Lenin didn’t think about that. He liked his own leadership and “inevitable forces of history” which meant that everything will be good. Then he saw how things work and instituted NEP. Then he died of syphilis.
Norbert Wiener, though, thought about that, he wrote in “Cybernetics” a few obvious conclusions and descriptions of the world of the future, and how we need a cybernetic democracy (that’d be directly voting on many things every day, something that was considered impractical 100 years ago, but is more practical now than normal vote then, yet nobody’s doing it), only he didn’t describe how it’ll be a cybernetic democracy and not a cybernetic tyranny, probably something easy and obvious, not worth mentioning, that’s sarcasm.
Lenin didn’t think about that. He liked his own leadership and “inevitable forces of history” which meant that everything will be good. Then he saw how things work and instituted NEP. Then he died of syphilis.
Norbert Wiener, though, thought about that, he wrote in “Cybernetics” a few obvious conclusions and descriptions of the world of the future, and how we need a cybernetic democracy (that’d be directly voting on many things every day, something that was considered impractical 100 years ago, but is more practical now than normal vote then, yet nobody’s doing it), only he didn’t describe how it’ll be a cybernetic democracy and not a cybernetic tyranny, probably something easy and obvious, not worth mentioning, that’s sarcasm.