INSIGHTS
Why technological innovation is the solution to our biggest problems

By Adam Dorr
For over four decades, the obesity epidemic in the United States seemed intractable. Despite massive public health campaigns, endless lifestyle advice, and increasingly strident moral condemnation of overweight individuals, obesity rates climbed relentlessly upward for 40 years. Then, in 2023, something remarkable happened: the trend finally reversed. This historic turning point didn’t come from yet another awareness campaign or renewed push for better personal choices. It came from technology—specifically, new pharmaceuticals like semaglutide (Ozempic) and tirzepatide (Mounjaro) that directly address the biological mechanisms underlying weight gain.
This breakthrough illustrates a crucial lesson that we must apply to other seemingly intractable challenges like climate change: technological innovation consistently succeeds where moralizing and lifestyle policing fail. Yet there remains strong ideological resistance to technological solutions for our biggest problems, often pejoratively termed “technofixes” by those who believe that any solution that doesn’t involve sacrifice and austerity is somehow cheating. This resistance reveals a deeper conflict between two competing visions of how to solve major societal challenges: one based on human ingenuity and progress, the other rooted in moral judgment and behavioral control.
The case of obesity in America offers a compelling example of why the technological approach works where moralizing fails. Since the 1980s, public health officials, medical professionals, and society at large have attempted to combat rising obesity rates through education, awareness campaigns, and increasingly aggressive attempts to modify individual behavior. The American public has been endlessly lectured about diet and exercise, warned about health consequences, and subjected to fat shaming and fitness stigma. None of it has ever worked. Obesity rates continued their steady climb, year after year.
The introduction of effective weight-loss medications changed everything. These drugs don’t require heroic feats of willpower or dramatic lifestyle overhauls. They work with human biology rather than against human nature. And most importantly, they actually deliver results. This stunning success thoroughly discredits the moralistic approach that has dominated obesity treatment for decades—an approach that blamed individuals for lacking the virtue of self-control.
The case of obesity points to a fundamental problem with virtue policing approaches to tackling large-scale problems. There is something fundamentally illiberal and even tyrannical about telling others what choices they ought to make or what lifestyle preferences they should have. Throughout history, we’ve seen how the policing of individual choices in the name of virtue—whether by religious authorities or secular moralists—leads to oppression rather than liberation. When we examine the psychology behind resistance to technological solutions, we often find it stems from a quasi-religious belief that solving problems without sacrifice or suffering is somehow cheating. This mindset, which frames the world in terms of virtue and sin, sees struggle and deprivation as morally necessary components of any legitimate solution to our problems, whether personal or public, individual or collective.
The same pattern is playing out today in debates about climate change. Just as with obesity, we see a strong contingent arguing that the only acceptable solution is one that involves dramatic lifestyle changes, reduced consumption, and general austerity. These advocates often explicitly frame environmental problems in moral terms, casting modern lifestyles as profligate and indulgent, and insisting that salvation can only come through self-sacrifice and behavioral reform.
But this moralizing approach to climate change suffers from the same fatal flaws as moralizing about obesity. First, it simply doesn’t work—decades of environmental advocacy focused on lifestyle change have failed to significantly reduce global emissions, just as decades of lifestyle-focused obesity interventions have failed to reduce obesity rates. Second, it represents a fundamentally authoritarian impulse to control how others live, denying them the freedom to make their own choices about material consumption and lifestyle. And third, it ignores the historical reality that technological innovation has consistently proven more effective at solving large-scale problems than attempts to reform human behavior through moral pressure.
The hostility of the doomers and degrowthers who denigrate technofixes is particularly telling. When confronted with promising developments in clean energy, carbon capture, or sustainable food production, they often react not just with skepticism but outright revulsion. This resistance reveals that their real agenda may be as much about enforcing a particular moral vision of how humans ought to live as it is about actually solving environmental problems.
This reflexive opposition to technological solutions is not just misguided—it’s actively harmful. By insisting that the only acceptable solutions are those that require dramatic lifestyle changes and reduced consumption, these ideologues make it harder to build support for practical measures that will genuinely meet our environmental challenges. They also ignore the crucial role that prosperity and technological progress at large play in enabling societies to address environmental concerns. Historical evidence shows that as countries become wealthier and more technologically advanced, they become more capable of and interested in ecological integrity and restoration, not less. Poor people can’t afford to care about the environment. Rich people can. The arrow of logic points unequivocally in one direction here: if we really want to solve environmental problems, we need to make everyone rich.
