Article
Why am I a Part of Volt Europa? Real Positive Change, and an Innovative Approach
I am deeply rooted in my hometown, a place I cherish with pride. But, my identity as a local patriot is inseparable from my commitment to a broader, interconnected world. For me, being a local patriot also means being an engaged European.
In 2019, when I first learned about Volt Europa—a movement dedicated to driving positive change across Europe with a distinctly innovative approach—I was immediately intrigued. Volt Europa stands out as the most forward-thinking political project I have encountered.
It was this interest that led me, at the end of 2019, to attend a meeting of Volt Slovakia in Bratislava. At that time, it was a small civic association with just a handful of members in Slovakia. However, what I found was something profoundly logical: truly interesting and passionate people gravitate toward inspiring ideas. These individuals were dedicating significant energy and free time to the cause. My enthusiasm was so strong that I willingly spent five hours on a train to Bratislava for just an hour-long meeting in a café. That very day, I decided to join Volt Europa—a decision I have never once regretted.
Since then, Volt Europa has secured several seats in the European Parliament, grown to over 20,000 members across Europe, and is now registered as a political party in Slovakia. The community striving for positive change in Europe continues to expand.
Why am I a part of it?
A United Europe: A Stronger Voice on the Global Stage
Looking at today's world, I see no rational argument against making Europe more united and self-confident.
I want the world to take us seriously and to respect our opinions. I want China, India, and the United States to recognise Europe as an equal partner in every discussion.
Let us be honest: who in China would consider the Spanish Prime Minister an equal partner in a discussion? While someone might claim to, the reality is different. Either Europe speaks with a confident, unified voice, or we risk being seen merely as a tourist destination—a cultural monument for visitors from around the world. This is the stark reality we must confront.
Continue reading
Enter your email to unlock this article and join the newsletter. You can unsubscribe anytime.
Summary
Common questions on this article's topic
What is Volt Europa?
What democratic reforms does Volt Europa advocate?
Why do most people not understand or care about European elections?
What motivated the decision to join Volt Europa?
Is Volt Europa active in Slovakia?
Related articles
What happened — and how can it be reversed?
It happens every day. It is happening right now.
Manipulation without the feeling of being manipulated is the most effective kind.
More articles
I am building an AI system to predict the S&P 500. It runs on my own machine, uses free public data — yfinance, FRED, the Shiller dataset — and grades every forecast against reality. This series documents the build itself: the decisions, the methodology, the mistakes. What I will eventually share from the running system is a separate question, and an honest one.
Yesterday I could not tear myself away from the computer. When I lifted my head, it was half past eight in the evening. I had been sitting alone upstairs for about three hours.
Will AI take my job? A certified Google trainer told me in June 2024 that my profession would cease to exist. Twenty-two months later, my job title has not changed — but ninety percent of what I do during the day is different. I have delegated more of my thinking to AI agents than I thought possible. I am not afraid. This is why, and what it means for anyone asking the same question.
One hour. Fifty-five minutes. That is how long it took to build what a Czech software firm had quoted at over €50,000. I built it with Claude Code. Not a prototype. Not a proof of concept. A working tool — the one the company actually needed. By the evening of the same day, it was running on staging. This is not about Claude Code. It is about what Claude Code exposes.
I have conducted roughly one hundred and fifty practical interviews over the past four years. Fifty for data specialist roles. A hundred for advertising and performance marketing specialists. Almost every one of them involved sitting down with a candidate over a practical task — something close to a real problem we actually need to solve at the company. Not theory. Not trivia. Applied problem-solving. Over time, I started noticing a pattern.
Before you can teach AI to understand anything, you need to see what it is hiding from you.
The moment other people needed access to it, the problem changed completely. It was no longer about whether the agent could learn. It was about who gets to teach it.
I wanted to build an agent that doesn't just assist. One that acts.
This is what I learned about local vs cloud AI, and why I switched to Claude Code.
