Mark Twain, 1800's: "Buy land. They've stopped making it"
The Seasteading Institute, 2008: Production Resuming.
Anubisrising
Interest
- Level of interest in seasteading
- Definitely want to move someday
- Timeline for seasteading
- I'm ready now!
- What kind of society are you interested in living in?
- <p>Something fun, not in some new age corny kinda way, but something actually fun and new. Something sustainable at it's most basic level. Something that has vision, and has unbelieveable goals and actually works towards meeting them. one that does not draw a line between fantasy and reality. a society where the infinities of space and time are pondered, respected and worshipped by realizing that as much as we know, we don't know much of anything. Where this unfathomably unbelievable phenomena called existence is not disrespected by mediocrity and the mundane.</p><p>It would have to be a goal oriented society, a society without clear goals, like our present situation, just asks for trouble, and gets it. </p><p>It would have to use a non repeating calender similar to the mayans. Think about the negative consequences of living the same days over and over our whole lives. The same days repeat every 7 days. Over and over our whole lives. It should be no wonder people go senile, and that addiction is such an issue. Not just drug addiction...that is the tip of the behavioral addictions iceberg. People would get a long much better with eachother and work much better with eachother if they weren't as addictive to behaviors: behaviors like remembering from the day before how your immediate group treats eachother individually, and seeing as it makes the day funny, you keep it, despite it's creation of scapegoats and outcasts to fuel itself. These types of behaviors are bound to create social clicks and hierarchies and eventually divert us right back to the original problem of conflict.</p><p>Overall though, i think high powered observatory telescopes would solve a lot of problems. There's nothing like looking right through one of them into the universe. It's almost like a drug, in that it alters your perspective to do it. If you haven't ever looked directly through an observatory type telescope at the moon you literally don't know what you are missing.</p>
Personal Information
- Country
- USA
- Location
- New Milford, CT
- Homepage
- www.myspace.com/norhymesnoreasons
Skills
- General Skills
Abstract Thought, Problem solving, Blacksmithing, Landscaping, Farming, Shamanism
History
- Member for
- 17 weeks 3 days