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Titulo Original: JACQUE FRESCO, DOCUMENTÁRIO DUBLADO UM MUNDO QUE VALE A PENA IMAGINAR TOP
Canal Autor (Nome): Lukevi
Canal Autor (Link): https://www.youtube.com/@lukevi9250
Fonte do Video (Link): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7AsrfYsAfzw
Licenca: Este conteudo e reutilizado sob a Licenca Creative Commons Atribuicao 4.0 Internacional (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Note: The original content has not been modified. / O conteudo original foi mantido integralmente.
Canal Autor (Nome): Lukevi
Canal Autor (Link): https://www.youtube.com/@lukevi9250
Fonte do Video (Link): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7AsrfYsAfzw
Licenca: Este conteudo e reutilizado sob a Licenca Creative Commons Atribuicao 4.0 Internacional (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Note: The original content has not been modified. / O conteudo original foi mantido integralmente.
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TVTranscrição
00:02Hello, I'm Evan Hirsch, we're here in the state of Florida at the Tivenus Project to visit the futuristic centennial.
00:09Jack Fresco and his partner Rochane Meadows created this eight-hectare futuristic paradise to give us a...
00:19This is an example of what could be possible, if their visions come to fruition, regarding a new society for all of us, centered...
00:26in a resource-based economy.
00:28S.O.U.L. Documentary presents
00:32A World Imagining
00:35Jack Fresco, Timon and Tiplan
00:37Jack Fresco, Timon and Tiplan
00:40Jack, 1974
00:44The reason we emphasize machines and technology is to liberate man, so he can go to centers of
00:50art, music centers, cultural centers, and finding the meaning of one's own existence and life.
00:56Interview with Jack Fresco, TAC 4, CLAP, Jack, 2017
01:01This was Jack's last interview before he died in May 2017 at the age of 101.
01:10Let's take a look at this magnificent body of futuristic and visionary work.
01:13Come on over.
01:15What do you think about when you contemplate the future?
01:18Let's find out what Jack Fresco, a futurist, thinks about this.
01:23You may not have heard of Jack Fresco, but he's known all over the world.
01:27Documentaries have been made about him.
01:29He has a plan to create an entirely new world from scratch.
01:35Writers for magazines across Europe wrote articles about him.
01:38I came to the other side of the world, all the way to Florida.
01:40To meet a man who has a very clear vision of what he thinks.
01:44What the future of the city should be.
01:46Ponto offers an architectural plan for humans, technology, and nature to coexist.
01:51Creating a sustainable future.
01:55Social engineer, industrial engineer, designer, inventor.
01:59A point that truly believes that the ills of society can only be cured.
02:03If we get rid of the rules that govern it.
02:06And to us.
02:06But to do it Jack's way, there would be no communism, only capitalism.
02:10Everyone living together in one world.
02:12Sharing everything.
02:13Dramatic music, comma.
02:33If you had to describe yourself, what would you say?
02:37I would have to classify myself as a social engineer.
02:41Because I'm not just interested in architecture and learning theory.
02:44And human behavior.
02:46But I am interested in all aspects of the Earth.
02:49And of the people.
02:51People, especially.
02:52I'm not very interested in technology.
02:54Although it may seem that I am advocating for this.
02:57In truth.
02:58All the wonders of technology.
02:59For me.
03:00They're nothing but scrap metal.
03:02Unless they improve human life.
03:05My favorite part of the day was the lecture itself.
03:08I attended many of Jack Fresco's lectures.
03:10He seemed like a genuine person to me.
03:12Determined to save the world by any means I could.
03:15But I think Jack has this incredible ability to abstract himself.
03:19And to observe things from above.
03:22Regarding society.
03:23Regarding structures.
03:24About life.
03:25About the people.
03:27Parkinson's disease affected Jack's ability to speak in his final years.
03:31Depression had a major influence on him.
03:34Yes.
03:34How things have changed.
03:36Good.
03:37I had to think of a way to get around that.
03:40I went to the library.
03:42I read many books.
03:44Everyone had a little bit of something.
03:48Jack has been working on this his whole life.
03:51And what led him in this direction was the fact that he experienced the Great Depression.
03:55Good.
03:55I remember how humble I was.
03:57During depression.
03:58My father.
