Yesterday, I read how the global financial system has turned into a casino grift for the wealthy, companies rebuying their stock, hedge-fund super-trading in nanoseconds, private equity overborrowing and bankrupting industries, the cryptocurrency mirage, banks hyper-selling the same dubious instruments that led to financial meltdown in 2008.
I also read how some techie thought it was a good idea to create an AI social network exclusively for Artificial Intelligence agents (no humans allowed) and was surprised that a stream of thought from these AI bots was to eliminate humanity. “Dude? Did you never watch Terminator?”
Then I turned on the news and learned that the US and Russia’s New Start treaty, the last limit on nuclear arsenals, expired yesterday, and that 2025 was the hottest year on record. Sea level rises are causing residents of the Maldives to abandon their island homes, while members of the US government claim that the recent cold snap disproves climate change.
There was more in the news about forever wars, rise of autocracy, increasingly ferocious weather disasters, powerful men engaging in teenage sex trafficking, and the murderous repression of dissent.
My wife and I felt a little overwhelmed, so we settled down to an evening watching post-apocalyptic drama on Netflix. It is one of the things we have in common, books movies, TV shows about ordinary people trying to survive in a post-apocalyptic world. We’ve learned how to fight zombies with Joel and Ellie (Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey) in “The Last of Us,” and made tough choices of a nuclear attack in “The House of Dynamite,” with Idris Elba as a US president in a tough spot.
At the moment, we are watching “Falling Skies” a 2011 series, originally broadcast on TNT, described by one reviewer as a “Family drama with aliens.” The action centers on the Mason family, led by Tom played by Noah Wyle (of “The Pitt” fame), and Tom’s second wife, Anne Glass, played by Moon Bloodgood, and the three Mason boys. There are multiple life forms of aliens some good, most very bad.
We watched three episodes last night, enough to distract from our distress about the real world.
As I said, we read and watch a lot of this kind of story, sometimes terrified, sometimes pointing out plot holes: “Yeah, where did the grenade launcher with the alien tech come from?”
Today, the world is back.
I wondered if there might be something we can learn from post-apocalypse survival that might help make a better world. Let’s look at a structure of these dramas.
Science fiction often extends a problem that exists today:
Stephen King’s The Stand begins with a government biolab worker dropping a vial of lethal virus, panicking, running outside, and spreading “Captain Trips” around the world. There’s a lot of loose virus movies and books, but we’ve shied away from them since Covid.
The movie The Day After Tomorrow begins with climate change reversing the flow of the Gulf Stream and starting a new Ice Age. Scientists create the Snowpiercer ice world by shooting sulfate grains into the atmosphere (yes, they are experimenting with that in India) – a few particles good ̶ too many ̶ Brrrrrrrr!
We grew up with the threat of nuclear war. As Billy Joel sang “Cold War kids were hard to kill, under our desks in an air raid drill.” So post-atomic holocaust books, The Road, Planet of the Apes, Mad Max, On the Beach etc., are old hat to us.
Then there are the alien invasion movies. Some aliens come to save us from ourselves: “The Day the Earth Stood Still” – come on Klaatu, and Arthur C. Clarke’s Childhood’s End. And there are some where we live together with the new species. James Caan in “Alien Nation” and Harrison Ford in Ridley Scott’s “Bladerunner” try to teach us to get along with those who are different from us.
Cinematic aliens are terrifying. Occasionally, they “come in peace” and we stupidly start a war, but mostly, carnivorous insects, reptiles and robots just drop in, and use their much superior Technology to destroy the landscape and most of the people.
Depending on the story’s arc, there are some times risk prevention lessons in the set-up. “Yeah, maybe, if the aliens say they ‘come in peace,’ don’t shoot first and ask questions later.” Or maybe “have some special safety procedures around” artificial intelligence like a kill switch that the program can’t override, like Terminator’s SkyNet. Or maybe have multiple levels of containment on deadly viruses, The Stand, or don’t let computers make decisions about nuclear weapons, War Games.
Usually though, humans are just dropped into the apocalyptic scene and have to survive. What can we learn from the survivors?
Stories like these have been around for a long time. In the ancient world, the protagonists were gods, demigods, or heroes of myths. They tell us how to survive when the world turns upside down.
Our world has many problems. Watching science fiction and fantasy can be viewed as escapism, avoiding taking action on problems in the real world. but inspiration to act can come from many sources. Perhaps the Wisdom contained in them is a recipe for leading positive change.
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