Techno optimism of our age still so largely undervalued by investors, governments and citizens. So strange! It is a fascinating paradox, isn't it?
Think about it: the energy revolution, AI, robotics, quantum, new proteins/medicines, ….It is a fascinating paradox, isn't it? We are living through a period where the "impossible" is becoming a weekly software update, yet the prevailing cultural mood often oscillates between cautious skepticism and outright doomerism.
There are a few psychological and structural reasons why the world is late to the party on techno-optimism:
The "Linear Brain" vs. Exponential Growth
Human intuition is evolved for a linear world. If you take 30 steps linearly, you’re across the street; if you take 30 steps exponentially (doubling each time), you’re a billion meters away—roughly 26 times around the Earth.
* Investors often struggle to price in technologies like AI, fusion, or synthetic biology because their models are built on historical precedents that don't apply to vertical growth curves.
* Governments are structurally designed for stability and "slow-twitch" responses, making them naturally allergic to the disruptive speed of the frontier.
The Visibility of Cost vs. The Invisibility of Gain
We have a "negativity bias." The jobs lost to automation or the risks of a new energy source are concentrated and highly visible.
* The Benefits—like the total eradication of a disease or the plummeting cost of solar energy—are often distributed and gradual.
* We notice the one plane crash; we don't notice the 100,000 flights that landed safely because of better engineering.
The "Status Quo" Trap
Many of our current institutions (and the people who run them) are the "winners" of the previous technological era.
* Governments fear the loss of regulatory control.
* Citizens fear the loss of agency in an increasingly automated world.
* To be an optimist requires a level of intellectual courage—the willingness to believe that the future can be fundamentally better than the past, rather than just a slightly more efficient version of the present.
The Reality Check: Optimization is about doing things better; Techno-Optimism is about doing better things.
We are moving from an era of scarcity to an era of abundance, but our social and financial systems are still running on "Scarcity 1.0" software. It feels strange because the gap between what is possible and what is perceived has never been wider.
THE PROBLEM?
It is the institutional and cultural "drag" that prevents us from reaching escape velocity.
Essentially, we are trying to build a Star Trek future using a Victorian-era social operating system.
The Architecture of Stagnation: Why the World is Braking
If techno-optimism is the engine, these forces represent the "friction" that keeps us pinned to the status quo. We can categorize three distinct layers of resistance:
The Institutional "Old Guard"
The frameworks that govern our lives are often managed by those whose primary incentive is to prevent change rather than catalyze it.
Political Gerontocracy & Backward-Looking Policy: Politicians are often incentivized by short-term election cycles and "nostalgia-based" platforms. Instead of drafting "Pro-Frontier" policy, they retreat into protectionism or culture wars, treating 21st-century breakthroughs with 19th-century mentalities.
The CFO-Dominant Business Culture: Modern corporate leadership has shifted from the visionary "Builder" (CMO/Founder) to the "Optimizer" (CFO). When a company prioritizes quarterly stock buybacks and cost-cutting over R&D and moonshots, it reflects a conservatism of capital—a fear that the future won’t yield a high enough ROI.
"Move-Slow" Trade Unionism: While originally designed to protect dignity, some modern union cultures have shifted toward protecting tasks rather than people. This creates a structural resistance to the very automation that could liberate humanity from drudgery.
The Cultural Noise Machine
The way we process information and define "value" has become decoupled from actual progress.
The Media’s "Intellectual Downsizing" vs. The Frontier of Knowledge
The legacy media apparatus acts as a psychological brake on progress by choosing to monetize fear rather than distribute capability. To fix the "Progress is Dirty" narrative, we need a complete pivot from sensationalist consumption to active intellectual expansion:
From "If it Bleeds" to "If it Builds": Old-school media specializes in the "sleepy village mindset," obsessing over local grievances and trivialities while the most significant breakthroughs in human history are relegated to niche science journals. We need a media that treats a breakthrough in fusion or a new AI architecture with the same "breaking news" urgency usually reserved for celebrity scandals or local accidents.
Prime-Time Pedagogy: From Passive Consumption to High-Octane Human Capital
The current media landscape functions as a digital sedative, but it could—and should—function as a distributed university. We must replace the hollow noise of repetitive pundits and mindless game shows with a "Knowledge-First" schedule designed to aggressively upskill the populace in real-time.
