you? Well, to admit, I sometimes have a hard time describing myself in this sense. I suppose really I'm a writer. I write a number of books of nonfiction, primarily focused on issues of philosophy, computer science, design and architecture, geopolitics, various mixtures of these. So kind of depending on the audience, different things come to the fore. I'm a professor at University of California, San Diego. I also taught at Syark in Los Angeles. I direct an urban futures think tank at the Strelka Institute. In Moscow, the current iteration of which is called the terraforming, which is not the terraforming of Mars or the moon to make them suitable for earth-like life, but rather the terraforming of the earth to ensure that it remains viable for earth-like life. The new book that you mentioned that comes out this week is about the pandemic and what happened, what we need to learn from it, what was exposed in essence, how to make sense of it. So what led you to write the book? Was it the (3/42)
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