Thứ Sáu, 27 tháng 1, 2017

Waching daily Jan 27 2017

fear slark pro mmr gameplay dota 2

For more infomation >> Fear • Slark • 20-1-13 — Pro MMR Gameplay Dota 2 - Duration: 36:42.

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【ENG SUB】フリーハグで一番辛かったことは? What Is the Toughest Thing In Free Fugs? - Duration: 4:55.

For more infomation >> 【ENG SUB】フリーハグで一番辛かったことは? What Is the Toughest Thing In Free Fugs? - Duration: 4:55.

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L-O-V-E | A Short Film - Duration: 3:24.

I love you

Who is the you that you love?

I know there is someone.

Maybe multiple.

I know there is someone that comes to mind.

Just this instance.

I want to talk about love.

L-O-V-E, the four letter word.

Love.

But not the love as we see in films, as portrayed on screen

As captured in letters on the pages of romance novels.

As imagined in many shades of gray, no.

I want you to imagine the magnitude of love, in its intimacy.

The paradox of it.

How love is both ordinary and extraordinary.

The love you see in the pictures taken at the moment your parents first laid eyes on you

Holding your mothers hand when crossing the street.

Or your little sister's when you were first allowed to cross the street by yourselves

The first friends you made.

The love you shared

It's the fabric of life, the inherit connection we all share.

It's what makes live worth while, both the good times and the bad.

Both the happiness and the grief.

Whether you miss someone or share a moment.

It's all around us

I love food, to discover new flavours and textures.

I love chocolate, goodness do I love chocolate.

I love to read, or go to the theater and be immersed in someone else's story.

I love music, to play, to sing.

I love the way music tickles my brain and vibrates through my bones.

I love going to the cinema to watch a movie, it feels like coming home to me.

But ultimately, I love to love.

I love to be unapologetically enthusiastic, to full-heartedly love something.

To open up, share your heart and soul and give people a chance to love you.

I love to love.

That magnificent word.

L-O-V-E

Love

For more infomation >> L-O-V-E | A Short Film - Duration: 3:24.

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About Marc Andrew from Fun In The Sun Weddings - Duration: 0:57.

Hey there, my name is Marc and I am the lead

photographer for Fun In The Sun Weddings. And, I'm the

guy who's going to be spending the day with you. And let

me tell you, we are going to have a blast doing it. We're

going to have a ton of fun, get some amazing photos, and

just have a great time together. Okay? It's a wedding. It's

stressful. I've been there before with my wife Jillian on a

destination wedding. And yeah, it was crazy. A little

wacky. Especially having a photographer follow you

around for hours taking photos of your every move. So,

my job is to make it less wacky; more comfortable. Get

the shoulders down, get the smiles up, laugh, smile, cry,

giggle. Do whatever you need to do. I'll capture those as

photos for you guys if you promise to have fun and laugh.

Alright, when you guys are ready to get the party started,

contact us, okay? We're looking forward to speaking to you. Adios!

For more infomation >> About Marc Andrew from Fun In The Sun Weddings - Duration: 0:57.

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DOES THE SECRET TO HOW THE UNIVERSE WORKS LIE WITHIN THIS GEOMETRICAL PATTERN THE FLOWER OF LIFE - Duration: 3:49.

DOES THE SECRET TO HOW THE UNIVERSE WORKS LIE WITHIN THIS GEOMETRICAL PATTERN?

THE FLOWER OF LIFE

by ALANNA KETLER

The Flower of Life is most likely something that you have seen before.

It is a common symbol of many spiritual and religious teachings around the world.

advertisement - learn more The Flower of Life has been found all over

the world in many different religions.

It is one of the oldest sacred symbols known to man.

It is a geometrical shape that is made up of multiple overlapping circles of the same

size.

There is a huge amount of information and knowledge that can be gained from understanding

the Flower of Life.

It is considered to be sacred geometry that contains ancient religious value and to sum

it up it depicts the fundamental forms of space and time, but there is a lot more to

know.

Let this be an introduction to The Flower of Life.

The oldest depiction of the flower of life known to man is at The Temple of Osiris in

Abydos, Egypt.

The symbol here is not etched or carved into the granite rock, it appears to be burned

into the rock.

Many other depictions can be found within many ancient structures in many different

countries including: Israel, Turkey, Ireland and many more.

A rather interesting depiction of the flower of life is found in The Forbidden City, in

Beijing, China.

The Flower of Life is found in a spherical form underneath the paw of the �Fu-Dog,�

or more accurately known as the �Guardian Lion.� This palace was home to 24 emperors

of the Ming and Qing dynasties.

The Fu-Dogs were a symbol of protection to the buildings and their inhabitants and also,

they were considered to be the guardians of knowledge.

Which is interesting when you consider the spherical Flower of Life symbol that is found

under the dog�s paws.

The dogs are literally guarding the knowledge.

It was mentioned above that The Flower of Life was considered to be sacred geometry,

but what does that mean?

What is �Sacred Geometry?�

Back in the day, certain numbers had a symbolic meaning aside from their everyday use.

Various shapes such as triangles, hexagons and octagons are considered a physical manifestation

of a number.

Because of this, these shapes hold a higher vibrational value because of the fact that

they are visible.

Because of this Leonardo DaVinci was very interested in the Flower of Life and studied

its form and mathematical properties.

floweroflife2He was also interested in how the Flower of Life connected to physical reality

as well as consciousness.

Leonardo drew the Flower of Life itself, as well as the Seed of Life.

Leonardo was known for using the Golden Ratio of Phi in his artwork, this is also known

as the Fibonacci Spiral.

Which is derived from the Flower of Life pattern.

I am sure many of you have heard of The Fibonacci Spiral before, the Fibonacci Spiral is the

series of numbers 0,1,1,2,3,5,8,13,21,34� each number is comprised by adding together

the previous 2 numbers.

This is important because the spiral that this mathematical equation makes can be found

in all living things including human beings, plants, animals and even our galaxy, The Milky

Way

For more infomation >> DOES THE SECRET TO HOW THE UNIVERSE WORKS LIE WITHIN THIS GEOMETRICAL PATTERN THE FLOWER OF LIFE - Duration: 3:49.

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Currency trading #9 Housing - The big bull that is reshaping the world economy - Duration: 2:14.

If you building a house, What would you need?

Iron, Cement, Mason, Laborers and money

Once the construction is complete, what would you need?

Copper, Zinc and Aluminium for electrical appliances and wiring

Plastic pipes etc,. made from a crude oil base

Nickel

Like us, millions of people around the world build homes every year

So there is an apparent demand for minerals, metals and rare earth minerals

The demand for these goods is reported under

Wholsesale price index, Housing Index

In United States, every Friday a report that carries housing permits to build, renovate is issued

Traders keep a track of these reports in order to know

The demand for metals and minerals and flow of US dollars towards these goods

Gold, Diamond and Copper from Australia, South Africa and Latin American countries would be bought

The outflow of US dollar is calculated so as to predict the concurring value

So when it comes to India, we don't have these metals in abundant quantity

And so INR get converted into respective country's currencies and the buying takes place

INR value decreases

It is important to be ahead of the news,

If there is a sudden surge in demand for copper

Australian Dollar increases in value

The countries which export copper will see an increase in their currency value

Keep a record of the minerals available in different countries and their rate

If you can forecast the prices for the upcoming month, it would be great

A jackpot lies ahead for you

Thank you

For more infomation >> Currency trading #9 Housing - The big bull that is reshaping the world economy - Duration: 2:14.

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THIS WEBSITE TELLS YOU HOW MUCH BIG PHARMA PAYS YOUR DOCTOR TO PRESCRIBE DRUGS - Duration: 9:48.

THIS

WEBSITE TELLS YOU HOW MUCH BIG PHARMA PAYS YOUR DOCTOR TO PRESCRIBE DRUGS

by KALEE BROWN.

In 2014, Harvard University stated that prescription drugs are the 4th leading cause of death.

North American culture practically worships the pharmaceutical industry and often fails

to recognize many of the issues within it.

Many Americans are completely unaware that new prescription drugs have a 1 in 5 chance

of causing serious reactions, even after being approved.

In fact, approximately 1.9 million people are hospitalized annually due to properly

prescribed medication (not including any overdoses, self-prescriptions, or mis-prescribing).

128,000 people die every year in the U.S. from drugs prescribed to them, so why is this

still happening?

The reality is, drug companies make a lot of money from selling prescriptions, and they

even pay doctors to do it for them.

If you�ve ever questioned this industry and your doctor�s motives, here is some

good news: You can now find out how much your doctor is paid annually to prescribe any drug.

In addition, you can also search any company name and find out how much they pay doctors

in total every year.

The Database That�s Exposing Big Pharma�s Money Trail

The governmental website Open Payments Data allows you to fully understand the financial

relationship between doctors and pharmaceutical companies in the United States.

