are equipped to govern for what's ahead. Your point on US demographics is spot on, with aging and health of the indigenous needs to be supported by immigration, but that needs to be orchestrated properly. Many nations are shutting down immigration (Netherlands for instance) as the quality of incomers as unvetted creates problems. Deficits and the debt are now insurmountable, but few in DC are spending enough time on the de-dollarization move, which will have pernicious effects on the USD. Moving the USD away from being the numeraire is beyond compare. Foreign policy has been a travesty and the multi-polar world will emasculate US hegemony and the world will become one of "frenemies", which the US must wake up to. The world of the Marshall Plan, Bretton Woods and the American led-world order is shifting and its incumbent on our leaders to position our country for what's ahead. The need to move off long-term planning no longer than election cycles is a must. its time for thinkers to understand the new reality. Hope you are well Keith.