-
In a decaying society, Art
-
if it is truthful, must also reflect decay.
-
And unless it wants to break faith with its social function
-
Art must show the world as changeable.
-
And help to change it.
-
-Ernst Fischer
-
Deadly riots over the government's
-
plan to avoid defaulting on its loans...
-
is that the unemployment keeps
-
rising and it has to keep rising
-
just because we have an excess supply of goods...
-
this is all borrowed money...
-
and that debt is owned by banks in other countries...
-
M-O-N-E-Y, in the form of a convenient personal loan...
-
... filter cigarette that delivers the taste...
-
45 malt liquor... Are You Hot?!...
-
is the US planning to bomb Iran?...
-
...America is sponsoring terror attacks in Iran...
-
Now, my grandmother was a wonderful person.
-
She taught me how to play the game Monopoly.
-
She understood that the name of the game is to acquire.
-
She would accumulate everything she could and
-
eventually, she became the master of the board.
-
And then she would always say the same thing to me.
-
She would look at me and she would say:
-
“One day, you'll learn to play the game.”
-
One summer I played Monopoly almost every day, all day long
-
and that summer, I learned to play the game.
-
I came to understand that the only way to win
-
is to make a total commitment to acquisition.
-
I came to understand that money and possessions...
-
that's the way that you keep score.
-
And by the end of that summer
-
I was more ruthless than my grandmother.
-
I was ready to bend the rules if I had to, to win that game...
-
and I sat down with her to play that fall.
-
I took everything she had. I watched her
-
give her last dollar and quit in utter defeat.
-
And then she had one more thing to teach me.
-
Then she said:
-
“Now it all goes back in the box.
-
All those houses and hotels.
-
All the railroads and utility companies...
-
All that property and all that wonderful money...
-
Now it all goes back in the box.
-
None of it was really yours.
-
You got all heated up about it for a while.
-
But it was around a long time before you sat down at the board
-
and it will be here after you're gone - players come - players go.
-
Houses and cars...
-
Titles and clothes...
-
Even your body.”
-
Because the fact is that everything I clutch and consume and hoard
-
is going to go back in the box and I'm going to lose it all.
-
So you have to ask yourself
-
when you finally get the ultimate promotion
-
when you have made the ultimate purchase
-
when you buy the ultimate home
-
when you have stored up financial security
-
and climbed the ladder of success to the
-
highest rung you can possibly climb it...
-
and the thrill wears off
-
- and it will wear off -
-
Then what?
-
How far do you have to walk down that road
-
before you see where it leads?
-
Surely you understand
-
it will never be enough.
-
So you have to ask yourself the question:
-
What matters?
-
They're Hot!
-
They're Rich!
-
And They're Spoiled!
-
America's #1 Show is Back!
-
Gentle Machine Productions Presents
-
A Peter Joseph Film
-
When I was a young man
-
growing up in New York City
-
I refused to pledge allegiance to the flag.
-
Of course I was sent to the principal's office.
-
And he asked me 'Why don't you want to Pledge Allegiance?
-
Everybody does!'
-
I said, 'Everybody once believed the earth was flat
-
but that doesn't make it so.'
-
I explained that America owed everything it has
-
to other cultures
-
and other nations
-
and that I would rather pledge allegiance
-
to the earth
-
and everyone on it.
-
Needless to say, it wasn't long
-
before I left school entirely
-
and I set up a lab in my bedroom.
-
There I began to learn about science
-
and nature.
-
I realized then
-
that the universe is governed by laws
-
and that the human being
-
along with society itself
-
was not exempt from these laws.
-
Then came the crash of 1929.
-
Which began what we now call
-
“The Great Depression”.
-
I found it difficult to understand why millions
-
were out of work, homeless, starving
-
while all the factories were sitting there.
-
The resources were unchanged.
-
It was then that I realized
-
that the rules of the economic game
-
were inherently invalid.
-
Shortly after came World War II
-
where various nations took turns
-
systematically destroying each other.
-
I later calculated that all the destruction
-
and wasted resources
-
spent on that war
-
could have easily provided for every
-
human need on the planet.
-
Since that time I have watched humanity
-
set the stage for its own extinction.
-
I have watched as the precious finite resources
-
are perpetually wasted and destroyed
-
in the name of profit and free-markets.
-
I have watched the social values of society be reduced
-
into a base artificiality of materialism
-
and mindless consumption.
-
And I have watched as the monetary powers
-
control the political structure
-
of supposedly free societies.
-
I'm 94 years old now.
-
And I'm afraid my disposition
-
is the same as it was
-
75 years ago.
-
This shit's got to go.
-
[ZEITGEIST]
-
[ZEITGEIST: MOVING FORWARD]
-
[Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful
-
committed citizens can change the world.
-
Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.
-
-Margaret Mead]
-
Part 1: Human Nature
-
So you're a scientist
-
and somewhere along the way, hammered into your head
-
is the inevitable “nature versus nurture”
-
and that's at least up there with Coke versus Pepsi
-
or Greeks versus Trojans.
-
So, nature versus nurture: This, by now
-
utterly over-simplifying view of
-
where influences are
-
influences how a cell deals with
-
an energy crisis up to
-
what makes us who we are on the most individualistic
-
levels of personality.
-
And what you've got is this complete false dichotomy
-
built around nature as deterministic
-
at the very bottom of all the causality.
-
Life is DNA and the code of codes
-
and the Holy Grail, and everything is driven by it....
-
At the other end is a much more
-
social science perspective which is
-
We are 'social organisms'
-
and biology is for slime molds.
-
Humans are free of biology
-
and obviously both views are nonsense.
-
What you see instead is that
-
it is virtually impossible to understand
-
how biology works
-
outside of the context of environment.
-
[It's Genetic]
-
One of the most crazy making
-
yet widespread and
-
potentially dangerous notions is:
-
“Oh, that behavior is genetic”.
