You are going to live the next twenty, thirty, maybe fifty years inside the system you are living in right now.
So is everyone you love.
When energy is expensive, life is expensive.
When energy is unstable, life is unstable.
And the people who decide what energy costs do not live where you live.
You have been waiting your whole life
Waiting for the policy to pass.
Waiting for the investment to arrive.
Waiting for someone in a room you have never seen to decide that your country, your neighbourhood, your street, your family, matters enough to fix.
The Wall exists to end the waiting.
The Wall is not a petition
A petition asks someone in power to care.
The Wall does not ask anyone in power for anything.
It measures whether enough people in your country want their country considered first for the deployment of the CTMP system designed to lower the cost of energy, water, housing, transport, and industry.
One anonymous signal.
One country.
One public count.
No name. No email. No account. No identity attached to you, ever.
What you are really signing for
You are signing for the chance that the next thirty years of your life will not cost what the last thirty did.
You are signing for power so cheap that the price of everything downstream changes.
You are signing for water that the system produces at the scale of a nation, allocated free to the host country.
You are signing for steel, concrete, housing, transport, telecom, and industry built on a foundation that does not extract the spread upward.
That is not a cheaper bill.
That is a different floor underneath the economy.
What it could mean for you
No mortgage interest.
No bank margin.
No thirty-year financing layer doubling the price.
These are not projections. They are the arithmetic of what happens when the foundational cost of civilization drops by more than ninety-nine percent at the point of production.
Why your country matters
Every country has a threshold.
Five percent of its population, with a floor of two hundred and fifty thousand signatures.
When your country crosses its threshold, it moves to the front of the queue for the first independent review.
No politician selects the order.
No investor selects the location.
No closed room overrides the count.
If your country is behind, the gap is almost certainly smaller than you think.
A few thousand people is not a nation.
One country can move quickly when its people understand what the count actually means.
This is bigger than nationalism
You can care about your own country and still understand what this means for everyone else.
The first country matters because the first physical review creates proof.
Proof travels.
Once one country forces the question into the open, every other country can look at it and say:
Why not us.
What signing does not do
It records one thing only: that one person, in one country, anonymously signalled that their country should be considered.
Somewhere, right now
None of these people need another speech about scarcity.
They need the system underneath their lives to change.
The line that matters
The Wall does not ask anyone's permission.
It records yours.
One click
Pick your country.
Click once.
Watch the number move.
Then look at where your country stands. See who is ahead. See how close the threshold is.
The Wall does not tell you what to do.
It records what you decide.