Our Journey of Moments

Soon (if not here already), "digital realities" may be confused with real reality.

Interlocked Film Sequels and Series: Our shared dramatic journey through stunning experience in near-future time, expanding outward.

More Science than Science Fiction.

More Mystery than Myth.

The coming age of weaponized Earth. Part of the dramatic landscape, events and sequences in my Films and Series are logical conclusions of leading edge/over-the-horizon science with elements of fantasy and horror.

Multiple character groups that the global audience in all wonderful diversity can engage emotionally and intellectually…

Of great good and the terror of monstrous evil in groundbreaking conflict.

Of inspiration, wonder, and hope.

Of humanity - and the power of unyielding resolve.

R. D. Townsend

 

What the Speed of Life Means for Security and Society by Kathryn Bouskill, a social scientist at RAND

March 6, 2019

https://www.rand.org/blog/rand-review/2019/03/what-the-speed-of-life-means-for-security-and-society.html

 “The envelope arrived with no explanation but a New York City postmark. Kathryn Bouskill tore it open and shook out a small, silvery coin. It was stamped with a “20,” she saw as she turned it over in her hand—not 20 cents, or 20 dollars, but 20 minutes.

 Bouskill studies health and human behavior as an anthropologist at RAND. She and another researcher, Seifu Chonde, teamed up to examine our scramble for new technology, our headlong rush to make everything go a little faster. We are hurtling toward a time of transformation, they concluded, without asking what all this speed means for our society, our security, and our sanity.

 She knew the value of that coin right away.

 Do We Have "Hurry Sickness"?

There's a word in German for that discombobulated feeling that life is just racing by: Eilkrankheit, “hurry sickness.” It means rushing home from work just to flip open your laptop. Or checking your cellphone more than 50 times a day, the U.S. average.

 Bouskill wondered whether we might be coming down with a case of societal hurry sickness. She partnered with Chonde to test that idea. He came at the question from the opposite perspective, as an engineer and data scientist. He reminded Bouskill that a train can jump the tracks by going too fast, but also by going too slow.

 He looked at how quickly technology will advance in the next 20 years. She looked at what that could mean for the human experience.

 They concluded that we are about to shift into hyperdrive. The experts they interviewed, the research they reviewed, all pointed in the same direction. Dozens of technologies with the power to transform human life, from 3D printing to cognitive implants, could become as ordinary as a cellphone by 2040.

 Society will have to adapt, on the fly, in ways it never has. It took the telephone 85 years to become a household mainstay; color television, 21 years; and the smartphone, 13 years. A key difference was the infrastructure involved. It took a long time to connect every household to a telephone line. In the digital world, it takes no time at all.

Years Until Technologies Became Mainstays of Life

Technology    Years

Smartphone   13

Internet          15

Color Television        21

Car      71

Telephone     85

As Technology Transforms Life, Can We Adapt?

The speed of change is already testing our ability to respond. In 2010, for example, a high-speed trader working from home executed a series of split-second sales by algorithm, triggering a “flash crash” that briefly wiped nearly $1 trillion from the Dow Jones Industrial Average. In 2013, a law student prompted a regulatory crisis by posting designs for a 3D-printed gun on the internet.

By 2040, the researchers concluded, the speed of life itself could pose a security challenge. In a crisis, the people making decisions will have less time to react, and more information coming at them. That's already a concern at the highest levels of national security and government. As Gen. Joseph Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, warned in a recent essay: “Decision space has collapsed and so our processes must adapt to keep pace.”

 By 2040, the speed of life itself could pose a security challenge.”

'It Was As if We Weren’t Human.'