-
Now what does that mean?
-
It means all sorts of subtle stuff if you
-
know modern biology, but for most people
-
out there, what it winds-up meaning is:
-
a deterministic view of life;
-
one rooted in biology and genetics;
-
genes equal things that cannot be changed;
-
genes equal things that are
-
inevitable and you might as well not
-
waste resources trying to fix;
-
might as well not put societal energies into trying
-
to improve because it's inevitable and it's unchangeable...
-
and that is sheer nonsense.
-
[Disease]
-
It is widely thought that conditions like
-
ADHD are genetically programmed
-
That conditions like schizophrenia are genetically programmed.
-
The truth is the opposite.
-
Nothing is genetically programmed.
-
There are very rare diseases
-
a small handful
-
extremely sparsely represented in the population
-
that are truly genetically determined.
-
Most complex conditions
-
might have a predisposition that has a genetic component
-
but a predisposition is not the same as a predetermination.
-
The whole search for the source of diseases in the genome
-
was doomed to failure before anybody even thought of it
-
because most diseases are not genetically predetermined.
-
Heart disease, cancers, strokes
-
rheumatoid conditions, autoimmune conditions in general
-
mental health conditions, addictions...
-
none of them are genetically determined.
-
Breast cancer, for example, out of 100 women with breast cancer
-
only seven will carry the breast cancer genes.
-
93 do not
-
and out of 100 women who do have the genes
-
not all of them will get cancer.
-
[Behavior]
-
Genes are not just things that make us behave
-
in a particular way regardless of our environment.
-
Genes give us different ways of responding to our environment.
-
And, in fact, it looks as if some of the early
-
childhood influences and the kind of child rearing
-
affect gene expression
-
actually turning on or off different genes
-
to put you on a different developmental track
-
which may suit the kind of world you've got to deal with.
-
So for example.
-
A study done in Montreal with suicide victims
-
looked at autopsies of the brains of these people
-
and it turned out that if a suicide victim
-
(these are usually young adults)
-
had been abused as a child, the abuse actually
-
caused a genetic change in the brain
-
that was absent in the brains of people who had not been abused.
-
That's an epigenetic effect.
-
“epi” means on top of, so that
-
the epigenetic influence is what happens
-
environmentally to either activate or deactivate certain genes.
-
In New Zealand, there was a study
-
that was done in a town called Dunedin
-
in which a few thousand individuals
-
were studied from birth into their 20s.
-
What they found was that they could identify
-
a genetic mutation, an abnormal gene
-
which did have some relation to
-
the predisposition to commit violence
-
but only if the individual had also
-
been subjected to severe child abuse.
-
In other words, children with this abnormal gene would
-
be no more likely to be violent than anybody else
-
and, in fact, they actually had a lower rate of violence
-
than people with normal genes
-
as long as they weren't abused as children.
-
Great additional example of the ways
-
in which genes are not “be all - end all”.
-
A fancy technique where you can
-
take a specific gene out of a mouse
-
and that mouse and its descendants will not have that gene.
-
You have ”knocked out” that gene.
-
So there's this one gene that encodes
-
for a protein that has something to do
-
with learning and memory and with this fabulous demonstration-
-
you “knock out” that gene and you
-
have a mouse that doesn't learn as well.
-
“Oh! A genetic basis for intelligence!”
-
What was much less appreciated in that landmark study
-
that got picked up by the media left and right
-
is take those genetically impaired mice
-
and raise them in a much more enriched
-
stimulating environment than your normal mice in a lab cage
-
and they completely overcame that deficit.
-
So, when one says in a contemporary sense that
-
“oh, this behavior is genetic”
-
to the extent that that's even a valid sort of phrase to use
-
what you're saying is: there is a
-
genetic contribution to how this
-
organism responds to environment;
-
genes may influence the
-
readiness with which an organism will
-
deal with a certain environmental challenge.
-
You know, that's not the version most people have in their minds
-
and not to be too 'soap-boxing'
-
but run with the old
-
version of “It's genetic!”
-
and it's not that far from the history of eugenics
-
and things of that sort.
-
It's a widespread misconception
-
and it's a potentially fairly dangerous one.
-
One reason that the
-
biological explanation for violence...
-
one reason that hypothesis is
-
potentially dangerous, it's not just misleading
-
it can really do harm...
-
is because if you believe that
-
you could very easily say:
-
“Well, there's nothing we can do
-
to change the predisposition
-
people have to becoming violent;
-
all we can do is punish them - lock them up
-
or execute them
-
but we don't need to worry about changing the
-
social environment or the social preconditions
-
that may lead people to become violent because
-
that's irrelevant'.”
-
The genetic argument allows us the luxury of ignoring
-
past and present historical and social factors
-
and in the words of Louis Menand
-
who wrote in the New Yorker
-
Very astutely, he said:
-
“it's all in the genes... an explanation for the way things are
-
that does not threaten the way things are.
-
Why should someone feel unhappy
-
or engage in antisocial behavior
-
when that person is living in the
-
freest and most prosperous nation on Earth?
-
It can't be the system.
-
There must be a flaw in the wiring somewhere.”
-
Which is a good way of putting it.
-
So, the genetic argument is simply a cop-out
-
which allows us to ignore
-
the social and economic and political factors
-
that, in fact, underlie
-
many troublesome behaviors.
-
[Case Study: Addiction]
-
Addictions are usually
-
considered to be a drug-related issue
-
but looking at it more broadly
-
I define addiction as any behavior
-
that is associated with craving
-
with temporary relief
-
and with long-term negative consequences
-
along with an impairment of control over it so that the person
-
wishes to give it up or promises to do so
-
but can't follow through
-
and when you understand that, you see that
-
there are many more addictions
-
than simply those related to drugs.
