Em 2010, a Rockefeller Foundation, em conjunto com o Global Business Network, anteviram quatro cenários de possível evolução da tecnologia e desenvolvimento internacional. Nada disto está escondido, é perfeitamente acessível aqui por este link.
Esquematizaram os 4 cenários como "a matriz de risco" (ama triste risco)... e nada disso seria estranho, excepto que o chamado "Lock Step", que iremos aqui colocar, traçava um panorama em 2010, do que iria acontecer em 2020 (ainda que fosse colocado com início em 2012).
"A matriz de risco"
Em resumo os quatro cenários são descritos assim:
- LOCK STEP – A world of tighter top-down government control and more authoritarian leadership, with limited innovation and growing citizen pushback.
- CLEVER TOGETHER – A world in which highly coordinated and successful strategies emerge for addressing both urgent and entrenched worldwide issues.
- HACK ATTACK – An economically unstable and shock-prone world in which governments weaken, criminals thrive, and dangerous innovations emerge.
- SMART SCRAMBLE – An economically depressed world in which individuals and communities develop localized, makeshift solutions to a growing set of problems.
Dir-se-ia que o "Clever Together" seria o favorito... mas para quem?
Na perspectiva de uma classe dirigente que vê na China um modelo, o "Lock Step" (Confinar passo a passo), acaba por ser o mais atractivo, apesar de envolver uma menor capacidade adaptativa da população... e o que será menos desejável mesmo será o "Smart Scramble" (Desenrascanço).
O "Hack Attack" também é perigoso podendo levar a organizações fora da lei, ou seja fora do controlo da classe dirigente... mesmo assim, não será tão perigoso quanto o desenrascanço, por esse ser individual e estar à mesma fora de controlo.
Assim, o primeiro apresentado foi o "Lock Step", que antevia o quê? (antevisão de há 10 anos atrás)
- Uma pandemia a começar em 2012, infectando 20% da população, afectando o turismo, faltando bens, com lojas e escritórios fechados durante meses, o fim dos voos, etc. Quem se sairia melhor? A China.
- Os governos imporiam a obrigatoriedade de máscaras e medidas de temperatura obrigatórias, em todos os espaços comuns.
- Que todas as restrições usadas em tempo de pandemia continuaram depois, alimentadas pelos próprios governos, com vários pretextos - nova pandemia, terrorismo, clima, pobreza.
- Que os cidadãos nos países ocidentais iriam ver com bons olhos um governo paternalista, e aceitariam o controlo biométrico - passaportes, etc. Aceitariam bem, pelo menos inicialmente (o que já acontece). Nos países em desenvolvimento, pelo contrário poderia levar a ditaduras mais severas, e maior rejeição.
- A investigação e tecnologia seria dirigida para áreas de fazer dinheiro, ou investigação fundamental, sendo desencorajada e não financiada toda a investigação em sectores mesmo inovadores (isto já acontece há dezenas de anos).
- Prevê várias conjunturas mundiais com nacionalismos a crescerem.
- Considera que só uns 15 anos depois os cidadãos se iriam fartar do estado paternalista. Começando pelo conflito entre o interesse nacional e individual, especialmente em jovens que veriam a situação sem tendência de mudar. Mesmo os que gostariam do "estado das coisas", começariam a estar desagradados pelas constantes restrições.
(1) LOCK STEP __________________
A world of tighter top-down government control and more authoritarian leadership, with limited innovation and growing citizen pushback
In 2012, the pandemic that the world had been anticipating for years finally hit.
Unlike 2009’s H1N1, this new influenza strain — originating from wild geese — was extremely virulent and deadly. Even the most pandemic-prepared nations were quickly overwhelmed when the virus streaked around the world, infecting nearly 20 percent of the global population and killing 8 million in just seven months, the majority of them healthy young adults. The pandemic also had a deadly effect on economies: international mobility of both people and goods screeched to a halt, debilitating industries like tourism and breaking global supply chains. Even locally, normally bustling shops and office buildings sat empty for months, devoid of both employees and customers.
The pandemic blanketed the planet — though disproportionate numbers died in Africa, Southeast Asia, and Central America, where the virus spread like wildfire in the absence of official containment protocols. But even in developed countries, containment was a challenge. The United States’s initial policy of “strongly discouraging” citizens from flying proved deadly in its leniency, accelerating the spread of the virus not just within the U.S. but across borders. However, a few countries did fare better — China in particular. The Chinese government’s quick imposition and enforcement of mandatory quarantine for all citizens, as well as its instant and near-hermetic sealing off of all borders, saved millions of lives, stopping the spread of the virus far earlier than in other countries and enabling a swifter post-pandemic recovery.
China’s government was not the only one that took extreme measures to protect its citizens from risk and exposure. During the pandemic, national leaders around the world flexed their authority and imposed airtight rules and restrictions, from the mandatory wearing of face masks to body-temperature checks at the entries to communal spaces like train stations and supermarkets. Even after the pandemic faded, this more authoritarian control and oversight of citizens and their activities stuck and even intensified. In order to protect themselves from the spread of increasingly global problems — from pandemics and transnational terrorism to environmental crises and rising poverty — leaders around the world took a firmer grip on power.