If you click on Search Tool, you have the ability to search by Physician, Teaching Hospital,

or Company Making Payments.

The two former options allow you to see how much doctors and hospitals are paid annually

by pharmaceutical companies to prescribe drugs.

If you search a specific company, on the other hand, you can see a detailed summary of their

spendings.

There�s specific information outlining which doctors are paid the highest amounts, how

many doctors they pay nationwide, the nature of these payments, and then specific details

of every single payment they made to doctors that year.

For example, when you type Big Pharma giant Gilead Science Inc. into the tool bar, you

can see that the company spent $36,830,535.40 in Total General Payments and $45,394,349.76

in Total Research Payments in the year 2015 alone.

48.4% of payments were classified as �Compensation for services other than consulting, including

serving as faculty or as a speaker at a venue other than a continuing education program.�

The top paid physician made more than $600,000 in 2015 from simply prescribing drugs manufactured

by Gilead Science Inc.

It doesn�t take much common sense to understand what this could mean, particularly since it�s

hardly a secret that pharmaceutical companies essentially buy out the medical industry.

Numerous pharmaceutical companies have paid doctors and researchers to understate the

dangers of both drugs and their negative side effects, and to falsify research as well.

Arnold Relman, Harvard Professor and former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine,

put it perfectly when he said, �The medical profession is being bought by the pharmaceutical

industry, not only in terms of the practice of medicine, but also in terms of teaching

and research.

. . . The academic institutions of this country are allowing themselves to be the paid agents

of the pharmaceutical industry.

I think it�s disgraceful.�

Don�t Be So Quick to Blame Your Doctor�

If you�ve visited Open Payments Data�s platform and searched your doctor within their

database, take a moment to reflect on what you�re really looking at.

Just because your doctors receive payments from pharmaceutical companies doesn�t necessarily

mean they�re terrible people; it could just mean that they�re doing their jobs.

It�s unlikely your personal doctor designed the current structure of the medical industry.

Your doctor may not even understand the complexity of the pharmaceutical industry because MDs

aren�t properly educated on these drugs.

Many doctors genuinely believe they�re helping people through the use of medication; they

don�t see the bigger picture here because it�s not included in their education.

Plus, it�s often illegal for MDs to prescribe natural cures instead of pharmaceutical drugs

and conventional treatments, particularly when it comes to the cancer industry (check

out this CE article that exposes the truth about cancer).

In addition, when you actually think about it, it makes perfect sense that some doctors

are being paid by pharmaceutical companies.

Of course Big Pharma would require doctors� help in creating drugs and validating their

use; it�s completely legal and should be expected of them.

However, there�s clearly a grey area here that cannot be ignored.

Pharmaceutical companies, rather than qualified and unbiased doctors, define a lot of the

information that MDs are taught, and Big Pharma often influences medical professors and funds

university programs.

For example, 1,600 Harvard professors stated that they or a family member have ties to

drug companies that could bias their teachings or research.

The pharmaceutical industry donated more than $11.5 million to Harvard in 2008 for �research

and continuing education classes.� Many Harvard students have expressed concern over

this and it even made mainstream news when a student was belittled by his professor for

asking about the side effects of a drug his professor was unlawfully promoting in class.

This has also been a prevalent issue within psychiatry.

As Dr. Irwin Savodnik of UCLA explains, �The very vocabulary of psychiatry is now defined

at all levels by the pharmaceutical industry.� This is partially because the Diagnostic and

Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), the text most psychiatrists in the U.S. refer

to to diagnose and treat their patients, is heavily biased toward using pharmaceutical

drugs instead of therapy.

Read more about this in our CE article here.

If you haven�t yet been exposed to this side of the U.S. medical industry, I can understand

that there may be some confusion.

Why would pharmaceutical companies and some doctors conspire to over-prescribe or mis-prescribe

people when their sole purpose should be to help their patients?

The simple answer is profit.

Why Big Pharma Wants You To Take Pills

This may be obvious to many of you, but, just to be clear: The entire medical industry is

focused around profit.

It�s similar to any other industry in that every service it provides you with, or item

it convinces you to purchase, makes someone else a lot of many.

In the case of a pharmaceutical company, they can only make money if you�re sick.

So, it wouldn�t really be in the best interest of Big Pharma to sell drugs without any negative

side effects.

If they produced drugs that actually 100% cured people, how would they continue to profit

off our illnesses?

This is precisely why Big Pharma does not get involved with all-natural medicines; there

is no profit to be made in plants.

Anyone can grow a plant with the right climate and it�s much cheaper to manufacture than

synthetic drugs.

It�s also easier to make pills in larger quantities than plants.

and then when you consider the economies of scale, Big Pharma is able to generate an even

greater profit.

Big Pharma has infiltrated pharmaceutical drugs into other industries too.

If you eat animal products, then you�re inadvertently ingesting the hormones, antibiotics,

and other pharmaceutical drugs given to those animals.

Antibiotics, birth control pills, painkillers, and other pharmaceutical drugs can be found

in tap water as well.

Let�s take a moment to look at the bigger picture: Most industries are currently driven

by money, not passion.

It seems strange, but this is precisely the issue within the medical industry.

I�m sure many doctors choose their occupation because they�re passionate about helping

people.

However, until Big Pharma stops playing such a crucial role in creating their job descriptions,

it will be difficult for MDs to actually help people without simultaneously hurting them.

It�s clear that we need a systemic change in values.

Until we start to work �for the people� rather than �for the profit,� we cannot

expect these outcomes to change.

It�s hardly surprising that Big Pharma wants you to be sick because they�re not just

in the business to cure people � they also need to make a profit.

For more infomation >> THIS WEBSITE TELLS YOU HOW MUCH BIG PHARMA PAYS YOUR DOCTOR TO PRESCRIBE DRUGS - Duration: 9:48.

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Support Me on Patreon! [CC] || Jeff Miller - Duration: 3:20.

[ INTRO MUSIC: Tops by Lincoln Jesser ]

Hey, everyone. It's Jeff. I hope you're doing well

and if you're new to what I do, allow me to introduce myself.

My name is Jeff Miller. I'm 24 years old. I live in the Midwest

and I hold a bunch of different titles, but mostly I consider myself

a musician, a content creator, a dog parent, a data analyst,

and likely owner to one of the world's loudest sneezes. *laughs*

So what do I create?

I create videos every Monday and Friday

and those videos are all about my life, my transitional journey, cover songs

and just all around educational videos about trans related issues.

Now this video doesn't really fit into those categories,

so what is this video for?

This video is essentially asking for your consideration to support me on Patreon.

Patreon is a crowdfunding site where you can support me directly

by pledging a certain amount of money every month.

In return, you get something from me. * laughs *

And all of those perks are listed on my Patreon page and that's linked down below.

But some of those perks include a personalized thank-you note from me,

early video access so you can see videos before anyone else can

and also a monthly live stream with me.

So that's cool and all, but why am I asking for support?

Number one, I want to amplify the value of what I am doing.

This could lead me to being able to travel to different schools to help educate

and share my story and maybe even do some performances

because I've done that in the past and that was really awesome and I want to keep doing more of that.

Number two and perhaps the biggest reason, if I'm being completely honest, is

I am planning on having phalloplasty in 2018.

The additional cost of housing, travel, and being off work for at least two months for recovery...

That really adds up and financially there's a lot of stress that goes with that.

So with this and your support that would really help.

With all that being said, I want to make it clear that this is absolutely not a requirement.

My videos will always remain free and will always be there to help whoever needs it.

I don't want anyone to put themselves at risk or feel like they're obligated to donate to me

because that's, that's not the case at all.

But if you would like to donate and you feel like you are financially able to do that,

there are no words that I can say to accurately show how much gratitude I have to you

If you are not able to donate or you just plain don't want to *laughs*

that's okay. I still think that you're cool.

Any support though in any form, that's very much appreciated.

And that's pretty much it. So thank you so much for watching. Thank you for your support.

And, as always, please remember that you are valid.

You are loved.

I hope you all have a wonderful weekend and I'll see you again on Monday.

Bye.

♪ THANKS FOR CHECKING OUT MY VIDEO ♪

♪ YOU CAN CLICK ANYWHERE IF YOU DON'T KNOW WHERE TO GO ♪

♪ I HOPE THAT YOU ENJOYED THE SHOW ♪

For more infomation >> Support Me on Patreon! [CC] || Jeff Miller - Duration: 3:20.

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Future by Design (2006) - Duration: 1:29:23.

Leonardo da Vinci was a self-taught renaissance man.

As a scientist, artist and inventor,

da Vinci's genius led to an unprecedented body of work.

The drawings he left behind remain as testaments

to his innovation and originality.

One of da Vinci's main inhibitions was the lack of materials

he needed to transform his concepts into reality.

Jacque Fresco is also a self-taught scientist, architect and inventor.