03:59Being an agronomist.
04:00He was one of the first to be fired.
04:02And he really tried to find a job.
04:05He couldn't.
04:06And the family was threatened.
04:08And there were no provisions for that type of situation.
04:10And I remember seeing millions of unemployed Americans.
04:13And children traveling across the country with oars carrying cargo.
04:17They were good kids.
04:18They simply couldn't succeed.
04:20And people were evicted from their homes because they didn't have the money for rent.
04:23And people in the bread lines.
04:25And that's what incited people to speak out in the streets about what communism is.
04:29The free enterprise system.
04:32And manquimunited.
04:33And all sorts of things.
04:34And he felt that those were the rules of the game by which we played.
04:37That they were so distorted.
04:39Which began a search for a different social system.
04:42That would allow people to proliferate more.
04:45And he couldn't find one.
04:47The environment shapes behavior.
04:49What humanity has failed to learn.
04:51He couldn't learn.
04:52What makes people behave the way they do?
04:56It's indoctrination in schools.
04:58And in magazines.
05:02And on the radio.
05:03And in the news.
05:04Suddenly I realized.
05:06Not many people understand.
05:08This factor.
05:09The environment shapes us.
05:11And that was it.
05:12Wow.
05:12Seriously.
05:14If you were to raise an American child among the headhunters of the Amazon.
05:18She will shrink heads and behave like a headhunter.
05:21You may not like this behavior.
05:23But if you maintain this environment.
05:25You will get this as a result.
05:27When you grow up in the favelas.
05:28Where any kid can grab whatever they can grab.
05:30Otherwise, there's nothing left for you.
05:32He understands?
05:33It is created with a philosophy that mirrors the place it comes from.
05:38Then.
05:38When people steal.
05:40I say.
05:41Every human being is legitimate.
05:44They obey natural law.
05:45What he was exposed to.
05:47If it's hate.
05:48All of this is legitimate.
05:50Fresco's vision goes beyond architecture.
05:54He sees his cities as tools for promoting humanist values.
06:00I feel that the environment shapes our values.
06:03The people we know.
06:05The people we identify with.
06:07It is not in human nature for people to be greedy.
06:10This is reinforced in this culture.
06:12And by being greedy.
06:13Get more things.
06:15Get more money.
06:17I speak on behalf of many other people.
06:20Every human being is perfectly well-adjusted to where they have been.
06:24What you need to remember is that we can create a dog.
06:28To tear Japanese soldiers to pieces.
06:30Or we could create the same police dog to help the blind.
06:33How can we go beyond the perspective of human nature?
06:37We see him as a scapegoat.
06:39They think that.
06:40Good.
06:41If there is a human nature in people, then they are incapable of giving up what they do.
06:45So there will always be war.
06:46There will always be hatred.
06:47There will always be envy and crime.
06:49And that's simply not true.
06:51From our point of view.
06:52There are no criminals.
06:53There are people who have been subjected to deprivation.
06:57They were subjected to environments that lacked affection.
07:00Little love.
07:01Little attention.
07:01And the result and byproduct is criminal behavior.
07:05All our intolerance.
07:06And our hatred.
07:07And our prejudice.
07:08And our notions of good and evil.
07:10And of right and wrong.
07:12They are given to us by the culture in which we are raised.
07:16We believe that we teach competition.
07:18That which is not innate in a person.
07:20Competition is dangerous.
07:21Socially offensive.
07:23Considered correct and normal.
07:24Because we are raised based on this value system.
07:27We can take a primitive baby and turn it into an aeronautical engineer.
07:30Yes.
07:31Over the last 25 years.
07:33And they come from a background of isolated village life.
07:35These tribesmen drove their first tractor.
07:38They acquired and practiced entirely new medical skills.
07:41And they mastered the ability to pilot an airplane.
07:44They don't have a primitive mind.
07:46Their minds are shaped by primitive culture.
07:51You make more sense than anyone I've ever listened to.
07:55Because his level of logic is so rare.
07:59You can't expect a person to do something outside of their conditioning.
08:05So, is reconditioning the foundation for finding a new way?
08:09Yes.
08:10It's too difficult after the children leave school.
08:15They've already been poisoned.
08:19You were able to break free from that and find your own path.
08:22Aren't there enough of us out there who can make something happen?
