Gulf of
Gulf of
Mexico
Mexico
Pacific
Pacific
Ocean
Ocean
MEXICO
MEXICO
Republic of Texas
Republic of Texas
Annexed by U.S.
Annexed by U.S.
1845
1845
Gadsden Purchase
Gadsden Purchase
1853
1853
Ceded to U.S. by
Ceded to U.S. by
Treaty of
Treaty of
Guadalupe Hidalgo
Guadalupe Hidalgo
1848
1848
CANADA
CANADA
Gulf of
Mexico
Pacific
Ocean
CANADA
MEXICO
Republic of Texas
Annexed by U.S.
1845
Gadsden Purchase
1853
Ceded to U.S. by
Treaty of
Guadalupe Hidalgo
1848
Percentage of
Hispanic Residents
61–100
36–60
16–35
6–15
0–5
U.S. Hispanic Population (2000)
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over half. The entire map will have turned one to two shades darker. The
borderland, extending far into the United States, will become predomi
nantly Mexican. Mexico will have solved its final phase of population
growth by extending its nonpolitical boundaries into the Mexican Ces
sion—with the encouragement of the United States.
p o p u l at i o n , t e c h n o lo g y, a n d
t h e c r i s i s o f 2 0 8 0
Surging immigration into the United States and the aftereffects of the war
will kick off an economic boom from about 2040 to 2060. The availability
of land and capital in the United States, coupled with one of the most dy
namic labor pools in the advanced industrial world, will stoke the economic
fires. The relative ease with which the United States absorbs immigrants will
give it a massive advantage over other industrialized countries. But there will
be another dimension to this boom that we must acknowledge: technology.
Let’s consider this and then return to our discussion of Mexico.
During the crisis of 2030, the United States will look for ways to com
pensate for labor shortages, particularly in developing technologies that can
take the place of humans.
One of the dominant patterns in technology development in the United
States has been:
1. Basic science or designs are developed at universities or by individual
inventors, frequently resulting in conceptual breakthroughs, modest
implementations, and some commercial exploitation.
2. In the context of a military need, the United States infuses large
amounts of money into the project to speed development toward spe
cific, military ends.
3. The private sector takes advantage of commercial applications of this
technology to build entire industries.
The same is happening with robotics. At end of the twentieth century
basic development in robotics had already been undertaken. Core theoreti
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cal breakthroughs had taken place and there were some commercial appli
cations, but robots have not become staples of the American economy.
The military, however, has been pumping money into both basic robot
ics theory and its applications for years. The U.S. military, through DARPA
and other sources, has been actively funding robotics development. Build
ing a robotic mule to carry infantry equipment and creating a robotic air
craft that would not need a pilot are but two examples of work in robotics.
Deploying in space intelligent robotic systems that don’t need to be con
trolled from earth is another goal. Ultimately, it is a matter of demograph
ics. Fewer young people means fewer soldiers. However, U.S. strategic
commitments will increase, not decrease. The United States, more than any
other nation, will need robotic support for soldiers as a matter of national
interest.
By the time the social and political crisis of 2030 occurs, robotics appli
cations will have been field- tested and proven by the military and thus ready
for commercial application. Obviously, robots won’t be ready for mass de
ployment by 2030. And in no way will robots eliminate the need for immi
gration. This situation will sound familiar to many of us, as we’ve been here
before. Computing was at this stage in 1975; the military had paid for the
development of the silicon microchip, and many military applications could
be found. Commercialization processes were just beginning, and it would
take several decades to transform the civilian economy. So the mass deploy
ment of robotics technologies will not be taking place until the 2040s, and
the full transformative power of robotics will not be felt until about 2060.
Ironically, immigrant technologists will be critical in developing robotics
technology, a technology that will undercut the need for mass immigration.
In fact, as robotics enters the mainstream of society, it will undercut the eco
nomic position of those migrants engaged in unskilled labor at the bottom
of the economic pyramid.
Once again, the solution to one problem will be the catalyst for the next
one. This situation will set the stage for the crisis of 2080. The system for
encouraging immigration will be embedded into American culture and pol
itics. Recruiters will continue offering incentives for immigrants to come to
the United States. An emergency measure will have become a routine part of
government. The problem is that by 2060 or so, the crisis will have passed,
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both because of migration and due to new technologies like robotics. The
last boomers will be gone and buried, and America’s demographic structure
will look more like a pyramid—which is what it should look like. Advances
in robotics will eliminate the need for an entire segment of immigrants.
