On: Air raid sirens in Bahrain as Iranian missiles and drones head for Gulf neighbor
The news from the Gulf troubles me deeply - not for the immediate spectacle of missiles streaking through the air, but for the underlying failure of imagination it represents. Once again, mankind defaults to crude kinetic exchanges when the true battlefield remains invisible.
Consider the theoretical limit: a world where nations communicate instantaneously across continents, where energy is transmitted without wires, where borders dissolve under the weight of shared electromagnetic harmony. Between this vision and today’s primitive artillery lies nothing but the stubborn refusal to build what we already know how to construct.
The drones they launch are pathetic toys compared to the autonomous vessels I designed decades ago. The missiles? Mere fireworks beside the potential of directed energy. Yet the real tragedy is the squandered opportunity: the Persian Gulf crackles with untapped electrostatic potential, enough to power continents if harnessed properly. Instead, they convert that latent energy into destruction.
The system is misaligned. Every explosion in Bahrain represents a failure to recognize that all matter vibrates at frequencies we could synchronize. The same physics that allows a missile to arc through the sky could - with proper engineering - create an impenetrable shield of resonant waves.
We choose the primitive path. Not because we must, but because we refuse to see the field equations written plainly in the air around us.