-
There's workaholism; addiction to shopping;
-
to the Internet; to video games...
-
There's the addiction to power. People that have power but they
-
want more and more; nothing is ever enough for them.
-
Acquisition - corporations that must own more and more.
-
The addiction to oil
-
or at least to the wealth and to the products made
-
accessible to us by oil.
-
Look at the negative consequences on the environment.
-
We are destroying the very earth that we
-
inhabit for the sake of that addiction.
-
Now, these addictions are far more
-
devastating in their social consequences
-
than the cocaine or heroin habits of my downtown Eastside patients.
-
Yet, they are rewarded and considered to be respectable.
-
The tobacco company executive that shows a higher profit
-
will get a much bigger reward.
-
He doesn't face any negative consequences legally or otherwise.
-
In fact he is a respected member of
-
the board of several other corporations.
-
But, tobacco smoke related diseases
-
kill 5 ½ million people around the world every year.
-
In the United States they kill 400,000 people a year.
-
And these people are addicted to what? To profit.
-
To such a degree that they are addicted
-
that they are actually in denial
-
about the impact of their activities
-
which is typical for addicts, this denial.
-
And that's a respectable one. It's respectable
-
to be addicted to profit, no matter what the cost.
-
So, what is acceptable and what is respectable
-
is a highly arbitrary phenomenon in our society
-
and it seems like the greater the harm
-
the more respectable the addiction.
-
[The Myth]
-
There is a general myth that drugs, in themselves, are addictive.
-
In fact, the war on drugs is predicated on the
-
idea that if you interdict the source of
-
drugs you can deal with addiction that way.
-
Now, if you understand addiction in the broader sense
-
we see that nothing in itself is addictive.
-
No substance, no drug is by itself addictive
-
and no behavior is by itself addictive.
-
Many people can go shopping without becoming shopaholics.
-
Not everyone becomes a food addict.
-
Not everyone who drinks a glass of wine becomes an alcoholic.
-
So the real issue is what makes people susceptible
-
because it's the combination of a susceptible individual
-
and the potentially addictive substance or behavior
-
that makes for the full flowering of addiction.
-
In short, it's not the drug that's addictive
-
it's the question of the susceptibility of the individual
-
to being addicted to a particular substance or behavior.
-
[Environment]
-
If we wish to understand what
-
then makes some people susceptible
-
we actually have to look at the life experience.
-
The old idea, although it's old but it's still
-
broadly held, that addictions are due to some genetic cause
-
is simply scientifically untenable.
-
What the case is actually is that certain life experiences
-
make people susceptible.
-
Life experiences that not only shape the person's
-
personality and psychological needs
-
but also their very brains in certain ways.
-
And that process begins in utero.
-
[Prenatal]
-
It has been shown, for example
-
that if you stress mothers during pregnancy
-
their children are more likely to have
-
traits that predispose them to addictions
-
and that's because development is shaped
-
by the psychological and social environment.
-
So the biology of human beings is very much affected by
-
and programmed by the life experiences beginning in utero.
-
Environment does not begin at birth.
-
Environment begins as soon as you have an environment.
-
As soon as you are a fetus, you are subject to whatever
-
information is coming through mom's circulations.
-
Hormones, levels of nutrients...
-
A great landmark example of this is
-
something called the Dutch Hongerwinter.
-
In 1944, Nazis occupying Holland
-
for a bunch of reasons, they decide to
-
take all the food and divert it to Germany;
-
for three months everybody there was starving.
-
Tens of thousands of people starve to death.
-
What the Dutch hunger winter effect is:
-
if you were a second or third trimester fetus during the starvation
-
your body 'learned' something very unique during that time.
-
As it turns out, second and third trimester is when your body is
-
going about trying to learn about the environment:
-
How menacing of a place is it out there?
-
How plentiful? How much nutrients am I getting
-
by way of mom's circulation?
-
Be a fetus who was starving during that time and your body
-
programs forever after to be
-
really, really stingy with your sugar and fat and
-
what you do is you store every bit of it.
-
Be a Dutch Hunger Winter fetus and half a century later
-
everything else being equal
-
you are more likely to have high blood pressure
-
obesity or metabolic syndrome.
-
That is environment coming in a very unexpected place.
-
You can stress animals in the laboratory when they're pregnant
-
and their offspring will be more
-
likely to use cocaine and alcohol as adults.
-
You can stress human mothers. For example, in a British study
-
women who were abused in pregnancy
-
will have higher levels of
-
the stress hormone cortisol in their placenta at birth
-
and their children are more likely to have conditions that
-
predispose them to addictions by age 7 or 8.
-
So in utero stress already prepares the gun
-
for all kinds of mental health issues.
-
An Israeli study done on children
-
born to mothers who were pregnant
-
prior to the onset of the 1967 war...
-
These women, of course, were very stressed
-
and their offspring have a higher incidence of schizophrenia
-
than the average cohort.
-
So, there is plenty of evidence now that prenatal
-
effects have a huge impact on the developing human being.
-
[Infancy]
-
The point about human development and
-
specifically human brain development
-
is that it occurs mostly under the impact of the environment
-
and mostly after birth.
-
Now, if you compare us to a horse
-
which can run on the first day of life
-
we see that we are very undeveloped.
-
We can't muster that much neurological coordination
-
balance, muscle strength, visual acuity
-
until a year and a half, two years of age.
-
That's because the brain development in the horse
-
happens in the safety of the womb
-
and in the human being, it has to happen after birth
-
and that has to do with simple evolutionary logic.
-
As the head gets larger, which is what makes us into human beings
-
the burgeoning of the forebrain is
-
what creates the human species, actually.
-
At the same time, we walk on two legs. So, our pelvis narrows
-
to accommodate that. So now we
-
have a narrower pelvis, a larger head
-
Bingo! We have to be born prematurely.