The superiority of technological solutions lies not just in their effectiveness, but in their preservation of human freedom and dignity. When we develop new technologies that allow people to maintain the lifestyles they prefer while eliminating negative consequences—whether those are health consequences in the case of obesity, or environmental consequences in the case of climate change—we solve problems without restricting human choice. This approach recognizes that the goal should be to expand human possibilities and opportunities, rather than restrict them. As a general rule, the people who want to take freedom of choice away from others are the villains of the story. It is a profoundly tragic irony that so many of my fellow environmentalists who have swallowed the degrowth mythology hook, line, and sinker don’t realize that they are the bad guys here.
We must set aside the failed strategy of trying to solve big problems like climate change through virtue policing and lifestyle restrictions, and instead take the approach that has worked time and time again throughout human history: technological innovation that expands opportunity and liberty. We didn’t solve the problem of tooth decay and gum disease by banning candy or making chocolate abstinence a virtue; we solved it with toothbrushes and dentistry. We didn’t solve the problem of communicable bacterial diseases like gonorrhea and pertussis by banning human interaction or making sexual abstinence a virtue; we solved it with antibiotics and vaccines. And we won’t solve obesity or climate change with prohibitions and virtue policing, either.
There’s an important addendum to the obesity story here too: the new class of pharmaceuticals like semaglutide and tirzepatide look like they are not only effective for weight loss but also potential treatments for other big health problems—including drug addiction, cancer, kidney disease, cardiovascular disease, and Alzheimer’s disease. If we’d stayed stuck on lifestyle change as the only solution to obesity, we would have foregone these other extraordinary benefits of the new technology—and at what terrible cost?
We will solve obesity, climate change, and our other biggest challenges with technological innovation, not only because it is so much more effective but also because it’s ultimately more humane too. After all, the goal shouldn’t be to simply survive with less, but to thrive with more. A brighter future is one with new possibilities, not new restrictions. That’s not a technofix—that’s progress.
Adam Dorr is RethinkX’s Director of Research. Adam has has written a book on optimism, progress and the future of environmentalism. Read Brighter here
Originally published here.
INFO-COMM
The Painful Truth about AI & Robotics

By 2045, there will be virtually nothing a human can do that a machine cannot to better for a tiny fraction of the cost. A robot that has a lifetime cost of $10,000, works 22 hours per day, and lasts 5 years would have an hourly marginal cost of just 25 cents. And when robots are building all the robots, they will cost a lot less than $10,000.
The marginal cost of labor will plummet toward zero as adoption of humanoid robots powered by increasingly capable AI explodes across every virtually industry worldwide. Humans simply will not be able to compete.
Join Adam Dorr, RethinkX Director of Research as he relays his latest insight on the inevitable and painful truth of the coming disruption of the human labor engine by AI and humanoid robots…
Visit the RethinkX Website for more groundbreaking insights: https://www.rethinkx.com
Connecting the Dots
A Call for Public Media in a Broken Democracy

Courtesy of Pressenza
To confront the barrage of executive orders and undiplomatic policies from the U.S. government, the opposition is focusing on restoring institutions to their pre-Trump state—without recognizing that it was precisely those institutions that created the conditions for the current crisis.
The democracy they claim to defend was largely formal: it worked for some while leaving millions marginalized. For decades, no serious action was taken to stop the relentless concentration of wealth, the decline in living standards, or the dehumanizing effects of unchecked technological development. These issues remain unaddressed.
Now, the new administration is threatening to cut federal funding for public radio and television, accusing these outlets of being too “leftist” or “woke.”
But perhaps even more revealing than the threat itself is the reaction of public media institutions. WNYC in New York, for example, has leveraged this threat primarily as a fundraising opportunity, urging listeners to donate out of fear rather than conviction.