For his entire life, he has been deeply committed to investigation,

insight and innovation.

A prolific creator and builder,

Jacque has been redesigning our entire culture for most of his life.

While da Vinci needed advanced materials,

Fresco has lacked access to the social and political resources needed

to realize his most far-reaching ideas.

AUGUST, 1974

(Larry King) My guest is an extraordinary Miamian, Dr. Jacque Fresco.

I could go through all the things that Dr. Fresco has done.

He's a social engineer, industrial engineer, designer, inventor,

was a consultant for Rotorcraft Helicopter,

director of Scientific Research Laboratories, Los Angeles,

designed and copyrighted various items

ranging from drafting instruments to X-ray units,

has had works published in The Architectural Records,

Popular Mechanics, Saturday Review, and has been

a technical and psychological consultant of the motion picture industry,

a member of the air force design development unit at Wright Field,

developed the electrostatic anti-icing systems,

designed prefabricated aluminum houses...

What does it say on your driver's license?

What is the occupation? - Industrial Designer

- Jacque, do you - Social Engineer

- Does it bug you that people,

when they talk about Jacque Fresco in Miami, say that

he's someone who's too far ahead of this time? His thinking, is....

"We're not ready for advanced kind of thinking." Not that type.

Does it bug you? - I imagine every creative person in every field

encounters that sort of problem. No, it doesn't. I can't afford it.

There's too many things that are important.

DocFlix Movies Presents

A Film By William Gazecki

Future by Design

Music By Diane Louie

Drawings & Model Animations By Jacque Fresco

Directed & Narrated By William Gazecki

Jacque Fresco is a futurist.

A futurist is someone for whom all thoughts and actions

are based upon what tomorrow could be.

He has been planning for the future since the 1920s.

Not only is he a philosopher and theorist,

but an engineer, industrial designer and social planner.

As a multi-disciplinarian, he has studied everything from theology

to behaviorism, and from biology to the material sciences.

Jacque Fresco, doesn't want to just talk about

what today will be like, tomorrow.

He has a plan to build an entire new world from the ground up.

(Gazecki) I'd like to go from

the time you first started conceiving of drawings.

- Started drawing? Well, that's very early.

Eight, nine... eight or nine years old.

- About the future? - Yes.

I was always interested in the future as far back as I can remember.

There was a motion picture called Metropolis.

It was different; it took my attention.

It was the first out-of-the-box type movie.

It depicted the future as a regimented system,

which was totally unacceptable,

but the architecture was interesting and the robotics

in that film were interesting.

I drew airplanes and cities of the future,

underwater cities, floating cities,

and skyscrapers with landing platforms on them.

I drew my idea of what a post office ought to be.

Since the airport was so far from the post office,

they had a truck deliver that. I figured, here's these long post offices,

but why couldn't we land on top, pick up the mail directly, and fly onward?

So, I would draw landing platforms on the rooftops of the buildings,

slightly angular, so the airplane didn't have trouble landing.

It couldn't be as long, but it would be slowed up by the incline.

But then on take-off, they would go in reverse.

Then I tried ships, drawings of passenger/freighter ships,

then aircraft carriers.

And I showed it to my principal

So he said "I'm going to give you a letter."

And during the summer,

if you can manage to get to the Bureau of Standards,

I know a Doctor Dickinson, who is the chief of the Heat & Power Division.

And so I went to the Bureau of Standards.

Dr. Dickinson looked at my drawings and he said,

"Have you ever heard of Bucky Fuller?" I said, "No."

I think I must have been 14, 14 1/2, somewhere around that.

So he said, "Would you like to meet him?"

I said, "Yeah, sure. Is he... What is he?"

He said, "He's an inventor, like you.

He thinks up a lot of new things."

Buckminster Fuller was one of the 20th century's most renown futurists.

Known primarily as the inventor of the Geodesic dome,

Fuller was a proponent of using technology with a humanistic approach.

(Jacque) Dr. Dickinson took me out there to see Fuller.

And there was Bucky Fuller.

He was seated there with his car called the Dymaxium.

I talked to him about social things. I said,

"What about changing society to some other form,

whereby all people can benefit from the works of industry?"

He said, "What do you mean?" I said, "Well if...

instead of working people going out on strike,

give them a piece of the action.

And so if business improved, they all got automatic pay.

If it went down, they got less pay."

So, he sat back and he said,

"What are you, some kind of social planner?

Is that what you want to be?" I said, "I don't know what the name is,

but I think that would work. It would give people more incentive."

He says, "Let me tell you something. It's tough enough

just getting a new automobile out there.

If you're trying to change society..."

This was years before he even lectured on things.

(Gazecki) Albert Einstein once said

"The problems we have cannot be solved

at the same level of thinking with which we created them."

- Did you meet Einstein, Albert Einstein? - Yes.

- Where did you get the idea to meet Albert Einstein?

- I was outside a theater called Radio City

and I saw a woman come out with grey hair sticking up.

I said, "It looks like Einstein's sister" to my friends!

And then Einstein came out. And I think it was his sister.

I was just kidding about that.

And I walked over and I said, "Is it possible to meet with you?"

He said, "Why?" I said, "I have thousands of questions I want to ask."

He said, "I live in Princeton, New Jersey."

- So tell me about the day you went and met him.

- Well, I went to his home, and it was modest.

I said that there seems to be harmony in nature.

"How do you feel about that?"

He says, "Yes, the universe is lawful,

but 'harmony', I don't know what you mean by that."

I said, "Well, when a rat eats insects,

it may be supporting the rat system, but what about the insect system?"

What he did is he used some water from the backyard swamp water,

and he put it under a microscope and he said, "Look,

everything is fighting everything else.

In the human body, everything is fighting everything else.

In the ocean, big fish eat little fish".

I didn't really have enough time to sit there with Einstein

and go through all kinds of things,

because he didn't seem to be in that area.

He did (imitating Einstein) "Are you interested in mathematics?"

(still mocking) Mathematics... are you interested...

"What boolean geometry means to you?" You know.

I didn't wanted to get off into that

because, to me, that would be a sidetrack.

Mathematics is a tool, just like sociology and anthropology.

These are all instruments that go into making up the future.

(Gazecki) When the stock market crashed in 1929, Jacque was only 13 years old.

Coming of age during The Great Depression prompted many questions

for the curious and inquisitive young man.

Living in New York City, he found the squalor

and suffering around him difficult to understand.

The confusion, contradictions and struggles he saw

left a significant impact on his character.

(Jacque) Things were so bad, that I had no way of looking at it.

And I thought the rules of the game were somehow screwed up.

I went to many different meetings: communist meetings,

socialist meetings, fascist meetings,

Mankind United, technocracy,

to see what the world was teaching, including Eastern philosophy.

And I wanted to know what people thought, what they wanted,

why they gelled on one system.

And that each time a society arrived at a system

they tend to keep that system. They didn't even try to go beyond that.

But in technology, whenever we made anything, we try to surpass it.

The history of civilization, to me then, was the history of change.

Social change, human arrangements,

homes, boats, planes, trains;

all of them were in the process of social evolution,

including our language, our outlook, our values, our behavior.

(Gazecki) As the Depression wore on, Jacque left New York

and started hitchhiking around the country.

In his travels he met many interesting and different people,

most of whom were, like himself, searching for a way of life

that was fair and equitable.

Eventually, he ended up traveling to the warm waters

and primitive islands of Tahiti.

(Jacque) I wanted to go to the south seas because I liked the idea

of the natives sharing things; I've read about that.

Now, the chief, if he had six wives, and you were strange,

he'd say, "Here's my best wife. Maybe she will please you?"

They felt their wives gave them so much joy,

perhaps they'd give a visitor some joy.

Their thinking about it was different. And that upset...

It caused me to ponder "gee, that's not the way I saw things.

Was that the way I saw things, or was that the way I was indoctrinated?"

That's when I began to ask those questions.

How do you know that anything you like makes sense, Jacque?

What about your own values? Think about them; maybe they are senseless.

[Pearl Harbor - December 7, 1941]

(Gazecki) Concerned that Tahiti would be invaded,

Jacque returned to the US and joined the army air corps.

When the war was over, thousands of factories stood idle.

Their manufacturing capacity no longer needed for wartime production.

Capitalizing on the tremendous capacity available for aluminum fabrication,

Jacque designed and built a house made entirely from aluminum extrusions.

The result was an innovative and extremely efficient use

of time and materials.

(Jacque) The windows, for example, were put in and then

extrusions snapped in and set with a seal.

And so it was very rapid. It took something like twelve minutes

to put all the windows in.

Eight hours to put up the building.

1948, it was unveiled at Warner Bros,

and there were lines all around the studio.

Thousands of people had come to see it. And airplanes...

smoke... written through the sky.

"Visit The Trend Home at Warner Bros. Studio."

