People don’t need a plan to admire — they need a door they can enter.
A random thought: we are witnessing something many of us already sensed years ago — things are changing, and the old structures are no longer holding. People can feel it. There is still resistance to pretending everything is normal, but more and more individuals are realizing that something different is needed. The real question now is not whether change is coming, but whether we are able to offer something concrete. People don’t just want ideas — they want a plan they can experience directly. One possible step could be to create a temporary shared space where people can spend short periods of time together and experience this way of living in practice. Something simple at first — families, individuals, small groups — living side by side while respecting clear rules of coexistence and responsibility. Not a permanent commitment, but a real opportunity to test whether this model is stable and sustainable. This could even begin through a small crowdfunding effort, where each person contributes time, skills, or modest resources to help create the first shared environment. A place that functions almost like a short-term residency or a community-based B&B — not as a retreat, but as a living prototype. If such experiences prove meaningful and workable, they could become replicable in other towns and regions, adapting to local needs while keeping the same spirit of cooperation and structure. Communities built in this way do not need to position themselves against anything. When they are transparent, grounded, and connected to the surrounding territory, they naturally become a resource rather than a threat. Perhaps the next step is simply to ask: are we ready to begin building something small but real together, and allow people to experience it with their own eyes?