chewybrian wrote: ↑June 8th, 2024, 9:29 am
Sy Borg wrote: ↑May 28th, 2024, 8:52 pm
Fun to revisit this one. I now know exactly what I'd do with absolute power. I would delegate all the work to people I trusted, and continue pottering around at home.
That's a good framework for action without details of what actions you would delegate. I'd tell my minions to do good things, make useful things, create a just world, protect the world for future generations... you know, just the simple stuff.
I do share your desire to kick back. I'd even do some gardening as well. That's the thing people like Trump can never seem to do. They don't seem to enjoy all they have, except as a vehicle for showing off. The only thing they can never have is enough.
I would be more than happy to have Trump's confidence, drive, power, perseverance, resilience and cunning. If everyone was a leaf-raking, dog-walking recluse like me, nothing would get done. I have enough trouble managing myself, let alone managing society or world (though our current leaders don't seem to have a clue either, and are obviously bluffing). My only knocks on Trump are his dishonesty and his tendencies towards Dunning-Kruger and organised crime.
While politicians are dicey blighters that I would trust as far as I could throw, they are impressive hominids who will steamroller you if you get in their way. Modern human silverbacks.
I wouldn't know what to ask my minions to do. Every action has so many knock-on effects.
"Let's improve the welfare system" soon becomes "What do we do about the welfare trap and cycles of poverty?".
"Let's go green" leads to a rash of heavy manufacturing (powered by coal) in China to satisfy the west's demands for "green" products.
"Let's be broad-minded and multicultural" ends up as governments boosting GDP with mass immigration and accusing those impacted by the crush loading as "racist".
"Let's support the underdog" in general ends up rewarding people for mistakes and poor behaviour.
It's probably far beyond human analytical capacities to understand the best forms of governance in large, complex societies, hence the thousands of years of argy bargy. Leadership today looks to me like juggling too many plates and trying not to break too many. All they have to do is hold the mess together with Perkins paste and old shoelaces and hope the system doesn't break during their tenure. Our systems tend to exist on the edge of disaster, like racing cars, with each moment a potential catastrophe should a bad enough mistake be made.
I am hoping that quality AI will help politicians make better decisions and be more accountable in the future.