Memia on Sunday 27-Mar-2022: 🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦// Risk, 2022 edition🎲⚔️// network power🌐// swarms, egregores, autocults😱// new Kremlinology🪆// China's economy under pressure🇨🇳📉// rainwater cities🌧️
A variety of morbid symptoms
Kia ora,
In this week’s monster sized Memia on Sunday, your regular eclectic curation of big-picture thinking about the future, analysis and culture from the last week:
🎲⚔️Risk, 2022 Edition
(I wrote briefly about the new rules of 21st Century Risk back in Memia 2020.24):
“In the traditional game of Risk, political powers conquer bordering territories using constantly-reinforced armies. It’s a game of scale, power, dominance (and, of course, dice🎲).
So…if “influencing” is now the name of the game, what are the new rules for 21st Century Risk? (Indeed, what are the new aims to win the game?!)”
Another big week of flexing in global geopolitics:
🌐Futurist John Robb: the last month has witnessed “network power” replacing “soft power”. (see also: Swarms… below)
🪆Kremlinology is back
Imagining some post-Putin, defeated-Russia scenarios
A sideways look at US strategic think tanks in all of this
Yuval Noah Harari talks with Sam Harris about protecting the “global order”
More on the looming global food crisis exacerbated by the Russia / Ukraine war
Plus very recently a move by China to establish a landing pad in Solomon Islands - Australia and Aotearoa’s back yard.
🇺🇦#standwithukraine
No words.
Also worth reflecting:
…and Grozny, and Syria, and Yemen, and Palestine… when will it be the last time?
😱Smarms, egregores, autocults
Fascinating discussion from 4 futurist edge thinkers, finding meta-framing of what’s going on out there in the infosphere: has the global “permacrisis” and escalating social media memetic velocity generated a new “swarm intelligence”, or “egregore” (a distinct non-physical entity that arises from a collective group of people) which may effectively be using millions of human brains hacked by “empathy triggers” as a substrate to think and evolve? Mindblowing stuff.
🇨🇳📉China’s economy under pressure
Two opposing positions from economist Adam Tooze and the FT’s Chartbook team on China’s economic outlook.
Weekend exploring
The regular collection of deeper links to go explore:
After this week’s flash flooding in Tāmaki Makaurau and other parts of Te Ika-a-Māui…Ed Clayton has some thoughtful ideas on how to more effectively include rainwater in city designs:
A new interpretation of the island-filled chart created by Pacific voyager Tupaia, who guided Captain James Cook through the South Seas, may finally crack a 250-year-old puzzle.
Music: Introduction to one of my favourite musicians, stalwart multi-instrumentalist (and skilled whistler) Andrew Bird.
Also music/culture, a new profile of Canadian electro-pop artist Grimes… more famous for other reasons, but she’s been releasing original music since 2009 and worth a deeper dive.
Weekenders
Another top crop of memes to wrap up with.
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