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Chapter 252: Chapter 190: Gains and Strategies_2

Translator: 549690339 |

This ti was almost a success, so next ti, he would try to achieve everything in one go.

These were the ntal preparations he made in advance for the things he would do after he went back in ti. In the coming month, he still had a lot to accomplish in this era.

First, he needed to deal with the transfer of achievents of new technologies like room-temperature superconducting tals, several advanced organic materials, and ultra-durable, ultra-high conversion rate solar panels, which took a lot of effort to bring back.

These things couldn’t possibly be achieved within a month, so he could only lay the groundwork for now and pray to God in his heart that Rainer and the Whale Group would give him so help in his endeavors when he went back in ti.

Second, he would carefully select parts of the relatively basic theoretical knowledge from the 31st century that Dean Clark, a scholar of expert status with only an elentary school diploma, managed to grasp and bring them to people in the 21st century who might be able to understand them.

For example, the conclusive results of basic physics and mathematics theories.

To avoid causing any adverse effects, Harrison Clark had to be selective with the knowledge points and couldn’t just dump them all at once.

He had to choose theories that were of undoubted fundantals and without any mysteries, or else it would be easy to lead future generations astray.

As a result, there wouldn’t be much he could choose from, and the selected knowledge would be unsystematic and sprawling.

It was hard, and Harrison Clark was unsure whether the people in this era could actually understand them.

For example, elentary school students in the 21st century knew about the eight major planets in the Solar System and that batteries have positive and negative poles.

But if a student ti traveled back to the Tang Dynasty and talked about the eight planets and positive-negative poles with Hank Donald?

They would probably be poisoned by the Tang poetry.

Harrison Clark planned to write an eclectic book, putting whatever he could think of into it.

Whether others could understand it, accept it, or ultimately bring about any positive change would be entirely up to their luck.

Third, the simplest task – to bury “antiques” belonging to himself and Carrie Thomas in the ground in advance so that he could dig them up by himself a thousand years later and beco a genuine top-tier “archaeologist,” thereby quickly raising his social status.

In the previous tiline, he found that the houses he had lived in and the offices he used had all beco historical sites.

So, undoubtedly, items closely related to historical figures, like manuscripts, used fingers, personal clothing, mouthwash cups, toothbrushes, and so on, were extrely valuable.

They would be worth a fortune.

Presenting them in public when they were handed over to the World Governnt would definitely create a sensation.

As for hiding things, it took skill – he had to have several hiding places and hide things deep, so that they would not be dug up by others during the following 1,000 years. The more he could keep for himself, the better.

Fourth, he needed to organize the entire R&D process of the S Bacteria Vaccine he had stolen from Scott.

Though he couldn’t morize the DNA chain structure of the S Bacteria King and have Willian obtain the S Bacteria King in advance, Harrison Clark had a more ruthless tactic up his sleeve.

He directly morized the long string of chemical equations and a pile of organic polyr structural stereograms of the inactivated S Bacteria protein shell that induced the formation of immune antibodies in the vaccine.

Harrison Clark would leave this information behind and hide it in the scholarly book ntioned in the second plan.

By the ti the S Bacteria outbreak occurred, he believed that among the mad scientists of that ti, there would definitely be soone who would take a look and discover his hint.

Then, the developnt of the ultimate S Bacteria vaccine would be unbelievably fast.

The S Bacteria might even be eliminated before it becos a threat.

As a result, the S Bacteria, the ultimate weapon that the invaders had high hopes for, would be rendered useless and would leave behind antibodies to help humans improve their gene awakening rate for free.

Harrison Clark estimated that if fewer people would die this ti and the overall human level could improve, by the 31st century, humanity would at least be much better off than the last ti.

Fifth, he would follow the old routine and carry out regular operations with backup programs.

He would bring back music and movies.

Although he didn’t deliberately study this ti, his mory had improved a lot. He morized more than 20 songs, including “Across the Starry Sky” and the works created by Carrie Thomas in her later years, as well as several classic blockbuster sci-fi movies from the late 21st century and the early 22nd century.

The above were the five core operation ideas Harrison Clark had set for this ti.

There was one more thing he was still undecided about.

He had so thoughts about the system.

In the previous tiline, the ultimate human-centric social system had obvious benefits.

It was very harmonious, with everyone highly motivated and proactive.

However, the drawbacks and problems were evident: people’s sense of autonomy was overwhelmingly strong and the room for error was too vast.

Without a compulsory high-performance system to keep them in check and correct mistakes in a tily manner, it would be hard for people who went down the wrong path to turn back.

For instance, the bizarre Intuition School was a product of excessive freedom.

If not for Harrison Clark’s extraordinary writing and transforming skills, the nearly 10,000 mbers of the Intuition School would have been dood.

So Harrison Clark once pondered how to find a better social structure capable of maximizing everyone’s subjective initiative while having a powerful corrective chanism.

The question returned to its original point.

In his worldview, he still believed that only through the birth of a republic revolving around a great leader could this be achieved.

However, he didn’t dare to dream of enlightening a great leader beyond hundreds of years of ti and space..

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