The End of Reality
How Four Billionaires are Selling a Fantasy Future of the Metaverse, Mars, and Crypto
-
- $18.99
Publisher Description
An instant bestseller! A brilliant takedown and exposé of the great con job of the twenty-first century—the metaverse, crypto, space travel, transhumanism—being sold by four billionaires (Peter Thiel, Mark Zuckerberg, Marc Andreesen, Elon Musk), leading to the degeneration and bankruptcy of our society.
At a time when the crises of income inequality, climate, and democracy are compounding to create epic wealth disparity and the prospect of a second American civil war, four billionaires are hyping schemes that are designed to divert our attention away from issues that really matter. Each scheme—the metaverse, cryptocurrency, space travel, and transhumanism—is an existential threat in moral, political, and economic terms.
In The End of Reality¸ Jonathan Taplin provides perceptive insight into the personal backgrounds and cultural power of these billionaires—Peter Thiel, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, and Marc Andreesen (“The Four”) —and shows how their tech monopolies have brought middle-class wage stagnation, the hollowing out of many American towns, a radical increase in income inequality, and unbounded public acrimony. Meanwhile, the enormous amount of taxpayer money to be funneled into the dystopian ventures of "The Four," the benefits of which will accrue to billionaires, exacerbate these disturbing trends.
The End of Reality is both scathing critique and reform agenda that replaces the warped worldview of "The Four" with a vision of regenerative economics that seeks to build a sustainable society with healthy growth and full employment.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this vigorous polemic, University of Southern California professor of communication and digital media Taplin (Move Fast and Break Things) accuses Marc Andreesen, Elon Musk, Peter Thiel, and Mark Zuckerberg of capitalizing on the low quality of life among America's poor and working classes by selling them a carefully calculated fantasy. Among other pipe dreams, these "Technocrats" promised that life in the metaverse would be more fulfilling and that an economy based in cryptocurrency would be more equitable. The reality, according to Taplin, is that tech products like crypto and social media only "preserv the status quo" in place since the 1980s—namely chaotic, unregulated free-market liberalism—under which the tech billionaires' wealth and power has grown. Moreover, Taplin writes, "the rise of social networks correlates with the metastasis of social distrust political polarization" that further entrenches the dominance of these technocrats. Taplin accuses political leaders of being either slow or unwilling to take what he sees as the obvious first steps forward, including breaking up Meta and putting the Securities and Exchange Commission in charge of cryptocurrency. Persuasive and insightful, this cutting portrait of America's slide toward oligarchy hits home.