08:25Well, this will make something happen.
08:28This film.
08:30Constructive cooperation in human endeavor.
08:34All environments generate behavior.
08:36We don't like seeing it that way.
08:37I make my own decisions.
08:39No one ever told me what to buy or what to think.
08:42When he goes to school, the first thing they do to him...
08:44It's you raising your right hand.
08:46He doesn't even know which is his right hand.
08:48And swears allegiance to a flag.
08:50But he had never seen all the other flags in the world.
08:52Swear allegiance the American way.
08:55And the American way doesn't exist.
08:56When I went to school.
08:57The beds we slept in were designed in England.
09:00The electric battery came from the Arabs.
09:02It was conceived 600 years before Christ.
09:04We learned so much from so many people.
09:06And most of us are alive thanks to Louis Pastel.
09:09So we owe so much to so many.
09:11We are turning away from patriotism.
09:12That's understandable.
09:14To renounce our concepts of individual uniqueness.
09:17In exchange for constructive cooperation in human endeavor.
09:21This is the future.
09:22Whether we will see it or not.
09:24It depends on whether there will be a future.
09:27I have no expectations whatsoever.
09:30Whatever happens, happens.
09:32What I think should happen isn't real.
09:36That's what hurts us.
09:38Our expectations of the world.
09:40Social design and values.
09:44What Jack developed.
09:45That which he developed with him over the last 40 years.
09:48It's much more than just buildings.
09:50And truth.
09:51We always say that it's not architecture.
09:53It's social design.
09:54It is an economy based on resources and the values that accompany them.
09:57So it's more than just a building.
09:59AND.
09:59The building is an affirmation of an underlying philosophy.
10:02Yes.
10:03About how to manage the world.
10:05It's like the human body.
10:06If the brain would say so.
10:07Hey.
10:08I do all the reasoning.
10:09I want most of the body's energy.
10:11Then the liver begins to suffocate.
10:13The liver tells you.
10:14You cannot exist without me.
10:15Then the brain says...
10:16Good.
10:17Here, take a little bit of it.
10:19The liver suffers.
10:20It is not possible to give certain things to only some organs of the human body.
10:23The whole mechanism.
10:24The planet Earth.
10:25And all its inhabitants live here.
10:27And there is a way today.
10:29Happily.
10:29Just for today.
10:30With science and technology.
10:32To overcome these problems.
10:33Science and technology with a human focus.
10:35Being concerned about the environment without...
10:37To become a better environment for everyone.
10:39And keep that in mind as the main guideline.
10:43For computers too.
10:44Their main guideline is human concern.
10:48One cannot be human.
10:50Or decent.
10:52Without the knowledge to overcome scarcity.
10:55Today we are able to produce abundance for all countries.
10:58So that they don't need to invade other countries.
11:01We can provide for your needs.
11:04Who will do all the work to build it?
11:06Nobody.
11:06The Tivenus Project will be automated.
11:09Factories.
11:09Thursdays.
11:10If we liberate science and technology.
11:12To create a high standard of living for all.
11:14And to automate tedious tasks.
11:17Jack Fresco's background is as an industrial designer.
11:20Social engineering guru and architect.
11:23This led the 98-year-old futurist to be nicknamed the Da Vinci of modern times.
11:28There has long been a theory for a more sustainable society.
11:32And their city designs are unlike anything we have today.
11:37Technically.
11:38How difficult is it to build these houses?
11:40Good.
11:41We will prefabricate.
11:42Just like cars on production lines.
11:44Not with carpenters and hammers and nails.
11:47This was acceptable 50 years ago.
11:49But it's no longer appropriate.
11:51He then built the first prefabricated house.
11:54From World War II onwards, made of aluminum.
11:56But he made extrusions so that the windows would fit into place.
11:59The doors fit together.
12:00And everything could be built very quickly.
12:03But that's because he worked with extrusions.
12:05He remembered extruding entire buildings and apartments.
12:09It's all so futuristic.
12:10Even today.
12:11It's so futuristic.
12:12And when did he make these?
12:13He actually made all of these designs.
12:16There are 60.
12:1770.
12:17And sometimes, 80 years ago.
12:19He is 101 years old and started drawing when he was 13.
12:22We made these about 30 to 35 years ago.
