Nueva Valencia

The Big One
Rumbling preceded the explosions; hopeless wailing followed. Chemicals, debris, and smoke filled the air ââ a deadly haze of incalculable proportion. My backpacks pounded against my chest, then my back. Chest, back. Chest, back.
This organic Newtonâs cradle was all I could salvage. One pack had cash, my birth certificate and passport, a chess game to keep myself sane, and a radio-compass. The other was overflowing with protein bars and a filled up water pouch.
Bliss
âYo have fun with tutoring dude! Math today right?â asked Jessie
âEnglish actually ââ I prepared an article for them to dissect. Weâre gonna focus on flow and information presentation. Couple kids wanna be journalists so I hope they appreciate itâ I replied
âUgh sounds so rewardingâ she sighed, âIâm still on the retrofitting grind. Weâre meeting our metrics here, obvs, but these Russian Hill boomers are a pain in the ass. They can get wrecked for all I careâ
âToo bad bud, someoneâs gotta save them from themselvesâ I teased back as I pocked her ribs, âHave fun!â
A familiar buzz tingled my pocket as I hopped on my bike. Strolling down Valencia, the improvements were evident: Tables clustered around fountains, trees canopied the median, speakers replaced traffic lights. Music. Laughter. No longer did we suffer the rumbling engines and incessant honking. Smiling families walked abreast and flurries of bikes streamed down the street next to them. Grass-covered pedestrian walkways replaced the dirty old asphalt.
I docked my bike infront of the center.
âYou spared 404 grams of CO2: BIKT transferred to your walletâ read my phone screen.
Few dapps had gripped San Franciscoâs attention quite like Bikt. The premise was simple: get rewarded 1 BIKT per carbon gram you saved relative to driving a car. Given this cityâs obsession with virtue signaling, their leaderboard feature made usage skyrocket in the past year. Most streets had been similarly converted to pedestrian-biking havens. Only major thoroughfares accommodated cars nowadays.
Large bay windows sandwiched by organic walls. Through the windows you could see the iconic mural ââ a joyful sun providing rays to a field of wheat. I opened up Rainbow and scanned the QR code at the door. My wallet read: âgm AndrĂ©, would you like to sign-in to your 1pm session? âCancelâ âSignââ. Tapping the âSignâ button, a new screen appeared, âWelcome! Your rate is 50 EDU per student. Enjoy :Dâ
Aftermath
An 8.5 Mw earthquake. Near $7 Billion in damages. 40,000 lives lost, more than 400,000 homes destroyed. Despite repeated assurances from Chevron their refinery couldnât handle such a magnitude. North Bay was in flames; SFâs wharf was leveled. Richmond, Oakland, and Berkeley burned for 2 days. The days of teaching probability and retrofitting seemed so far gone. To think that was only 5 days ago. God, please spare Jessie. When I left for my session I never thought itâd be the last time weâd see each other.
Wildfire
I collected the half-dozen annotated articles and fed them through the scanner. After dinner Iâd mint each of these on behalf of the students, along with feedback on their analysis. Huh. Maybe the original reporter would give them feedback as well. With proof of provenance built into these DNAs theyâre bound to get a notification of its use.
EducaSun was another wild success ââ peer-to-peer tutoring: Tutors would provide schedules and courses then students would signup at their convenience. Instead of getting their schedule mandated to them by out of touch principals, learners would place themselves at their desired level. Kids, now animated by intrinsic desire for knowledge, no longer felt constant peer-pressure to overachieve.
My clock read â2:30â. âPerfectâ I muttered as I left the building. Swiping over to that yellow square, I thought about all the progress weâd made. 4 years ago this was a district like any other, polluted and rent burdened. Since Engagemint released however, weâd seen transformative change; My thumb hit the dark yellow, flower shaped âEâ. A dashboard popped up. It was titled âEarthquake preparedness ââ 4/20/2026â followed by 3 buttons: âProposal Summaryâ âCall Inâ âWrite Inâ
Cryptoeconomic networks had taken the world by storm. Previously relegated to the status of criminal-enabling-money-laundering-scams, a plethora of attractive usecases were developed overtime. Once users realized they could program their own incentives into the currency they used, adoption exploded. It all started 4 years, in 2022, with the release of Engagemint. Engagemint rewarded participants for volunteering in their communities ââ first for trash cleanups, then housing development advocacy. Eventually the ecosystem grew to over 50 mutually supportive organization. Bikt and EducaSun were both spinoffs of their own.
Mission District was the first battleground to emerge in the battle for local housing development. Rent-burdened families went up against longtime homeowners who refused to see their net worth decrease. Crossfire was heard during the weekly Board of Supervisor and Housing Committee meetings. Housing advocacy groups seized this opportunity, demanding additional safety measures and proper earthquake preparedness for new construction.
By attending