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  • The Venus Project is pleased to introduce some interviewees from our forthcoming series

  • I'm Jeff Hoffman. I'm professor of aerospace engineering

  • in the department of aeronautics and astronautics at MIT.

  • Prior to coming here, I spent 25 years at NASA as a NASA astronaut

  • and made five flights in various space shuttles.

  • I was the first astronaut to log 1,000 hours on the space shuttle,

  • and I was one of the crew in the rescue mission

  • for the Hubble Space Telescope back in 1993.

  • All over the world there are places where we can see the artificial borders

  • that humans have put up and the different ways that we take care

  • of the land on either side of the borders.

  • So, it's like the many other impacts

  • the Human race has had on our planet.

  • It's a situation where we've affected our planet

  • in ways that are visible from a cosmic perspective,

  • and it should give us pause.

  • I'm Karen Hudes. I'm known as the World Bank whistle-blower.

  • I'm working with a team of other whistle-blowers,

  • both from the World Bank and outside the World Bank,

  • to tell you what's been hidden from youdeliberately hidden from you.

  • The Federal Reserve system is a private systemit's not a central bank.

  • And these bankers are all part of a system

  • called 'The Bank for International Settlements'.

  • They own 40% of the assets of the 43,000 companies

  • that are traded on the capital market,

  • and they pull down 60% of the annual earnings.

  • They bought up all our media; and that media is hoodwinking the citizens.

  • At the vanguard of this new wave of automation is the field of robotics.

  • But instead of serving us, we find them competing for our jobs,

  • and, according to MIT professors Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee,

  • one of the reasons for the jobless recovery.

  • I’m Erik Brynjolfsson. I’m a professor at MIT

  • and the director of the MIT initiative on the digital economy.

  • Every new technology both destroys jobs and creates jobs.

  • There are winners and there are losers.

  • There’s disruption, and that’s certainly true with this wave,

  • even as it creates record wealth.

  • Were now at $77 trillion with record productivity and record GDP.

  • There are a lot of people who are actually worse off than they were before.

  • My name is Abby Martin and I am a journalist for mediaroots.org

  • and a host of Breaking The Set on RT America.

  • The media’s morphed into just peddling the corporate interests

  • of the money masters that control the political establishment.

  • I don’t even consider us to live in a democracy at all;

  • there’s a corporatocracy that’s running the planet,

  • and under this corporatocracy, we have them (corporations) using the state as a tool of the market.

  • And so, were at a state now

  • [where] all of their interests [are] bleeding into the media.

  • My name is Paul Wright and I’m the executive director and the founder

  • of 'The Human Rights Defense Center'.

  • I’m also the editor of 'Prison Legal News',

  • and I've published and edited three anthologies on mass incarceration,

  • starting with 'The Celling of America: An Inside look at the U.S. Prison Industry',

  • followed by 'Prison Nation: The Warehousing of America’s Poor',

  • and 'Prison Profiteers: Who Makes Money from Mass Incarceration'.

  • Generally, the laws in this country are written by the wealthy and the powerful

  • because, by definition, that’s who controls legislatures

  • and the commanding heights of the power system in this country.

  • The government is not a neutral agent; it serves the class that holds power.

  • My name is Mark Jacobson.

  • I’m a professor of civil and environmental engineering at Stanford University,

  • and I build computer models to simulate climates, air pollution, and weather

  • on global, regional, and local scales.

  • I also study and develop solutions to the problems of

  • global warming, air pollution, and air-pollution health problems

  • with the goal of trying to provide energy stability for years to come.

  • There’s no technological or economic limitation to solving these problems;

  • it’s a social and political issue, primarily.

  • My name is Dylan Ratigan,

  • I am the recently retired host of 'The Dylan Ratigan Show' on MSNBC.

  • It was the highest rated non-primetime show on the network.

  • Prior to that, I was the host and creator

  • of a program on CNBC entitled 'Fast Money',

  • which was the single highest-grossing, highest-rated

  • show in the history of CNBC.

  • I have resigned all those positions 18 months ago

  • in order to follow the leadership

  • of recently-returned Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans

  • who have explained to me that the necessary solution to global conflict

  • is the tactical application of global resource management,

  • and I have devoted my life to helping them achieve that goal.

  • My name is Erin Ade.

  • I’m a reporter for RT television

  • and host of 'Boom Bust', a financial and economic show on RT.

  • Yes, there might be idealistic politicians who got into the game to change the world, but,

  • if theyre any good at their job, theyre no longer changing the world;

  • theyre serving the interests of their donors to rise in the world of politics.

  • That’s a scary reality because you can pay your way into having laws implemented

  • that serve you and your corporation as you would like them to serve.

  • I'm Paul Hewitt.

  • I’m well-known for a textbook I’ve written: 'Conceptual Physics'

  • and also for screencasts that are on YouTube right now

  • called 'Hewitt Drew-it! Physics'.

  • Science has a self-correcting method

  • of making sure that people give their best, and honestly.

  • Exceptions? Of course.

  • Corruptions here and there? Of course.

  • But in general, it’s the best way

  • of looking and interacting with the worldrationality.

  • What will Earth look like 50 years from now?

  • It’s something scientists, sci-fi fans, and a lot of kids daydream about.

  • But, there’s also a big dreamer right here in Florida

  • who may just be the oldest living futurist.

  • Jacque Fresco has a vision, a very serious vision, for the 21st century.

  • It’s all in keeping with his life’s work: The Venus Project.

  • Were not civilized yet.

  • As long as we have prisons, police, armies, and navies, were not civilized.

  • We want to build a world that takes care of everybody.

  • Well, there’s no such thing as utopia;

  • just a better system than this one.

  • No [political] system on earth is any good; they are all corrupt.

  • If you don’t want war and you don’t want hatred and unemployment,

  • you have to change the way we think.

  • You have to change the culture.

  • Stay tuned for Episode 1 Coming Soon

The Venus Project is pleased to introduce some interviewees from our forthcoming series

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