'It Was As if We Weren’t Human.' Inside the Modern Slave Trade Trapping African Migrants

The trade in human beings thrives on the road to Europe

By Aryn Baker | Photographs by Lynsey Addario for TIME

March 14, 2019

http://time.com/longform/african-slave-trade/

“Slavery may seem like a relic of history. But according to the U.N.’s International Labor Organization (ILO), there are more than three times as many people in forced servitude today as were captured and sold during the 350-year span of the transatlantic slave trade. What the ILO calls “the new slavery” takes in 25 million people in debt bondage and 15 million in forced marriage. As an illicit industry, it is one of the world’s most lucrative, earning criminal networks $150 billion a year, just behind drug smuggling and weapons trafficking. “Modern slavery is far and away more profitable now than at any point in human history,” says Siddharth Kara, an economist at the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy.”

Today, March 14, 2019, is Albert Einstein’s 140th birthday .

To enlighten, inspire, and engage Humanity in all the todays of tomorrow; wishing you all the best.

- RDT

https://thebulletin.org/2019/03/tomorrow-is-einsteins-birthday/

“More than 70 years ago, Einstein was integral to the Bulletin‘s founding, an effort to engage the public, policy makers, and scientists around the world about the accelerating pace of scientific and technological advancement.

Einstein’s legacy is still integral to everything the Bulletin does. From making science accessible to a general audience to broadcasting our internationally-renowned Doomsday Clock announcement, the Bulletin continues the work set out for it by Einstein and the many other leading scientific voices of the time by continuing to debate and work toward solutions to today’s existential threats: nuclear risk, climate change, and disruptive technologies.”

March 14 is Albert Einstein’s birthday.png

Origins...

"Dies Mercurii"

Throughout human history, time and space have been inexorably linked:

The seven-day week originates from the calendar of the Babylonians, which in turn is based on a Sumerian calendar dated to 21st-century B.C. Seven days corresponds to the time it takes for a moon to transition between each phase: full, waning half, new and waxing half....The book of Genesis (and hence the seven-day account of creation) was likely written around 500 B.C. during the Jewish exile to Babylon...

[Today]

Wednesday is "Wōden's day." Wōden, or Odin, was the ruler of the Norse gods' realm and associated with wisdom, magic, victory and death. The Romans connected Wōden to Mercury because they were both guides of souls after death. “Wednesday” comes from Old English “Wōdnesdæg.”"

https://www.livescience.com/45432-days-of-the-week.html

Nothing but Love: The Diversity of Being

Collaborative storytelling from the audience perspective; an engaging and (relatively soon) immersive experience.

Several "capital" (major) character groups offering groundbreaking diversity and storytelling.

Women character groups, multi-racial, multi-cultural character groups.

GenX to GenZ; it is a given: We live in a multi-cultural and multi-racial world.

And when we engage with each other, we learn so very much.

New and emerging discoveries in Phases of Matter. Octonions describing a possible connection between known reality and mathematics.

Quantum Atmospheres. Groundbreaking work in Quantum Gravity....the list goes on, and on.

There is so much wondrous and fascinating science that all humanity should share in, discuss, and engage in bountiful curiosity.

So, first we have to get there....

Each of us represents our own diversity of perspective; our very own Diversity of Being. And, yes, our own legacy to future generations.

Of Love, and of Consequence: Where shall we lead?

From forgotten past to found future:

"Think higher, feel deeper"

“For in the end, it is all about memory, its sources and its magnitude, and, of course, its consequences.”

- Elie Wiesel

"Guidepost"

Shakespeare references the "Undiscovered Country" analogous to death, finality, and not being able to return from: To me the Undiscovered Country is a future that is not final.

We all have Free Will and the choice to make our own future.

And, human exploration of outer space, and humanity is way, way behind. We landed on the moon 50 years ago...and since then, regarding human exploration, we have been standing still.

Only now, thanks to private enterprise are we finally taking those steps into strides as humans explore our home star (“solar”) system and ,eventually, into the stars.

Could the government and all people on our solitary planet get really behind human space exploration? Yes.

Would that greatly speed up our exploration of the stars? Absolutely.

What is perhaps the one common denominator left in our fractured society?

The Movie experience, including episodic premium TV and streaming series. We root for the side of great good against great evil.

We share in defining and reinforcing our true, diverse, unique, humanity, as we sail into the Undiscovered Country of a future of our own making.

RDT