Survival of the Richest: Escape Fantasies of the Tech Billionaires
Survival of the Richest: Escape Fantasies of the Tech Billionaires book cover

Survival of the Richest: Escape Fantasies of the Tech Billionaires

Price
$16.70
Format
Hardcover
Pages
224
Publisher
W. W. Norton & Company
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0393881066
Dimensions
5.7 x 0.9 x 8.6 inches
Weight
12.8 ounces

Description

"Dark and revealing… Rushkoff provides a powerful critique of the attitudes and technologies that enable these deceptions." ― Washington Post " Survival of the Richest reveals fascinating tidbits about the elite tech crowd’s postapocalyptic survival strategies and the niche solutions being marketed to them." ― Carolyn Wong Simpkins, Science "[H]arrowing and illuminating." ― Chris Barsanti, PopMatters "A devastating portrait of the cultures and logics underlying big tech. Rushkoff is going to make you mad enough to fight back. A vital, lucid, and enraging read." ― Naomi Klein, author of This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate " Survival of the Richest is more than a primer on a soulless worldview pervading all aspects of life. Defying fantasies of escape―from each other, from earthliness, from Earth―Rushkoff offers something at once more realistic and more imaginative: mutual regard, responsibility, and flourishing. In so doing, he mounts an impassioned defense of everything and everyone marked expendable in the fanatical pursuit of a blank slate." ― Jenny Odell "Douglas Rushkoff has always been a singular observer and thinker. Embedded near the epicenters of the digital revolution, he has never flinched from honestly delivering fresh, radical, humane critiques of the emerging world. There are plenty of books decrying the horrors of twenty-first-century monopoly capitalism, but none quite like Survival of the Richest ." ― Kurt Anderson, author of Evil Geniuses "Beyond eye-opening, this book is eye-popping. A master storyteller, Rushkoff brings to life perhaps the greatest challenge of our time. A must-read." ― Frances Moore Lappé, author or coauthor of twenty books, from Diet for a Small Planet to Daring Democracy "Rushkoff gives us a sober, scathing oddsmaking on the recursive wager of the ultra-rich." ― Cory Doctorow "[Rushkoff’s] report is both fierce and amazed in the face of capitalism’s delusions; I for one am sharpening my pitchfork." ― Jonathan Lethem "Douglas Rushkoff’s keen eye as a seasoned media analyst, combined with his flair and wit as a writer and a performer, shine in this book." ― Marina Gorbis, executive director of Institute for the Future "A hilarious and lacerating look at the elite sociopathy wrecking the world, and a call to arms for how the rest of us can fight it." ― Molly Crabapple, author of Drawing Blood and coauthor (with Marwan Hisham) of Brothers of the Gun "With razor-sharp insight, Rushkoff unwraps the dazzling facade of the technological dream, revealing the alarming Mindset that underlies promises of planetary salvation." ― Jeremy Lent, author of The Patterning Instinct and The Web of Meaning "A scary, true and unsettling look at what happens when money causes people to lose their humanity." ― Seth Godin "Numbing and mind-blowing in equal measure, Survival of the Richest reveals how tech billionaires are planning to survive a global apocalypse." ― BookPage "[A] thorough and authoritative condemnation of tech worship." ― Kirkus Reviews "A shocking account of how the very wealthy prep for doomsday [and]…an eye-popping look at some outlandish visions for the future." ― Publishers Weekly Douglas Rushkoff is professor of media theory and digital economics at Queens/CUNY. Named one of the world’s ten most influential intellectuals by MIT, he hosts the Team Human podcast and has written many award-winning books, including Media Virus , Program or Be Programmed , and Present Shock . He lives in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York.

Features & Highlights

  • Named One of the Most Anticipated Books of 2022 by
  • Kirkus
  • and
  • Literary Hub
  • The tech elite have a plan to survive the apocalypse: they want to leave us all behind.
  • Five mysterious billionaires summoned theorist Douglas Rushkoff to a desert resort for a private talk. The topic? How to survive the “Event”: the societal catastrophe they know is coming. Rushkoff came to understand that these men were under the influence of The Mindset, a Silicon Valley–style certainty that they and their cohort can break the laws of physics, economics, and morality to escape a disaster of their own making―as long as they have enough money and the right technology.
  • In
  • Survival of the Richest
  • , Rushkoff traces the origins of The Mindset in science and technology through its current expression in missions to Mars, island bunkers, AI futurism, and the metaverse. In a dozen urgent, electrifying chapters, he confronts tech utopianism, the datafication of all human interaction, and the exploitation of that data by corporations. Through fascinating characters―master programmers who want to remake the world from scratch as if redesigning a video game and bankers who return from Burning Man convinced that incentivized capitalism is the solution to environmental disasters―Rushkoff explains why those with the most power to change our current trajectory have no interest in doing so. And he shows how recent forms of anti-mainstream rebellion―QAnon, for example, or meme stocks―reinforce the same destructive order.
  • This mind-blowing work of social analysis shows us how to transcend the landscape The Mindset created―a world alive with algorithms and intelligences actively rewarding our most selfish tendencies―and rediscover community, mutual aid, and human interdependency. In a thundering conclusion,
  • Survival of the Richest
  • argues that the only way to survive the coming catastrophe is to ensure it doesn’t happen in the first place.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(89)
★★★★
25%
(74)
★★★
15%
(44)
★★
7%
(21)
23%
(67)