12:26But.
12:26Many of the designs are very old.
12:28So there's a monorail under the bridge.
12:30Yes.
12:30This is an enclosed bridge with a monorail underneath.
12:33And that is it.
12:34In truth.
12:35It's a very old design of his.
12:36Jack had a concept for a train.
12:38Before I met him.
12:39But the train wasn't in a tunnel.
12:41He had a probe in his nose that emitted electricity.
12:44We could say.
12:45In front of you.
12:46Breaking the air.
12:47Therefore, there would be no sonic boom or no atmospheric pressure.
12:50And I could walk a lot.
12:51Very quickly.
12:52But the tunnel isn't necessary.
12:54And the same goes for aircraft.
12:55He applied for aircraft.
12:56AND.
12:57Indeed.
12:57In 1956 he appeared in Popular Mechanics with this device.
13:02We hope to create a new transportation system capable of traveling up to 3200 kilometers.
13:07Well.
13:07Floating in a repulsive magnetic field or on a cushion of air.
13:11If 40 or 50 people have to get off the train.
13:14We slowed it down to 160 kilometers.
13:16Well.
13:17We raised the passenger section.
13:18Or we slide over there to the side.
13:20And we slid into our seats, another one with the passengers boarding.
13:23This represents the construction of an underwater dam in the Gulf Stream.
13:27This dam will channel seawater to an outlet.
13:30So that fish and marine life are separated from the turbine blades.
13:34The Gulf Stream will generate energy to oxygenate the waters.
13:38Eliminate the red tide.
13:39Monitor marine life.
13:40And to create an ecological relationship.
13:43Among all the oceanographic groups in the world.
13:46And the continents.
13:48Let's not wait for nature to do it.
13:50We ruined it.
13:51We'll have to clean it.
13:53Sooner or later they end up acquiring the technology.
13:55He simply worked in many areas.
13:58That's why he remembered things sooner.
14:00But it's social design that's most important.
14:05We live in a money-driven world.
14:07We think in terms of money.
14:08But the true value of any nation lies in its resources.
14:12Without resources, you have nothing.
14:17Let's say the ship sank.
14:18And he is now on an island.
14:20And he has, let's say, 10 million dollars.
14:23And it has gold and diamonds.
14:25But the island has no water.
14:27Not even arable land.
14:28Not even fish.
14:30You have nothing.
14:32So everything is focused on money.
14:34Which in reality doesn't represent anything.
14:36Otherwise, it's a way to exploit other people.
14:40When profit is the most important thing.
14:41This is very dangerous.
14:44And what if you squander your resources on war?
14:48Where today we have 5,500 ships at the bottom of the sea.
14:53Loaded with copper.
14:54Manganese.
14:55Tungstane.
14:56All the nests that were killed.
14:58300,000 aircraft shot down.
15:01With the resources saved from World War II, we could have housed everyone on Earth.
15:05Built hospitals all over the world.
15:07Schools all over the world.
15:09There is something terribly wrong with our culture.
15:13We will not be included in the history books of the future.
15:16We are so ignorant.
15:18Not in technology.
15:20We are doing well in computers and electronics.
15:23But the human value system is not advancing fast enough.
15:27Governments are not changing fast enough.
15:31What we did well.
15:33Nothing.
15:34Yet.
15:35This is our dark age.
15:37This is the new dark age.
15:39And the world could end tonight.
15:42Yes.
15:45The future is not Star Wars.
15:47According to Jack.
15:48It's a home for everyone.
15:50We will show a world where values are different.
15:53People's aspirations.
15:55They have compassion.
15:56Concern for one another.
15:58Concern for the environment.
15:59Building the structures of the future may be the easy part of Jack's vision.
16:05In the true future.
16:06People will be different.
16:07Today.
16:08A person feels good when helping an elderly lady cross the street.
16:11But where does she go after crossing the street?
16:14Since you think you have the answer.
16:15In the city of the future.
16:18When I was about 12 years old.
16:20I was looking at a cogwheel on a table.
16:23And I saw the cities of the future.
16:27I think all inventions are based on...
16:30In experiences like this.
16:32I don't believe they come from nowhere.
16:35That's what the whole city is all about.
16:37The entire city resembles this.
16:40This is an ecological program.
