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Free currencies | Jean-François Noubel | TEDxParis

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    Good afternoon.
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    I'd like you all to breathe
    through the little straw.
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    We're even going to stand up,
    if it's OK. Come on.
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    We're going to move our bodies
    while breathing through this little straw.
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    And go! Go on!
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    ♪ Tum Chiki Cha Chiki Tum Chiki Cha ♪
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    Keep going, move!
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    ♪ Tum Chiki Cha Chiki Tum Chiki Cha ♪
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    Keep moving; keep breathing
    through the straw! Go.
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    ♪ Tum Chiki Cha Chiki Tum Chiki Cha ♪
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    Move a lot!
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    ♪ Tum Chiki Cha Chiki Tum Chiki Cha ♪
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    ♪ Tum Chiki Cha Chiki Tum Chiki Cha ♪
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    Great. Thanks.
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    Is it easy?
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    So, we do that for one short minute.
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    What if we did that for many weeks,
    many months, or the rest of our life,
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    or if we were born with this little straw
    in our mouths, what would happen?
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    First of all, we would certainly forget
    that we have this little straw,
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    and we would probably build
    a philosophy based on scarcity.
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    In other words, we'd say air is scarce,
    just because we forgot that that the tool
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    that links us to this abundant air,
    there's plenty of it for us,
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    but we forgot this object, so we build up
    a vision of a scarce world.
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    Also, it was a bit short in one minute,
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    but we realize that if we really
    start breathing through this little straw,
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    then all our physical,
    emotional, and mental energy,
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    all our inspiration,
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    are entirely devoted to this breathing.
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    We don't think about anything else,
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    we're not going to write
    a symphony or a book,
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    we're not going to run, or dance.
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    In fact, each breath becomes
    the conquest of the next breath.
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    And another thing:
    this suffocation will encourage us
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    to steal our neighbor's straw,
    or at least to feel tempted to do so.
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    Moreover, if I accumulate
    many little straws,
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    I might become able to ask others
    to take their neighbor's straw,
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    and also ask anyone to work for me,
    and hand out the straws.
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    So you see, this situation
    of asphyxiation,
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    this is what most of humanity
    is experiencing today.
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    With this tool, not to access air,
    but wealth, I mean money.
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    Money is missing, money is lacking.
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    This is the experience
    of most of our contemporaries,
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    to different degrees, but most of them.
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    Why is money lacking?
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    We know for sure
    that there is a huge quantity of it,
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    but this money is going
    to become concentrated.
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    We encounter this concentration already,
    as young children playing "Monopoly",
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    which is a kind of miniature model,
    a simplified version
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    of the economic system in which we live,
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    but it's the same thing,
    the fundamentals are the same:
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    the more money I make,
    the more I can invest,
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    the more I can invest, the more I make,
    the more I make the more I can invest.
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    This shows that there is
    a phenomenon of "condensation",
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    that's the technical term, of currency,
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    which becomes concentrated
    in the hands of a few.
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    And while money becomes condensed here,
    of course it becomes rare somewhere else.
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    There we have what
    we call undermonetization.
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    That is where this asphyxia takes place.
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    This phenomenon of currency condensation
    has a name; it's called the Pareto effect,
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    and this is what we experience
    in the Monopoly game.
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    This leads to interesting conclusions,
    not the ones you find in school books,
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    and even less in the economic press.
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    First, in this monetary system,
    by design, there no one winner,
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    the one with all the bank notes,
    because if I have all the bank notes,
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    and the other players have nothing,
    I am as economically dead as the others.
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    So, I can do what I want
    with the piles of bank notes I have,
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    I can turn a blind eye to them,
    but anyway, I can't do anything with them.
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    Or I can change the rules of the game,
    and then the game can continue.
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    So in truth, this is a game of mass death.
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    It's inherent in the monetary structure
    of the Monopoly game,
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    as well as in the monetary structure
    we use in the world today.
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    The next thing is that no matter
    what the participants' intentions may be,
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    even if people want to make
    favorable exchanges,
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    even if they're not trying
    to kill each other,
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    regardless of people's intentions,
    the system as a whole,