-
And that means the brain development that in other animals
-
occurs in utero
-
in us, occurs after birth
-
and much of that under the impact of the environment.
-
The concept of Neural Darwinism simply means
-
that the circuits that get the appropriate input from the environment
-
will develop optimally and the ones that don't
-
will either not develop optimally or perhaps not at all.
-
If you take a child with perfectly good eyes at birth
-
and you put him in a dark room for five years
-
he will be blind thereafter for the rest of his life
-
because the circuits of vision require light waves for their development
-
and without that even the rudimentary
-
circuit's present and active at birth
-
will atrophy and die and new ones will not develop.
-
[Memory]
-
There is a significant way in which
-
early experiences shape adult behavior
-
and even and especially early
-
experiences for which there is no recall memory.
-
It turns out that there are two kinds of memory:
-
there is explicit memory which is recall
-
this is when you can call back facts
-
details, episodes, circumstances.
-
But the structure in the brain which is called the hippocampus
-
which encodes recall memory
-
doesn't even begin to develop fully until a year and a half
-
and it is not fully developed until much later.
-
Which is why hardly anybody has
-
any recall memory prior to 18 months.
-
But there is another kind of
-
memory which is called implicit memory
-
which is, in fact, an emotional memory
-
where the emotional impact and the interpretation the child makes
-
of those emotional experiences are ingrained in the brain
-
in the form of nerve circuits ready to fire
-
without specific recall.
-
So to give you a clear example
-
people who are adopted have a
-
lifelong sense of rejection very often.
-
They can't recall the adoption.
-
They can't recall the separation of the birth mother
-
because there's nothing there to recall with.
-
But the emotional memory of separation and rejection
-
is deeply embedded in their brains.
-
Hence, they are much more likely
-
to experience a sense of rejection
-
and a great emotional upset
-
when they perceive themselves as being rejected
-
by other people.
-
That's not unique to people who are
-
adopted but it is particularly strong in them
-
because of this function of implicit memory.
-
People who are addicted, given all the
-
research literature and in my experience
-
the hard-core addicts virtually were all
-
significantly abused as children
-
or suffered severe emotional loss.
-
Their emotional or implicit memories
-
are those of a world that's not safe
-
and not helpful; caregivers who were not to be trusted
-
and relationships that are not
-
safe enough to open up to vulnerability
-
and hence their responses tend
-
to be to keep themselves separate from
-
really intimate relationships;
-
not to trust caregivers
-
doctors and other people who are trying to help them
-
and generally see the world as an unsafe place...
-
and that is strictly a function of implicit memory
-
which sometimes has to do with incidents they don't even recall.
-
[Touch]
-
Infants who are born premature or often in incubators
-
and various types of gadgetry and
-
machinery for weeks and perhaps months,
-
it's now known that if these
-
children are touched and stroked on the back
-
for just 10 minutes a day that promotes their brain development.
-
So, human touch is essential for development
-
and, in fact, infants who are never picked up will actually die.
-
That is how much of a fundamental
-
need being held is to human beings.
-
In our society, there is an unfortunate tendency
-
to tell parents not to pick up their kids, not to hold them
-
not to pick up babies who are crying for fear of spoiling them
-
or to encourage them to sleep through the night
-
you don't pick them up...
-
which is just the opposite of what the child needs
-
and these children might go back to sleep because they give up
-
and their brains just shut down as a
-
way of defending against the vulnerability
-
of being abandoned really by their parents
-
but their implicit memories will be
-
that of the world that doesn't give a damn.
-
[Childhood]
-
A lot of these differences are structured very early in life.
-
In a way, the parental experience of adversity
-
how tough life is or how easy it is
-
is passed on to children
-
whether through maternal depression
-
or parents being bad tempered with
-
their kids because they have had a hard day
-
or just being too tired at the end of the day...
-
and these have very powerful effects programming
-
children's development, which we know a lot about now
-
But that early sensitivity isn't just an evolutionary mistake.
-
It exists again in many different species.
-
Even in seedlings there's an early adaptive process
-
to the kind of environment they are growing up in
-
but for humans, the adaptation is to the quality of social relations.
-
And so, early life:
-
how nurturing, how much conflict, how much attention you get
-
is a taster of the kind of world you may be growing up in.
-
Are you growing up in a world where
-
you have to fight for what you can get;
-
watch your back; fend for yourself; learn not to trust others?...
-
or are you growing up in a society where you depend on
-
reciprocity, mutuality, cooperation, where empathy is important
-
where your security depends on good relations with other people?...
-
and that needs a very different
-
emotional and cognitive development
-
and that's what the early sensitivity is about
-
and parenting is almost, quite unconsciously
-
a system for passing on that experience to children...
-
of the kind of world they are in.
-
The great British child psychiatrist, DW Winnicott, said
-
that fundamentally, two things can go wrong in childhood.
-
One is when things happen that shouldn't happen
-
and then things that should happen but don't.
-
In the first category, is the dramatic, abusive
-
and abandonment experiences of my
-
downtown Eastside patients and of many addicts.
-
That's what shouldn't happen but did.
-
But then there is the non-stressed
-
attuned, non-distracted attention
-
of the parent that every child needs
-
that very often children don't get.
-
They're not abused. They are not neglected
-
and they're not traumatized
-
but what should happen
-
the presence of the emotionally available nurturing parent
-
just is not available to them because of the
-
stresses in our society and the parenting environment.
-
The psychologist Allan Surer calls that "Proximal Abandonment"
-
when the parent is physically present
-
but emotionally absent.
-
I have spent...
-
roughly the last 40 years of my life
-
working with the most violent of people our society produces:
-
murderers, rapists and so on.
-
In an attempt to understand what causes this violence.
-
I discovered that the most violent of the criminals in our prisons
-
had themselves been victims
-
of a degree of child abuse that was beyond the scale of
-
what I ever thought of applying the term child abuse to.
