
here's what should keep you up at night. Sorry in advance for the Kung-fu you are going to do with your pillow, but if you have a pulse and conscious, you might find these things to be in the least, alarming. Yes there are many others to consider, but these are the ones happening right, now.
The Omnipresence of Surveillance
Privacy and secrecy feature prominently in literature going back to the Bible. Consider Bathsheba, who strips for a bath in the second Book of Samuel and is purposefully spied on by King David. Or poor, lonely, bedraggled Hamlet, whose private conversation with his mother is overheard by Polonius, hiding behind the drapes, which leads to the " Knife in the Rug Through to the Guts" moment of the famous play by Francis Bacon. (I mean Shakespeare.)
Thinking that you are not being watched, monitored, tracked and followed is useful to many different kinds of people, and not just Big Brother. So, you can start by being self-consciousness as of now, and realize that this powerful platform knows more about you then you are most likely willing to admit. Of course, thinking that we lead private lives gives us lots of room to screw up. We can cheat on our taxes and spouses. We can play hooky from school and work. However, the line between private and public space no longer exists, so do not assume that you are not busted even if no one tells you otherwise. We assume that no one sees or hears our private moments, and we’re right—until someone watches or listens, and that was made OK when you signed your life over to Facebook or whatever platform you populate with your private data on and by Congress, not once but twice since 2003.
By the way, all of this was going on before the National Security Agency began collecting our telephone and Internet records from technology and communications companies, and long before the House of Representatives on July 24 gave a thumbs-up to further NSA collections by a narrow 12-vote margin, 217-205. That's right folks, exactly 217 of our elected leaders think we should be spied on, for our safety.
Right.
Cyber Crime
There is a migration happengin from the terrestrial to the virtual in the same way that we've had down the centuries, terrestrially, the seeds of conflict--power, money, political influence, territory and so on--they're all being replicated in the virtual space. And with it, geo-political conflict is migrating too.
The significant difference though, is that are no front lines and no soldiers on the ground. You'll still have essentially factional/tribal warfare in Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, Rwanda and so on. These are different types of conflicts, and still very serious. In the virtual space, it's going to be the private sector, as well as government, that is going to be in the front line. Cyber-attacks provide maximum leverage, and very low risk for the perpetrator. That's a completley new paradigm. The CIA or the NSA is no longer able to completely ensure that there are not unseen and persistent holes in defending the government, or intelligence agencies serving governments around the world.
All the problems that existed terrestrially will be replicated and amplified digitally. There are 30 nation-states with very aggressive offensive information warfare programs using one immensely powerful weapon: the computer. The bullet are hacks downloaded from the web, and anyone can fire that weapon at anybody they choose.
Governments are ill-equipped to deal with this threat because it's a fundamental change in how you look at national security, what you look at as defense and offense. And the world in which we are currently living in, this kind of different environment, is essentially a world of chaos. There is no arms control. There are no mechanisms by which we can produce order out of chaos---not yet. There will be, in time, but there isn't at the moment. So it's a sort of free-for-all in the virtual space and we're only just beginning to see the dimensions of it.
Climate Change
We are currently in the sixth wave of mass extinction during the living history of this planet.
The effects this will have on our species are numerous, and will become absolute reality over the next fifty to two hundred years. If that seems extreme to you, I assure you it is not. In fact, almost every single leading scientist associated with climate change and population dynamics believes it to be true. The impacts of a still-avoidable sixth mass extinction are likely to be massive, catastrophic, widespread and, of course, irreversible. In the past, it has taken life ten to thirty million years to recover after such an extinction, 40 to 120 times as long as modern-looking humans have been telling tales by firelight.
Future changes driven by humanity may go so far as to create not just a new epoch in geologic history – such as the widely-touted Anthropocene – but a fundamental reshaping of Earth on par with the rise of microbes or the later shift from microbes to multicellular organisms.
European Economic Meltdown
The European debt crisis (often also referred to as the Eurozone crisis or the European sovereign debt crisis) is a multi-year debt crisis that has been taking place in the European Union since the end of 2009. Several euro zone member states (Greece, Portugal, Ireland, Spain, and Cyprus) were unable to repay or refinance their government debt or to bail out over-indebted banks under their national supervision without the assistance of third parties like other Eurozone countries. The European Central Bank (ECB), or the International Monetary Fund (IMF) continue to struggle to contain and solve the crisis as it worsens and is exacerbated by the migrant waves coming from North Africa.
