The real danger exposed by the Facebook antitrust case has nothing to do with FB--which is the least popular social media company for good reason--but with what it signals about a future marked by bi-partisan hostility towards corporations and innovation.
It was the pro-innovation, deregulatory efforts of both Democrats (like Michael Dukakis & Birch Bayh) and Republicans (like Bob Dole) in the 80s & 90s that allowed the tech sector to build on its mid-20th c successes and secure American tech dominance for another generation.
And while the "what have you done for me lately" mood is de rigueur, the American economy in the last forty years would have been very, very bad without Silicon Valley 2.0. Remove the gains from the tech sector and the US economy would look like Japan in the 90s.
So it is alarming to see a rapidly swelling, bi-partisan anti-tech consensus growing in DC and state capitols around the country. The odds of our political class strangling the life out of our entrepreneurial class is growing almost monthly.
And we might be surprised to wakeup one day and find out that the industry doesn't need us nearly as much as we need them. We're not there yet; we still have the best capitalization, the best research university network, the best network effects, and so on.
But our advantage in ALL of those areas is shrinking; the margins aren't as comfortable as they once were. Just a few years ago, the US passed the inflection point where we are no longer the source for a majority of the world's venture capital $$.
The ratio of top tech talent--the programmers, engineers, and innovators--who pick the US over other destinations is falling as countries like China, Canada, and Singapore compete to attract them via relaxed visa rules and government subsidies.
So don't fixate on questions like whether Facebook is a monopoly, whether antitrust action is justified, whether Zuckerberg is a lizard person, and so on.
Realize that these hearings are exposing a deeper threat to America's future as the global hub for innovation.
For those interested, I created a triptych of episodes about the origins of Silicon Valley featuring guests like @margaretomara and @calebwatney.
I cam away impressed with just how much Silicon Valley was a function of chance.
Scrap some combo of ERISA reform in the 70s, immigration reform in 1965, Bayh-Dole in 1980, and today the Valley would be mostly/merely of interest to historians of the semiconductor industry.
So much hinged on the vast consequences of seemingly small regulatory tweaks. It's really quite amazing...and scary. We got *this* close to failing to create the necessary & sufficient preconditions for American digital dominance. And it would be so easy to mess it all up now.
Here's a good example from the comments on this thread illustrating the breadth of the emerging anti-tech consensus, from progressive left to nationalist right.
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There is a clear corollary to the Jericho March from the 1960s called Operation Midnight Ride. Today, it's disgraced ex-general Michael Flynn & religious broadcaster Eric Metaxas; back then it was disgraced ex-general Edwin Walker & religious broadcaster Billy James Hargis. 1/
Former General Edwin Walker was a Korean War hero who was cashiered by the military in the early 60s for spreading whacko anti-communist conspiracy theories to soldiers under his command.
He's mostly fogotten today, but left-wingers at the time feared he might attempt a coup. 3/
We can be thankful for yet another instance of Trump's incompetence belying his wickedness, but the attempted coup--frivolous lawsuits, 100+ GOP congresspeople joining the Texas suit, Trump's calls to state officials to overturn the election results--will have consequences. 1/
We are watching, live, a practice run for the end of a functional American democracy. A future, more competent incumbent--one who takes the "wannabe" out of "wannabe authoritarian"--now has the playbook for how to steal an election thanks to Trump and the GOP. 2/
But this isn't just some crazy, future hypothetical. If the election had hinged on a single state--and not three of them--I have no confidence that the coup attempt would be failing right now. 3/
Mea culpa. I still think Elon Musk is generally overrated, but I personally underrated him in the past.
I had thought of him as a PT Barnum who merely arbitraged government subsidies for renewable tech. But he's a clever, if not as innovative as people think, entrepreneur.
Very little about a Tesla vehicle is truly and radically new...but it has multiplied the number of electric vehicles on the road and made them *cool*, which is a vital step towards mass consumer adoption. Battery costs have fallen as a result. He's challenged the dealer monopoly.
Very little about SpaceX's underlying tech is truly novel--other launch companies did more innovation--but Musk combined other people's innovations with a tact for multi-stakeholder buy-in and is beating NASA at the space game so severely that NASA has bought in!
The ethno-nationalist heresy that @roddreher describes here is of a similar species to that in the biblical accounts of Christ's triumphal entry into Jerusalem, which ended, days later, with the same crowd baying for his crucifixion. What gives? theamericanconservative.com/dreher/donald-…
The key to understanding that mood shift was the palm branches being thrown at Jesus's feet, which were symbols of Jewish ethno-nationalist resistance. Indeed, it was the palm that adorned currency during the nationalist Maccabean regime two centuries prior.
In other words, the crowd singing hosannas to Jesus riding a donkey into Jerusalem were looking for a revolutionary leader to lead an armed insurgency to Make Israel Great Again.
If you were raised in an evangelical church, odds are you experienced this common preaching practice: every sermon had an easily digestible takeaway (or "application" in evangelicalese), an admonition for listeners to work on in their own lives that week.
Thus a sermon on, say, Moses and the Brazen Serpent would end with an admonition to trust in the ultimate God rather than looking to the lesser gods offered by modern society.
I attended a deeply conservative, fundamentalist Christian university. They had a first class library on campus, but the periodical librarian had a particular problem. 1/
The university had very strict dress codes involving the acceptable length of dresses, when to wear ties and suit coats, and so on. The general goal was to minimize the amount of bare skin being showed or even allowing one to detect too much of the mere *shape* of the body. 2/
There were a lot of problematic cultural, gendered, and theological assumptions that were baked into the simultaneously underexamined and overhyped concept of "decency," but that's not the point of our story today. 3/