-
I had no idea of the depth
-
of the depravity with which children in our society
-
are all too often treated.
-
The most violent people I saw were themselves the survivors
-
of their own attempted murder often at the hands of their parents
-
or other people in their social environment
-
or were the survivors of family members who had been killed
-
their closest family members, by other people.
-
The Buddha argued that everything depends on everything else.
-
He says 'the one contains the many and the many contains the one'.
-
That you can't understand anything in isolation from its environment.
-
The leaf contains the sun, the sky and the earth, obviously.
-
This has now been shown to be true, of course
-
all around and specifically when it comes to human development.
-
The modern scientific term for it
-
is the "bio psycho social" nature of human development
-
which says that the biology of human beings
-
depends very much on their interaction with
-
the social and psychological environment.
-
Specifically, the psychiatrist and researcher
-
Daniel Siegel at the University of California, Los Angeles, UCLA
-
has coined a phrase “Interpersonal Neurobiology”
-
which means to say that the way
-
that our nervous system functions
-
depends very much on our personal relationships.
-
In the first place with the parenting caregivers and in the
-
second place with other important attachment figures in our lives
-
and in the third-place, with our entire culture.
-
So that you can't separate the
-
neurological functioning of a human being
-
from the environment in which he or she grew up in
-
and continues to exist in
-
and this is true throughout the lifecycle.
-
It's particularly true when you are
-
dependent and helpless when your brain is developing
-
but it's true even in adults and even at the end of life.
-
[Culture]
-
Human beings have lived in almost every kind of society.
-
From the most egalitarian... hunting and gathering societies
-
seem to have been very egalitarian
-
for instance, based on food sharing, gift exchange...
-
Small bands of people living predominately
-
off of foraging and a little bit of hunting
-
predominantly among people you have
-
at the least, known your entire life
-
if not surrounded by third cousins or closer;
-
in a world in which there is a great
-
deal of fluidity between different groups;
-
in a world which there is not a
-
whole lot in terms of material culture...
-
this is how humans have spent most of their hominid history.
-
And no surprise, that makes for a very different world.
-
One of the things you get as a result of that is far less violence.
-
Organized group violence is not
-
something that occurred at that time
-
of human history and that seems quite clear.
-
So where did we go wrong?
-
Violence is not universal.
-
It is not symmetrically distributed throughout the human race.
-
There is a huge variation in the amount of violence in different societies.
-
There are some societies that have virtually no violence.
-
There are others that destroy themselves.
-
Some of the Anabaptist religious
-
groups that are complete strict pacifists
-
like the Amish, the Mennonites, the Hutterites...
-
among some of these groups, the Hutterites
-
there are no recorded cases of homicide.
-
During our major wars, like World War II
-
where people were being drafted
-
they would refuse to serve in the military.
-
They would go to prison rather than serve in the military
-
In the Kibbutzim in Israel
-
the level of violence is so low that the criminal courts there
-
will often send violent offenders
-
people who have committed crimes
-
to live on the Kibbutzim in order to
-
learn how to live a non-violent life...
-
because that's the way people live there.
-
So, we are amply shaped by society.
-
Our societies, in the broader sense including our theological
-
our metaphysical, our linguistic influences, etc.
-
our societies help shape us as to whether or not we think
-
life is basically about sin or about beauty;
-
whether the afterlife will carry a price for
-
how we live our lives or if it's irrelevant.
-
In a broad sort of way different large societies could
-
be termed as individualistic or
-
collectivist and you get very different people
-
and different mindsets and I suspect
-
different brains coming along with that.
-
We, in America, are in one of the most individualistic of societies.
-
With capitalism being a system that allows you to go
-
higher and higher up a potential pyramid and
-
the deal is that it comes with fewer and fewer safety nets.
-
By definition, the more stratified a society is
-
the fewer people you have as peers - the fewer people with whom
-
you have symmetrical, reciprocal relationships -
-
and instead, all you have are differing spots and endless hierarchies...
-
A world in which you have few reciprocal partners
-
is a world with a lot less altruism.
-
[Human Nature]
-
So, this brings us to a total impossible juncture which is
-
to try to make sense in perspective science...
-
as to what that nature is of human nature.
-
You know, on a certain level
-
the nature of our nature is not to be
-
particularly constrained by our nature.
-
We come up with more social
-
variability than any species out there.
-
More systems of belief, of styles of family structures
-
of ways of raising children. The capacity
-
for variety that we have is extraordinary.
-
In a society which is predicated on competition
-
and really, very often, the ruthless exploitation
-
of one human being by another
-
the profiteering off of other people's problems
-
and very often the creation of
-
problems for the purpose of profiteering
-
the ruling ideology will very often justify that behavior
-
by appeals to some fundamental and unalterable human nature.
-
So the myth in our society is
-
that people are competitive by nature
-
and that they are individualistic and that they're selfish.
-
The real reality is quite the opposite.
-
We have certain human needs.
-
The only way that you can talk about human nature concretely
-
is by recognizing that there are certain human needs.
-
We have a human need for companionship and for close contact
-
to be loved, to be attached to, to be accepted
-
to be seen, to be received for who we are.
-
If those needs are met, we develop
-
into people who are compassionate
-
and cooperative and who have empathy for other people.
-
So...
-
the opposite, that we often see in our
-
society is, in fact, a distortion of human nature
-
precisely because so few people have their needs met.
-
So, yes you can talk about human nature
-
but only in the sense of basic human needs
-
that are instinctively evoked
-
or I should say, certain human needs
-
that lead to certain traits if they are met
-
and a different set of traits if they are denied.
-
So...
-
when we recognize the fact that the human organism
-
which has a great deal of adaptive flexibility
-
allowing us to survive in many different conditions
-
is also rigidly programmed for certain environmental requirements
-
or human needs
-
a social imperative begins to emerge.