16:42The cities are all surrounded by beautiful gardens.
16:45Where there are lakes.
16:47Recreational areas.
16:48Art centers.
16:49Music centers.
16:50Cultural centers.
16:51And around the city.
16:52We have the agricultural belt where we produce food hydroponically.
16:56Between cities.
16:58We let everything return to nature.
17:01In Jack's world.
17:02This groundbreaking new technology would literally change the way we live together.
17:06Cybernetics would free us from long working days.
17:09And it would allow us to pursue our interests.
17:16All the new cities will be universities.
17:19In practice.
17:20There are no resumes that are used for exploitation or abuse.
17:24any other human beings.
17:27United Nations Prize for Sustainable City Design.
17:312016.
17:32Jack Fresco has been gracing us with his presence.
17:35With his unwavering dedication and persevering work.
17:39To recreate a better future.
17:42On behalf of all of us.
17:44Thanks.
17:46We're getting there.
17:48And you were a crucial force in that change.
17:51Please.
17:53A warm round of applause for Mr. Jack Fresco.
17:57Applause.
18:01The whole idea of the future.
18:02It's about stopping the construction of small towns and buildings.
18:05But to work within a comprehensive system.
18:10The city center.
18:12The core.
18:12It will house an electronic computer.
18:15Computers don't control people.
18:18Maintain security.
18:20They supervise the environment.
18:21It maintains the ecological balance between animal and plant life.
18:27All machines do is control physical entities.
18:31And they understand the environment.
18:33We feel that machines should do it.
18:35Dirty, repetitive, or boring jobs.
18:39That man must be free.
18:43To pursue higher things.
18:46The superior potential of man.
18:53What needs to be done.
18:55Exactly.
18:57An international system for the maximum utilization of the world's resources.
19:03Without any privileged group.
19:07There is no technical elite.
19:09No scientific group that feels like a cushion.
19:13Let him make the decisions.
19:17What form of government?
19:19Government resource management.
19:21Not political.
19:22Not even a communist.
19:23Fascist.
19:25Socialist.
19:26Free enterprise.
19:29Simply the installation of resource management.
19:33To improve the lives of all human beings.
19:39Fresco raises a question for all of us.
19:42Will humanity create the paradise that we know is possible?
19:45Or it will lead itself towards oblivion.
19:48The choice is ours.
19:50Resource-based economy.
19:53As automation advances, we will lose all these jobs.
19:56How do we provide food, shelter, medical care, and energy?
20:00For all these people.
20:01That they will not be able to earn a living.
20:03Because there are no jobs available for that purpose.
20:05A resource-based economy.
20:06The Tvenus Project wants to use a resource-based economy.
20:11Meaning.
20:12We have sufficient resources.
20:13To take care of all conditions and problems.
20:15And to make everything available.
20:17Free.
20:18With a library.
20:19A library for everything.
20:21A library.
20:22Okay.
20:23There would be no money because we wouldn't need it.
20:26The resources would be available to everyone.
20:29You don't want to own anything.
20:31You don't want money.
20:32What you want is access to things.
20:35There is simply no need to profit from the misery of others.
20:39Catch a toothache.
20:41Someone make some cubres out of this.
20:42And we don't need to do that anymore.
20:45We can go even further by creating abundance.
20:49We can achieve such a high level of production.
20:53It would be superfluous to put a price tag on things.
20:56And this is the beginning of the civilized world.
21:00The monetary system was conceived hundreds of years ago.
21:04And it no longer fits the situation.
21:08Then.
21:08When this society grows.
21:10They will understand that money is no longer necessary.
21:14They can move towards a new type of economy.
21:17No society in history.
21:19Have you ever looked to the future and designed things to fit into it?
21:23They waited until...
21:24Boom.
21:24The ground collapsed.
21:25Then they changed.
21:27Do you see?
21:28Unfortunately.
21:29And we are given the notion of individuality because it fits within this culture.
21:33That each person has to be responsible for their own survival.
21:37For your healthcare needs.
21:39And we don't need to do that.
21:41We could provide this for everyone.
21:43If people have access to things.
21:45Who will steal your things?
21:47Who will carry your things?
21:49If there are access centers.
21:51If there is no money.
21:52We don't need bankers.
21:54We don't need lawyers.
