The Gathering at Edison Lab: Who Controls the Future

The Gathering at Edison Lab: Who Controls the Future

They came to Edison Laboratory. All of them. The tech oligarchs, the political operators, the time travelers, and the man who invented the future they buried. Standing outside the building where centralized energy was born, holding the device that could end it — the flux capacitor, the Tesla coil, the zero-point generator, whatever name you give to the technology that makes their entire control architecture obsolete.

This is the meeting that determines everything. Not elections. Not legislation. Not public debate. This. A small group of men standing on a sidewalk in West Orange, New Jersey, deciding whether humanity gets access to the technology that would free it, or whether that technology gets locked in another trunk for another century while the metered, monitored, permission-based system continues to grind.

Look at their faces. Some want to release it. Some want to control it. Some want to weaponize it. Some want to sell it. And one of them — the one who built it — just wants it to work the way it was always supposed to: freely, for everyone, without a gatekeeper, without a tollbooth, without a handler deciding who deserves power and who deserves darkness.

The future of the human race has always been decided by a handful of people in rooms — or on sidewalks — that the public never sees. This is that room. This is that moment. The technology exists. The only question is whether the men holding it will open their hands or close their fists.

The answer to that question is the subject of this book.

Transhumane Genocide: The Underground Report — available soon.