Most Helpful Reviews

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How the escapist “Mindset” prevents the futures we want from manifesting

In his usual eloquent and deeply researched style, Rushkoff illuminates how we got to this point in human history and how we might successfully get out of it. A worthy must-read that will change the way you think (for the better) about the inequities of our current societal operating system.
17 people found this helpful
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I really wanted to find this worthwhile

After reading the author's comments in an article at the Guardian my interest was piqued and I decided to purchase and read his book assuming the author had something more to say on the topic. It turns out - not so much. Along with what I found to be a rather tepid critique of the billionaire class and their world view, the author manages to credulously deliver the "official story" position on many other topics. I learned among other things that the official public health narratives of the past several years are all "true," along with the "official" account of the events of nine-eleven 2001. I must admit that this book was a sobering reminder of just what it takes to be considered a "public intellectual" in the West today - in this case simply bark the "official story" while offering the most bland critique imaginable of global elites - and then posture as if you're some sort of rebel while doing so. If you are already well informed regarding the state of the world - outside the "official" boundaries set by MSM news sources - you will find this book a rather huge disappointment I dare say.
15 people found this helpful
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Longtime fan not disappointed by a stylistic shift

It wouldn't be fair for me NOT to offer the caveat that I am a fan of Rushkoff's work, but this is both fully in the vein of and a departure from previous work. His ideas still shine through, but he reaches them more through storytelling than he has in some other books, and the result is a personal and thoughtful journey. Understanding "the mindset" becomes as powerful a lens as his observations on the viral proliferation of ideas were when I encountered them in 1995. A must for fans, but an especially accessible entry into the world of his work.
13 people found this helpful
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Just Watch the TED Talk

If you are expecting this to be a nuanced take on the future of humanity, you will leave hungry. I could write a 200 page response to this book, but no one would read it, so I will just say that you should watch the writers TED talk. It covers the basics of this book and is less than 10 minutes long. I really wanted to like this book and connect with it but I just couldn't.
11 people found this helpful
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Read this please my fellow humans

I've worked around the uber-rich for quite some time and have had a lot of frightening observations about the culture that permeates these circles, and am thankful these things have been properly addressed.
One of only a handful of 5-stars I've given in my 25 (o0f) years on here. Yet another fine read from Douglas Rushkoff. But this one certainly comes at a crucial moment and this is really an addition to the few things around us we need to chart our path forward. Things are really frightening out there and having an advocate like this on our side gives me a little bit of hope. Highly recommend this book for book club, or whatever scenario you can think of that will get people together to talk about this kind of stuff.
7 people found this helpful
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shallow

I wanted to like this book. Billionaires are, by several sane measures, sociopaths, and a satisfying target. But check out this sentence from page 2, describing his business-class flight to go meet with some rich folks at a desert convention. "They [airline staff presumably] gave me noise-canceling headphones to wear and warmed mixed nuts to eat (yes, they *heat* the nuts) as I composed a lecture on my MacBook [important brand insertion there?] about how digital businesses could foster circular economic principles rather than doubling down on extractive growth-based capitalism--painfully aware that the ethical value of my words nor the carbon offsets I had purchased along with my ticket could possibly compensate for the environmental damage I was doing." Seems to me it's not just billionaires who are being righteous and self-absorbed these days. I put it down after 10 pages. If anybody wants my copy, they can have it.
3 people found this helpful
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book

I'm satisfied. The delivery is fast and the quality is good.Thank you.
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Misleading title... Waste of my time

I really wanted to like this book, but the author constantly strokes his ego at every chance he gets which turned me off completely. He touched on many interesting topics but the content was clouded by his desire to portray anyone who didn't share his views as "psychotic" and in need of intervention and often injecting his biased political views on every subject he discussed . Tittle is deffinately misleading, as he only addressed the tittle subject in the first two chapters. I was hopping for facts on how the rich are planning for the future but instead I felt I was reading a rant on how the rich are destroying society without offering any solution or insight on what their plans are for when our society collapses.
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important and funny

Rushkoff warns us and makes us laugh at these bozos as the same time.
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important and funny

Rushkoff warns us and makes us laugh at these bozos as the same time.