It was publicized in newspapers. I think the Architectural Record...

as one of the first mass-produced type homes.

(Gazecki) Jacque appreciated the challenges of innovative problem solving.

As he honed his skills, he became a competent inventor.

He always had a research lab and was constantly inventing new products.

While much of his time was spent pursuing his own interests,

he was also hired by entrepreneurs to design and fabricate

specific inventions, working in a very broad array of technologies.

He invented everything from medical and dental devices

to 3D motion picture projection systems.

(Jacque) A guy named Jack Moss was a film producer at the time.

I met him at Warner Bros. Studios. He came to see the Trend Home.

And he was awed by everything fitting together so sensibly.

And he said, "How do you guys think of these things?"

So, I began to describe how I thought about things.

Then he found me interesting, and he said

"Come on out to the house." He had a big estate.

And he said, "Do you think you can make a movie projector

that projects 3D images without glasses?"

So I said, "Yes." He said, "How do you know you can do it?

You've never done it." And I said, "That's right."

But if it's a physical phenomenon, I think I can work it out."

"How are you gonna' do it?" I said, "I don't know yet."

What I did is, I had many different applications

which I'd rather not describe in detail.

But I got 3D imaging different ways.

And the simplest way was projecting the right and left eye image

from behind the screen at the right eye and the left eye.

If you moved over to the side you lost your image.

And Jack wanted Technicolor to go the rest of the way.

So he got them to come out and look at it.

"How do you do that? It's very interesting."

I said, "We're not at liberty to disclose that

unless you back the next stage".

So they said, "Well, how do you maintain visual isolation?"

I said, "I still can't discuss that with you."

They looked at it and it was super clear, no lines.

They said, "That's the best I've seen up to now, but

it fades at thirty degrees." I said, "Yes, it does."

"And at a distance it fades, too, as you move back."

So they said, "Can you do anything about that?" I said, "Yes.

That's why you're here, to take it to the next stage."

So, they said, "Look, Jacque, you get rid of the fade

and you get rid of the distance problem. Then call us."

So, that died... like the Trend Home died.

Then I read in the books on inventions how Alexander Graham Bell

had to make the telephone, before they backed it.

The Xerox machine had to be made, completely.

Edison had to make the electric lamp. Nobody backed him

on the way up, until after he was known.

(Gazecki) What are these for? What were these all about?

These are surgical instruments, aren't they?

- Yes, various types, but those are only some of them.

You know what a retractor is? - No

- It holds the skin open while you're operating.

These are various types of retractors.

The purpose of that was to rotate

the bone so it's in line before you put the prosthesis in.

It rotates the femur, the upper region of the femur.

Those are tweezers with holes in them...

If look at the holes in the front... to put the sutures through to guide you

through the muscle. You put it over the muscle and the holes

are right through the middle of the muscle. You didn't have to eyeball it.

- So these are things that you designed... - Long time ago.

- Under contract? - Oh, yeah. - You contracted to design these things?

- Yes. I did thousands of different things.

But this doctor took the patents out in his name.

But that's all right. I didn't know what was out there.

I didn't know what I wanted to be.

Since I looked at all things and tried to change all things.

Wheelchairs, everything. Make them better... you know.

I found it easy to invent.

But then, inventions cost money and I didn't have money for patents.

I used to make thousands of different inventions

and just file them away, because I had no money.

I used to spend my savings, whatever I earned,

on what equipment that I needed.

And if I was working on an artificial leg

and I was $200 behind,

I would take my last $200 and work on that.

I'd solve that problem, but then the rent would be due

and the electric bills, and I couldn't pay them.

The auctioneers would be sent in to auction off everything in my lab.

I used to sit back... I couldn't adjust to say

"Well, I've got to set aside $25 for rent,

$200 for this, for a machine..."

I couldn't do that, because I was very near the answers,

and the type of problems I worked on were outside

of the frame of reference of most science.

In a fluorescent tube, you have high voltage moving along,

and you have a transformer that generates it,

and you put a phosphor material that glows.

But the tube is round and the phosphor on that back side does nothing.

It's only the phosphor on the front side.

I want to extrude the tube, so it's elliptical.

You have more light surface in an elliptical tube.

Then I wanted to mirror back, the back of the tube.

Instead of putting a big reflector outside there,

put the mirror inside the tube.

I didn't have the money to make that tube.

Then I said, "What a hell you are making a tube for?"

Why don't you work on a flat sheet of glass that phosphors; that glows?

Make glass that's electrically conductive.

Well, how do you make non-conductive, electrically conductive?

By putting metallic particles in the glass, and phosphors.

What happens is the electric current would flow through the glass; animate the phosphors.

You had a flat sheet. You don't want a lamp.

A lamp is only giving light on one side.

I wanted the whole surface to glow.

(Gazecki) Over time, Jacque's ideas about the future

became more well-organized and focused.

Gradually, he began to combine his technological expertise

with what he had learned about human behavior,

sociology and social structure.

(Jacque) I spent so many years improving area by area. I said, "Look,

the whole society is aberrated, the way we do things.

Why not redesign society?

It'd be easier than making all these thousands of products.

(Gazecki) You really decided to re-design the culture...

- Because I couldn't get...

Patchwork didn't work. It wasn't sufficient.

So, they thought I was a communist.

After all, the guy wanted to redesign society. What else?

"The Larry King Show" - August,1974

(Larry King) What is Sociocyberneering?

- Sociocyberneering is a new organization,

and it represents the application of the most sophisticated forms

of science and technology toward problem solving,

so that we can reclaim the environment

which we loused up over the years;

and to build a way of life worthy of man, to humanize society,

to break away from the artificiality, the regimentation

that dominates our society today.

Our society seems torn apart and pulled in many directions.

Sociocyberneering is an approach

at the restructuring of society in humanistic terms.

- Humanistic terms, yes.

(Gazecki) The mission of Sociocyberneering was to build

a residential research center, developing

and demonstrating new technologies and innovative social concepts

within a community setting.

On a barren scrap of land in central Florida,

Jacque and a few friends began to build what is now known as

The Venus Project named after the tiny nearby village of Venus, Florida.

Occupying some 25 acres, 10 buildings have been constructed.

Each utilizes both design, construction and lifestyle concepts

integral to developing a working model of harmony and high productivity,

integrating both nature and advanced technology.

Jacque's objective of conducting a complete reassessment and redesign

of our entire culture remains the central focus of his work.

With The Venus Project, he has created an environment

conducive to creativity and innovation.

(Roxanne) When people come here, they're amazed to hear

that this was just a flat tomato patch.

We've dug out streams and ponds

and planted hundreds of palm trees and trees.

We built this land to show what the outskirts of the city would be like.

We have many buildings here, but you can't see one building when you're in another.

We really wanted to show how high-tech and nature

could coexist within this environment.

(Gazecki) Jacque and Roxanne have been living on the property

and building The Venus Project since the late 1970s.

The entire time has been a constant process of developing

and implementing new ideas.

Jacque begins with a drawing, then produces a scale model,

and then videotapes his models in order to demonstrate

his concepts for the future.

Although Venus, Florida is relatively isolated

visitors often make the journey to see The Venus Project

and to meet Jacque.

- Joan. - I'm Margaret. - Hi, Margaret.

I'm not going to remember your names, but...

I'm Jacque. Hi, how are you? Good to see you. How are you?

Have a seat, and then we'll go on with what this is about.

Is everybody here?

So, there was a time when most people believed

that the decisions of the majority

were very close to reality.

But there was also a time when the majority of people

believed the Earth was flat.

And if you asked them whether they were sincere, they said, "Of course!

You can see it's flat!" So, they'd break a sincerity meter.

But it isn't sincerity that the world needs.

It needs the intelligent management of the Earth's resources.

It's what we don't have. The major contribution

that Future by Design would like to provide is

a method of coping with problems.

Now, you're brought up to believe, I believe this,

that everyone should have a right to their own opinion.

Is that the way you were brought up? - Yes, sir. - Okay.

When you got everybody going around and giving their opinion

"I'll tell you what's wrong with Jim!" They've got all kinds of opinions.

But when engineers talk to each other, they don't say, "Believe me."

They say, "See this new metal?

It can hold up 4,000 pounds per square inch."

He puts it in a machine and pulls it apart and he says, "You're right!"

I would say that the majority of the people of the world today are unsane.

Not insane, unsane

meaning: having been exposed to methods of evaluation

that are long rendered obsolete.

Our language in the future will change to a saner language

where we have no argument in it.

They say, "Can there be such a language?" There is!

When engineers talk to each other, it's not subject to interpretation.

They use math; they use descriptive systems.

If I interpreted what another engineer said in the way I think he meant it,

you couldn't build bridges. You couldn't build dams

or power transmission lines.

The language has to have meaning.

That's why when a doctor writes a prescription, if he prints it,

it's the same all over the world.

