You work for decades to pay for markup economics. The CTMP is a physical replacement architecture that prices energy, water, materials, and industry by rules instead of extraction incentives.
Status: Audit ready
A 300GW gravity anchored engine using the ocean as a forebay to produce firm baseload power at a fixed tariff.
Structural energy affordability unlocks stability. Water becomes trivial. Materials drop to cost. Public health improves.
When energy is structurally inexpensive, every downstream essential is repriced. Steel, concrete, water, transport, materials, food security, and housing all collapse toward real cost.
Status: Preview only
Your anonymous action state. It records verification steps without storing identity or tracking behavior.
A 14 day response timer that displays corporate silence as data. No names. No artifacts. Only aggregated behavior.
Participants propose and vote on industrial verticals under Charter constraints. One completed action equals one vote.
The most elegant mass measurement in human history. One click. Choose your country. You are counted anonymously in a global demand signal that no institution can distort, purchase, or suppress. No names. No tracking. No persuasion. No pressure.
Status: Awaiting signal
The Wall is a country level demand ledger. When a country reaches the defined threshold, it earns the first CTMP deployment review under Charter rules.
Preview only. Launch countdown active.
For decades, the ideas behind the CTMP have been incompatible with institutional incentives. They cannot be captured, collateralized, or monetized in ways that preserve the old markup architecture. They deliver at a price that breaks extraction models. So instead of asking permission from systems built to say no, we measure demand directly.
When millions of people sign The Wall, the signal becomes undeniable. No government can ignore it. No institution can distort it. A country that crosses the defined threshold earns the first deployment review under Charter rules.
This is not about one technology. It is about whether humanity chooses abundance over artificial scarcity. Whether peace infrastructure replaces resource competition. Whether people, not gatekeepers, decide their future.