Theme map

Seven rooms for early support.

The theme map helps supporters choose where they can contribute without needing the whole civilisational blueprint in their head at once.

People around a Brisbane planning table reviewing maps, notes and civic technology
The theme map is a translation layer: big seed-doc architecture turned into rooms people can actually support.

From the seed docs

Six doors into one support field.

The source material is broad: Minjerribah local systems, the C-Hour reciprocity economy, a Sovereignty Stack for civic AI, the Peaceful Space Gambit, the AUKUS/ISS preservation gambit, health and AI surge planning, and an agent navigation layer for the wider archive.

C-Hours Shared Table Legal RAG Virtual Solar Swarm ISS Gambit Disaster kiosks Public-safe evidence
01

Care and the C-Hour economy

A public conversation about the incomplete ledger: unpaid care, ecological stewardship and community contribution recognised without financialising every human act. This is where carers, co-ops, local organisers, policy thinkers and ethical finance people can find a shared language.

02

Civic AI and public trust

P4A-style civic twins, Legal RAG, public ledgers, agent-readable Markdown and local decision records can make civic work clearer. The seed-doc architecture adds CRDTs, federated learning and L0-L3 data sovereignty so useful intelligence does not require raw personal or cultural data to be centralised.

03

Peaceful space commons

The Peaceful Space Gambit invites defence transition, space science, planetary defence and open research into one cooperative frame. It carries the Antarctic Treaty spirit, Outer Space Treaty care, Artemis-era practicality, a Virtual Solar Swarm hypothesis and a Web3 Sensorium for open debate.

04

AUKUS Space Gambit and ISS preservation

The security and economic surge notes add a sharper challenge: if NASA and its partners are preparing to retire the International Space Station through a controlled ocean deorbit after operations end around 2030, could an Australian-led AUKUS Space Gambit explore a lawful, peaceful alternative before that window closes?

This stays clearly in the hypothesis lane for now. The public support ask is for aerospace engineers, space-law people, orbital safety reviewers, AUKUS transition thinkers and heritage/science partners to test whether any ISS stabilisation, reboost, museum-orbit or modular expansion concept is technically, legally and diplomatically credible.

Open AUKUS Space Gambit
05

Local resilience from Minjerribah to Brisbane

Island-scale thinking can teach city-scale coordination: the Gumpi makerspace idea, Straddie Shared Table, sovereign kiosks, local training, respectful cultural protocol, resilient energy and practical places where people can ask for help before systems fail.

06

Celestial hypothesis and eclipse readiness

The 2028 and 2030 Australian total solar eclipse markers can become calm civic rehearsals: safe viewing, open science, visitor flow, local communications and peaceful space imagination, with speculative material clearly labelled as hypothesis.

07

Health, ageing and human readiness

The health and AI surge thread is handled carefully: public pages can discuss care access, prevention, ageing, community wellbeing and evidence-review needs. Any clinical claims, protocols or personal records need private stewardship before they become public-facing material.

ISS public baseline: NASA selected SpaceX to develop and deliver the U.S. Deorbit Vehicle under a contract with total potential value of US$843 million. NASA's ISS transition FAQ frames controlled deorbit into a remote ocean area as the current end-of-life plan after station operations end.

Tone rule

Joyful responsible abundance, not vague future fog.

Every theme needs a useful next action: convene a roundtable, test a builder, map a risk, review evidence, host a local session, fund a small pilot or help make the invitation clearer.