The world I'm talking about is different.

(Roxanne) There aren't too many people that have seen everything

that he's gone through in the past

and come out of it with a certain direction.

And the interesting thing is, too, is that he's not a philosopher

that talks about how the world should be, i.e. his point of view.

He's a technician that understands how it can be built,

and has worked with people and understands what it takes to change them

and understands what it was that made them that way.

So it's really based on hands-on learning

and not reading something in a book.

He went through the experiences himself

and came out with the conclusions he did

because it was based on actual learning-experience

and experiments.

(Jacque) When an engineer has an idea, he talks to the computer about his idea.

While they're talking about it, the integrated computerized system

will take the elements that they're speaking about,

convert the language into imagery,

and the image will turn

and be exposed to all of the people watching

that exhibit and presentation.

They will question the presentation

but the image system will answer the questions

how the buildings are fabricated, how water is supplied,

how it handles earthquakes, or any other question.

Instead of people sitting around asking an individual questions,

the answers are demonstrated inside of

what appears to be a transparent dome.

Ideas are not just verbal, because when you talk verbally,

it does not deliver enough information to people.

A more comprehensive system of communication

is 3-dimensional imaging,

always showing people what you've got in mind,

not what they think you've got in mind.

- Designed with a holographic computer and built from prefabricated materials

the home of the future will be far more than just a residence.

It will be an element of lifestyle

and will facilitate learning, inspiration and communication.

(Jacque) One of the most interesting aspects of tomorrow's civilization

will be the fact that if you knew anyone fairly well

and went to visit them in a period of time of just a few years,

their houses will change, because the people living in them change.

Their needs and dimension of knowledge grows considerably

and so will the environment that they live in. There's no such thing

as a fixed home that a person lives in all their lives.

It changes with their values, with their outlook,

with their acquired knowledge.

- You had said one thing about how the buildings

were designed according to function. -Yes

- The curvature, and the materials, and the... -Yes

I compare it to natural physiology.

An animal's shape is not designed from the outside in;

it evolves from the inside out.

Whatever you request, the exterior will express

a cover over the shape that you'd prefer to live in.

Some of the buildings that are dome-shaped

can be laid like eggs continuously

by a machine that carries a dome shape.

And in that dome, the exterior

and the interior fabricate at the same time.

Not everyone will choose to live in a dome.

They will choose to live in whatever architectural shape

would meet their needs.

The reason why we suggest a dome

is it uses the minimum amount of materials and

covers the maximum areas and offers maximum strength.

The dome shape is included in almost all of nature.

Your brain is in a dome. The cranial case is in a dome.

When a person says, "Yeah, I don't think I'd want to live in a dome"

you've been living in a dome most of your life.

The interior of the building will have no source of light.

You won't be able to see a lamp or source of light.

All the walls would have even illumination.

You can also specify the color of the illumination.

Either, the entire inner surface or local areas

of different color; if this is your request.

This will be the simplest type of bathroom;

shower, sink, toilet bowl, molded into one system.

Actually, there's no hardware on here.

But there's a slot and the water comes out as a ribbon

and that'll cut the soap off the hand

and use about 1/6th the amount of water.

Now, the waste water from the sink

goes down into a pipe around here and fills the water closet,

and we flush the john with that water.

Instead of telling people to save water, build the system in.

This is what it's all about, if you wish to conserve water.

The bathrooms may vary from that simple style

to slightly more complex, but all one-piece.

There may be as many as fifty variations on a bathroom.

You pick what you want and then it's installed.

When you leave the building, the entire building is cleaned.

We also have a slight increase in air pressure in the building,

so no dust comes in your house from the outside.

If there's any contaminants in the air

it increases the electrostatic charge, which removes contaminants.

It would be a smart house, because the house has its own nervous system.

This is what I'm saying.

In the future, houses will have many sensory devices

to detect fire, toxic materials

anything that may threaten the life of a human being.

If you walked into the house of the future

you might say, "Can I use your phone?"

I'd say, "Well, what's a phone?"

You'd just say, "I'd like to talk to Sam in Arabia".

"What part of Arabia?" You just announce what you want,

and the sound would be focused at some point

you are standing, right at your ear, so you can hear Sam in Arabia.

In southern Florida, millions of dollars

in buildings were destroyed by the big hurricane there,

and they'd put up buildings that look just about the same.

If you don't want hurricane damage...

an inverted cone...it's almost impossible

for a whirlwind to pick up an inverted cone.

We would have these shelters built

in the West Indies or wherever hurricanes occur.

Inside would be pull-down bedding,

food storage and emergency water.

This is the kind of form that no vortex or wind can pick up.

Try to pick this up with greasy fingers,

and that's similar to the wind whirling around it.

(Gazecki) For apartment buildings and other large structures,

Jacque has devised a cybernated construction system.

Computer-controlled robots will handle 90%

of the movement and placement of prefabricated components.

Special advanced materials are to be developed,

eliminating waste and minimizing the need for manual labor.

Guided by satellite and using a sophisticated form

of artificial intelligence, the buildings will construct themselves;

a technique Jacque has named "self-erecting structures".

(Jacque) This represents a relatively complex aluminum extrusion.

If you were to take a toothpaste tube

cut the letter "T" in the opening and squeeze the toothpaste

it would come out like the letter "T";

and this is how extrusions are made.

However, in the future, it may be possible

to extrude complete apartment houses,

apartment building units or modules.

This extruder can be faced with different dies

to mold different shapes.

Almost an infinite variety of shapes can be extruded.

So, it would be the apartment of your preference that's extruded.

So, any shape, or almost any extruded shape

can be designed to fit many different architectural arrangements.

This is a transitional type structure

which utilizes cranes to lift the components of the building.

Eventually, the building itself will be part

of the self-erecting structure.

Don't forget all the models that I do are only transitional.

They don't represent the best that man can turn out,

because no one knows what the future will bring.

There's just so many variables that can alter things.

So the models that I make are all transitional.

And many of them are only conceptual; they're not necessarily

what the future might look like.

Let's say they're extrapolations

of taking the present and extrapolating forward.

But we can't go too far forward

because we don't know what new things will come into being.

This looks like a train station.

We hope to phase out the airplane by designing

transportation units that can move up to 2000 miles an hour,

floating on a magnetic repulsive field or an air cushion.

In those huge trains of tomorrow there'll be television,

radio, amusement, art centers, classrooms;

not a group of seats lined up as your trains are today.

If forty or fifty people have to leave the train,

we slow up to a hundred miles an hour

lift off the passenger section or slide it off,

and slide on a section with the passengers getting on.

You don't have to stop the whole plane, or the train.

In the future, we will just shove off those passengers

getting off and that freight leaving.

This is part of the linear acceleration train

that can take you anywhere in the world in just a few hours;

safely, without snow, rain, being lost at sea...

A monorail is one of the methods of transportation.

Some of them can be suspended by magnetic levitation.

Others can use wheels and ride the rails.

This is an aerial perspective of a monorail station

with entrance and exits on the side of the highway.

This is actually a true monorail,

because it is one rail system that supports two trains.

Most monorails aren't really monorail; they consist of two tracks.

This is accomplished on one track.

The vehicles of the future will be highly aerodynamic in shape.

Their shape will permit the minimum amount of skin resistance,

giving you the maximum distance for minimum fuel consumption.

The front end of the car will be equipped with radar or sonar

or other sensory devices that can detect the distance

you are from other vehicles and maintain that separation automatically.

In other words, on a highway or anywhere where two cars

might hit each other, the electronic sensors

would sense the distance automatically

and keep the cars from side-swiping or making contact at all.

Even if they did and then pinched a slight dent in the car,

the car would be made up of the memory materials;

shape-memory alloys that go back

to their original shape even when dented.

I'm going to take this metal called nitinol.

This wire, or spring, is wound around a mandrel and

heated to a specific temperature and held until it cools.

Then, when you pull it out beyond its elastic limit

so it's not about to return to the spring shape,

and then you form it in many different ways.

If it's heated... I'll put it on this form

so it won't drift away,

and I'm going to heat that metal.

You can watch it return to its original shape.

It's called "shape-memory alloys".

It could be done in plastics, metals,

or any other materials in the future.

Watch how it returns.

Even if there's an area of the car we removed

they can be rebuilt, in other words, automatically,

by the car having a memory system of its configuration,

just like the human body. Just like, perhaps,

in lizards and salamanders and certain types of organisms today

can regenerate parts of their body.

The technology of the future will enable our automotive vehicles

to repair and regenerate damaged areas.

This is a transport unit, or air-suspended unit.

It will travel five or four feet above the ground

and not requiring highways or bridges.

You can turn around by electrodynamic means,

discharging air from the right or the left side,

not by tunneled air paths, but just by attracting or repelling air.

I did this about 65 years ago.

This is what an automobile will look like in the future.

