A point about the Cybertruck (seriously)
Adam Ragusea
0:00 This video is sponsored by Squarespace.
0:02 Yeah, I realize it's random,
0:04 but I wrote you a little something here about the Tesla Cybertruck.
0:08 There's a whole bunch of unsold ones at the dealership there behind me.
0:11 Anyway, just bear with me for a sec.
0:12 There is a story told in Walter Isaacson's biography of Elon
0:17 Musk from a couple of years ago that goes like this.
0:20 Elon says that he was hanging out with his son Saxon,
0:26 he was hanging out with his son Saxon, and the spoke Saxon,
0:32 "Why doesn't the future look like the future?" No idea if that story is true,
0:40 by the way, but "Why doesn't the future look like the future?"
0:44 is a thing that a lot of people do ask in different ways,
0:47 and it's easy to understand why.
0:49 Broadly speaking, the science fiction of the 20th century predicted
0:55 that our time would look very different than it actually does now.
1:01 By our time, they predicted that we would have houses
1:05 that look like flying saucers or hovering cars or post-apocalyptic wastelands.
1:14 Not yet.
1:16 I don't think.
1:18 I am in a parking lot.
1:21 So, the question is, why doesn't their future, our present,
1:26 why doesn't it look more like what they predicted?
1:30 Why does the early mid-21st century look
1:34 the way that it actually turned out to look?
1:38 Elon says that this question, as asked by his son,
1:43 inspired the design of the Cybertruck.
1:47 Something that looks like what someone in the 1980s would have predicted.
1:52 Something that beloved dystopian sci-fi hero
1:56 John Blade Runner, would have driven.
2:02 The idea behind this design has always made me laugh because
2:04 I think that Elon Musk means for this truck to look futuristic.
2:10 But to me, and perhaps to you, it actually looks kind of old-fashioned.
2:17 It looks like something from the '80s because it kind of is.
2:24 It's an imitation of designs from 40 years ago.
2:29 It looks like the armored vehicle from Aliens, 1986.
2:34 The fact that that design was intended
2:36 by James Cameron to look futuristic is irrelevant.
2:39 It's still a design from the '80s.
2:42 So, it naturally looks old-fashioned to people like you and me.
2:47 And so does its present-day imitator, the Cybertruck.
2:53 The reason that I'm talking about this now, by the way, is just that my son,
2:57 who does not have an implicitly racist name,
3:00 my son and I were talking through our feelings on the Cybertruck the other day.
3:03 He thinks that they look kind of cool.
3:06 But he's troubled by Elon's whole,
3:08 "If you crash into another car, you're going to win" stick.
3:12 My son sincerely does not wish to hurt other people.
3:16 Imagine that.
3:18 Anyway, Elon Musk, due to his Peter Pan syndrome,
3:22 or perhaps just due to his relatively advanced age at this point,
3:29 Musk doesn't seem to realize that an '80s design in our time looks
3:35 the way a '50s design would have looked to someone in the '80s.
3:41 Something like Tom Corbett, Space Cadet.
3:44 That looks like something from the 1950s because it is.
3:49 Even though it believes itself to be futuristic.
3:53 Believing it does not make it so.
3:57 It's still clearly from the 50s,
3:59 just as the Cybertruck is clearly a 21st century
4:03 retro throwback to a product of 20th century imagination.
4:10 Or at least that's what the Cybertruck obviously looks like to me.
4:15 Let me know if you agree.
4:17 I suspect at least some of you do.
4:20 But I don't think that Elon Musk sees the Cybertruck as a retro throwback.
4:25 I think this 80s inspired design actually does look futuristic to him.
4:31 And here is a darker potential explanation for that.
4:36 I suspect that Elon and people like him, they see the 20th century sci-fi vision
4:45 for our time to be a kind of unfulfilled potential.
4:52 They see it as where we rightly should be by now,
4:57 if not for all of the ways we failed,
5:00 or if not for those people holding us back.
5:06 When Elon Musk hears his son ask, "Why doesn't the future look like the future?"
5:11 his answer is predicated on the assumption that the present,
5:16 our time, would not look futuristic to someone from the 80s or the 50s.
5:24 And I think that it actually would.
5:29 Yeah, a a lot of our world would still look
5:31 pretty familiar to a person time traveling from the 80s.
5:34 Our cars don't hover yet, but they do look pretty different from the 80s cars.
5:42 80s cars were mostly still all straight lines and steel.
5:46 Now, even a basic ass car is plastic composite and aerodynamically curvy.
5:54 I think a 2026 Toyota Corolla really would
5:58 look futuristic to a frozen and unthawed 80s man, or certainly a 50s man.
