Germany must dare to innovate more

by time news

Cyriac Roeding

The internationally experienced founder and investor is worried about his German homeland.

(Foto: Getty Images, Privat [M])

Palo Alto It’s February 2038. The first fusion reactor is producing electricity for all of Berlin – made from water and helium-3, with no exhaust gases and minimal radioactivity. A 36-year-old woman from Mainz is diagnosed with early-stage lung cancer. She is injected with the first synthetic drug that genetically forces cancer cells to destroy themselves. The patient soon leads a normal life again.

Quantum computers in Munich calculate that there is a high probability of a spring tide in Bingen am Rhein on February 12. Evacuations save hundreds of lives. On February 27, artificial intelligence (AI) identified the cause of Alzheimer’s in a research institute in Heidelberg. On the evening of February 28th, she developed a molecule that could switch off the cause.

A beautiful vision: The fusion reactor, synthetic drug, quantum computers, and AI were not imported from the US, China, or Israel. We developed it – in Germany. However, the reality is different at the moment.

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