Not new area of total squalor.

The international project should be about bringing people together in actual geographic terms when this virus is destroyed.

What say I: Time seemed to collide last night as I realized I was perfectly on track and exactly when I was supposed to be, as if my race with time had been won, in effect arriving at the right time to be more or less in the present.

A good strategy for 21st-century problems is to double down on truth-seeking, technological acceleration, human adaptability, and resilient systems rather than nostalgia, top-down control, or ideological purity tests.The core challenges—climate and energy, AI/automation disruption, demographic shifts, polarization/misinformation, pandemics/biosecurity, inequality amid abundance, geopolitical fragmentation, and mental health—stem from rapid technological and social change outpacing our institutions and psychology. They are not primarily "solved" by more regulation or redistribution alone.Core Principles of an Effective StrategyPrioritize understanding and truth over narrative Invest heavily in science, open data, and free inquiry. Misinformation and polarization thrive when institutions lose credibility. Strong free speech norms + better tools for verification (e.g., transparent AI, decentralized platforms) beat censorship. xAI’s mission—understanding the universe—is a direct response to this. Accelerate beneficial technology aggressively Technology created most modern problems and holds the best solutions. Energy: Scale nuclear (fission + eventual fusion), advanced renewables, and storage. Abundance beats scarcity politics. AI and biotech: Use AI to accelerate scientific discovery, drug development, climate modeling, and productivity. Align it carefully but don’t slow it down out of fear. Space and resilience: Become multi-planetary as insurance against existential risks. Problems like climate change and resource limits become far more manageable with cheaper energy and advanced materials. Build individual and societal resilience Education focused on critical thinking, STEM, adaptability, and trade skills—not just credentials. Encourage personal responsibility, family/community strength, and self-reliance alongside safety nets. Decentralize where possible: Strong local institutions, diverse economies, and portable skills beat fragile centralized systems. "Fortified walls" (cultural cohesion, private security, strong institutions) work for groups facing threats, as history shows. Manage risks pragmatically, not ideologically Existential risks (advanced AI misalignment, engineered pandemics, nuclear) deserve serious, non-hysterical attention and technical solutions. Demographic and cultural changes require honest discussion of assimilation, incentives, and national identity rather than denial or open borders absolutism. Zero-sum identity politics amplifies problems; focus on shared prosperity and individual rights. Use markets + targeted coordination Markets drive innovation and efficiency better than central planning. Government’s best role is often setting clear rules, funding basic research, and handling genuine public goods or coordination failures—not micromanaging outcomes or picking winners based on politics. What This Looks Like in PracticeShort-to-medium term: Secure energy abundance, reform education for the AI age, strengthen borders and rule of law while maintaining legal immigration of high-skill/talented people, and protect free speech. Long term: Pursue radical abundance through technology so that many zero-sum conflicts become positive-sum. A wealthier, healthier, more knowledgeable humanity handles disagreements better. Measure success by human flourishing metrics (life expectancy, real wages, scientific output, subjective well-being, freedom) rather than ideological checkboxes. The 20th century showed that liberal democracies + markets + science produced unprecedented progress despite wars and crises. The 21st century’s edge comes from doubling down on those strengths while adapting to new tools and risks—rather than rejecting them out of nostalgia or fear.Problems will persist because humans and complex systems are messy. The winning mindset is optimistic realism: problems are solvable through ingenuity, not inevitable doom or utopia through perfect politics.