Friday, March 30, 2018

Our government should provide more incentives for future innovations


I believe that Intelligence has the potential to be the most rewarding investment in today’s society. With computers, humans have reached a point where both hardware and software development have converged into two categories.  Technology that is produced for extracurricular activities and technology designed more for the needs of businesses.  The recreational side is a trophy to human intelligence.  It connects our world by bringing family and friends together.  However, future development looks to solve a problem that no longer exists.  As a side effect, our current generation grows underdeveloped, unmotivated, and unable to produce innovations that benefit the world around them.  This has grown to be accepted in education and is compounded by companies who capitalize on human inefficiency.  With discipline, human intelligence can fulfill their ethical obligations, making a smarter and more efficient world.  
Our government would seem to have the biggest role to play on this issue.  With the further simplification of technology, our educational system needs to be further simplified and rewarded as such.  We should provide more incentives for those aiming to offer constructive innovations to our society by lowering tuition costs and provide funding for instituting well thought out  and more practical degree programs more centralized around  certain fields.  Along with education, our government needs to do a better job of recognizing and financially supporting current underfunded research.  Some prime examples would be The Leviating Dipole Experiment at MIT, The Homer Machine at the University of Wisconsin, and the Thomas Jarbe CT Fusion group at The University of Washington.  All of which lay way for the future benefits of Nuclear Fusion, whom without future government funding will cease to exist.

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