-
Just as our bodies require physical nutrients
-
the human brain demands positive forms of environmental stimulus
-
at all stages of development
-
while also needing to be protected
-
from other negative forms of stimulus.
-
And if things that should happen, do not...
-
or if things that shouldn't happen, do...
-
it is now apparent that the door can be opened for not only
-
a cascade of mental and physical diseases
-
but many detrimental human behaviors as well.
-
So, as we turn our perspective now outward
-
and take account for the state of affairs today
-
we must ask the question:
-
Is the condition we have created in the modern world
-
actually supporting our health?
-
Is the bedrock of our socioeconomic
-
system acting as a positive force
-
for human and social development and progress?
-
Or, is the foundational gravitation of our society
-
actually going against the core evolutionary requirements
-
needed to create and maintain
-
our personal and social well-being?
-
[Part II: Social Pathology]
-
So, one might ask where did this all begin?
-
What we have today... really a world in a state of
-
cumulative collapse.
-
[The Market]
-
You get it started with John Locke.
-
And John Locke introduces property.
-
He has three provisos for just private right and property.
-
And the three provisos are:
-
There must be enough left over for others
-
and that you must not let it spoil
-
and that you, most of all, must mix your labor with it.
-
It seems justified- you mix your labor with the world
-
then you are entitled to the product
-
and as long as there's enough left over for others
-
and as long as it doesn't spoil
-
and you don't allow anything to go to waste then that's okay.
-
He spends a long time on this and his famous treatise of government
-
and it's since been the canonical text
-
for economic and political and legal understanding.
-
It is still the classic text that's studied.
-
Well - after he gives the provisos
-
and you're almost thinking at the time whether you
-
are for private property or not
-
he has given a very good plausible and powerful defense
-
of private property here...
-
Well, he drops them!
-
He drops them like that. Right in one sentence.
-
He says, 'Well, once the introduction
-
of money came in by men's tacit consent
-
then it became...'
-
and he doesn't say all the provisos are canceled or erased-
-
but that's what happens.
-
So, now we have not
-
product and your property earned by your own labor-
-
oh no- money buys labor now.
-
There is no longer consideration
-
whether there is enough left over for others;
-
there is no longer consideration of whether it spoils
-
because he says money is like
-
silver and gold and gold can't spoil
-
and therefore money can't be responsible for waste...
-
which is ridiculous. We are not talking about money
-
and silver, we are talking about what its effects are.
-
It's one non sequitur after another.
-
Just the most startling
-
logical legerdemain that he gets away with here
-
but it fits the interests of capital owners.
-
Then Adam Smith comes along and what he adds
-
is the religion to this...
-
Locke started with God made it all this way
-
this is God's right
-
and now we get also with Smith
-
saying 'it's not only God's...'
-
well, he's not actually saying this but
-
this is what's happening philosophically, in principle
-
he's saying that 'it is not only a question of private property...'
-
That's all now 'presupposed'- It's Given!
-
And that there's 'money investors that buy labor' – Given!
-
There's no limit to how much they can buy of other men's labor
-
how much they can accumulate, how much 'inequality'-
-
that's all given now.
-
And so he comes along and what his big idea is
-
and again it's just introduced in parentheses, in passing...
-
You know, when people put out goods for sale - the supply
-
and other people buy them - the demand and so forth
-
how do we have supply equaling demand
-
or demand equaling supply?
-
how can they come into equilibrium?
-
and that is one of the central notions of economics
-
is how do they come into equilibrium...
-
and he says: it's the “Invisible Hand of the Market”
-
that brings them into equilibrium.
-
So, now we have "God is actually imminent”.
-
He just didn't give the rights to property
-
and all its wherewithal and its "natural rights"
-
regarding what Locke said...
-
now we have the system itself as "God".
-
In fact, Smith says, when he talks
-
and you have to read the whole of the
-
Wealth of Nations' to find this quote.
-
He says: 'the scantiness of subsistence
-
sets limits to the reproduction of the poor
-
and that nature can deal with this in no other way
-
than elimination of their children.'
-
So he anticipated evolutionary theory in the worst sense...
-
this is well before Darwin.
-
And so he called them the 'Race of Laborers'.
-
So you can see: there was inherent racism built-in here
-
there was an inherent life blindness to kill
-
innumerable children
-
and he thought: 'that's the Invisible Hand making supply
-
meet demand and demand meet supply.'
-
So, see how wise "God" is?
-
So you can see a lot of the really virulent
-
life destructive, eco-genocidal things
-
that are going on now have, in a way,
-
a 'thought gene' back in Smith too.
-
When we reflect on the original concept of
-
the so-called free market - capitalist system
-
as initiated by early economic philosophers
-
such as Adam Smith
-
we see that the original intent of a “market”
-
was based around real, tangible, life supporting goods for trade.
-
Adam Smith never fathomed that the most
-
profitable economic sector on the planet
-
would eventually be in the arena of financial trading
-
or so-called investment
-
where money itself is simply
-
gained by the movement of other money
-
in an arbitrary game which holds
-
zero productive merit to society.
-
Yet, regardless of Smith's intent
-
the door for such seemingly anomalous advents
-
was left wide open by one fundamental tenet of this theory:
-
Money is treated as a Commodity, in and of itself.
-
Today, in every economy of the world
-
regardless of the social system they claim
-
money is pursued for the sake of money and nothing else.
-
The underlying idea, which was mysteriously qualified
-
by Adam Smith with his religious declaration of the
-
'Invisible Hand'
-
is that the narrow, self-interested pursuit
-
of this fictional commodity
-
will somehow magically manifest
-
human and social well-being and progress.
-
The reality is that the monetary incentive interest
-
or what some have termed the:“Money Sequence of Value”
-
has now completely decoupled from the foundational
-
'life interest', which could be termed the
-
'Life Sequence of Value.'