It'll have sensors on it. So, if I got mad at you

and, when I get within a certain distance, the breaks go on.

If I'm backing up and there's a child crossing, the car stops.

No one drowns in a swimming pool, because a net comes up

when you're not home. Is that clear?

If somebody falls in the pool and you're busy cooking...

the child sinks to the bottom, a tight net comes up right away.

What do you want? What kind of world do you want?

What you see here is just glimpses of the future.

So, we'll go and look the place over so you've got a better idea.

That area over there, across the water,

we will build a very large dome like a center for dialogue

to invite different people out here.

This is a freighter with separate sections.

This freighter can deliver this to the Philippines,

drop this off in Hawaii... And so

when all of the freight bays are released

they are propelled automatically to the loading docks.

And then the forward portion of the ship and the rear portion,

which is the propulsion unit, are joined together.

So you always travel at a balanced load;

you never travel with an empty hull back.

Using energy that way conserves millions of gallons of fuel

if you use fuel in a conventional sense.

This is a possible propulsion method. In this instance

water is drawn toward the surface of the ship electrodynamically.

And, in turn, the ship's reaction is forward

away from the pressure toward the rear.

It's like holding a peach pit, and squeezing it, and it moves forward.

It has far less wake,

less water turbulence,

and very little energy consumed.

What you see here is an illustration

of underwater transportation for the future.

At the very leading edge air bubbles will be emitted

very rapidly in front of the unit,

and that will cut down the resistance considerably.

If you were to release thousands of air bubbles

underneath the ship, it would sink,

because the water is less buoyant with the air bubbles in it.

The air bubbles will be a system in the future

for reducing the forward resistance.

Transporting things underwater is much more economical

and offers much less resistance.

When traveling on the surface, you're confronted

with waves and wave motion.

Underwater, you don't have that problem at all.

We talk about civilization as though it's a static state.

There are no civilized people yet.

It's a process that's constantly going on.

We're not civilized. It's an ongoing process;

and so we never become fully civilized.

We'd have to know quite a bit in order to behave

in the most constructive manner.

And that goes for intelligence.

I don't know if I've talked to you about an electrical engineer

of 75 years ago, an intelligent one, couldn't get a job today.

When you're talking about intelligence, what are you talking about?

It's an ongoing process.

That's why there's no such thing as an intelligent person.

There are people that are fairly well-informed in area A and B,

not informed in area C.

When you go on with a word like civilization,

it sounds like something that was attained.

As long as you have war, police, prisons, crime,

you're in the early stages of civilization;

what they call civilization.

This type of helicopter, or aircraft

would have its propulsion unit at the tip of the blades.

They'd be relatively small, high thrust.

The center of the disc, or the passenger compartment

would remain stationary while the blades spun around.

In the event of engine failure,

the blades can automatically gyrate and bring the craft down

not only vertically, but can travel forward by tilting.

You will notice that there are no ailerons or elevators on this plane.

It's operated in a different manner, also by ion propulsion.

Electron discharge is much lighter, much cheaper, much safer,

much faster and less energy consumed.

In the future, by controlling the airflow

over wings and the direction of it,

the need for a rudder will be rendered obsolete.

For individual transportation of small groups,

you have the vertical landing and take-off

VTOL aircraft of the future. They are called "lift fuselage".

The body itself generates the lift

for this type of aircraft. It is propelled electronically,

meaning particles are electrified and discharged

from the rear of the craft; which propel the craft forward.

For hovering, we then eject the same propellant downward

and generate a ring vortex, a whirling vortex beneath the craft.

The control of that vortex determines the speed downward.

We're going over to the model dome where we have models

of future type buildings and how they go together.

Here you have the city system.

I put domes here, but there'll be many variations.

In other words... - What are those?

- These are research centers. This is medicine

agronomy, population designing

improvement of products, energy systems.

Energy in the future will be geothermal, most of it.

You can get that from the earth. There's enough geothermal energy

for thousands of years without worrying about anything.

I'm not talking about solar, wind power or wave power

or tidal power. All that is extra.

There's no shortage of anything except brains in Washington.

- You can't make money from the sun. - What's that?

- You can't make money from the sun! - No, you can't. Exactly that.

All these buildings can come apart and be recycled.

Now if you follow me, we'll go to the future.

(Larry King) Alright, let's explore the thinking of Jacque Fresco

and the society he'd like to see.

We'll start with this, and you tell me...

- I'll try to point it out. - Yeah, you can point right at it.

- Most of the cities are based on natural configurations,

basic designs in nature. The center of the city

the nucleus, will house an electronic computer

which only controls water purification, the atmospheric conditions

that is, it controls air contamination systems,

they maintain safety, they oversee the environment,

maintain ecological balance between animal life and plant life.

The center of the city is a university.

A university that covers all subjects related to man.

There's no courses that are used to exploit

or abuse any other human being.

All repetitious jobs will be phased out.

We feel that machines ought to do the filthy

or the repetitious, or the boring jobs,

that man has to be free to pursue the higher things,

the higher possibilities of man.

(Gazecki) You came up with this idea for a round city.

- A round city. A round governmental branch.

Extending out of it would be the department of agriculture,

education, oceanography; the disciplines.

The circular scheme, or plan, brings each district

closer to the central dome, which contains the medical,

food, shopping, everything else that people need.

The circular arrangement makes it easier to operate

using far less energy than any other system.

If you start at one end of the city and go through the city

you'll always return to the same place.

Whereas in a linear city, if you go to one end,

you have to backtrack to get to the same point.

The circular scheme is, by far, the most efficient.

When cities are contracted in the future,

they will be contracted as a whole, as an entire system.

In that way, all of the parts and components

would be delivered in stages, like sequence one

will be the underground: the heating system,

the electric generators, the piping systems, the recycling systems.

After that, the next layer, which would serve

as the first layer that contains the architecture

the foundations for all the buildings.

After that, the erection of structures up from the foundations,

starting with the central portion of the city

and working its way out to the different radial sectors,

and then out to the final housing sectors,

and then to the agricultural belt, and then to the recreation areas.

The cities themselves are prefabricated.

Most of the elements that comprise the structures of the cities

are interchangeable, interlocking.

They are designed so they can be disassembled

just as they were assembled.

The new cities will be updated continuously.

As the waters are piped into the cities,

they are checked. To whatever extent contamination exists,

the water processing plants evaporate the water,

recondense it and cleanse it.

All waters piped into the city will be monitored constantly

not by a monitoring system, but several monitoring systems.

The same is true of the air above and around the city:

it's constantly monitored.

All of the rooftops are photovoltaic.

All of the skin, outer skin of the building

converts solar radiation into electrical energy.

As we move beyond the third sector

we come to tennis courts, parks.

Beyond that is the residential district, which consists of lakes,

waterfalls, all kinds of beautiful plants throughout the area.

Each house is concealed by plants

so you can't see another building. Some people prefer

as in the next sector, to live in apartment houses.

The apartments have drama groups, recreation, swimming pools,

discussion groups, and so many other facilities.

The disadvantage of living in a private home is you would have to go

to the various places to access the same things.

Instead of motor vehicles in the city

all transportation is carried on by circular conveyors

that we call transveyors.

They move radially, circumferentially and vertically.

They serve the function of elevators, buses, conveyors.

If you wish to go to another city, you can take an elevator

down beneath the central dome, which has Maglev trains, etc.

that will transport you to the center

of any other city or any other region.

There will be no waste products, just as in nature

there are no waste products. All materials

that we would formerly called waste would be recycled

and converted into new products.

When the city hits a certain number of people,

we stop the development and let everything go back to nature

between this and the next city.

It doesn't mean that we can solve all the problems.

We can just design and build a far better environment

to advance all human beings.

Not everybody will live in a dome.

This is different types of architecture; this may be a vacation house.

I don't know what people will choose to live in

but that would be up to each individual.

What we want to do is build cities in the sea.

You pick the city you want to live in. Some of these cities

are for ocean mining. The oceans have tungsten, manganese,

phosphorous; all kinds of chemicals, stuff we may need.

They're made available to all people.

You don't have to worry about being blind in the future.

We design cities so you can hear an open door

and you can sense a table, because you have built-in sensors.

We work on making artificial methods for visual

for everybody, because anybody can lose their eyesight.

There's no more nickels and dimes for medical research.

This is what the army of the future is all about.

There's usually an alligator sleeping down here.

(King) Are you betting that people will not declare war on each other, so that

you can get at building all of this? - Well, we don't have much choice.

We're going to destroy each other, or we're going to make it.

-This looks like some sort of submerged stadium with something...

- We might build circular cities in the sea,

where the water is about 30-35 feet deep.

Most of the apartment houses will open out into the sea.

You can observe marine life and fish swimming by.

There will be no zoos, no seaquariums.

Everything will be observed in natural conditions.

There will be boating, scuba diving, recreation, and universities

built in the sea.

