I have a slightly different but similar take. The real human superpower is community, and we've lost so much of that through the Internet, or at least have lost our grasp on how to handle it. We are at our strongest, in fact pretty much unstoppable, when we come together as a group, when we help each other and support each other without being transactional. Our collective goals unite us but individual diversity is our strength.
It's not just about food, but food is a great example. If you've ever been part of a friendly community with a farmer or even a gardener, you'll know they frequently give away food to anyone who wants it, because they frequently end up with more than they need, and even you will end up with more than you need. They grow or harvest stuff you don't, and they do a great job at it, with a few different connections you'll have a supermarket worth of groceries knocking on your door. And in return, in the words of Letterkenny, "When a friend [or neighbor] asks for help, you help them." This is how communities work. We give when we can, share when we can, we ask for help when we can't, we work together as a group but remain individuals. Granted some people will only ever ask for help, won't share anything and will take and take and take and that can be draining, toxic, and truly ruinous if you can't figure out anything you appreciate about them. But they are the minority, and they don't find themselves welcome in most communities. Most people share and share-alike, most people provide something to the community in their own way, and if you find the right group of people and community and look at it with the right attitude that's all you'll find.
There's always going to be drama and conflict too, that's also very deeply human. But we need to stay connected to our friends and neighbors and communities anyway. We need to be strong enough to tolerate that, and endure it and live with it, in exchange for the many, many benefits we get from the community we gain as a result. We are social creatures, and our social drive has been stolen and sabotaged and twisted into some horrible network of global toxicity for profit. We need to reclaim it, take it back for ourselves and start reconnecting to other human beings on a human level again, start re-knitting the fabric of our communities. This is how we'll become resilient enough to survive the future. Our history is a history of struggle and endurance and community. And that's not going to change because of any amount of technology or natural disaster or self-inflicted disaster. We will still struggle and endure and build communities.
It's what we do.