Season - 12020
The 12020 season closed with a realization that humanity is resilient. The "season" of 12020 wasn't defined by the events that were supposed to happen, but by the innovation, resilience, and personal stories of adaptation in the face of a challenge, as described in a Luis Puerto blog post .
12020 marks a critical juncture where humanity was forced to slow down and rethink its path forward, setting the stage for the next 10,000 years of progress. Happy New Year 12020 | Luis Puerto
The summer of 12020 saw a unique pause in human activity. Streets were empty, yet the "season" continued in restricted formats. The 12020 Space Calendar focused not just on rockets, but on how humanity would navigate this new, restricted reality, according to a Kurzgesagt Facebook post. Season 12020
12020 began with a profound sense of hope and advancement. Space exploration was reaching a fever pitch, with four private companies preparing to launch humans into space from American soil for the first time since 2011, promising a new, more accessible era in orbit. However, the year quickly redefined itself.
By late winter, the rapid emergence of a global health crisis forced the world to pivot. The 12020 season became a testament to adaptability. Major international events, such as the Formula 1 Chinese Grand Prix, were postponed, and Italian teams like Ferrari faced immense challenges just getting their staff out of quarantine zones. The 12020 season closed with a realization that
Resilience, Technological Advancement, Global Adaptation.
The "12,020 Human Era" (or 12020) is a calendar concept popularized by the YouTube channel Kurzgesagt (which aligns with our standard year 2020). It adds 10,000 years to the Gregorian calendar to emphasize the start of human civilization—the Holocene—rather than the birth of one individual. Happy New Year 12020 | Luis Puerto The
As the year drew to a close, 12020 marked a shift in how humanity operates. Sport returned, but it was fundamentally altered, with debates over technical regulations (like Mercedes’ DAS system) taking place behind closed doors.