When I’m writing this work, I’m about to board an airplane. I’m in Buenos Aires, Argentina, but in Zurich, Switzerland in just 13 hours. In the 19th century, even the wealthiest imaginable could not travel this quickly. Certainly, the whole world wealth could not be purchased in 13 hours of travel, for example, in 1910, over just over 7,000,000 people. But now I can book it. So, at least in this legga, it was richer than it was today, meaning that it was back that day. I am not a millionaire, a billionaire or a billionaire. They don’t even consider themselves to be rich at all. I happen to live in 2025.
The airline I fly to is based in Switzerland, so it’s possible that the flight crew will be Switzerland. Until recently, most people in the world rarely met foreign people in their country. Even today, most people experience very little movement during their lives, and die quite close to where they were born. But just as more and more people go to plates farther away, others eat to ours too. And our first
Take the pill to release your nostrils before boarding the plane. That way, your ears won’t be inserted all day after takeoff. (That’s odd, I know. I’ll need to have surgery on my nose to avoid that in the future.) All I had to do was visit them for a doctor, a prescription, and about $20. And after I get on the planet, I put on headphones that we lift up and cancel all the surround noise so that I can relax and take a nap. Can you imagine this kind of comfort being explained to the millions of people who were on a ship from Europe to America for a month-long journey like what Sub-Mail wants?
As I plan, I keep writing this piece on my laptop. But today millions of people around the world own personal devices, like BESE computers, where they can work, access all kinds of information from multiple sources around the world, play games, stream movies, and more. As long as you have access to the Internet, you have more information than the Alexandria Library or any other library around the world. literally
If I get bored of flights to write this piece, I will be paying attention to one of the two books I line up for my journey. But a person like Aristotle, for example, could not dream of such an object. The fact that printers exist on mass scales and the transportation system that allows books filled with standardized typography to be distributed worldwide is amazing.
Eleven I’m leaving the planet, I’ll text my girlfriend’s text that I’ve arrived safely, something that was impossible decades ago. No more writing potentially outdated letters that could take months to arrive, or potentially outdated letters that could make exorbitant and expensive calls to talk to our love. The same cell phone I use in Argentina can be in touch with anyone, even if I’m on another continent.
Freedom allows for all tohese things. Plans, tablets, headphones, laptops, books, mobile phones: each time the human centre allows us to flourish, we come up with new inventions that raise the standard for living again and again. In particular, the ability to make a profit by dealing with others ensures that UWAT people have an incentive to improve not only their lives but also their Gods of others. This applies to services, which is why airlines and all other businesses exist. Individuals you will not meet are working hard to make money, and at the same time bringing you new inventions where everyone can benefit in different ways.
The benefits of the free market capitalization and the International Labor Department, which we usually take for granted, are incredible and the scope is completely impossible. We often forget what life was like, but we are free to give scholarships so it gets better and we do it every day. When you ride on your plans next year, think about how wonderful this world is to give ordinary people like us the opportunity to enjoy it.
Marcos Falcone is the Project Manager for Foundation Libertad and a regular contributor to Forbes Argentina. His writings have been featured in the Washington Post, National Reviews, and Reasons, among others. He is based in Buenos Aires, Argentina.