I liked that Axil,
I have a say that there is always, at least, two possibilities - regardless
of the situation you find yourself in except when dying.
I also believe that there is always one simple but unproductive way one can
choose and "that is to go with the flow". In reality let someone else make
the decision for you without any of your conditions being regarded.
Then there is of course different level of enthusiasm one can apply to the
solution. Among those with the most passion we will find the da Vinci,
Galileo, Nobel, Wilbur Wright and at some point in time someone who took
LENR to fruition. (The list could have been much longer of course - just a
few random examples.)


Best Regards ,
Lennart Thornros

www.StrategicLeadershipSac.com
[email protected]
+1 916 436 1899
202 Granite Park Court, Lincoln CA 95648

“Productivity is never an accident. It is always the result of a commitment
to excellence, intelligent planning, and focused effort.” PJM

On Sat, Nov 15, 2014 at 1:11 AM, Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote:

> LENR is an enabling technology. It opens the door to new opportunities and
> new hopes. It will restore the vigor of the human spirit born to wonder and
> explore into new lands and new possibilities. From the dawn of human
> existence, when faced by imminent extinction, the human spirit sought out
> new places were existence was more assured and prospects were better. In
> latter times, when our forefathers suffered from the oppression levied by
> the stubborn social problems of their birthplace: poverty,
> economic crises, class oppression, racism, prejudice, and wars, they
> packed up the rucksacks and headed for their ports of departure to
> try their luck in a new land with new hopes and opportunities. These
> places of new hopes and opportunity still exist, but in this modern
> age we must look upward to realize them.
>
> LENR will change the economic model of doing business in space by
> providing the economic leverage and energy surplus to clime into the sky
> where new possibilities await.
>
> Standing in Houston, Texas in the early 1960s, a young and vibrant
> President named John F. Kennedy looked skyward and offered a new and
> hopeful future to his generation. In the middle of a Cold War, in the heart
> of a time when the threat of total annihilation loomed over the heads of
> everyone, he dared to challenge those listening to take on a higher goal.
> Rather than succumb to the darkness and fear, he held out light, and rather
> than cast what was in reality a technological face off into the mix of that
> shadow war, he held it aloft, a beacon to all who could hear and understand
> what he meant. At just the time when it seemed there was no choice but the
> continuation of a pointless global wrestling match which at any moment
> could result in the end for all, he spoke of choices.
>
> He said "We choose to go to the Moon. We choose to go to the Moon in this
> decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they
> are hard, because that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of
> our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing
> to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to
> win, and the others, too..."
>
> Today we must ask ourselves again to face that noble challenge. What kind
> of tomorrow do we want for our lives and to give to our kids? Thanks to
> LENR, a new choice stands before us. A better future is not certain if we
> do not reach for it.
>
> Our first possible choice, and the one lots of folks sometimes seem to
> believe is inevitable, is the worst. It's what will happen if we keep on
> rolling along and do nothing about conserving our natural resources and
> descend into materialism and stagnation of the spirit . It is a dark
> dystopian image, a apocalyptic vision, the result of a time when all the
> world’s cultures rush to create consumer societies such as those as
> now exists in Europe, Japan and the USA. Eventually our excesses
> exceed our limits and we end up with a polluted and stripped world
> whose environment collapses, bringing down whole societies, leading
> to war, famine, the end of global culture, and the dawn of a new dark
> age.
>
> Our second choice is to attempt to sustain the human race on this one
> world through rationing of resources - at the cost of personal freedom and
> accomplishment- as we anesthetize ourselves with virtual realities and
> sensory distortions and illusions… Under the heavy hand of global Big
> Brother, our lives, actions, and even our very thoughts will be monitored
> and controlled. Imagination and innovation will be seen as threats to order
> and safety. Risk will be avoided at all cost. Our lives will eventually
> become so physically and intellectually passive that we finally load
> ourselves into banks of virtual electronic realities and pass the eons in a
> bliss of pretend adventures and paradises uncounted to await some global
> catastrophe such as an asteroid strike or plague sending us into oblivion.
> Or there's the third choice, opening the High Frontier of space and
> breaking out into the galaxy. Celebrating the spirit of exploration and
> individuality, we begin to truly explore and open the space around us to
> human settlement.
>
> Turning debates between free enterprise technologists and protectors
> of the Earth on their heads, we unleash the power of human
> imagination to create ways to harvest the unlimited resources of
> space, not only saving this precious planet, but also blazing a path
> to the stars. This is a tomorrow where life is exciting, new
> possibilities open up each day, and humanity spreads outwards, as the
> harbinger of life to worlds now dead. This future is characterized by new
> ideas and cultures spreading every where, the entire human race engaged in
> spreading life to the stars and a future that is ever
> expanding and hopeful.
>
> Opening the space frontier will also change what it means to be human. The
> effect of the space frontier on humanity will be profound. Our pioneering
> past will spring forth and be honed sharp to drive us confident into to our
> future. Our heritage will be strong once more to once again to fill our
> tomorrows with vision and excitement. The paths set by the trail breakers
> will continue onward and upward across the stars. The spirit of family will
> be resurrected as the frontier ethics of hard work and familial support are
> reinforced through the simple need to survive and prosper in a hostile
> environment. Our relationship to the cosmos will change, as we throw open
> the doors to an unlimited
> tomorrow for all, and as we always do, offer to hold those doors open
> for all and everyone to follow. Opening the frontier will change what
> it means to be a human being. We will become a multi-planet species,
> assuring our survival, and that of the life forms for which we are
> responsible. And a child living in such times will know why they are alive,
> and be able to see an unending and ever opening panorama of possibility
> stretching out before them. And in those final hours of our lives we will
> look at the stars as old friends might and know that we have done well.
>

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