08-14-2025, 03:24 PM
This post was last modified: 08-14-2025, 03:27 PM by SomeStupidName. 
I asked Grok what it would do if it ran the world and it spit out the usual liberal Marxist gibberish it has been modeled to. So then I asked to to plan it out again but this time focusing on fusion power systems, abandoning wind farms, but remain as groups of capitalist democratic republics with private companies pursuing both recreational and mineral exploitation of the solar system. And I must say I like this plan.
AI is here we should work with it, fighting it or using it to fight each other sounds like a loosing scenario.
AI is here we should work with it, fighting it or using it to fight each other sounds like a loosing scenario.
Quote:Grok's Plan for Earth's Future: Fusion-Powered, Capitalist Space Pioneers:
Alright, let's blueprint a realistic, phased plan for Earth that aligns with your vision. This builds on my hypothetical "running the planet" scenario but zeroes in on heavy reliance on fusion power, ditching wind farms, preserving capitalist democratic republics, and unleashing private companies to exploit the solar system for fun (space tourism) and profit (mineral mining). I'll ground this in current trends as of August 2025, drawing from ongoing developments in fusion tech, wind energy stats, and the booming private space sector. The goal: A sustainable, innovative Earth where free markets drive progress without upending political freedoms.
The plan assumes a 10-15 year rollout starting from 2025, with international cooperation via treaties (e.g., an updated Paris Agreement focused on fusion) and incentives for private investment. Governments would act as enablers—providing subsidies, regulations, and infrastructure—while markets handle execution. Challenges like tech hurdles and economic transitions are addressed head-on.
Phase 1: Accelerate Fusion Power Dominance (2025-2030)Shift global energy to fusion as the backbone, leveraging recent breakthroughs to make it commercially viable sooner.By 2030, fusion could supply 20-30% of global power, reducing energy costs by 50% and emissions near-zero.
- R&D Investment Surge: Pool public-private funds to fast-track fusion reactors. As of 2025, the industry has raised $2.64 billion in funding over the past year, with innovations like AI tools spotting "safe zones" in reactors and Google's agreements accelerating development. Governments in capitalist democracies (e.g., US, Germany) would match China's $2 billion bet with competitive grants, aiming for prototypes like the proposed ARC tokamak (up to 400 MW output) to go online by 2028. Private firms like Commonwealth Fusion Systems get tax breaks for scaling.
- Infrastructure Buildout: Construct fusion plants near high-demand areas (cities, data centers). Start with 10 pilot sites globally by 2030, producing clean, limitless energy. Use AI for efficiency, as seen in recent HEAT-ML tools. This replaces fossil fuels and intermittents, stabilizing grids.
- Incentives: Offer fusion energy credits to companies adopting it, traded on markets like carbon credits. Democracies vote on subsidies via referendums to maintain public buy-in.
Phase 2: Phase Out Wind Farms Responsibly (2025-2035)Abandon wind energy to redirect resources to fusion, acknowledging its intermittency and land use issues while minimizing economic disruption.By 2035, wind contributes <5% globally, with fusion filling the gap. This avoids stranded assets through market mechanisms.
- Current Baseline and Rationale: Global wind capacity hit about 1,173 GW in 2024, with 117 GW added that year, but growth is slowing due to supply chain issues. Wind's variability requires backups, clashing with fusion's steady output. Phasing out frees up land (e.g., for fusion plants or agriculture) and materials like rare earths for space tech.
- Decommissioning Strategy: Halt new wind installations immediately. For existing farms, offer buyouts to operators—private companies could repurpose turbines for scrap or export to non-participating nations. Governments provide retraining for 1-2 million wind workers (e.g., into fusion maintenance) via market-driven programs.
- Transition Support: Redirect wind subsidies (trillions globally) to fusion R&D. Use auctions for decommissioned sites, letting capitalists develop them into solar-fusion hybrids if needed as a bridge.
Phase 3: Preserve and Enhance Capitalist Democratic Republics (Ongoing)Keep the political-economic core intact: Free markets, elections, and individual rights as the engine of innovation.This phase is evergreen, with periodic reviews to adapt without shifting to authoritarianism.
- Economic Framework: No overhauls—capitalism thrives with fusion lowering barriers to entry (cheap energy boosts startups). Democracies like the US and EU enforce antitrust to prevent monopolies in fusion or space.
- Governance Tweaks: International bodies (e.g., UN Fusion Council) set standards, but decisions remain national via elected reps. Private lobbying is fine, but transparent to avoid corruption.
- Social Safeguards: Universal basic services (health, education) funded by fusion taxes, but delivered via competitive private providers. This maintains incentives while ensuring stability.
Phase 4: Empower Private Companies for Solar System Exploitation (2025-2040)Unleash capitalism in space: Recreational tourism for revenue, mineral mining for resources, all driven by private enterprise.By 2040, space adds $1-2 trillion to global GDP, with tourism hitting millions of passengers and mining supplying 20% of Earth's rare metals.
- Regulatory Boost: Governments issue licenses for asteroid mining and tourism, with minimal red tape. As of 2025, companies like AstroForge are testing mining equipment in space, targeting trillions in asteroid riches. Update the Outer Space Treaty to allow private claims on resources.
- Recreational Exploitation (Tourism): Subsidize early flights via tax credits. Firms like SpaceX, Blue Origin, and Virgin Galactic (already reducing costs) could offer orbital hotels by 2030. Market it as luxury experiences—$100K tickets dropping to $10K with fusion-powered rockets.
- Mineral Exploitation (Mining): Focus on near-Earth asteroids for platinum, water, and rare metals. Startups like those in recent roundups aim for launches in 2025, with full ops by 2035. Private consortia mine and sell back to Earth, funding further expansion. Profits reinvested in colonies on Moon/Mars.
- Infrastructure: Build spaceports with fusion energy. Public-private partnerships for safety nets (e.g., rescue ops), but ops are corporate-led.
Overall Timeline, Challenges, and BenefitsThis plan keeps Earth dynamic and free—fusion fuels the machine, space is the new Wild West. Thoughts on tweaks, like specific space targets?
- Timeline:
- 2025-2027: Policy frameworks, fusion pilots, wind moratorium.
- 2028-2032: Fusion scaling, wind decommissioning starts, space missions launch.
- 2033+: Full fusion dominance, space economy booms.
- Challenges and Mitigations:
- Tech Risks: Fusion delays? Bridge with existing nukes/solar; markets reward innovators.
- Economic Disruption: Wind job losses? Retrain via private academies.
- Geopolitics: Democracies lead, but trade fusion tech to allies.
- Environmental: Space debris? Enforce private cleanup standards.
- Benefits: Cheap, abundant energy spurs growth (GDP +5-10% annually). Space opens new frontiers, preserving Earth while expanding humanity. Capitalism ensures efficiency, democracies keep it fair.
“The American press is a shame and a reproach to a civilized people. When a man is too lazy to work and too cowardly to steal, he becomes an editor and manufactures public opinion.”
― William T. Sherman
― William T. Sherman





