Do you believe in current economic systems? What about political systems? Do you have alternatives?
Do you think modernity is making people happy? Do you have any thoughts on what could be done if you don't?
(please leave politics and religion out of this conversation unless you are speaking about something theoretical)
I also thought that reading some books on communication studies would be beneficial. It kind of made things clearer but without benefits. Understanding why a hurricane is coming toward you or how strong it is does not matter much if you don't know how to be safe.
But to be fair, of course, it is very difficult to predict this before dropping a network into society.
On the other hand, the modern world is built on top of certain institutions or crafts that require certain technical abilities. You can't acquire these abilities without focus and dedication, which seems to be rare these days among young people. If you want to watch TikTok all day and prefer being Messi to Einstein, you need to know that no TikTok if certain technical people didn't exist, and the same goes for Messi. Which most of the young people won't get. Which suggests that all of this will fall down in the long run. (can't be sure of course)
In a decade or two, we finally collectively realize that we do need secure general purpose computing, and adopt capability based security[1] widely. The resulting regained freedom to just try things results in a renaissance of the internet.
In a decade or two, it turns out that the bitgrid[2] actually does help give petaflop computing to the masses, dirt cheap.
In a decade or two, we figure out how to take an atomically flat surface, add a layer of semiconductor to it, then build transistors on it, one at a time, to make chips with the minimum possible sized fabrication system. This allows custom semiconductor production to be democratized.
Barring some catastrophic extinction events like supervolcanonic eruptions and meteor strikes Kurzweil's vision seems inevitable to me.