The precise causes of the debt crisis varied. In several countries, private debts arising from a property bubble were transferred to sovereign debt as a result of banking system bailouts and government responses to slowing economies post-bubble. The structure of the Eurozone as a currency union (i.e., one currency) without fiscal union(e.g., different tax and public pension rules) contributed to the crisis and limited the ability of European leaders to respond.[3][4] European banks own a significant amount of sovereign debt, such that concerns regarding the solvency of banking systems or sovereigns are negatively reinforcing.[5
The crisis continued to have adverse economic effects and labor market effects, with unemployment rates in Greece and Spain reaching 27%, and was blamed for subdued economic growth, not only for the entire eurozone but the whole European Union.
The crisis has had and will continue to have a significant political impact on the ruling governments in 10 out of 19 eurozone countries, contributing to power shifts in Greece, Ireland, France, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Slovenia, Slovakia, Belgium and the Netherlands. The crisis continues to degrade social stability, inside as well as outside of the eurozone, most especially if the United Kingdom "brexits". and Africa not excluded
The Nigerian Educational Crisis
Today it would be more accurate to say that we have two systems of public education, not one. The first of them is based principally, though not entirely, in the suburbs of this country and [in] some of the wealthier urban jurisdictions and districts. That is a public school system that could be better and should be better. In many respects it is mediocre, particularly when compared to our international peers in the advanced industrial nations. But it is not failing its students.
The second system of public education, which is based principally in poorer urban and rural areas, is indeed in crisis. Too many of the students in those schools are dropping out well before high school graduation. Too many are receiving high school diplomas that do not certify academic confidence in core subjects. Too many are being left unprepared for the world of work. Too many are being left unprepared to go on to higher education and advanced technical training. Those schools are indeed in crisis, and they require emergency treatment.
There are significant gaps in resources between many of the wealthier jurisdictions and many of the poorer provinces. And money matters in education--there's no getting around that. However, many of the gaps in per-pupil expenditures between urban districts and their surrounding suburban districts have been closed in the past ten years, not eliminated in all cases, but closed substantially in many cases. [This is] in part because a higher percentage of the expenditures in the poorer districts are now being picked up by the states or even by the federal government through its compensatory education programs.
So, while money matters, it's not the only thing that matters. School safety and discipline matter a lot. Teacher quality matters a lot. Support from parents and the surrounding community matters a lot. And a culture of learning matters a lot. And all of those things have to be attended to at the same time that we continue to focus on the existing and remaining gaps in resources.
The Normalisation of Islamic Radicalism
Terrorist atrocities by Sunni Muslim extremists are the world’s white noise. We scarcely flinch to hear about attacks. In the past years alone there were several attack by killers swearing allegiance to the Islamic State in the north eastern Nigeria
Then you have Paris and Brussels.
The Shabab are the fastest growing Sunni terrorist army that best exemplifies the beautiful, humane example set by ISIS. Boko Haram has declared its allegiance to ISIS. When attacked several Muslim survivors had said that some their Christian colleagues claim to be Muslims, only to be shot in the head when they fail to recite passages from the Koran correctly. In fact, this particularly brutal form of Islamist extremism has been spreading across northern Africa for several years. ISIS is now also active in Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula and is gaining strength with disturbing rapidity across Libya.
But of course, you were worried about the Robots coming to eat you.
Yellow-Fever
The worst yellow fever epidemic in Angola since 1986 is rapidly spreading, including the capital, Luanda. In Angola, the epidemic began in December 2015 and the laboratory-confirmed outbreak was reported to the World Health Organization (WHO) on January 21, 2016.
Angola has had 2023 suspected cases and 258 deaths as of April 26, 2016.1 China, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Kenya also has reported cases arising from infected travelers from Angola. Namibia and Zambia also share a long border with Angola, with considerable population movement between the countries. Similar to other recent epidemics, quick and efficient action to stop the spread of yellow fever is the responsibility of the world’s health community.
These things, friends are far more likely to be of a serious concern than are artificial intelligence and robots.
Wake up