21:56We don't need advertising agencies.
21:58We don't need brokers.
22:00There is so much superficial waste.
22:02This culture.
22:04Things need to be sold to keep the economy going.
22:07Like this.
22:08We are using our resources just to continue selling.
22:13There are people who believe in the power of money.
22:18They are so mistaken.
22:19And you can't tell them that.
22:21They think he's a communist.
22:23Communism is not radical enough.
22:26Communism is not radical enough.
22:28That's a great quote from Jacques, right?
22:31I don't want communism or socialism.
22:33That's too old-fashioned.
22:35We are moving towards a system.
22:37A different system.
22:38It is a system free from political biases.
22:40What if we elected people of unquestionable ethics to the government?
22:44What if the resources ran out?
22:46I can guarantee it to you.
22:47Crime would increase again.
22:49And the Tivenus Project is a redesign of our culture.
22:52To plan a society.
22:54Through intelligent use, science and technology.
22:58To improve everyone's lives.
23:00Not just a select minority.
23:02The economic alternative for most societies in the world.
23:07It is to declare the earth as the common heritage of all the people of the world.
23:13And then remove all artificial borders.
23:17So that people can travel anywhere on earth without a passport.
23:22And there wouldn't be problems like racial problems.
23:27There will be opportunities for everyone.
23:29We do it because the smarter your children are...
23:32My life is richer now.
23:34Thus, everyone in the world represents an extension of each person's life.
23:37Instead of.
23:38I have exactly the car you need and are looking for.
23:40Instead of everyone selling themselves out and profiting from each other.
23:46This will motivate them to see that everything they do...
23:50It becomes available to all of humanity.
23:53All the children are well cared for.
23:55All elderly people are cared for.
23:57Therefore, this means that they themselves will be insured.
24:01Because everyone cares about everyone else.
24:04Science applied to the social system.
24:07Before launching a spacecraft to the Moon.
24:10We want to know how many people will be on that spaceship.
24:12There is water on the Moon.
24:14Therefore, everything you design must be in accordance with physical reality.
24:18People speculate about how many people the Earth can sustain and support.
24:24First, you need to investigate and find out.
24:27How much energy do we have?
24:29The first thing we need to do is take stock of exactly what we have.
24:34And where is the arable land?
24:35Where is the water?
24:37Where is the majority of the population located?
24:39What are the diseases?
24:40We have to make many.
24:42Surveys on where the technical staff are located?
24:44Where are the needs?
24:46So, what do we do and where?
24:51We need to learn how to manage.
24:53The real economy.
24:55Not for profit.
24:56For the betterment of humanity.
24:58Then we will see the beginning of the civilized world.
25:01And once that's achieved.
25:04The children won't understand how.
25:07We couldn't see that in the old days.
25:10They will say.
25:10Father.
25:11It wasn't obvious.
25:12If you lived for yourself, you would die for yourself.
25:15He's talking about revolution.
25:16No.
25:17When society collapses.
25:18Technical revolution.
25:20But what if society collapses?
25:21Then they will want to do it differently.
25:23I'm sorry about that.
25:25But it seems so.
25:26That the conditions were so abusive in some places.
25:30They installed socialism.
25:32Communism.
25:32Whatever.
25:33Or fascism.
25:34That it suited the conditions in which people lived.
25:38None of them is the solution.
25:40All governments.
25:41Throughout history.
25:43They have been corrupt.
25:44Our priorities are all mixed up in this system.
25:47Because they are the wealth.
25:49Property and power.
25:50And in a resource-based economy.
25:53It's about protecting the environment and ensuring people's well-being.
25:58When a few nations control the majority of the earth's resources.
26:02There will be problems.
26:04There will be territorial disputes.
26:06Wars.
26:07It doesn't matter how many treaties are signed.
26:09No matter how many laws are made.
26:12This will not stop this condition.
26:15The human condition.
26:17That which causes people to invade other territories.
26:20Torture people.
26:22Create armies to protect what you have.
26:24This will not work.
26:26It never worked.
26:27It is as old as mankind.
26:29So what we need is a completely different approach to the human problem.
26:35And to preserve the land for the future.
26:37Future generations.
26:46At 100 years old.
26:47Jacky's extensive body of work is showcased in a beautiful exhibition at the Art Museum.
