Same here. There have been tons of technologies coming out recently where my main reaction is "awesome, I can't wait to use the heck out of that." If anything my biggest sigh comes from "but I bet the comment threads are going to be littered with tedious doomers moaning about how it's going to enable the awful stuff they're imagining instead."
FaceDeer
The issue I'm taking is with:
Louis doesn't want to improve the show, they want something else entirely.
I don't think he's trying to "improve the show." He's saying the same thing you are, that he just doesn't think Black Mirror is a good show.
Saying "those are just mercenaries, we didn't send them" would have also been a perfectly fine response by China. But then I suppose that would be admitting that there are Chinese people that the CCP can't control.
There's been plenty of negative portrayals of new technology throughout the history of sci-fi. Heck, the very first one is usually considered to be "Frankenstein", and it's all about how new technology can backfire spectacularly.
I think the problem is not the existence of negative portrayals, but the absence of positive ones. There aren't a lot of shows for folks who want to see a positive view of the future, where technology solves problems rather than always being the source of them. That used to be the domain of things like Star Trek but modern Star Trek is a pale shadow that no longer paints a particularly rosy view of humanity's future. The Orville took up that mantle, I suppose, but it's stretched pretty thin.
It doesn't "show the future", though. This is exactly what frustrates me so much about online discourse and shows like Black Mirror, some new technology comes along and people go "that's a terrible idea, haven't you seen Black Mirror?" As if Black Mirror was some kind of rigorous scientific study that shows the One True Way that the future will unfold.
It's an entertainment show. Its purpose is to draw in viewers and keep them watching. You don't do that with episodes that show a new technology coming out and everything turning out fine, you do it by presenting a scary, compelling narrative.
We don't get freaked out in real life by summer camps and restrict the availability of machetes and other bladed instruments near them because of what happened in that documentary series "Friday the 13th." It's fiction. Plot trumps realism.
I don't think he's proposing changing Black Mirror itself, he's saying the same thing you're saying - that it's just not a good show.
Like, if I was writing an article criticizing the prevalence of torture porn in modern entertainment, I wouldn't say "they should release a Saw movie where Jigsaw forces his victims to undergo nonviolent counselling." That wouldn't be a Saw movie, it'd be a weird parody of one. I'd just say "Saw is an example of the sort of thing I'm complaining about."
Ah yes, since the one thing that markets truly love is stability, and moving production from one country to another requires long-term planning, this will surely help with that.
And any qualified workers you do have could randomly disappear to El Salvador at any moment.
But didn't Trump tell them not to retaliate? I'm pretty sure Trump told them not to retaliate. I don't understand.
The problem is that Trump doesn't understand what "tariffs" are, and thinks that a trade imbalance is somehow a tariff. Trying to comply would be like Mattingly trying to trim his sideburns.
It is possible to dislike something without believing it should be erased from existence. This is really extreme black-and-white thinking that isn't remotely realistic.