Ryan Bodenheimer
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
What's the point?
Um, and I think there's, there's one thing that continuously comes up for me and it, to me, it seems like if our military, you fast forward us a couple thousand years in the future.
the technologies that we have, is there a way for us to get that technology back to us today to prevent some wild, terrible situation from happening?
We're talking nuclear war or something like that.
If my military brain was fast forwarded 2000 years into the future and I could do that and I could get it to what I see as the good guys, I see the US military as the greatest force for good on the planet.
People can argue with that or it's not perfect, it's not what I'm saying,
But I think we are the greatest force for good on the planet if you just look at history.
So if I was in the future and I could get that technology back into the right hands, why not?
I would try to get it to the U.S.
military or at least get it into the brains of U.S.
military decision makers, innovators, so that we could start to develop things that, who knows, maybe this technology leads to some sort of deterrence for a nuclear war down the road.
Yeah.
You know, that's something that I think the U.S.
military giving a gift to its past self to be more effective is plausible.
And I think to me, that's what makes sense.
A lot of times that's not the only theory I have, but that's kind of one of the main ones that I've come to.
No, because I think with this type of advanced technology, if they wanted to blow your fighter jet out of the sky, they would have done it long ago.
I think there's something different here.
There's something way, way better that we can take from this than a threat.
Yeah, I look at it like human advancement through competitive pressure.