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    goes towards its destiny, independently
    of the will of the players.
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    It's the mechanism of scarcity, and this
    is why we call money a "scarce currency".
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    It's not a value judgment;
    it's a technical term that describes
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    the kind of currency humanity uses today.
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    Whether it's euros, dollars,
    any other currency, it's the same thing.
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    But today, of course,
    a response is being made to that.
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    It's simple: from the fact that currency
    is missing in a given region,
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    the people see that the money
    has gone somewhere else,
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    so they create their own local currency.
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    Today, we see local currencies
    proliferating all over the planet.
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    As a result, trade picks up again,
    the social body resumes its activity
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    and its energy, and it starts over.
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    There are also currencies
    called "social currencies",
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    complementary social currencies.
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    For instance, let's imagine
    that I am a student in Japan,
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    and my next door neighbor is an old lady.
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    I can do her shopping, keep her house,
    maybe even help her to get dressed.
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    I earn Fureai Kippus that I can now send
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    to my old great-uncle
    on the other side of Japan.
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    He can then use them
    with someone in his neighborhood.
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    Here we see that this currency
    has an exclusively social function.
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    it creates relationships,
    while the Yen as such
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    is not at all adapted
    to performing this function.
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    And it also allows the government
    to save billions of yen.
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    There are also currencies
    used for business purposes.
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    There's one that most people
    know worldwide: Air Miles,
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    which allow one to purchase plane tickets,
    hotel rooms, rental cars, etc.
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    There are also currencies
    that we call "targeted",
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    because they fulfill a specific function,
    such as carbon or kilowatt currencies.
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    These targeted currencies are made
    to support a specific sector:
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    education, energy, etc.; there you go.
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    This was a quick overview
    of "complementary currencies".
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    Therefore, a breach has opened.
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    If you go to the Internet to observe it,
    a breach has opened
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    in the monopoly of scarce money;
    this is one response.
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    However, we're not going to stop there,
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    because complementary currencies
    are only a transitory step.
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    It is a response to...
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    "Complementary": means what it says,
    it "complements" the system.
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    It creates patches, bandages; it's made
    to heal, to supply deficiencies.
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    But in fact, what's happening
    foreshadows an historical moment,
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    as has sometimes happened in the past.
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    For example, when people said,
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    "Look, everyone has the right
    to think what he likes,
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    and everyone has the right
    to freedom of speech.
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    It is a universal and inalienable right."
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    Well, we know that before this, freedom
    of speech was an elite prerogative.
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    One couldn't express oneself
    without the permission of some authority,
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    be it the king, God, or whoever else.
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    And today, in our own time,
    we still speak of sovereign currency,
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    In our minds, we say -
    it's indisputable -
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    currency is tied to power, to authority,
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    whether it be that of God, the state,
    banks; it doesn't matter.
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    The transition that is happening now is
    the shift from power-controlled currency
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    towards MANY currencies
    controlled by the citizenry.
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    Everywhere we begin to hear people say,
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    "Yes, indeed, we can create a currency
    to support this sector of education,
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    or that one, for clean water."
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    In the latter context, people want
    to create social solidarity, and so on.
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    And this whole nascent movement,
    is called "free currencies".
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    And as well as resolving social issues,
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    these free currencies foreshadow
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    an evolution of our species
    of the same magnitude
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    as the invention of language,
    or the invention of writing.
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    That is, we are becoming capable
    capable of creating large groups,
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    small ones, local ones, huge ones,
    specialized or general, it doesn't matter.
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    These communities will soon have
    a language that will give them the ability
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    to understand their own dynamics,
    the dynamics of exchange, of flows.
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    By the way this is the original meaning
    of the word "currency" in English.
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    John Locke considered that "currency
    is the ability to see currents, flows,"
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    and there are thousands of currents
    everywhere around us.
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    Some of them are
    really interesting for us,
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    and we must have the freedom
    to play with them, to see these currents.