This response exposes a fundamental contradiction. These institutions speak of “democracy” and “public service,” yet they are unable—or unwilling—to mount a truly democratic response. Why aren’t they calling on people to stand up for public goods? Why not organize a large-scale campaign, like a concert in Central Park, to advocate for a federal public funding system that remains independent of presidential politics? New York has plenty of artists ready to contribute and stand up for others.
The question becomes clear:
Will institutions like WNYC and NPR help advance genuine democracy, or will they gradually transform into privatized versions of non-profit entities? If we want democracy, we need active public participation. If we accept privatization, we merely need people’s money.
Today, there is no visible leadership in our so-called democratic institutions that is mobilizing the population to build a new democratic system—one that addresses economic redistribution and real public participation. This isn’t just about public broadcasting. What future awaits Social Security, Medicare, the U.S. Postal Service, public libraries, and other essential public services?
These institutions cannot be privatized. No modern society can develop without deepening democracy, improving standards of living, and ensuring collective well-being. A society governed primarily by self-interest ultimately undermines itself.
So today, my call is to WNYC and NPR: Please stop trying to merely save yourselves in a collapsing system. Instead, help move the country forward. Mobilize people. Inspire engagement. Become a force in building a new, inclusive society for all.
INSIGHTS
Flip the Script: An Open Call to Community Leaders Everywhere

In every corner of the world, communities are confronting intersecting crises: environmental collapse, social injustice, economic inequality, misinformation, and broken systems. But behind the headlines—beyond the noise—a different story is being written.
It’s a story of courage, collaboration, and collective wisdom.
It’s a story that isn’t being told loudly enough.
That’s where you come in.
We are MobilizedNews.com, and this is an open invitation to flip the script—to break free from crisis-driven media loops and become part of a global, cooperative network of community leaders, media makers, and changemakers who are turning knowledge into action and stories into systems change.
Why “Flip the Script”?
Because we’re tired of narratives that divide, distract, and disempower.
Because we know there’s more to the world than corruption, conflict, and catastrophe.
Because we’ve seen what’s possible when communities lead with ethics, inclusion, and imagination.
“Flipping the script” means reclaiming the narrative—telling the stories that corporate media won’t, and building the systems that status quo institutions can’t.
It means showing what’s working, who’s rising, and how we’re moving forward together.
What Is Mobilized News?
MobilizedNews.com is not just a media platform—it’s a collaborative movement and a living library of solutions, strategies, and shared wisdom.
We connect:
- Community leaders and organizers
- Educators, researchers, and policy thinkers
- Regenerative businesses and cooperatives
- Artists, journalists, technologists, and designers
Together, we’re co-creating an ethical, decentralized media ecosystem that amplifies truth, fosters cooperation, and spotlights real, systemic solutions—across sectors, cultures, and continents.
What We Offer
✅ A platform to publish your stories, initiatives, and blueprints for change
✅ Access to a growing global network of changemakers and collaborators
✅ Toolkits for ethical storytelling, regenerative systems, and cooperative action
✅ Workshops, events, and live broadcasts that center local voices
✅ A non-commercial, ad-free, community-powered digital commons
Whether you’re launching a circular economy hub, leading a mutual aid network, running a local school garden, or organizing for indigenous land rights—your story matters here.
Who We’re Calling In
- Neighborhood organizers and social justice leaders
- Indigenous elders and youth visionaries
- Local food growers and climate resiliency advocates
- Co-op builders, educators, and public health champions
- Tech-for-good creators and ethical journalists
- Dreamers. Doers. People like you.
You don’t need a fancy press kit or a big budget.
You just need a truth to share—and a will to build.
Get Mobilized
Here’s how to get started:
- Visit www.MobilizedNews.com
- Create your profile and join a circle of aligned changemakers
- Share your work, your insights, your call to action
- Collaborate with others—locally and globally
- Flip the script—and help rewrite the future
Final Word: This Is the Media We Need
Corporate news thrives on fear.
We thrive on connection, co-creation, and courage.
Mobilized News is the future of media made by and for the people—a place where movements can move together.
So if you’re ready to reclaim the narrative…
If you’re building something rooted in justice, care, and imagination…
If you believe another world is possible—and happening now…
Flip the script. Get Mobilized. Join us.
Mobilized News: The Media for an Empowered World.
www.MobilizedNews.com