- Are these drawings all made by you? - Yes.

(Jacque) This represents a blueprint

of the basic structure of the city in the sea.

There are helicopter landing areas on the upper section.

There are cranes that travel around the entire upper portion

of the structure. The legs are designed to move up and down

to support the structure and rest on the sea bed.

What are these cities in the sea for?

Some of them represent hospitals

that can be towed off the coast of Africa or India.

Instead of sending building materials out there

and building a hospital, then shipping the equipment out there.

It's much easier to build a floating hospital,

tow it off the coast of Africa, use it,

and by the time the new hospitals are assembled there,

you can then move this to another region;

float it to another region.

Most of the cities will be constructed in dry-docks

by automated systems.

After it's complete and the flood-locks are open,

and it fills with water, there are units that looks like tugboats

that deliver the cities to the site where they will be located.

Some will house as many as a million people;

a series of cities in close proximity, joined together

by transport systems, that is, tunnels either under the water,

or above-the-water bridges.

This is an aerial view

of one of the many variations of cities in the sea.

The towers are used for residential occupation.

The docks surrounding the cities

are used for marine exploration and redevelopment.

In other words, to restore the reefs, the damaged reefs.

The unit in the center is used for hydroponic gardens;

growing of food without soil.

Many of the cities in the sea

will have docking facilities for marine vehicles.

That means it'll be like an underwater bus

that would take people around to visit the different areas.

You'll be able get a very good picture of the ocean

and how we harness it and use it and preserve it and protect it,

so that future generations might enjoy the oceans, also.

This projects above one of the cities under the sea

with an observation platform and a landing platform on the upper deck.

At the sea level, there'll be a floating dock system

that moves with the tide, up and down so boats can dock.

Then you enter an elevator shaft, which goes to an airlock.

It takes you to the bottom of the sea, or the sea bed.

The sea bed is used for observation of reefs and marine life.

Not only do they monitor the reefs, they restore the reefs

and change them, rebuild them or redesign them.

Some day we will be able to control the shape, configuration of reefs

so they can support more marine life.

I think humans can add to nature

and improve it considerably. What will that mean?

It'll mean a higher standard of living for all people.

(Roxanne) When he draws these buildings and designs

he thinks about how they go together, how they're manufactured.

Some of the drawings I have seen have gone back about 60 years

and they're just beginning to talk about

some of these things now as being a possibility.

You know, in the past people would say: "You'd never be able

to get to the moon, not in a thousand years!"

And they'd look up the next day and they're going to the moon.

When I first met Jacque 25 years ago and he would talk

to some people about certain inventions,

they'd say, "You won't see that... not in a thousand years!"

And ten years later, they'd come out with it on the cover of Popular Science.

The whole basis of the technology is to maintain

a high standard of living. Technology is not worth anything

unless it improves people's lives.

Today, people are afraid of science and technology

because it's so abusive today in so many ways.

But it's not science and it's not the technology

we should be wary of; it's the abuse and the misuse of science.

You can take a rocket and you can shoot it

into space and explore outer space,

or you can take it and use it as a bomb and destroy another country.

The inanimate object, really,

is in our hands, and what we do with it.

Science is really the ability to predict the next most probable.

That's what the real meaning of science is:

gaining the ability to predict the next most probable.

When we talk about science, we're talking about a method

of looking at a situation, a method of evaluation

that differs from the opinionated system.

"If you ask me, I'll tell you!"

The scientific method has no special connection to truth.

It really has a better way of looking at things

than the earlier systems,

where everything was attributed to gods or demons.

(Gazecki) This is where we get into applying the scientific method to society.

-Yes. This is not in a book yet.

The scientific method applied to society

is something people don't think about much.

But if you want to know where the answers may lie,

it is in the application of the methods of science

with human concern and environmental concern.

The Future by Design refers to

the application of the methods of science, not scientists,

the methods of science to the social system.

Naturally, even the methods of science undergo change.

As they change, so would the future.

If we use the scientific method throughout the world,

the probability of war drops to zero.

The probability of human suffering disappears.

Deprivation, poverty, crime...

all those things tend to disappear, because there's no basis for it.

(Roxanne) Jacque spent a lot of time... before studying people,

he started studying how animals behave,

and how to change or predict the behavior of animals,

and came to the conclusion that it's really the environment

that changes behavior and enables us to behave the way we do.

We're not born with prejudice and bigotry and anger and greed.

It's really generated and nurtured by the environment that we live in.

That's why we feel that unless you change your environment

and change the experiences, we'll get the same aberrant behavior

within people, unless the environment is changed.

(Jacque) Any culture in the world today

tries to educate people

so they'll serve a function in that particular culture.

In other words, if you're brought up in a Nazi culture,

the flag waving and the swastika are the kinds of things they put forth.

If you're brought up in a primitive tribe,

handling the javelin and the bow and arrow

will be the kind of thing that you will be exposed to.

People are conditioned to serve

the interests of an established culture.

Who does that to us? The owners of the institutions:

The establishment. They give us a value system

that would support existing structures,

whether it be religious, non-religious, industrial, military...

When children say, you know, "Daddy, what's the greatest country in the world?",

of course, "Our country is the greatest country in the world."

"Which god is the right god, Daddy?"

"Our god! All the other gods are false gods."

Picture this: a Roman family taking its kids to see the Christians

being fed to the lions. And the kids are watching

"Dad, can we come next week to see Christians being fed to lions?"

Are these kids sick? No! Their value system is distorted.

So, I'm strictly concerned with the environment

that people are reared in, raised in.

And if that environment is altered, so will behavior be altered.

You reorient the environment and that, in turn, reorients people.

But if you reorient people without

touching the environment, it'll slip back.

So, when you try to think about the future, remember this:

the process with which you think about things

is based upon indoctrination, what you're given by your society.

Your range of thought is limited

by the dominant values of your society.

Learning to be flexible in values takes a long time.

In talking to kids, when I was very young

I had to be very patient with them if I were to make any progress.

I talked about the concept of god:

your concept of god, my concept of god, and his concept of god.

So different... I wonder what God is really like.

Or, if there is a god, for that matter.

And why would god permit war and disease, if he's all-loving?

It didn't make sense to me... too many clashes.

I questioned that.

Of course, I felt a little uncomfortable

during questioning the concept of god.

But then, reading about the history and evolution

of gods - there were many different gods:

the god of war, the god of peace, the god of love...

Which was more like the people that invented them.

They behaved, they got angry, they made sacrifices,

they created floods when they didn't like the way things were going.

And this did not come through as superior intelligence.

Primitive people, going back in time, when they saw lightning,

they thought that the deity was angry. Why else would it occur?

When a hurricane swept the land, they got rid of certain people

in their tribe as a sacrifice, hoping that the gods

would not produce a second hurricane.

However, if it did occur again,

then they sacrificed some of the younger people.

Rarely would the chief sacrifice himself,

but he's always got a line of people, ready to sacrifice.

So, you have that problem with human beings.

Anything that occurs beyond their comprehension,

they have to invent an excuse for.

They have to create gods and demons

to account for things, because people come

to the leadership of that community.

No matter how primitive the tribe, they say:

"How come bad wind blow people off island?"

The guy says, "You not behave good!

You not make not enough contribution to volcano!

Throw your brother-in-law into volcano, maybe it doesn't erupt then."

So, if you throw your brother-in-law into the volcano

and it still erupts, you have to throw your sister-in-law in.

So you get metaphysics. You get religion.

You get superstition; "Knock wood".

Or you wear a rabbit's foot. Just remember

that the rabbit had four of them; didn't do him any good.

So on down the line, superstition prevails

wherever ignorance prevails.

Myth is a way of saying to the little guy

working out there in the field when he says

"What does all this amount to? I never seem to be getting anywhere."

"When you kick the bucket, everything is there for you.

If you don't get it in this life, you'll get it in the next,

if you remain good."

The amount of superstition that a culture can absorb

would be directly proportionate to the amount of information people have.

So, in the future, with adequate supply of information,

more than that which is given today,

considerably more, you don't have

"Knock wood", "Today's my lucky day", "When your number's up, it's up."

All that will disappear in the future.

(Roxanne) I look at this as everything he's doing

as being the utmost in spirituality.

Instead of looking for a better world later after you die,

it's really building the types of things that all religious teachings

talk about here on Earth.

We don't have to wait until we die for that.

We can confront our problems today and not wait

for the Messiah to come with the white robe and change things,

or not wait until we all go to heaven at a certain time,

or those believers that go to heaven at a certain time.

We can deal with the problems today.

For instance, in religion,

they put things on the will of god.

If there's an accident, it's the will of god.

And it stops you from thinking. It stops you from being innovative.

It stops you from thinking about, "Well, how do we redesign

the transportation system so we don't have those problems anymore?"

So he's worked with priests, and he's worked with religious people

and kind of expanded their horizons a bit so they can be more creative.

