I reflect on the surprise of Deepseek and the marvel of China’s relentless strides. In these weeks, their advancements have revealed a truth: they are not only competing but often outpacing the rest of the world, including us here in America. This is no accident. It is discipline, unity, and a vision held tightly by a system designed for control at scale.
China has not waged great wars in 40 years, yet they fight a quieter battle—a battle for dominance through innovation, labor, and sheer numbers. Their masses of STEM graduates dwarf ours, a reflection of both cultural priorities and the advantage of numbers. Yet, mass brings tradeoffs: the strain on resources, a quality of life stretched thin. But it also brings strength—more taxes, more trade, and more influence.
A machine that grinds forward, one step at a time.
And yet, I wonder: are we truly separate? In this race, are we not all running toward the same finish line? The progress of one nation lifts the world, even as competition divides us. Geopolitics aside, it is a wonder—what we, as humans, have achieved. Perhaps these are among the last innovations created by our hands, before artificial intelligence takes the reins.
I believe, deep in my core, that this technology we build is not an end but a means. A means to free us—to pursue what we truly value. To create, to connect, to ask the great questions of life not because we are forced to, but because we choose to.
We are entering a time when the old philosophical questions are no longer abstract. What once belonged to classrooms and quiet reflection now walks into reality. Hypotheticals turn to case studies, theories to problems we must face.
There is a man walking from Canada to California. He owns nothing. He depends on the kindness of strangers and the land itself to survive. It is his experiment: can he give back to the world without holding anything of his own?
I think of him often. He reminds me of a simple truth: everything we need is already here. The resources, the tools, the knowledge; they are gifts of this world. It is not about discovering new things, but combining what is already given.
And yet, this man chooses hardship. He creates struggle for himself, hoping to find clarity, purpose, or even enlightenment through it. Perhaps he reflects something many of us feel but rarely voice. When life becomes easy, when robots and technology lift every burden, what then? What challenges will remain for us?
I see this trend already. Those of us born into privilege, untouched by true hardship, begin to seek struggle. Not because we must, but because we feel something is missing without it. Will the ease of life turn us back to nature? Will it push us closer to the people around us?
Or will we drift, losing our sense of purpose in a world with nothing left to fight for?
The future is not a place we arrive at—it is a path we walk. And as I think of the man on his journey, I see something of our own. We are searching for meaning, for connection, for the spark that keeps us human. Whether through innovation, struggle, or simply the desire to understand, I hope we never stop walking.