Newsweek

Hey, Tech Kids! Get Off My Lawn!

Possible presidential candidate Mark Cuban fears the U.S. will get trounced in the coming technology war because its leaders are old fuddy-duddies.
A pilot model Uber self-driving car is displayed at the Uber Advanced Technologies Center on September 13, 2016 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Uber launched a groundbreaking driverless car service, stealing ahead of Detroit auto giants and Silicon Valley rivals with technology that could revolutionize transportation.
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Mark Cuban is flagrantly flirting with the notion of running for president in 2020, so I asked him if a big driver of his decision might be a belief that the nation desperately needs tech-savvy leadership. “Yes,” the entrepreneur and NBA team owner quickly replied via email. “The current administration’s lack of understanding of technology places our country at risk for unthinkable harm.”

Yikes! And here we’ve been distracted by worries that Little Rocket Man might lob a nuke toward Los Angeles and probably hit Bakersfield instead. Clearly, the techno alarm Cuban raises is something we need to unpack.

First of all, the U.S. suffers from the biggest gap in history is 71 years old and thinks Twitter is miraculous. He doesn’t use a computer and wouldn’t know Slack from Spanx. He’s equated sophisticated hacking with his young son’s ability to crack a home computer parental control password. He’s a climate change denier and would rather save coal jobs than invest in solar energy. Basically, Donald Trump has done nothing to suggest he’ll ever embrace an innovative technology solution to a pressing global problem.

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