Can you imagine being born French, growing up in a culture that is so educated, so culturally refined, so cynical of everything and with such a jaundiced eye towards everything America is about, then becoming a political scholar in that society - only to be completely fooled by a random visit from Peter Thiel?
You overstate your case, several firms are already at various stages. Wright Electric is working on a >500km range passenger craft for easyJet right now. That won't be able to fill every role, but a worthwhile number of them to be sure.
I get that. It's a shame that food isn't treated as a pubic good that simply needs to be provided for free at the point of consumption. I know some people would maybe overeat, but it's not like making them pay has solved that problem.
It seems like the kind of market inefficiency capitalism so often touts itself as the answer to. Why not make an agreement with a brewery to take the rice, and share any profits from sake? Just as an example, I don't know if that exact scenario could work with this sort of rice. Pairing up excess produce with businesses who don't mind getting free materials shouldn't be that hard.
It is a common expression that "an artwork is never finished, only abandoned". With its allusion to oneself as an artwork, my comment was intended in jest. Now the joke has been explained, it can be abandoned.
The logistics of agriculture are outrageous. I just don't get why you wouldn't try to make something out of an unwanted crop. You really can't find one use for that much plant matter? Ferment and/or distill it, get in touch with food banks, anything.
The last judge is hard, but in a really useful way - if you're not keeping your eyes on the enemy and proactively reading their tells, you're not going to be able to enjoy the back half of the game as much.
I had to kind of retrain my eyes to be able to beat this one... All throughout the game up to that point, I was so enthralled with the spectacle of combat that I'd be watching myself more than the enemy. But that leads to passivity.
I just read it from the Wikipedia page. Their site doesn't have a lot of info other than a white paper