this was very different in the sense that they immediately, there was a tremendous sense of heartbreak. it didn t feel like it was just for the ukrainian people and ukraine. it really felt that this would happen at this point in human history. i thought about my kids immediately, that this was something that would affect them. and i think it has. but not anything like what is happening on those front lines in that country and those people. but of course, it s just the amount of collateral damage that s going to continue economically, i think. psycho socially. it s a reel tipping point in terms of how this country, a country that i love also, are we going to hold on to the great
ft. tall lizard, and we re just chopping that thing down that certain removal is. joins us now some pretty cool graphics there . i mean, sometimes you gotta just show the folks what it s all about. um, and the and the godzilla reference. talk about that for us. yeah you know, i think about this term even if this is my beat, and when you think about this big c 02 problem in the atmosphere, marty , there are former fishermen from maine who started this ocean repair company called running tide. put it in terms that really made it clear for me . i mean, it just comes down to are we feeding carbon godzilla every day? are we chopping bits of them? apart the best we can. every aspect of our lives creates this sort of planet cooking pollution at this point in human history, but i just wanted to go look for hope and ideas on how to tackle this and i found hundreds of them out there. there s so much technology going on from whether marty uses the power of the
only modest advances since the 1960s. so outer space still remains almost impossibly far away. that s very sad. but that wasn t the only option. he also offered one other next best option for humankind. he called it, quote, much more realistic than space travel. eclared that what we humans must do at this point in human history is that we must move into the sea. we should become sea dwellers. quote, between cyber space and outer space lies the possibility of settling the oceans. we may have reached the stage at which it is economically feasible or where it will soon be economically feasible. it is a realistic risk. i eagerly support this. the idea was that we should basically build new teeny, tiny personal cities, city-states, unlike shipping containers that are floating in the ocean. float them out in the ocean
so outer space still remains almost impossibly far away. that s very sad. but that wasn t the only option. he also offered one other next best option for humankind. he called it, quote, much more realistic than space travel. he declared that what we humans must do at this point in human history is that we must move into the sea. we should become sea dwellers. quote, between cyber space and outer space lies the possibility of settling the oceans. we may have reached the stage at which it is economically feasible or where it will soon be economically feasible. it is a realistic risk. i eagerly support this. the idea was that we should basically build new teeny, tiny personal cities, city-states, unlike shipping containers that are floating in the ocean.
about developmental biology and evolutionary development. are you suggesting kids should start experimenting on converting chickens into dinosaurs? i think that would just be great, yeah. that would be pretty fun, right? you should actually recruit i mean, who s do you have any young people working with you in the laboratory? not yet. but i think that s a really good idea. yeah. it seems like it could be fun. what is the major innovation that you re benefiting from that you happen to be here at a point in human history where you can do this? well, i, you know, a benefit to come out of this, once we understand how to turn these genes on or how to turn them off, obviously, it s going to help a lot of applications in the medical field. but, really, you know, the coolest thing about it is that if you can reactivate an ancestral gene, obviously, you