The
World of Jacque Fresco
By
Debbie Ellison
A
world where war, poverty, hunger, money, environmental degradation,
and corruption in government do not exist. A future where
all people, regardless of age, sex, color, nationality, or
financial status, live as one family in financial abundance,
peace, and harmony. A society in which machines do the work
and humans enjoy their families and their creative pursuits.
Welcome to Jacque Fresco's world, a world, he says, that
is within our reach, if only we will wake up and grasp it.
Fresco is a futurist, an industrial designer, a visionary,
and a humanist who has spent most of his 86 years devising
ways to make the world a better place to live. When he speaks,
his passion to fulfill his vision of such a society fills
the space of the world he wishes to unite. He is a man who
does not just talk and wish and hope for a better world, he
is doing something about it. He is driven by his vision of
using science and technology to create a new global society
based on human and environmental concern.
His
book The Best That Money Can't Buy: Beyond Politics,
Poverty, and War outlines The Venus Project, his detailed
plan to redesign culture as we know it today. The book, as
does The Venus Project, addresses environmental, economic,
and human rights issues. Cybernation, or the application of
computers and automation to the social system, used humanely
and intelligently, is a cornerstone of Fresco's plan for
the future and calls for the redesign of cities, transportation
systems, and industrial plants to be energy efficient, clean,
and to meet the needs of all people both materially and spiritually.
Machines will do the work, thus freeing humans to pursue and
take delight in their personal development, creative pursuits,
and increased time with family and friends.
The Venus Project is based on Fresco's belief that we
as a society are not living in accordance with the laws of
nature, and, thus, are destroying our environment and our
freedom to make a life rather than make a living. Our main
problem, Fresco believes, is a lack of understanding
of what it means to be human and the full realization that
we human beings are not separate from nature. Our values,
beliefs, and behavior are as much a part of the natural law
as any other process. We are all an integral part of the chain
of life.
The
Venus Project's 25-acre research and development center
in Venus, Florida, is home to Fresco and his associate, Roxanne
Meadows. It is a working example of how the future will look,
if Fresco has anything to say about it. We here at The
Venus Project, he continues, work on ways of solving
problems, how to clean the ocean, how to diminish crime in
America and all over the world, how to do away with armies
as a means of solving problems.
We must learn to live in accordance with nature, not
our own just grab all you can from the earth and just cut
down the trees without concern for the future. Fresco
predicts that in less than ten years environmental and social
conditions will be so bad, we will be forced to totally change
the way we live. He says we will either use the earth intelligently
or kill each other. He speaks of conditions we are all too
aware of today, severe traffic problems, safety, crime, pollution,
war, ineffective and greedy politicians. It's not
a question of people being intelligent, he says, it's
a question of conditions getting so bad that it forces us
to make the change.
He
asserts that, using the proper technology and a change in
society's values, it would take ten years to change the
surface of the earth into a second Garden of Eden. With
an all-out effort, like we did in the Manhattan Project, it
would take ten years to wipe out the slums all over the world
and get rid of hunger and misery and most crimes.
His center in Venus houses ten experimental buildings and
research labs where development is underway for alternative
energy systems, city designs, transportation, manufacturing
systems, and more. Blueprints, renderings, and models are
being created for the construction of an experimental city
based on Fresco's research. In Venus, many of the machines
and systems he talks about are already operational.
We've
turned it back to the wetlands, Fresco explains. We
dug waterways and lakes and canals and streams. And then the
alligators came, the turtles came, they settled down here,
and it looks just like it used to look 200 years ago. We have
about ten buildings, domes, which are earthquake proof, fireproof,
do not have termites, you don't have to spray them with
poison, and they last a thousand years.
Fresco's book features seventy of his industrial designs,
including sea cities, apartment structures, automated construction
systems, future aircraft, bridges, geothermal energy plants,
and many more incredible inventions. He has appeared on the
Discovery Channel and many national television programs and
has lectured all over the world. Among his many inventions
are an aircraft wing structural system patented by the United
States Airforce; a technique for viewing three-dimensional
motion pictures without special viewing glasses; and noiseless,
pollution-free aircraft. His inventions span the fields of
technology, science, and medicine.
