Lungo, ma ne vale la pena.
Frase conclusiva: "
We need more politics and we need more politicians."
juan carlos
Politics or technology – which will save the world?
The internet, the mobile phone and now the self-driving car –
technology is revolutionising people's lives in ways that make
politics seem obsolete. But with the narrowing of the political
class, don't we need more politics rather than less?
David Runciman
The Guardian, Friday 23 May 2014 12.00 BST
The most significant revolution of the 21st century so far is not
political. It is the information technology revolution. Its
transformative effects are everywhere. In many places, rapid
technological change stands in stark contrast to the lack of
political change. Take the United States. Its political system has
hardly changed at all in the past 25 years. Even the moments of
apparent transformation – such as the election of Obama in 2008 –
have only reinforced how entrenched the established order is: once
the excitement died away, Obama was left facing the same constrained
political choices. American politics is stuck in a rut. But the
lives of American citizens have been revolutionised over the same
period. The birth of the web and the development of cheap and
efficient devices through which to access it have completely altered
the way people connect with each other. Networks of people with
shared interests, tastes, concerns, fetishes, prejudices and fears
have sprung up in limitless varieties. The information technology
revolution has changed the way human beings befriend each other, how
they meet, date, communicate, medicate, investigate, negotiate and
decide who they want to be and what they want to do. Many aspects of
our online world would be unrecognisable to someone who was
transplanted here from any point in the 20th century. But the
infighting and gridlock in Washington would be all too familiar.