In the space of a few minutes, on a prerecorded video filmed thousands of miles from where it was shown, the tech-savvy president of El Salvador captured the two strikingly different sides of this year’s unprecedented — and virtual — “gathering” of world leaders “at” the U.N. General Assembly in 2020. On one hand, Nayib Bukele said, humanity holds in its smartphone-clutching hands a 21st-century miracle: “In a world which is almost completely connected, I can say a few words here and be heard in the farthest corners of the world.” And yet, in the same speech Tuesday, he raised this ever-present doubt: When the people who govern the world were delivering sequestered addresses to the United Nations this past week, was anybody actually listening? “If you don’t believe me,” he said, “ask the first person you see.” So goes the planet. And so too, it seems, goes the United Nations. The same dissonance that technology hands us in our daily lives — closer but farther apart, more intimate yet somehow colder — revealed to a COVID-era world over the past week that even the people who collectively govern all of us can’t necessarily transcend the pixels and bits of data that have become foundational to the way human civilization operates. “It is obvious that technology is the future,” said the president of Ghana, Nana Akufo-Addo. “How else would we all have maintained a semblance of keeping in touch in the past six months, but for technology?” He’s not wrong. And yet. The fact is, this U.N. General Assembly was a Really Boring Meeting, kind of like preparing dinner by opening a can of steak. Sure, all the right ingredients were in there — the world’s leaders, a deeply urgent slate of problems, a global forum to hash them out. But it didn’t taste right, and that wasn’t just because it was virtual. Even an American online classroom, circa Fall 2020, is livelier. What if, say, the world’s leaders had been required — or even encouraged — to deliver their speeches live via satellite hookup? What if other leaders had been listening in real time? What if they could have responded? Riskier, yes, and potentially glitchier, but also more real. Something that had just happened might have been discussed. A loose, albeit very electronic, relationship between speaker and audience might have been possible. As the prerecorded speeches droned on, even the most interesting of leaders appeared kind of two-dimensional. The biggest signs of life came in the “right of reply” section, where nations that don’t like each other very much — Armenia and Azerbaijan, Iran and the United Arab Emirates, India and Pakistan — sent up lower-level diplomats to deliver often overheated responses in real time. Overheated isn’t always productive; Tuesday night’s U.S. presidential debate showed that. But the distance of technology created something new even for the United Nations, an organization known for its procedural, bureaucratic nature: a meeting almost entirely free of the natural energy generated when human beings charting the future of their planet get together to talk. Not that the promise of technology wasn’t front and center; talk of it dominated the week. An “Roadmap for Digital Cooperation” summit was held, and dozens of world leaders rhapsodized about how the magic of electronic networks — connections […]

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