What
The Venus Project is trying to do, Fresco explains,
is to declare the earth as the common heritage of all
the world's people. In that way, there would be no more
territorial disputes. And then, if all the nations join together,
like the United States of the World, and used the earth to
benefit the lives of all the world's people, this will
be the beginning of the civilized world. Right now, I think
that there's really no intelligent life on earth. We're
looking for intelligent life out there. There's hardly
any down here. Human beings have destroyed the oceans, the
atmosphere, not because they're mean, because they're
ignorant of the laws of nature.
Fresco advocates many changes in society and the world as
we know it a resource-based economy; cybernation; an
education system teaching compassion and understanding nature
and the unity of all humanity; a global alliance to solve
the problems we share; a clean, sustainable environment; and
a government based on these principles.
The
monetary system, he says, is now an impediment
to survival rather than a means of facilitating individual
existence and growth. This imaginary tool has outlived its
usefulness. It is not money that people need but the access
to goods and services.
The Venus Project concludes that The earth is abundant
with plentiful resources. Our practice of rationing resources
through monetary control is irrelevant and counterproductive
to our survival. A resource-based economic system utilizes
existing resources rather than money and provides an equitable
method of distribution in the most humane and efficient manner
for the entire population. All resources are available to
everyone without the use of money, credits, barter, or any
other form of exchange.
Goods
and services are available through distribution centers similar
to the public library system, where goods and resources would
be available to all. There would be 3-D, flat-screen televised
imaging capabilities in each home where orders are placed
for a desired item; the item is then automatically delivered
directly to a person's home.
Among the many ideas Fresco is working on: putting an abrasive
substance in highways to eliminate dangerous slippery conditions
when the pavement is wet, cars that receive impulses in school
districts to keep them from going more than 15 miles an hour,
radar units in cars that stop the car when another car or
person gets dangerously close, and a net that would cover
the bottom of all swimming pools to prevent anyone from falling
in and drowning.
What
makes The Venus Project different and more attainable than
earlier visions of a better world, according to Meadows and
Fresco, is that The Venus Project provides a comprehensive
set of blueprints, models, a methodology for implementation,
and competent individuals to bring about such a transition.
I became interested in Jacque's work, Meadows
says, when I heard him lecture. She says that
what he was saying sounded more significant than anything
I had ever learned and more relevant to the things we need
to learn and what we need to know to be able to live on earth
peacefully.
Today
we still live in a world where we keep things scarce and we
still fight and try and maintain control of resources. Today,
with all our technology, we can surpass that if we use our
technology wisely to create an abundance on earth and enable
all people's needs in terms of school and even spiritual
needs, education, and housing and clothing, So we can kind
of jump in evolution, and for the first time, if we do that,
if we set that up in society, then we can begin to know what
it's like to be civilized. We don't even know that
today. We're still grabbing for resources, fighting for
resources, and keeping them scarce for people and having a
lot of people suffer. The Venus Project talks about the next
step in evolution.
Education,
as proposed by The Venus Project, will be designed to teach
children the brotherhood of humanity, sensitivity to and caring
for nature, and the elimination of bigotry and prejudice.
Although books, videos, computers, and virtual reality would
be used, most of the educational processes would be of a participatory
nature in which students interact hands-on with the physical
environment, learn to interact effectively with others, share
experiences, and examine alternative approaches to problems.
Students will be taught tolerance of cultures that differ
from their own, leading to a better understanding of the advantage
of all nations joining together for the preservation of life
on planet Earth.
Fresco
and Meadows have submitted a manuscript for a new motion picture
called And the World Will Be One. They have produced
videotapes, written books, and lectures to get their message
out into the world. They are working with some of the people
who worked on the Star Trek series to do a new TV series and
a movie. They have no outside funding, so they put their own
funds toward the project. They believe educating the public
is the first step to making this new society a reality.
Fresco concedes that to make the transition from our present
culture, which is politically incompetent, scarcity-oriented,
and obsolete, to this new, more humane society
will require a quantum leap in both thought and action.
The Venus Project asserts that the only limitations to the
future of mankind are those we impose upon ourselves.
For
more information on The Venus Project, contact tvp@thevenusproject.com.
Freelance writer Debbie Ellison can be reached at write-on@mindspring.com