At first, the notion of a more controlled world gained wide acceptance and approval. Citizens willingly gave up some of their sovereignty — and their privacy — to more paternalistic states in exchange for greater safety and stability. Citizens were more tolerant, and even eager, for top-down direction and oversight, and national leaders had more latitude to impose order in the ways they saw fit. In developed countries, this heightened oversight took many forms: biometric IDs for all citizens, for example, and tighter regulation of key industries whose stability was deemed vital to national interests. In many developed countries, enforced cooperation with a suite of new regulations and agreements slowly but steadily restored both order and, importantly, economic growth.
Across the developing world, however, the story was different — and much more variable. Top-down authority took different forms in different countries, hinging largely on the capacity, caliber, and intentions of their leaders. In countries with strong and thoughtful leaders, citizens’ overall economic status and quality of life increased. In India, for example, air quality drastically improved after 2016, when the government outlawed high emitting vehicles. In Ghana, the introduction of ambitious government programs to improve basic infrastructure and ensure the availability of clean water for all her people led to a sharp decline in water-borne diseases. But more authoritarian leadership worked less well — and in some cases tragically — in countries run by irresponsible elites who used their increased power to pursue their own interests at the expense of their citizens.
There were other downsides, as the rise of virulent nationalism created new hazards: spectators at the 2018 World Cup, for example, wore bulletproof vests that sported a patch of their national flag. Strong technology regulations stifled innovation, kept costs high, and curbed adoption. In the developing world, access to “approved” technologies increased but beyond that remained limited: the locus of technology innovation was largely in the developed world, leaving many developing countries on the receiving end of technologies that others consider “best” for them. Some governments found this patronizing and refused to distribute computers and other technologies that they scoffed at as “second hand.” Meanwhile, developing countries with more resources and better capacity began to innovate internally to fill these gaps on their own.
Meanwhile, in the developed world, the presence of so many top-down rules and norms greatly inhibited entrepreneurial activity. Scientists and innovators were often told by governments what research lines to pursue and were guided mostly toward projects that would make money (e.g., market-driven product development) or were “sure bets” (e.g., fundamental research), leaving more risky or innovative research areas largely untapped. Well-off countries and monopolistic companies with big research and development budgets still made significant advances, but the IP behind their breakthroughs remained locked behind strict national or corporate protection. Russia and India imposed stringent domestic standards for supervising and certifying encryption-related products and their suppliers — a category that in reality meant all IT innovations. The U.S. and EU struck back with retaliatory national standards, throwing a wrench in the development and diffusion of technology globally.
Especially in the developing world, acting in one’s national self-interest often meant seeking practical alliances that fit with those interests—whether it was gaining access to needed resources or banding together in order to achieve economic growth. In South America and Africa, regional and sub-regional alliances became more structured. Kenya doubled its trade with southern and eastern Africa, as new partnerships grew within the continent. China’s investment in Africa expanded as the bargain of new jobs and infrastructure in exchange for access to key minerals or food exports proved agreeable to many governments. Cross-border ties proliferated in the form of official security aid. While the deployment of foreign security teams was welcomed in some of the most dire failed states, one-size-fits-all solutions yielded few positive results.
By 2025, people seemed to be growing weary of so much top-down control and letting leaders and authorities make choices for them. Wherever national interests clashed with individual interests, there was conflict. Sporadic pushback became increasingly organized and coordinated, as disaffected youth and people who had seen their status and opportunities slip away — largely in developing countries — incited civil unrest. In 2026, protestors in Nigeria brought down the government, fed up with the entrenched cronyism and corruption. Even those who liked the greater stability and predictability of this world began to grow uncomfortable and constrained by so many tight rules and by the strictness of national boundaries. The feeling lingered that sooner or later, something would inevitably upset the neat order that the world’s governments had worked so hard to establish.
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NOTA (04.05.2021):
Como não havia deixar de ser, este paralelismo entre o cenário pensado em 2010, e o que aconteceu em 2020, foi notado há já bastante tempo por outras pessoas, levando inclusive a um "fake-check"
The claim: COVID-19 is part of 'Operation Lockstep' from 'The Rockefeller Playbook'
que depois é dita ser "falsa", porque (e aqui é preciso conter o riso):
We rate these claims as FALSE, based on our research. "The Rockefeller Playbook" and "Operation Lockstep" do not exist. The claim borrows scenarios from "Lock Step," a section of "Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development," a report published by the Rockefeller Foundation. The report makes no reference to COVID-19, a vaccine against the disease or plans to introduce a police state during a pandemic.
Portanto, Lock Step era um nome de um cenário e não de uma operação Lockstep, e o livro não era um "playbook" era um relatório. O jogo de palavras continua de forma acéfala, dizendo que em 2010 não se falava da Covid-19... só faltaria invocar que era falso porque no relatório Rockefeller de 2010 não se antevia que Biden iria roubar as eleições a Trump em 2020. E continuando a mentira descarada, vão ao ponto de dizer que o relatório não previa planos para introduzir um estado-policial, quando o ponto do relatório era justamente esse - invocar o que aconteceria se se introduzisse um estado-policial, e como a população ao fim de uma década começaria a resistir a isso.