Acharya Prashant explains that Australia was one of the last continents colonized by man, and within a short span, this colonization led to the complete and irreversible extinction of 90% of all animal species weighing over 50 kilograms. He describes this as the "devastating and deadly touch of this new god." This destruction, he states, is a direct consequence of man's pursuit of happiness. The speaker characterizes the "happy ones" as those who will not let anyone or anything live that does not help them fulfill their desires, operating under the principle of "I want, my will." He laments that species that existed for millions of years were "evaporated in a second" by man's touch. The speaker asserts that happiness, pleasure, and desire have been the primary motivating forces for humanity, and this will continue. He grimly predicts that this planet is "done with" and that man will soon be colonizing another. These future humans, he suggests, will be superior in terms of looks, IQ, economic prosperity, and skills, but they will lack the one thing that matters: love. However, this absence of love will not matter to them. To illustrate this loss of spiritual depth, he recounts hearing a popular singer perform a song by Bulleh Shah, in which she had changed the original lyrics. He realized this was done because the modern audience would not be able to grasp the meaning of the original lines. This, he calls a "glimpse of tomorrow," a future where humanity will be unable to know what figures like Shri Krishna or Kabir Saheb are saying, much like a computer cannot. He concludes that we will become "fantastic computers," able to intellectually comprehend but unable to feel love.