Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
Used to be ~2016 that “Tech” was a cult-like coherent derp and techlash was a chaotic stream of confused critical commentary of very variable quality — mix of great insights and profound wrongness. Now it’s flipped. Tech is a chaotic stream of great and terrible ideas and Techlash is a cult-like coherent derp.
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Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
In 2016 you could predict the contents of a tech-positive essay based just on the headline. All drew from the same well of VC-startup hustle porn and talking points. Now you can predict the contents of a techlash piece based on the headline.
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Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
It’s an effect of institutionalization. In 2013-14, when I wrote my breaking smart essays, people were still working out the core arguments of tech positive worldviews and the critics were just starting to notice that it was worth engaging it. Everything being said was fresh. My essays still read mostly fine to me.
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Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
By 2016, the tech positive ideas had been turned into an mindless techbro derp. Techlash ideas were just gaining maturity. Then 2017 happened, Techlashers went to town gleefully, tech positive crowd performed a defensive lobotomy on themselves in retreat.
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Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
By 2019, the Techlash had self-lobotomized too, turning into a caricature of itself, marked by a profound lack of technical curiosity. Hatred of techbros got conflated with political resistance to fascism, SV helped by getting moronically redpilled and reactionary, and we had ourselves an idiot discourse.
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Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
The pandemic era was interesting. SV discourse vanished past its own assh… I mean event horizon *cough* clubhouse *cough* and the techlash turned into a profoundly illiterate (of not just engineering and science but vast swathes of humanities, esp history) religion, with a knee-jerk rejection doctrine for everything
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