Thursday, August 4, 2011

From Seattle WA and San Francisco CA

Hey Harlem NY dudes, let's take a trip out west.  What if you were on the Northwest coast by the Pacific

Ocean, in Seattle WA.   From the standpoint of NAWAPA, Seattle is now going

to be a major hub, on this line that's going to connect all of

Asia. All of Asia, over into Europe, down into Africa; connect

to that, across the Bering Strait, down through North America,

all the way down into South America: Suddenly there's a

different meaning for Seattle, as it'll be a major change in the

significance of all of this territory here. The value and

significance of cities that already exist here, and cities that

have yet to be built in this whole region, is transformed: It's

a different kind of hub.

And we could operate from that standpoint -- the value of

this region is determined not by its current state, but by the

future state of the entire process. This future state will

determine what the significance is. That's what we're talking

about as a campaign here.

Along with that, you've got the already -- certain

capabilities that are becoming dormant, like the aerospace

capability there, which with largely Boeing, but others, which

under the space program, under Kennedy's Apollo Project, played

a significant role. Without the Apollo Project, they'd become

less significant, in terms of their actual capability; but if you

were to launch a project on this scale again, return to the kind

of outlook we had under Apollo, you'd be raising their

significance to a major productive center, a major scientific

center, once again.

Similarly, we've got the San Francisco area, where we've got

Summer Shields as a candidate. [Detail 2]. I think I did say,

Dave Christie's a candidate for Washington State, Seattle area.

For the Bay Area, you've got Summer Shields as a candidate.

Similar situation: You're talking about a major transformation

for the state of California, because it does share a large chunk

of this Great American Desert. But then, also, the kinds of

capabilities that exist here, that we're talking about

re-claiming, that right now we're operating in a completely

isolated form. You've got major national laboratories there:

You've got Lawrence Livermore; you've got regions, which in the

past have been used for amazing things, like the level of fusion

energy research, that you had, although now the actual activity

in that area has slowed to a trickle, because of just bad

national policy, bad economic policy. The minds in the

background that would launch that, that would be able to drive us

into a breakthrough in fusion technology, both in energy

generation, but as an entire platform: for energy generation, for

propulsion, for materials reprocessing, all of that is, in

potential, there in the San Francisco Bay Area.

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