Tuesday, December 30, 2025

What Climate Change Will Mean for the US

The United States is already experiencing the effects of climate change and those effects are going to get more extreme. That's the theme of the Atlantic article,  What Climate Change Will Do to America by Mid-Century, by Van R. Newkirk II (archive link) It's the best article I've read about climate change in a long time. It grabbed me immediately with it's mention of Octavia Butler and it didn't let go until the end.

Earlier this year, in the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains, a graveyard was spared by the fire that sent thousands of Los Angeles residents fleeing into the coal-black night. Here, in Mountain View Cemetery, lie the bones of Octavia Butler, the famed science-fiction writer who spent her life in Pasadena and Altadena, both of which had burned. Trinkets offered by fans often decorate Butler’s unassuming grave. A footstone is inscribed with a quotation from her Parable of the Sower : ALL THAT YOU TOUCH, YOU CHANGE. ALL THAT YOU CHANGE, CHANGES YOU.

 In that dystopian novel, published in 1993 and set in the mid-2020s, the United States still exists but has been warped by global warming, and its authoritarian government has ceded most of the administration of day-to-day matters to corrupt companies. In Butler’s neo-feudal vision, states and cities erect strict borders to deter migrants, the gap between rich and poor has widened, and massive wildfires in Southern California drive the state’s decline.

It has become commonplace to label Butler a prophet. She didn’t get everything right about the United States today. But even in the things that haven’t happened, exactly, one can see analogs to real life.

Butler, however, considered herself merely an analyst—a “histofuturist.” She often said that her primary skill was simply learning from the past. In her research for Parable, she studied times of rising political strife and demagoguery, along with America’s history of class and racial inequality. She studied what was at the time an emerging scientific consensus regarding global warming, a body of research that even then predicted fires and floods, and warned of political instability.

“I didn’t make up the problems,” Butler wrote in an essay for Essence in 2000. “All I did was look around at the problems we’re neglecting now and give them about 30 years to grow into full-fledged disasters.” That same year, she said in an interview that she dearly hoped she was not prophesying anything at all; that among other social ills, climate change would become a disaster only if it was allowed to fester. “I hope, of course, that we will be smarter than that,” Butler said six years before her death, in 2006.

What will our “full-fledged disasters” be in three decades, as the planet continues to warm? The year 2024 was the hottest on record. Yet 2025 has been perhaps the single most devastating year in the fight for a livable planet. An authoritarian American president has pressed what can only be described as a policy of climate-change acceleration—destroying commitments to clean energy and pushing for more oil production. It doesn’t require an oracle to see where this trajectory might lead.

This is a long article and it's not pleasant reading, although it does offer a glimmer of hope at the end. But if you want to understand some of the challenges that face the United States, and by extension the rest of the world, in the next twenty or 30 years, it's essential reading. 



Monday, December 29, 2025

A Futurist Looks Ahead to 2026

Amy Webb is an American author, futurist, and founder to the Future Today Strategy Group. I read her book, The Genesis Machine, a few years ago and was seriously impressed. 

Every year she publishes a newsletter article looking at what happened during the year and what it portends for the coming year. If you want to get a handle on these topsy turvy times, it's essential reading. 

She starts out by looking at what she expects to be the big themes for 2026. These are the first three. (All are described in detail in the newsletter)

  1. Convergences will drive the next wave of disruption and growth. 
  2. The post-search internet. 
  3. The rise of unlimited labor. 
After that, she looks at some of the signals to watch for in 2026.

At FTSG, we define signals as indicators of emerging change. Longtime readers of this annual letter know that 18 years ago, I created an end-of-year inventory of signals to methodically reflect on the prevailing forces that are likely to influence the world ahead. It proved to be an invaluable catalogue months later for our clients and partners, so I've continued to publish this end-of-year letter with impactful signals for the entire FTSG community.
Cataloging signals is a practice I've refined and honed for two decades. My annual inventory is a way to think about the evolution of technology, science, business, and society as part of a long continuum.

Below is a short list (not hyperbole!) of signals I collected from the past year that are likely to shape the year ahead.

This is a long newsletter article but well worth the time it takes to read through it. A good idea would be to bookmark and look at it again in mid-year.  

