Basically, don't invest through investment companies. They'll chase the big profits because that's what they're paid to do. Even "green" or "sustainable" funds might invest in pharmaceutical companies that produce treatments instead of cures, or psuedo-science companies chasing net-energy loss concepts like clean coal or hydrogen, for example.
Instead, invest in specific technologies and goals:
- Low-cost solar panels and windmills
- Alternative chip designs like RISC-V and high-multicore (64+ cores)
- Peer to peer communications systems, alternatives to cellular/5G
- Robotic/hydroponic automated organic food production
- Incubated/cloned meat and meat alternatives without side effects like FODMAP
- mRNA vaccines, CRISPR, treatments for genetic disorders
- Low-cost EVs, LiFePO4 batteries, high-kW inverters, axial flux motors
- Heat pumps, thermal energy storage, concentrated trough solar
- Labor-saving inventions and assistive devices for freight, construction, etc
- Companies that openly support public education, single-payer healthcare, etc
- Incubators like Y Combinator but that provide smaller $10,000-$100,000 VC
- Open source projects/collaborations that distribute risk like Humble Bundle
- Mass transit like electric busses/high-speed rail (boring but global demand)
- Strike Debt and other loan forgiveness efforts that buy up loans in default
- PACs, unions, environmental groups working to unseat incumbants
- Foreign aid programs aimed at education, especially women and girls
- Independent investigative journalists and media
- Local bond efforts for better public schools, libraries, parks, etc
- Stocks/groups working to legalize cannibis and end the war on drugs
- Builders of tiny homes and alternative housing like yurts and earthships
Avoid:
- Crypto (untraceable exploitation, black markets, human trafficking, etc)
- Mutual funds and index funds (same reason as investment companies)
- FAANG/GAMMA (high profit, low innovation over market cap)
- MLMs (often tied to fundamentalist religious organizations and lobbyists)
- Foreign currencies (profits from exploitation and environmental degradation)
People to emulate (these are merely breadcrumbs towards ways of thinking):
- MacKenzie Scott
- Bill McKibben
- Michael Pollan
- Derrick Jensen
- Thom Hartmann
- Howard Zinn (deceased)
- Ed Abbey (deceased)
- John Muir (deceased)
- Frank Church (deceased)
- Terence McKenna (deceased)
See also:
- Capital in the Twenty-First Century by Thomas Piketty
- The Jungle and other books by Upton Sinclair (deceased)
- Nickel and Dimed and other books by Barbara Ehrenreich (deceased)
If I ever win the internet lottery, I'll work towards getting matching funds to tackle the biggest problems facing humanity:
1) That starts with liberating all peoples from forced labor, exploitation and subjugation so that they can self-actualize. Which looks like freeing capital from "black holes" of concentrated wealth, specifically moneyed interests and wealthy individuals who hoard resources and choose to do none of what I've stated above, at great expense to the rest of humanity. That's done not through competition or direct confrontation, but by getting everyone "off the grid" to disrupt the supply and demand curve which always results in the wealth inequality and late-stage capitalism we see today when there isn't regulation.
2) Then also improving quality of life universally, so working towards providing free treatments for all conditions/illnesses/injuries across borders.
3) Then also promoting kindess, mindfulness, and other cultural movements which move us away from othering and back towards reconnection to foster the common good. This looks like a rejection of reason for its own sake, and replacing that with the pursuit of meaning. So deciding collectively that using electronic devices in public is impolite, ending surveillance capitalism, tearing down the economic walls which separate us from our neighbors, etc. So that we can once again gather in small communities that provide mutual aid, childcare and tool/resource sharing so that we aren't forced to take on so much individually for our basic survival.
I think it may be possible to recruit AI to do all of this holistically and rapidly shift into the reality that we may have envisioned for the 21st century, a bit like the rapid technological growth we saw during COVID-19, when the first vacation that billions of people ever had resulted in 10-20 years of innovation in just 1-2 years. That's the key, that getting real work done requires escaping the menial labor that extracts profit from the working class.
So that's what I would do: use AI to examine thousands of stocks to find which ones trend similarly and which one correlate inversely, and come up with a plan to start moving profit the opposite direction from where it's moved traditionally. Then invest that cashflow into countless underemployed people whose talents, dignity and divinity haven't been recruited yet effectively because they've only been put to use in the service of capital.