Occupying no space; taking no time; having no boundaries
Black holes are so dense they occupy effectively no space. Might we have conversations that occupy no time? Conversations with no boundaries in space/time?
:- Doug.

Black holes are so dense they occupy effectively no space. Might we have conversations that occupy no time? Conversations with no boundaries in space/time?
:- Doug.
It is a matter of selfishness that keeps us stuck in the black ooze economy: the selfishness of those who claim to own the oil. They frighten us saying that if we overthrow them we will no longer have our automobiles, our economy, our jobs: we will die.
There is no proof to it: it consists mainly of their fear—their fear of trying something new. We can reassure that there is life (and business) after this activity in ooze dies its natural death.
We are not trapped in their death-story. We—that’s all of us—can write a different story. We just have to tell it despite their yelling.
:- Doug.
The problem with a distributed economy is not that it will lose jobs and businesses—because it will create jobs and businesses—but that it will eliminate particular jobs and businesses. Most specifically it will require the people who make the big bucks heading up the old way big businesses to think. To work. For all of us. To all this they are unaccustomed. We are unaccustomed.
:- Doug.
We are not so much about power to the people as power from the people.
:- Doug.
God speaks to us, among many ways, through the people we meet, the life around us, our memories, the books we read, the movies we see. Good morning, friend!
:- Doug.