Sunday, December 14, 2025

John Varley, RIP

I was sad to see that John Varley has died. He was one of my favourite authors duing the 80 and 90s, mostly for his Eight Worlds series. I met him at Ad Astra in 1989 and I think I still have a few of his books that he signed there.  

In looking over his Wikipedia entry, I see that I've missed a couple of his later books, an oversight I should correct, especially Irontown Blues, a follow-up to Steel Beach and The Golden Globe, both of which I loved. But my favourite of all his works is his novella, "The Persistance of Vision", which completely blew me away when I read it when it first appeared in F&SF.  Truly one of the greats.

Saturday, December 13, 2025

Saturday Sounds - Bheki Mseleku

This week's musical treat doesn't feature an album or a concert, but a musician, South African pianist and composer, Bheki Mseleku, who, sadly, died in 2008. I first heard his music on SiriusXM, the song "Vulkani" from his album, Timelessness, and immediately wanted to hear more. 

He's a pianist very much in the mode of McCoy Tyner (a good thing in my books) and a talented composer. His music incorporates African rhythms, hard-bop tonalities and strong melodies, Spotify has several of his albums and I've linked to Timelessness below. I hope you like it as much as I do. It's a perfect antidote to the onset of holiday musical sludge that we're inundated with this time of year.

Tuesday, December 02, 2025

Posts Will Be Sparse This Month

I haven't been able to keep up with a regular posting schedule this month. Part of that is just being too busy with household problems (a dead washing machine soon to be replaced) and prep for the holidays. I'm also having some eye problems, which I'm hoping will clear up over the next month (bad dry eye) and that's making it hard for me to read.

I don't want to shut the blog down but it's likely to be quiet here until early January. 

Monday, December 01, 2025

Movie and TV Reviews - November 2025

Movies and TV shows that Nancy and I watched in November. I do these posts mainly so I can keep track of what we've been watching, so the reviews are cursory. 

Movies

  • Goodnight Oppy: A BBC documentary about the Spirit and Opportunity Mars rovers. Quite good and gives a sense of just how remarkable this mission was. (Amazon Prime)
  • Frankenstein: I enjoyed it though I found it hard to watch (many dark scenes) and some of the changes from the novel confused me. I found it interesting that Del Torro updated the technology in the story (all the electrical stuff, for example) to a late Victorian level, even though the story is set in the 1830s. The gothic tone is faithful to the book even if some of the characters and details vary. (Netflix)
  • Deep Cover: A trio of improv actors gets hired by the police to pose a criminals to entrap a drug dealer. Things go spectacularly wrong. A good popcorn movie but not much more. (Prime)
  • The Family Plan 1 and 2: Extremely implausible but still somehow watchable. More popcorn movies. (Apple TV)

TV

  • The Nature of Things: Implosion. Documentary about the Titan submersible disaster. Should have been longer. 
  • Slow Horses (season 5): A bit lighter than some of the earlier seasons but still enjoyable. 
  • Trainwreck: Woodstock '99. Three-part documentary about the disastrous Woodstock '99 festival What were they thinking? (Apple TV)
  • Only Murders in the Building (season 5): The plots continue to be implausible, but we are enjoying it. Steve Martin is brilliant, as always. (Disney+)
  • Antiques Road Trip (seaon 12). Only four more seasons to go and we will have watched all of them, (PBS)
  • Beyond Paradise (season 3): The season finally continues after the Christmas episode. I'm enjoying this one more than earlier seasons; not all episodes revolve around murders. (BritBox)
  • Lazarus: We had high hopes for this because it was based on a novel by Harlen Coben. But we only got through about 20 minutes of the first episode before giving up. If you like shows about troubled psychiatrists having visions of dead people you will like it; we didn't. (Amazon Prime)
  • Code of Silence: BritBox has been heavily promoting this show about a deaf cleaner who gets hired by the police to lip read to help in an investigation. It's a bit implausible but quite watchable. (BritBox)
  • Only Murders in the Building (Season 5): The deaths continue at the troubled Arcadia as the intrepid podcasters try to find the killers. (Disney+)
  • Murder Is Easy: An adaptation of a story by Agatha Christie. This one turned out better than I expected, though that's not saying much. (BritBox)
  • I, Jack Wright: A British brick magnate dies suddenly and his family implodes in spectacular fashion. Grim, twisted, dark, and made with that special brand of dark humour t hat the Brits do so well. But the ending ... there had beter be a second season. (BritBox)