Technology has frequently promised to eliminate jobs. The exact oppo
site has always happened. More jobs have been created in order to maintain
the technology. What has happened is a shift from unskilled to skilled labor.
That will certainly be one result of robotics. Someone will have to design
and maintain the systems. But robotics differs from all prior technologies in
a fundamental way. Prior technologies have had labor displacement as a by-
product. Robotics is designed explicitly
for
labor displacement. The entire
point of this class of technology is replacing scarce human labor with
cheaper technology. The first goal will be replacing labor that is no longer
available. The second will be to shift available labor to support robotics. The
third—and this is where the problem starts—will be the direct displace
ment of workers. In other words, while robotics will be designed to replace
disappearing workers, it will also create unemployment among workers who
are displaced but don’t have the skills to move into robotics.
As a result, unemployment will begin rising, beginning around 2060
and accelerating throughout the next two decades. There will be a tempo
rary but painful population surplus. Whereas the problem of 2030 will be
coping with a population shortage, the problem by the 2060s to the 2080s
will be coping with a surplus population driven by excessive immigration
and structural unemployment. This will be compounded by advances in ge
netics. Human life may not be extended dramatically, but Americans will
remain productive longer. We shouldn’t discount, either, the possibility of
massive increases in longevity as a wild card.
Robotics, coupled with genetics and attendant technologies, will simul
taneously replace labor and increase the labor pool by making humans more
efficient. It will be a time of increasing turmoil. It will also be a time of tur
moil in terms of energy use. Robots, which will both move and process in
formation, will be even more ubiquitous energy hogs than automobiles.
This will kick off the energy crisis discussed in previous chapters and the
end of hydrocarbon technology rooted in the European Age. The United
States will be forced to look to space for energy.
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Developments in space- sourced energy systems will have been under
way well before 2080. In fact, the Defense Department is already thinking
about such a system. The National Security Space Office released a study
in October 2007 entitled “ Space- Based Solar Power as an Opportunity for
Strategic Security.” It states:
The magnitude of the looming energy and environmental problems is sig
nificant enough to warrant consideration of all options, to revisit a concept
called Space Based Solar Power (SBSP) first invented in the United States
almost 40 years ago. The basic idea is very straightforward: place very large
solar arrays into continuously and intensely sunlit Earth orbit, collect gi
gawatts of electrical energy, electromagnetically beam it to Earth, and re
ceive it on the surface for use either as baseload power via direct connection
to the existing electrical grid, conversion into manufactured synthetic hy
drocarbon fuels or as low- intensity broadcast power beamed directly to con
sumers. A single kilometer-
wide band of geosynchronous earth orbit
experiences enough solar flux in one year to nearly equal the amount of en
ergy contained within all known recoverable conventional oil resources on
earth today.
By 2050 early installations of this new solar technology should be in
place, and the crisis of 2080 will propel development forward. A significant
drop in energy costs will be essential to the implementation of the robotics
strategy, which is, in turn, essential to maintaining economic productivity
during a period of long- term population constraints. When population
doesn’t grow, technology must compensate, and for this technology to work,
energy costs must come down.
So in the United States after 2080 we will see a massive effort to extract
energy from space- based systems. Obviously, this will have begun decades
before, but not with the intensity required to make it the primary source of
power. The intensifying crisis of 2070 will move the project forward dra
matically. As with any government effort, the cost will be high, but by the
end of the twenty- first century, when private industry starts taking advan
tage of the vast public investment in space, the cost of energy will drop sub
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stantially. Robotics will be evolving quickly and dramatically. Think of the
evolution of home computers between 1990, when most homes and offices
still did not even have e-mail, and 2005, when literally billions of e-mails
were sent daily around the planet.
The United States will be one of the few advanced industrial countries
experiencing a temporary surplus in its population. The economic impera
tive of the previous fifty years—encouraging immigration by all means
possible—will have run its course, and it will have become the problem
rather than the solution. So the first step toward solving the crisis will be
limiting immigration, a massive and traumatizing reversal that will cause a
crisis, just as the shift toward attracting and increasing immigration had
fifty years before.
Once immigration has been halted, the United States will have to man
age the economic imbalance caused by its population surplus. Layoffs and
unemployment will strike disproportionately at the working poor—and
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