26:51We came to Naflis, Florida.
26:52Today, we're going to see the Baquer Museum.
26:54Who curated a magnificent exhibition.
26:56We arrived at the exhibition room where...
26:59Jacky Fresco's life's work is on display.
27:02Decade by decade, through an entire century.
27:05Beginning in the 1910s and continuing until the 2010s.
27:09We are here with Frank Verporten.
27:11The director and curator is the head of the Baquer Museum.
27:13We would like to know.
27:14First of all.
27:15What led him to host this exhibition at Baquer?
27:18We are the first space.
27:19I believe so.
27:20That there is a record of it.
27:21The first in the United States to dedicate an exhibition to this theme.
27:24In truth.
27:25The impetus for this has arrived.
27:26From a photograph by Jacky Fresco.
27:28That Rediseter removed.
27:29I believe it was in 2013.
27:31The response has been truly good.
27:33What I mean to say.
27:34You'll find this funny.
27:35But especially.
27:36The response also comes from different media.
27:38And of so many different kinds.
27:41Young filmmakers who are interested.
27:44In this person and in what he has achieved so far.
27:47I was here recently with an architect.
27:49Who viewed the exhibition for about 20 minutes.
27:52I wasn't familiar with this artist.
27:54Despite this architect being in his late fifties.
27:58And he said.
27:59This is well known.
28:00And he was looking at some of the designs.
28:01And he said.
28:02I can show you.
28:04Some architects or designers are working on this type of concept right now.
28:09In Jacky's case.
28:11These were designs he made in the 60s or 70s.
28:14These are the 1950s.
28:15These are quite futuristic, considering.
28:17We only sent a rocket to the moon in 1969.
28:20For the 1950s.
28:22They were quite ahead of their time.
28:24But also see how.
28:25How seriously he took himself from a very young age.
28:28This is truly remarkable.
28:30He knew he was on the trail of something very big.
28:32A person needs to take themselves seriously.
28:34We are very proud to be the first.
28:37Covering this topic.
28:40Now I can.
28:43Therefore, a resource-based economy is a non-profit organization.
28:48Let's just say they're inspired.
28:49Whatever they do.
28:51Good.
28:51We would like you to visit our website.
28:54Read more about the subject.
28:55There's much more information there.
28:57And visit the GetInvolved section.
28:58Where you can see all of our different teams.
29:01If you'd like to help.
29:02And we are working on the technical drawings for our next project.
29:05It is called a center for resource management.
29:08Which will include exhibitions of the future.
29:10We would also have a huge media center.
29:12An educational center.
29:14Research and development.
29:15And much more.
29:16Help is very welcome.
29:18We need your help.
29:19We won't get there any other way.
29:21The problems that this culture generates are endless.
29:24And that's why it's so important to show an alternative direction.
29:28We don't even know what it means to be civilized yet.
29:31In this culture.
29:32As long as we have war, poverty, and prisons.
29:35We are not civilized.
29:37We have the ability to do such wonderful things.
29:43So there you have it.
29:44We visited the Tivenus Project.
29:46Jack and Roshani couldn't have been more welcoming, informative, and inspiring.
29:51And we took this information with Minosco.
29:53And we are here to inspire you.
29:55We ask that you watch their documentaries.
29:58Go to their website.
30:00Read more.
30:00Search.
30:01Come and support this important project.
30:04Which truly provides new hope for all of us.
30:08Thank you for joining us.
30:09A special thank you to the Tivenus Project.
30:11Executive producer.
30:13Producer.
30:14I didn't expect to pass by here and see alligators.
30:22See an 81-year-old Palestinian and a 31-year-old Israeli.
30:28They share the same views on peace and love.
30:31And it's the perfect place to do it.
30:33Director of photography.
30:34Editor.
30:35Post-production and additional images.
30:37Camera and drone operator.
30:39This is our last hypothesis.
30:41Jack is a great visionary.
30:43To help people understand what a world without war would be like.
30:47No money.
30:48It would seem so.
30:49Perhaps we can still have our last dance.
30:55This is the point where we have a global resource management system.
30:58In cooperation.
30:59No competition.
31:07A special and heartfelt thank you to Roxane Meadows for her help and advice on this project.
31:12To learn more about Tivenus Producer.
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