
20 Mind-Bending Facts That Redefine the Present
Published May 15, 2025
Global Head of Research
Key Takeaways
- In 2025, a quantum chip solved a problem in minutes that would take a classical supercomputer longer than the age of the universe, signaling a seismic leap in computational power that investors must watch closely.
- While fusion breakthroughs and interstellar-scale data consumption reflect humanity’s soaring technological reach, they also expose deep contradictions in energy use and value creation.
- From plastic layers forming a new planetary stratum to avocados causing earthquakes, the unintended consequences of progress are reshaping both markets and the Earth itself, underscoring the need for resilient, forward-looking investment strategies.
We often talk about the future as if it’s something we’re waiting for. But the most astonishing thing about the future is how much of it has already arrived—and how quietly it did so.
Some revolutions don’t shout. They slip past our attention, one headline at a time, until we wake up and realize we’re not in the same world anymore.
To see this clearly, you don’t need predictions. You need perception. You need to know what’s already true—right now. And sometimes the truth comes in the form of a number so staggering it fractures your sense of scale.
Here are 20 of those truths. Not as trivia, but as proof: the present is already stranger than we expected the future to be. These come from a bigger piece containing 150 such facts. The lead author of the piece was featured on this episode of our Behind the Markets podcast.
The Compression of Time and Space
We tend to think in centuries, but technology moves in moments.
In 2025, a quantum chip built by Google solved a problem in under five minutes that would take the world’s most powerful supercomputer 10 septillion years to complete. That’s longer than the universe has existed. What used to be unfathomable is now executable—on a chip.
Meanwhile, since 2006, humans have collectively flown more than 95 trillion kilometers—roughly 10 light years. We've been to Proxima Centauri and back, not as astronauts, but as passengers. You don’t need warp drive for space travel. Just commercial airliners and enough time.
And while we crossed those distances, the tools in our pockets became godlike. Today’s smartphone is 100,000 times more powerful than the computers that landed humans on the moon. We landed on the lunar surface with less computational power than your phone uses to buffer a YouTube ad.
Power without Perspective
Our reach has expanded. But has our wisdom?
We have more silicon transistors on Earth than human cells. The inanimate now outnumbers the animate. This isn’t just exponential scaling. It’s existential inversion.
The same year we created a fusion reaction in France that burned three times hotter than the sun, we also watched a single music video (Despacito) enough times to consume more electricity than five African countries use in a year. We’re becoming gods in the lab—while burning fuel on pop culture in the living room.
This isn’t judgment. It’s contrast. And contrast creates clarity: it’s not just what we build that defines us. It’s what we prioritize.
The Economics of the Impossible
In physics, the price of a dream can be measured precisely.
At CERN, the world’s premier particle physics lab, producing one gram of antimatter would cost an estimated $62.5 trillion. That’s twice the GDP of the U.S.—for a single gram of something so rare we’ve never held it.
On the other hand, nature throws abundance at us without a price tag. One asteroid—Psyche 16—contains metal worth $100 sextillion, or 100,000 times global GDP. Somewhere in space, there's more money than we could ever invent. Scarcity is often just a function of where we’re standing.
Hidden Fragilities
For all our grandeur, we remain deeply vulnerable to forces we pretend are stable.
To meet the rising global appetite for avocados, farmers in Mexico have pumped so much groundwater that it’s now causing earthquakes. A superfood can shake the earth. The supply chain is never just about logistics—it’s about geology, water tables and unintended consequences.
And while we marvel at human longevity, our vision is regressing. By 2050, more than half the global population is expected to be short-sighted, up from 1.4 billion today. Our minds may be expanding—but our gaze is narrowing.
The Environment Is No Longer Background
The climate isn’t a future scenario. It’s already editing the present.
By 2050, over 100 major cities are expected to face climates never before seen in human history. Not just warmer. Unprecedented.
And while we worry about carbon, we’ve already created a new planetary layer: enough plastic to cover the surface of the Earth. In physical mass, human-made material now outweighs all land animals combined. Our waste is a new form of weather.
Even the Earth itself is reacting. Between 1993 and 2010, human groundwater extraction caused the Earth’s axis to shift by 80 centimeters. We didn’t just tilt the balance metaphorically. We did it literally.
The Surreal, the Sacred, the Satirical
Some of what’s true today feels like satire.
- A humanoid robot has been granted citizenship and a passport.
- We could have built four Great Pyramids of Giza in the time humanity spent watching Gangnam Style.
- There’s a cloud of alcohol 10,000 light years wide—big enough to brew 400 septillion pints of beer.
- All 8 billion of us could fit shoulder-to-shoulder in Los Angeles.
These aren’t just oddities. They’re moments where the map of what we think is possible tears open.
What Now?
These facts aren’t just fun—they’re frameworks. Each one invites a better question:
- If a chip can do in minutes what once took epochs, what’s the new unit of progress?
- If transistors outnumber cells, who’s really in charge?
- If we’re building stars in labs and triggering quakes with crops, how do we rethink energy and agriculture?
- If everything’s connected, what do we owe the web of consequences we’ve created?
- And maybe most importantly—if this is the present… what else are we failing to see?
Important Information Related to this Article
Unless otherwise stated, data source is Israel et al., “Did You Know? 150 Incredible Facts Showcasing the Transforming World,” BofA Global Research, 4/15/25.
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About the contributor

Global Head of Research
Christopher Gannatti began at WisdomTree as a Research Analyst in December 2010, working directly with Jeremy Schwartz, CFA®, Director of Research. In January of 2014, he was promoted to Associate Director of Research where he was responsible to lead different groups of analysts and strategists within the broader Research team at WisdomTree. In February of 2018, Christopher was promoted to Head of Research, Europe, where he was based out of WisdomTree’s London office and was responsible for the full WisdomTree research effort within the European market, as well as supporting the UCITs platform globally. In November 2021, Christopher was promoted to Global Head of Research, now responsible for numerous communications on investment strategy globally, particularly in the thematic equity space. Christopher came to WisdomTree from Lord Abbett, where he worked for four and a half years as a Regional Consultant. He received his MBA in Quantitative Finance, Accounting, and Economics from NYU’s Stern School of Business in 2010, and he received his bachelor’s degree from Colgate University in Economics in 2006. Christopher is a holder of the Chartered Financial Analyst Designation.