6:06 And holy crap, tricorders from Star Trek are real now.
6:12 A smartphone can literally do almost everything that Star Trek
6:16 envisioned for the personal communication devices of the 23rd century.
6:21 We're actually 200 years ahead of schedule on this one.
6:26 You ever been to Tokyo at night?
6:29 Tokyo at night straight up looks like the vision
6:33 of future Los Angeles that we see in Blade Runner.
6:38 I think a person who walked out of that movie in 1982 and stepped
6:42 into today's Tokyo at night would probably still
6:45 think that they were still in the movie.
6:48 I think a person from the 80s would be pretty amazed
6:51 to hear that almost nobody has to die of HIV anymore.
6:57 HIV is virtually curable in some people.
7:01 It can be managed as a chronic condition in most others.
7:04 There are prophylactics now that you can take
7:07 to keep you from getting infected in the first place.
7:10 In the 80s and 90s, HIV was a death sentence.
7:14 They drilled that into our heads when we
7:17 were young and sexually active in that era.
7:20 HIV was the scariest thing in the world.
7:24 My best friend at the time, who was more into sports than I was,
7:28 he cried the night that Magic Johnson announced that he was positive
7:33 in a speech that everyone took to be his Lou Gehrig moment, his goodbye.
7:40 Magic Johnson is of course still quite alive and kicking today
7:45 and a billionaire because now scientifically speaking
7:52 almost nobody has to die of HIV,
7:55 which makes it all the more ironic that literally millions of people
8:00 who could have been saved by these medicines are now dying because Elon
8:04 Musk bought his way into the US government and chose to use
8:09 his awesome power there to of all things eliminate funding for US foreign aid.
8:17 The world's richest man decided that the world's poorest people are
8:23 not worth the equivalent of spare change to keep them alive.
8:28 Probably because he views them as genetic trash to be discarded.
8:33 Which is something he says out loud all the time
8:36 now and we let him get away with it.
8:42 Even if you believe that some people really are genetically inferior and if you
8:49 further believe that you somehow possess
8:51 the divining rod to reliably tell them apart,
8:55 I dare you to say into the eyes of a child
9:00 "You must die scared alone and in pain so
9:09 that I might realize the future that I was promised
9:13 in a movie." But hey at least the deficit's under control.
9:26 What I'm arguing is that the future does look like the future.
9:30 It just doesn't look quite like the future
9:32 we expected because how could we know?
9:36 Nobody can predict the future.
9:39 Turns out this is it.
9:43 And maybe we didn't notice because it kind of crept up on us,
9:47 the way the future usually does.
9:50 I'm a couple of months away from walking my older
9:53 boy home from his elementary school for the last time.
9:57 I could swear I just dropped him off for the first grade.
10:02 The more adult answer to little Saxon's ostensible
10:06 question is that real grown-up progress is hard.
10:13 It requires lots of people working together for a long time toward common goals.
10:19 It requires not only great ideas,
10:22 but great labor to turn those ideas into reality.
10:26 And this kind of real tangible,
10:29 durable progress usually unfolds incrementally enough that you
10:36 might not even notice that it's happening.
10:40 Unless you make an effort to.
10:47 Clinging to futuristic visions from the past,
10:51 it's like a kind of revanchism, a lost cause mythology.
10:58 I think that some people feel deprived of yesterday's future,
11:03 even though they never actually had it in the first place.
11:07 All they ever really had was the fantasy of it.
11:12 Some people feel deprived of a US economy where the uneducated,
11:18 unprivileged workingman could own a beautiful three-bedroom
11:22 home or maybe some farmland and support
11:25 his homemaker wife and 2.5 kids on a single salary for low-skilled labor.
11:30 That was always mostly a fantasy.
11:36 You never lost it cuz you never really had it.
11:43 I grew up in the '80s and '90s and I
11:46 also thought that Blade Runner and Star Trek looked really cool.
11:49 Part of me is a little disappointed that the future
11:52 doesn't look like that, at least not yet.
11:58 But rather than spending my time chasing a fantasy,
12:03 I choose instead to put that effort toward noticing
12:06 and appreciating the progress that we actually ended up making.
12:12 Which is different than what I expected,
12:16 but it's still really good in a lot of ways and it
12:20 could be even better if we just keep looking forward, not back.
12:30 Just because something lacks the comfort of nostalgia
12:34 does not mean that it is bad.
12:38 Just because something or someone turns out different than
12:43 what you expected does not mean they are bad.
12:50 The future will still look like the future no matter what
12:55 because we could not go back even if we wanted to.
12:59 The only way available is forward.
13:05 So, get in, loser.
13:08 We're going that away.
13:12 You know something else from our present that really is quite futuristic?
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