-
What has happened is that there is a complete confusion
-
in economic doctrine
-
between those two sequences.
-
They think that the Money Sequence of Value
-
delivers the Life Sequence of Value
-
and that's why they say if more goods are sold
-
If GDP's rise and so forth...
-
there would be more enhanced well-being
-
and we could take the GDP as being our basic layer indicator
-
of social health...
-
Well, there you see the confusion.
-
It's talking about Money Sequences of Value
-
that is, all the receipts and all the revenues that are
-
derived from selling goods
-
and they're confusing that with life reproduction.
-
So, you have built right into this thing from the beginning
-
a complete conflation of the money
-
and life sequences of value.
-
So, we are dealing with a kind of structured delusion
-
which becomes more and more deadly
-
as the money sequence decouples from producing
-
anything at all.
-
So, it's a system disorder
-
and the system disorder seems to be fatal.
-
[Welcome to the Machine]
-
In society today, you seldom hear anyone speak
-
of the progress of their country or society
-
in terms of their physical well-being, state of happiness,
-
trust or social stability.
-
Rather, the measures are presented to us
-
through economic abstractions.
-
We have the gross domestic product, the consumer price index,
-
the value of the stock market, rates of inflation...
-
and so on.
-
But does this tell us anything of real value
-
as to the quality of people's lives?
-
No. All of these measures have to do with
-
the money sequence itself and nothing more.
-
For example, the Gross Domestic Product of a country
-
is a measure of the value of goods and services sold.
-
This measure is claimed to correlate to the
-
“standard of living” of a country's people.
-
In the United States health care accounted for over
-
17% of GDP in 2009
-
amounting to over 2.5 trillion spent.
-
Hence, creating a positive effect on this economic measure.
-
And, based on this logic
-
it would be even better for the US economy
-
if health care services increased more so...
-
perhaps to 3 trillion dollars... or 5 trillion
-
since that would create more growth
-
more jobs and hence boasted by economists
-
as a rise in their country's standard of living.
-
But wait a minute.
-
What do health care services actually represent?
-
Well, SICK AND DYING PEOPLE.
-
That's right- the more unhealthy people there are in America
-
the better the economy.
-
Now, that is not an exaggeration or a cynical perspective.
-
In fact, if we step back far enough
-
you will realize that the GDP
-
not only doesn't reflect real public or social health
-
on any tangible level
-
it is, in fact, mostly a measure
-
of industrial inefficiency
-
and social degradation.
-
And the more you see it rise, the worse things are becoming
-
with respect to personal, social
-
and environmental integrity.
-
You have to create problems to create profit.
-
There is no profit under the current paradigm
-
in saving lives, putting balance on this planet
-
having justice and peace or anything else.
-
There is just no profit there.
-
There's an old saying-
-
Pass a law and create a business'.
-
Whether you are creating a business for a lawyer or whatever.
-
So, crime does create
-
business just like destruction creates
-
business in Haiti.
-
We have now roughly 2,000,000 people incarcerated
-
in this country (USA)
-
and of those many are in prisons run
-
by private corporations:
-
Corrections Corporation of America, Wackenhut
-
who trade their stock on Wall Street
-
based upon how many people are in jail.
-
Now that's sickness.
-
But that is a reflection of what
-
this economic paradigm calls for.
-
So what exactly does this economic paradigm call for?
-
What is it that keeps our economic system going?
-
Consumption.
-
Or more accurately- Cyclical Consumption.
-
When we break down the
-
foundation of classic market economics
-
we are left with a pattern of monetary exchange
-
that simply cannot be allowed to stop
-
or even substantially slowed
-
if the society as we know it
-
is to remain operational.
-
There are three main actors on the economic stage:
-
the employee, the employer
-
and the consumer.
-
The employee sells labor to the employer for income.
-
The employer sells its production services, and hence goods,
-
to the consumer for income
-
and the consumer, of course, is simply another role
-
of the employer and employee
-
spending back into the system
-
to enable the cyclical consumption to continue.
-
In other words, the global market system is based on
-
the assumption that there will always be enough
-
product demand in a society
-
to move enough money around at a rate
-
which can keep the consumption process going.
-
And the faster the rate of consumption
-
the more so-called economic growth is assumed
-
and so the machine goes...
-
But, hold on-
-
I thought an economy was meant to, I don't know...
-
“Economize”?
-
Doesn't the very term have to do with preservation
-
and efficiency and a reduction of waste?
-
So how does our system, which demands consumption
-
and the more the better, efficiently preserve
-
or “Economize” at all?
-
Well... it doesn't.
-
The intent of the market system is, in fact, the exact opposite
-
of what a real economy is supposed to do,
-
which is efficiently and conservatively orient
-
the materials for production and distribution
-
of life supporting goods.
-
We live on a finite planet, with finite resources
-
where, for example, the oil we utilize took
-
millions of years to develop...
-
where the minerals we use took billions of years to develop.
-
So...having a system that deliberately promotes
-
the acceleration of consumption
-
for the sake of so-called “economic growth”
-
is pure ecocidal insanity.
-
Absence of waste, that's what efficiency is.
-
Absence of waste?
-
This system is more wasteful than all the other
-
existing systems in the history of the planet.
-
Every level of life organization and life system
-
is in a state of crisis and challenge
-
and decay or collapse.
-
No peer-reviewed journal in the last 30 years
-
will tell you anything different:
-
that is that every life system is in decline
-
as well as social programs...
-
as well as our water access.
-
Try to name any means of life that
-
isn't threatened and endangered...
-
You can't.
-
There really isn't one and that's very, very despairing.
-
But we haven't even figured out the causal mechanism.
-
We don't want to face the causal mechanism.
-
We just want to go on. You know that's where insanity is
-
where you keep doing the same thing over and over again
-
even though it clearly doesn't work.
