Questions from the youth: towards the end of 2013, and 2015, what do you think will have changed, technologically and event wise?
From 2012-2015:
-Growth of the autonomous car industry after its success in Nevada, putting pressure on other states DMV's to start licensing them.
-Electric car recharging stations appear in every medium to large U.S. city. The electric, electric-gasoline, and electric-diesel car market enters the mainstream and grows rapidly as gasoline grows ever more expensive. The oil industry is unhappy.
-Augmented Reality becomes a widespread feature of smartphones and first-generation AR glasses.
-Non-smartphone phone market almost dead.
-Puerto Rico, having voted by referendum to petition for statehood, but only just barely, is at some point from 2012-2015 accepted by Congress as the 51st state. The US has to change the flag again.
-Iran faces greater internal strife from directed U.S. sanctions against its economy. Iranian reformists become more desperate for change as Iranian fundamentalists become equally desperate to keep the West out. The possibility of violence looms.
-The GOP loses massive amounts of power as its far-right party leaders alienate moderates and center-right conservatives with their reactionary ideals. Obama coordinates the Democrats to a majority in both houses of Congress. Justices Scalia, Ginsburg, and Kennedy retire.
-Egypt is nearing the end of a civil war due to the military's unwillingness to give up power to a civilian government. NATO does not intervene and the rebels are crushed. Tunisia is a functioning democracy that has embraced Western values into law in order to improve its tourist industry, not because the politicians actually believe in it. Lybia and Syria are hybrid regimes where Sharia is present but not an absolute source of law, and even so fails to reach the level of fundamentalist held by Saudi Arabia and the Taliban. Both nations hold a unprecedented fondness for Western nations due to their assistance in their revolutions. Anti-west opinions are still powerful, but the issue has entered into the realm of something debatable. In Saudi Arabia, King Abdullah dies from old age and is replaced by the next in line.
-China's next generation of politicians reach the breaking point of their progression into the government, and the tone of Chinese autocracy changes. Things are still bad, but the new government is willing to implement reforms that the previous one was not.
-Relations between the US and Pakistan have completely soured as their competing interests diverge too wildly. Conversely, relations between the US and India warm significantly due to having a mutual rival in Pakistan.
-The US still hasn't pulled out of Afghanistan.
-The price and efficiency of solar power becomes very valuable to the market. Germany has replaced 50% of its power production with renewable energy sources. Nuclear fission the world over stagnates. The ITER project for nuclear fusion continues to be constructed in southern France.