Index | Parent Index | Build Freedom: Archive

After 2001: Our Neotech World



Despite 20th-century big government, however, Neotech persistently, albeit slowly, filtered into other industries during the final few years of the 20th century. The boundaries between computers, telephones, and televisions, for example, were blurring as all three became avenues to the Internet, and Neotech began spreading throughout those sister industries. First, Neotech touched off the long-awaited telecommunications revolution. The price to communicate collapsed; long-distance phone bills became a thing of the past. Distance no longer mattered as voices, images, eventually holograms communicated anywhere in the world for any length of time, knocking down the walls of distance as one could work anywhere in the world, children could go to school anywhere in the world, and people could play many types of games with friends anywhere in the world. Second, Neotech in the late 20th century touched off the television revolution. Immense bandwidth via coaxial and fiber-optic cables carrying digitized information brought us Web TV as well as thousands of stations with interactive use of the screen. Capacity and variety soared as costs dove and we tuned into anything, anytime, from anywhere in the world. And, of course, Neotech continued to whisk along the computer revolution itself, sending it into the ever more powerful dimension of cyberspace communication that took us instantly anywhere in the world. In short, the whole world fell into our laps.

Not only was Neotech spreading from the computer industry into its sibling telecommunications and television industries, but even more importantly, those communication industries opened a whole new world of technological advancements for all industries, bringing Neotech closer to all America. The communications revolution brought businesses such seemingly supernatural efficiencies that prices of many products went to the brink of computerlike free-falls. This all happened around the turn of millennium. Now, as we moved into the next millennium, would governments let us open the hatch? Would governments free the entrepreneurs? "How fast this new world arrives will depend on governments." --The Economist, London.

Here were three images that flashed before me in my Second Vision:

Bugs In Society Holding Back The Millionaire Phenomenon


Today's Make-The-People-Millionaires Megatrend To Rid The Bugs


Millionaire Megatrend Will Make The People Live Like Millionaires


After 2001

My Second Vision showed me technologies in all areas of life free to race ahead like the computers. In that Neotech or New Technology Society of radically advancing technologies, living costs were driven down to fractions like the computers. Buying power in all areas of life multiplied a hundred times or more. Ordinary people lived like millionaires in custom homes, drove luxury cars, and vacationed all over the world first class.

One man had the power to quickly bring us into that Golden Neotech World where poverty and suffering no longer existed and Americans lived in luxury. That man was the President of the United States. In the 20th century, no President would initiate the millionaire phenomenon because no career politician would slash his own base of power. But now, we have seen a sample of the great prosperity:

You see, 20th-century big government -- career politicians and bureaucrats politicizing our lives, ruling over us, playing God with our lives -- not only held back the Technological Revolution and tightened the seams that restricted Neotech as we approached the end of this millennium, but by doing so, also held back the job revolution and blocked a hundred million super entrepreneurs (explained in the Fourth Vision). The catalytic reaction when big government disintegrated after 2001, when Neotech burst out everywhere and mixed with millions of unleashed super entrepreneurs, surpassed anything ever contemplated in economic think tanks. The overwhelming energy and creativity pumped into super technologies conceived new societal prosperity that went way off the charts. Ordinary people finally experienced God's Second Ultimate Gift: enormous wealth.

You Became 100 Times Richer

Looking back from my Visions over the last decade of the 20th century, the federal government collected an average of 1.3 trillion dollars annually in taxes. Congress spent an average of 1.5 trillion dollars (rounding off). That spending split into three categories (all multi-year averages):



Index | Parent Index | Build Freedom: Archive

Disclaimer - Copyright - Contact

Online: buildfreedom.org - terrorcrat.com - mind-trek.com