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    Now, I would like to share a dream,
    this dream on which I am working.
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    I would like to--
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    I dream that every human being
    can become involved with his or her peers,
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    to the extent of her strength,
    to the best of his ability and talents,
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    without having this momentum stopped
    merely because of a currency shortage,
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    only for that reason.
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    I work, I wish to create the best system
    of sharing and exchanging wealth,
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    and free currencies
    seem to be ideal for this.
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    This system is not one imposed
    on everyone by a few,
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    it is one that people
    will create for themselves,
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    wherever they are, in their own context.
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    This city, that social network,
    this company,
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    this group of people
    sharing the same values.
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    That makes millions of different circles:
    small, large, local, global;
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    each of them must be able to create
    free currencies that will allow trade.
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    Of course I want this system
    to be easy to use, to be fun,
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    and able to work on any mobile phone.
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    We're working on it, we already have
    the first experiments; it works very well.
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    It opens up more than 50%
    of humanity to free currencies.
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    Today, less than 50% of humanity has
    access to currency in this free manner.
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    I wish that-- I dream that
    you'll leave this auditorium
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    with this little seed inside, thinking,
    "Currency is a citizen's right."
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    And everyone here in this room can do it.
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    By the way, already in this very room,
    a whole potential economy can start.
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    If you want to do it,
    that's it, it can start.
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    Maybe even TED itself,
    this huge exchange of ideas, of talents,
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    of people who share
    and disseminate ideas everywhere,
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    maybe this can be an extraordinary
    starting point for free currencies, too.
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    Once free currencies are
    everywhere, then you will choose.
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    The old, exclusive currency,
    that you have to pay for,
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    or multiple free currencies,
    that are citizen-based, and free to use?
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    In order to bring this dream about,
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    I work on two levels:
    first, a technical level.
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    There's technology to build,
    software and code need to be written.
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    You can also visit a website
    afterwards, if you want,
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    that will direct you to everything,
    called TheTransitioner.org.
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    Sorry, we work in English:
    that's TheTransitioner.org.
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    where you can easily find information.
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    Then beyond technology,
    beyond software code, protocols,
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    user interfaces, cell phones,
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    I also made a personal choice,
    which is to abandon money,
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    in order to become "rich".
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    That is, to become rich without money,
    but, of course, with free currencies.
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    And when I say "rich", it's not
    in the consumer sense of it,
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    but in its most profound meaning:
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    rich in relationships,
    and also in the material sense.
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    I have spoken a little
    about this misery in the world,
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    but I don't speak about it
    only in a theoretical way
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    as I have met with this misery myself.
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    I have earned money, I've inherited it,
    I've had pocket money,
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    and I've stolen it
    at one period of my life.
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    I myself have been in this predatory mode,
    which sent me to prison twice.
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    I found, I saw that most people
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    in prison, experiencing incarceration,
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    were people like me, who had
    predatory relationships with money,
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    who stole it, or were involved
    in drugs, break-ins, etc.
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    Traveling as I do in the world,
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    I've learned that in fact, true misery,
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    the true humiliation of a human being is
    not about not having access to something.
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    It is above all not to be able to give.
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    And now, today, we have the means
    to change that, precisely because
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    of all this work on the economy,
    that the media doesn't talk about.
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    Tomorrow's world won't be
    the fruit of our reactions,
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    it will be the fruit of our creations.
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    We're working on it; we need
    one another to complete the work.
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    We are a small global team,
    very determined, and we need your support.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    Host: Jean-François! (Applause)
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    I took the x from TEDx, so I no longer
    have to pronounce "TEDex".
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    I exchanged it for a thousand thanks,
    and now I give it to you.
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    JFN: Thanks! And they say that x
    is valuable, so thank you.
  • 13:46 - 13:47
    (Applause)
Title:
Free currencies | Jean-François Noubel | TEDxParis
Description:

This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences.

Jean-François Noubel speaks on free currencies and the end of money.

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Video Language:
French
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
13:54

English subtitles

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