Geeks Without Frontiers
Geeks Without Frontiers is a platform for global impact.
An award-winning non-profit, Geeks’ mission is to bring the benefits of broadband connectivity -health, education, poverty reduction, gender equality and the other UN Sustainable Development.
06/02/2026
Natural Hazards Cost the World 90 Million Jobs Every Year Disasters & extreme heat erase 90 million jobs yearly. Discover who's most at risk and how smart resilience investments protect livelihoods.
04/24/2026
Native Communities Go Digital in 2026: Culture, Connectivity, and Innovation High-speed internet connectivity is expanding access among Tribal nations in the United States. This ongoing progress toward digital goals is driven by historic federal investments and a focus on sove...
04/07/2026
In the 1960s, experts looked at India and Pakistan and delivered a cold prediction: hundreds of millions would starve to death.
The math was simple and horrifying.
Then a quiet scientist from Iowa stepped off a plane carrying bags of seeds and an idea everyone said would never work.
Norman Borlaug was born in 1914 on a small farm in Cresco, Iowa. He knew hunger firsthand — his family had survived the Dust Bowl by grit and sheer luck. After earning his Ph.D. in plant pathology, he accepted an assignment in 1944 that most scientists considered career su***de: go to Mexico and try to fix wheat.
The problem seemed impossible. The soil was wrong. The climate was unstable. Traditional breeding methods were too slow.
Borlaug didn’t care what seemed impossible.
For years, he worked in Mexican fields under brutal sun. He developed a technique called “shuttle breeding” — growing two wheat crops per year in different climates to accelerate development. Other scientists laughed. You can’t rush evolution, they said.
They were wrong.
Borlaug created wheat varieties that resisted disease, produced massive yields, and grew in nearly any climate. Most importantly, he engineered “dwarf wheat” — shorter, sturdier plants with thick stems that could support heavier grain heads without collapsing under their own abundance.
By the late 1950s, Mexico’s wheat production had tripled. A country that had imported half its grain was now exporting it.
But Borlaug wasn’t done.
In 1963, catastrophe loomed over South Asia. India and Pakistan faced food shortages so severe that war seemed inevitable — nations fighting over scraps. Famine was no longer theoretical.
Borlaug brought his seeds to the subcontinent.
The obstacles were staggering. Bureaucracies resisted. Officials doubted. Cultural traditions opposed new methods. Import regulations blocked shipments. Critics called him naïve, even dangerous.
But hunger doesn’t negotiate.
Pakistan and India, desperate and skeptical, agreed to try his wheat.
In 1965, Borlaug imported 35 truckloads — 250 tons of seed — and distributed it to farmers who had every reason to doubt him.
What happened next changed human history.
Pakistan’s wheat yields nearly doubled in five years — from 4.6 million tons in 1965 to 7.3 million tons in 1970. By 1968, Pakistan was self-sufficient in wheat.
India’s production exploded from 12.3 million tons in 1965 to 20.1 million tons in 1970. By 1974, India was self-sufficient in all cereal grains. By 2000, India was producing over 76 million tons of wheat annually.
The transformation was called the “Green Revolution.”
It saved an estimated one billion people from starvation.
In 1997, The Atlantic Monthly wrote: “Norman Borlaug has saved more lives than anyone who has ever lived.”
Read that again. One billion lives.
In 1970, Borlaug received the Nobel Peace Prize. At the ceremony, he said something that should be carved in stone everywhere: “We can’t build world peace on empty stomachs.”
He later received the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Congressional Gold Medal — becoming one of only seven Americans ever to receive all three of the nation’s highest civilian honors.
Yet walk down any street in America and ask who Norman Borlaug was. Most people won’t know.
He spent his final decades trying to bring the Green Revolution to Africa, training thousands of farmers, battling bureaucracy and defeatism until his body gave out.
He worked until he was 95 years old.
Norman Borlaug died in 2009. No headlines. No national mourning. Quiet, like he lived.
But his wheat varieties are still feeding billions. Right now. Today.
Think about the scale. One billion lives saved. That’s more than every doctor who has ever lived. More than every general, every politician, every celebrity combined.
An Iowa farm boy who spent decades in fields, hands in soil, breeding plants one generation at a time, fighting skeptics, proving that science — patient, unglamorous science — could defeat one of humanity’s oldest enemies.
He did it without seeking fame. Without accumulating wealth. Without demanding recognition.
He just kept working.
Because he understood something most people never grasp: hunger doesn’t wait for permission, politics don’t matter when children are starving, and one person with knowledge and determination can reshape the future of our entire species.
Norman Borlaug proved that feeding people is the deepest act of peace.
And that the most important heroes are often the ones history forgets to write down.
Until someone remembers to tell their story.
03/22/2026
Corporate Claws At NVIDIA GTC, after calling OpenClaw the most successful open-source project in history, Jensen Huang said that every single enterprise company and every single software company in the world needs an agentic strategy, and specifically needs an OpenClaw strategy. Here's what he means.
02/28/2026
Samsung Brings Satellite Communication Support to Galaxy Smartphones Across the Globe Collaboration with leading telecom operators across North America, Europe and Japan supports satellite-based communication on select Galaxy smartphones, including the Galaxy S26 series
02/25/2026
Newsroom Explore past press releases and news by The Nature Conservancy in the United States and around the globe.
02/25/2026
New Device From Starlink Rival Taara Promises 25Gbps Internet Using Light Taara, a startup that graduated from Alphabet’s moonshot factory, has slimmed down its technology, which uses near-infrared light to bring high-speed internet to remote areas.
01/12/2026
Hi everyone,
I want to sincerely thank every single one of you for joining this page, following Iran’s news, sharing our posts, and standing with the Iranian people. Your support, your messages, and even your silent presence mean more than words can express. You are helping be the voice of Iran when Iranians themselves are being silenced.
In just the past two weeks since I began sharing updates about the anti–Islamic regime protests, this page has gained over 20,000 new followers and reached more than 13 million views. This growth is not just a number, it is proof that the world is listening.
I know this has all unfolded during Christmas and the New Year, a time meant for rest and family. Yet you still chose to give your time, attention, and compassion to Iran. We see this. We feel this. And we will forever be grateful for your solidarity.
Since January 8, Iran has been under a near-total internet blackout. As the regime takes its last breaths, it has become increasingly vulgar, violent, and brutal toward its own people. This is precisely why your continued support matters so deeply. Please stay hopeful. Please remain the voice of Iran.
More than 90 million Iranians are being held hostage by this regime. For 46 years, Iran has fought largely alone against one of the most brutal dictatorships in the world. By now millions of innocent lives have been lost through executions, protests, wars, unsafe infrastructure, pollution, lack of medication, and systemic neglect.
Iranians should not have to fight alone anymore. We do not want to be alone.
Please stand by our side until Iran is free. Your support will never be forgotten, and it will always be remembered by a nation that survived because the world chose not to look away.
Thank you for being here. Thank you for caring. Thank you for being Iran’s voice. 💚🤍❤️
#جاویدشاه
Former Geeks Without Frontiers member of the Board of Advisors, Jason Silva's heartfelt thoughts on Venezuela
01/02/2026
'De-extinction' company announces plan to reintroduce species not seen in the wild in decades: 'Ready to welcome them back' "Its return represents both ecological restoration and spiritual renewal."
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