We are people who dream of going to Mars. We compete endlessly, even buying virtual tickets for Mars expeditions, just to say we want to go somewhere that isn’t “here.”
But where do we truly wish to go?
To a place of suspension—where resources are scarce, conditions are harsh, and uncertainty looms.
We started on a planet brimming with abundance. Over time, we subjected it to dangers, endangering not only Earth but the very future of human existence. Along the way, we waged countless wars—not truly over ideologies but over the conquest of resources, with ideological differences merely fueling the battle cries.

Now, having conquered one another on this planet, we set our sights on other celestial bodies, preparing them for a suspended existence.
It seems we are inherently restless, as if stability and peace are incompatible with our nature.
We process more to understand more about how to process less.
Perhaps it’s time to shift our perspective.
- To wield technology with benevolence.
- To recognize that we don’t need more worker ants—we need wiser, fairer cells.
The challenge is not just to reach Mars but to reconsider how we shape our world—and ourselves—here on Earth.