They look at the environment that shapes people's behavior,

and they don't call them "good" or "bad" anymore, they think about

shaping the environment

to get more constructive behavior.

(Jacque) If you were to ask me to redesign the world

and the way people live, the first thing I would have to do

is to conduct a survey to find what we have;

how much water we have,

how much people we have, how much arable land area.

After I know that, then I can base the parameters of design

on what we have.

What you really need is an understanding of the Earth's resources

by agronomists, geologists, geophysicists; people who study the Earth.

They don't give you their opinion. They say,

"There's more life in the Antarctic." That's not an opinion, that's a finding.

So, in the future, no more opinions.

"Do you have information in this area?" "No, I don't."

"Good! Here's where you might get it."

Or "Here's how you might go about finding out."

So I'm saying, "All people need clean air,

clean water, arable land,

and a good relationship of language."

So, I'm not superimposing Fresco's concepts.

I'm using the Earth as the measure.

In other words, we have to live in accordance

with the carrying capacity of the Earth.

Does that make sense? - Yes, sir, it does. I keep wondering

about how drastic a social change this is

and how totally different our world would be

and, yeah, how do you get... - From here to there?

- people to accept it, yeah. - Okay, here's how we do it.

Eventually, all decision-making

will be transferred to machines. First, people say

"Well, now, I don't know that I'd like machines making decisions."

First of all, that's what a scale does. If you go to a butcher shop

the butcher says "The chicken weighs six pounds."

Since you're buying it, you say, "that doesn't look like six pounds to me!"

So you grab it and say, "I think it weighs about four" because you're tense

so it seems to weigh less. Then the scale came in

and we assigned decision making to the scale.

Is that right? - So do pilots. - Yes, sir.

When they fly, they don't say, "I think I'm a mile and a half high."

They look at an instrument, and it tells them

they're 4,203 feet off the ground.

So, that is decision made by machine,

because the decision-making by machine is far more accurate.

Now, the question normal people ask is

"Yes, but can machine be smarter than the designer?"

Well, I know a little guy that designed a machine

to pick up a freight train and empty it. Now, he can't do that.

Machines are always faster than the designer.

You ever see a coke bottle machine move on the line?

The designer, he can't move those bottles.

What is happening in our societies is we are automating

more and more decision-making and assigning it to machines.

Picture a department of agriculture as a setup of computers

with electrical wiring into the soil.

So, if the water table drops, that pumps water out there.

If the nutrients change, it pumps nutrients. You don't need a guy

out there saying, "Mr. President, we have a drought out here!"

And the President says, "How bad is it?"

"Well, there are 5,000 homeless, and in the next three days

there'll be 15,000 homeless."

So, the President says, "Hmm." So he flies over

and he says, "Yes, you do have a drought." So what?

When you connect up the country, all the computers

to production, distribution, agriculture...

you have a nervous system

which maintains dynamic equilibrium

in production and distribution of goods and services, without money.

The government is right above your head there

if you can turn around to see it. It looks like the globe.

That globe there makes all the decisions, because it's connected!

We have satellites around the Earth that project a hologram;

a virtual image of the Earth.

So you're looking at the real Earth, in real time.

So you walk over to the image screens and you talk. You say

"How many planes are in the air at this instant?"

The computer will hit a laser spot all over the world and tell you: "7320".

Every plane in the air, every hurricane,

all the conditions all over the Earth... plant diseases...

No human can do that.

So we don't need people in government. We need electronics

in the field, production, distribution, weather...

So we can look, come at home and find out anything we want to know

without opinions based on folk-say, or folksy ways.

(Gazecki) The Future by Design is a self-regulated society

governed by a cybernated system of supply and demand.

Political systems are replaced by tabulating

the input of information from the general population

and delivering goods and services accordingly.

The economic system is similarly based

upon the use of all available resources

in meeting the needs of the entire culture.

(Roxanne) When there's a depression or a dip in the economy

and a lot of people don't have money to buy things,

there are still goods out there. There's still the ability to produce them.

There's still the resources, there's still the farms,

and people want to work and make things,

but they don't have the money; they can't buy things.

So there's something terribly wrong out there. We have

a great deal of the Earth's population starving and suffering,

and the resources are there. Our ability to produce is there.

Our ingenuity is there. Yet, some people have a lot,

and others don't have anything.

Today, that's really shameful with our technology.

It's really very, very abusive and absurd,

because we have all the technology today

to produce abundance all over the world for everyone.

(Jacque) People always ask, "How much will it cost to put up these new cities?"

Do we have the resources to do it?

That's the question, not "How much does it cost?"

That's the old question, during the monetary system.

Money is an invention of convenience

for purchasing goods and services

in a scarcity environment. If there's a scarcity

say, of water, it is prized, and its price is high.

If we find an abundance, suddenly the earth opens up

and an abundant supply of fresh water fills every ravine,

then nobody cares.

There's only a policeman in front of something

that people have need for

and don't have access to, so you put a guard there.

But if lemon trees or orange trees and apple trees

grew all over the place, you couldn't sell it.

Imagine, if you will, if you can, an island of 10,000 people

with $10 billion on the island available.

No resources, no arable land, no water

no fish, you have nothing.

So what is the real value in the future?

Resources.

Now, in a non-monetary based society, a resource-based society,

people have access to anything that they need,

somewhat like the public library.

They can go down and access a camera, or a bicycle, or a wristwatch.

Anything that they need is available, without a price tag.

That would mean we must achieve a level of production

that's so high that scarcity no longer exists.

Many people wonder what would drive people

if they have access to all their needs.

What would happen to incentive? What will motivate people?

Or, something gained, what's the gain?

Although the gain is that materials are available,

what will motivate them on to do better than what they have?

Need. We will always lack.

And the fact that we will always lack,

meaning that we cannot achieve perfection,

we cannot achieve truly dynamic equilibrium,

we will always be in some form of disequilibrium.

With the elimination of scarcity, the essential incentives change

toward problem solving, in general.

When nations or groups of people do not have access to resources,

their behavior is difficult to manage.

It becomes aberrant, they lose their mental equilibrium,

they cannot arrive at appropriate conclusions.

Once people are free, mentally

of debt, obligation, servitude,

then they can seek new horizons

that they've never even dreamt possible before.

(Gazecki) The core mechanism of democratic process in the Future by Design

is the use of public exhibition halls.

With the exhibition hall, everyone has the opportunity to participate

in establishing the priorities with which the society is governed.

- So, just like a world fair, to show you what's new, what is available

you look around and say, "I'd like one of those"

or, "I can use that sort of thing in my kitchen", whatever it is.

And then they always invite comment, or something new comes up

"What do you think about it? Do you feel it's efficient?

Do you feel there's shortcomings? Enter into your computer

your point of view regarding this, so you have a built-in democracy.

You have a participatory culture where all people participate,

and that is in a constant process, so that people

will know up to the minute what is coming out,

what exists, what is available, what is not available.

In other words, there'll be many bulletins and many publications

and visualizations of what is needed.

So, all the world's people will be informed constantly

of what we don't know, what is needed badly

and asking for suggestions and papers

and ideas from everybody.

I just want to say this to you, that all the marvels

and wonders of technology can amount to nothing,

unless it elevates humans to their highest potential.

This is the aim of the Future by Design.

(Roxanne) Jacque continues to invent everyday; to invent, to write, to work.

He has a zest for life that keeps him going and keeps him working.

And he's interested in things. He's interested in

what happens out there and how this will play out

and how it'll turn out, while very much wanting

to introduce this direction to the world. So that's his prime focus.

And he does that in every way he can, by actually showing

it's not enough to just tell what the future will be like,

but to show what people are missing.

He keeps coming up with new ideas, new inventions,

new designs, improves what he has,

represents them better, makes more models, makes more videos.

He's relentless at trying to get these ideas out.

I think he fears where society is now. It's not acceptable to him.

But, instead of just complaining, he wants to propose an alternative.

(Jacque) When people say, "Are you trying to build a perfect society?"

I have no notions of a perfect society. I don't know what that means.

I know we can do much better than what we've got.

I'm no Utopian.

I'm not a humanist who would like to see

everybody living in warmth and harmony.

I know that if we don't live that way, we'll kill each other

and destroy the Earth. We're a crude form of life right now,

in the evolutionary stages. Our civilization...

really we're not even civilized yet.

So, after the world joins together

and we are through with military systems, prisons, torture,

hunger, poverty, deprivation... When that is gone,

that'll be the beginning of the civilized world.

We are not there yet.

For more infomation >> Future by Design (2006) - Duration: 1:29:23.

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Callisto Holiday Village - Ayia Napa, Cyprus - Video Tutorial "Blue Village" - Duration: 3:20.

This is a Video Tutorial of Callisto Holiday Village in Ayia Napa, Cyprus.

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