b'Thomas Pikettys as-yet-unwritten magnum opus? 20Innate Value. One part common sense, one part meta-economic music. One part fast, one part slow. Fast. Innovate technologically and financially at the macro level as if the lives of our children depend upon it. Carbon seques-tration technologies. Carbon markets for soil carbon. Speculate liberally on unicorns and moonshots, scalable commercial breakthroughs that remediate pollution and dramatically reduce ecological footprint going forward. This is the realm of impact investing and venture capital. Slow. Create new flows of capital to enhance the resilience of local economies, communities and bioregions. Go beyond financial diversification, all the way to ecological, cultural and economic diversity. Restore and preserve soil fertility, ecological balance and health. Promote place-based decision-making and individual empowerment. Andhere comes the kickergo return-agnostic. In terms of dollars, that is. Local returns, ecolog-ical and social returns, come first, in a manner that cannot be accomplished while chasing globally driven competitive financial returns. This is the realm of slow money and nurture capital.Yes, we must go fast. We must also go slow. . .quickly.Its as obvious as two sides of a coin. Now, whether or not beetcoin is your cup of borscht, the need for radically new kinds of investing is becoming clearer every day. When 20 Thomas Pikettys Capital in the Twenty-First Century (Harvard, 2013) sold two million copies.Its principal thesis is that because return on capital is growing faster than the rate of economic growth, wealth inequality will continue to increase to levels that threaten social stability.40'