Buckminster Fuller was an architect, engineer, writer, inventor and futurist, but he was also a rebel who was kicked out of Harvard twice and never finished there. After he was admitted for the second time, he was expelled for “irresponsibility and lack of interest.” He had no interest in the existing systems and practices he found. He was only interested in inventing the future — in bringing to life the vision he saw in his own mind.
Fuller saw different ways of designing and engineering buildings, among other things. He didn’t try to convince architects and engineers that their conventional designs were wrong. He didn’t care about fighting them. He simply went about the work of inventing what he saw in his mind’s eye. He was very conscious of this approach.
“You never change something by fighting the existing reality,” Fuller said. “To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.”

Is Obama playing politics with war on terror? Of course, just as Bush did
Unless you oppose all coercion, ‘resistance’ claim rings hollow
Grow veggies in your own yard? ‘You’re heading to jail, you criminal’
If you’re scared of being ‘bad,’ manipulated praise relieves fear
Eviction leaves me sifting through collateral damage of a broken life
Shouldn’t standards be higher for those trusted to enforce our laws?
Briefly: Comic perfectly captured what I wrote about this weekend
Why do we stay in prison when there’s no lock holding us there?