The 8 PM Cognitive Shift: When the world settles down for the evening, the airwaves should transition from entertainment to empowerment. Prime time should be the hour of the Masterclass. Networks should broadcast high-level university lectures on the pillars of modern agency: Finance to build wealth, Marketing to scale ideas, and Computer “Science” etc. to master the machines.
The Renaissance Bridge: We shouldn't just look forward; we must look back to move ahead. By airing deep dives into Old School Art and Technique, media can reconnect us with the discipline and mastery of the past, proving that high-tech futures are built on the foundations of timeless craft.
The Architecture of the Self: Progress isn't just silicon; it’s biological. Broadcasters should replace tabloid gossip with rigorous education on Fitness, Sports Science (and Nutrition), giving people the physiological blueprint to reach and sustain higher performance and mental clarity.
From Viewer to Agent: The ultimate goal is to shatter the "Passive Participant" model. Instead of watching people compete for prizes, the audience should be learning to code alongside AI or navigate complex investment markets. This isn't just "educational TV"—it’s a social reboot. It’s about providing the tools for people to kick-start their lives, transforming a distracted audience into a global workforce of creators, builders, and innovators.
By turning the "idiot box" into an accelerator for human potential, we move from a culture that kills time to a culture that masters it. If the classic media won’t do it, well there is always TikTok, Youtube and all other new channels for it…
The "Small Talk" Purge: The "same old faces" syndrome creates an echo chamber of recycled opinions. Progress requires firing the "childish presenters" and professional contrarians in favor of a radical diversity of thought. We need the voices of the laboratory, the garage-startup, and the deep-thinker—people who expand the viewer's world rather than shrinking it to fit a 30-second soundbite.
Ending the Moral Panic: Media outlets often frame technology through a lens of "playing God" or "the end of work," ignoring the slow-motion tragedy of the status quo—the diseases we aren't curing and the poverty we aren't solving because we are too afraid of change. The media should be the bridge that helps people cross the "uncanny valley" of new tech, not the guardrail that keeps them trapped on the other side.
In short, the media should stop being a mirror that reflects our smallest fears and start being a telescope that shows us our greatest possibilities.
The Content-Free Economy: We’ve replaced the "Inventor" with the "Influencer." When our digital economy rewards the "content producer about nothing" over the scientist or engineer, we are effectively subsidizing intellectual junk food. We worship the "famous for being famous" and the athlete, while the people actually solving fusion or curing cancer remain anonymous.
The Entertainment Opium: Our culture is increasingly obsessed with escapism rather than engagement. When our entertainment is purely passive, it breeds a society of consumers rather than a society of creators.
The Psychological & Structural Traps
These are the deep-seated systems that shape how we think and act from a young age.
The Stagnant Education System: Most schools are still "factory models" designed to produce compliant workers for the industrial age. It is a system trapped in its own bureaucracy, teaching kids what to think for a world that no longer exists, rather than how to build in a world of exponential change.
The "Artist for a Living" vs. The "Creator" Mindset: There is a romanticization of the "struggling artist" or the pure critic, which often shuns the practical application of creativity. True techno-optimism views the engineer as an artist and the entrepreneur as a poet—someone who creates something from nothing. There is a space to be filled by real artists too. We need more color and daring projects in the open space. Bauhaus and Expressionism (with sharper cultural critic) needs a revival.
The Geopolitical Black Holes: Figures like Trump and Putin represent a "Great Regression"—a shift toward zero-sum thinking, borders, and conflict. This "madness" forces us to spend our cognitive and financial resources on defense and tribalism rather than on the global expansion of human potential.
The Synthesis
To summarize : We are being held back by a "Scarcity Cartel."
This is a loose confederation of politicians, media moguls, and risk-averse leaders who benefit from things staying exactly as they are. They thrive on the "Scarcity 1.0" mindset because abundance—of energy, intelligence, and health—would decentralize their power and make their gatekeeping irrelevant. Control is more important to them than progress and experimentation.
The gap we’re experiencing is the friction between the builders of the future and the managers of the past.
Please don’t get me wrong: I would keep some of the old unbearable lightness of being, but nowadays the balance between this and the ambition to what is possible is bit on the wrong foot.