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Looking back at the final decades of the 20th century, the people tomorrow shook their heads in disbelief. Society's opportunities had vanished because the B.O.A.T. made success too difficult. The legal battles, regulations, and legislation made opportunities at success limited, costly, and risky. Of course, in the next millennium, without such burdens, lucrative opportunities were everywhere, for everyone. The first generation of children in that free world could never understand their parents' and grandparents' blind spot in the 20th century.
We glumly looked back at the stagnation that killed our dreams in the 20th century, weakened our marriages, and destroyed the thrill of love we felt only during the first few weeks or months of falling in love. And, most painful, we saw how our children absorbed from us our hopeless resignation, just as we had from our parents.
After 2001, the Great Sin came to a disgraceful end. Big government could in no way, not ever again, strangle progress and kill our dreams. In fact, your three greatest childhood wishes of great wealth, great romantic love, a great body and mind all came true. Society no longer got pushed down with us squeezed into stagnation-traps where we had always lived in the 20th century. Career politicians were no longer around to hold back progressive technology with big-government regulations and legislation -- all in the name of the public "good". Government no longer included that bogus, second purpose below:
Tomorrow we looked back and realized in disgust that, like the transcontinental railroads, our 20th-century career politicians spent our money to ostensibly enhance our "well-being" and promote public "prosperity", but they really wanted the glory and "importance" that went with spending other people's money and ruling over us. They did not want anything to do with the effort, though, that went with building values, which market businessmen and women put themselves through every day. So, career politicians made a mess of things in the 20th century like they did with the railroads. And market businessmen who were interested in building values and not in ruling others made miracles in the 20th century like Hill's transcontinental and the computers.
Tomorrow, the miracle makers, the unburdened market businessmen and women dramatically improved our well-being and prosperity. A Neotech Society flourishing with geniuses of society handed us our needs on a silver platter and filled all our desires. That was the new code. The erroneous 20th-century idea that government could "promote public prosperity" sort of sneaked up over the century through career politicians finding ways to self-indulge at spending our money to become more and more likable for re-election. Indeed, spending other people's money was a fast way to build favorable illusions in the 20th century. But the people caught on after 2001. The old code ended with great shame.
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