Here is Future One. Martin Jacques gloating over ‘western impotence’ as evidenced by our inability to get what we wanted in Burma or Zimbabwe.
In the parallel moral universe of MJ, South Africa’s President Mbeki has "scored a major diplomatic triumph" by getting the two main parties in Zimbabwe to the negotiating table.
If allowing one of the most dismally incompetent and vicious leaders in world history to ignore his defeat in an election and cling on to power is a triumph for Guardian readers, yes, well done Thabo!
Meanwhile In Burma the West could not intervene and ended up quietly channelling its assistance to cyclone-ravaged Burma via ASEAN, "the obvious and desirable course of action".
Yes, Martin, how obvious and desirable it is that thousands of people die for lack of the assistance we generously offered, helpfully to demonstrate Western impotence to Guardian readers.
Here is Future Two. Kevin Kelly talks about the next 5000 days of the World Wide Web and the profound transformations coming our way.
Set aside 20 minutes of your life to listen. And to think.
Future Two will defeat the banal emptiness of Future One.
It rolls out to the planet, including Zim and Burma in due course, the true new power of ‘the West’: connectivity, transparency and individual freedom.
And sure, as Asia and Africa and the Middle East take up these values ‘the West’ will have a lot to think about. New syntheses of power and responsibility will emerge. All very complicated.
But the problems we and our leaders face are all about managing Western success and indeed grasping the scale of it, not managing failure.