-
So you're really
-
dealing with not an economic system
-
but I would go so far as to say an anti-economic system.
-
[The Anti-Economy]
-
There is an old saying that the competitive
-
market model seeks to
-
“create the best possible goods at the lowest possible prices”.
-
This statement is essentially the incentive concept
-
which justifies market competition
-
based on the assumption that the result
-
is the production of higher quality goods.
-
If I was going to build myself a table from scratch
-
I would naturally build it out of the best
-
most durable materials possible, right?
-
With the intent for it to last as long as possible.
-
Why would I want to make something poor
-
knowing I would have to eventually do it again
-
and expend more materials and more energy?
-
Well, as rational as that may seem in the physical world
-
when it comes to the market world
-
it is not only explicitly irrational
-
it is not even an option.
-
It is technically impossible to produce
-
the best of anything
-
if a company is to maintain a competitive edge
-
and hence remain affordable to the consumer.
-
Literally everything created and set for sale
-
in the global economy is immediately inferior
-
the moment it is produced
-
for it is a mathematical impossibility
-
to make the most scientifically advanced, efficient
-
and strategically sustainable products.
-
This is due to the fact that the market system
-
requires that “cost efficiency”
-
or the need to reduce expenses
-
exists at every stage of production.
-
From the cost of labor, to the cost
-
of materials and packaging and so on.
-
This competitive strategy, of course
-
is to make sure the public buys their goods
-
rather than from a competing producer
-
...which is doing the exact same thing
-
to also make their goods both competitive and affordable.
-
This immutably wasteful consequence of the system
-
could be termed: Intrinsic Obsolescence.
-
However, this is only one part of a larger problem:
-
A fundamental governing principle of market economics
-
one you will not find in any textbook, by the way
-
- is the following:
-
“Nothing produced can be allowed to maintain a lifespan
-
longer than what can be endured
-
in order to continue cyclical consumption.”
-
In other words, it is critical that stuff breakdown,
-
fail and expire within a certain amount of time.
-
This is termed - “Planned obsolescence”.
-
Planned obsolesce is the backbone of the underlying market
-
strategy of every goods producing corporation in existence.
-
While very few, of course
-
would admit to such a strategy outright
-
what they do is mask it within the
-
Intrinsic Obsolescence phenomenon just discussed,
-
while often ignoring, or even suppressing
-
new advents in technology
-
which might create a more sustainable, durable good.
-
So, if it wasn't wasteful enough
-
that the system inherently cannot allow the most
-
durable and efficient goods to be produced,
-
Planned Obsolescence deliberately
-
recognizes that the longer any good is in operation
-
the worse it is for sustaining cyclical consumption
-
and hence the market system itself.
-
In other words, product sustainability
-
is actually inverse to economic growth
-
and hence there is a direct, reinforced incentive
-
to make sure life spans are short
-
of any given good produced.
-
And, in fact, the system cannot operate any other way.
-
One glance at the sea of landfills now spreading across
-
the world show the obsolescence reality.
-
There are now billions of cheaply made cell phones
-
computers and other technology
-
each full of precious, difficult to mine materials
-
such as gold, coltan, copper...
-
now rotting in vast piles
-
usually due to the mere malfunction or obsolescence
-
of small parts which, in a conservative society
-
could likely be fixed or updated
-
and the life of the good extended.
-
Unfortunately, as efficient as that may seem
-
in our physical reality, living on a
-
finite planet with finite resources,
-
it is explicitly inefficient, with respect to the market.
-
To put into a phrase:
-
“Efficiency, Sustainability, and
-
Preservation are the enemies of our economic system” .
-
Likewise, just a physical goods need to be constantly
-
produced and reproduced
-
regardless of their environmental impact
-
the service industry operates with an equal rational.
-
The fact is, there is no monetary benefit
-
to resolving any problems
-
which are currently being serviced.
-
At the end of the day
-
the last thing the medical establishment really wants
-
is the curing of diseases such as cancer
-
which would eliminate countless jobs and trillions in revenue.
-
And since we are on the subject...
-
Crime and Terrorism in this system are good!
-
Well, at least economically...
-
for it is employing police
-
generating hi-value commodities for security
-
not to mention the value of prisons
-
that are privately owned - for profit.
-
And how about war?
-
The war industry in America is a huge driver of GDP -
-
one of the most profitable industries -
-
producing weapons of death and destruction.
-
The favorite game of this industry is to blow things up
-
and then can go and rebuild them, for profit.
-
We saw this with the windfall billion dollar
-
contracts made from the Iraq war.
-
The bottom line is that socially negative
-
attributes of society
-
have become positively rewarded ventures for industry
-
and any interest in problem resolution
-
or environmental sustainability and conservation
-
is intrinsically counter to economic sustainability.
-
And this is why
-
every time you see the GDP rise in any country
-
you are witnessing an increase in necessity
-
whether real or contrived
-
and by definition, a necessity is rooted in inefficiency.
-
Hence, increased necessity means increased inefficiency.
-
[Value System Disorder]
-
The American dream is based on
-
the rampant consumerism.
-
It is based upon the fact that
-
mainstream media and
-
especially commercial advertising
-
- all corporations who need this infinite growth -
-
have convinced us or brainwashed
-
most people in America and the world
-
that we have to have X number of material possessions
-
and the possibility of gaining infinitely more
-
material possessions, in order to be happy.
-
That's just not true.
-
So why do people continue to buy in this way
-
which is ultimately eco-genocidal
-
in its systemic effects cumulatively?
-
And it just is classical & operant conditioning.
-
You simply put inputs of conditioning into the organism
-
and you have outputs of desired behaviors
-
or goals or objectives.
-
And it has all the resources of technology
-
and they boast about how they
-
get into the minds of infants
-
what they hear is already making them
-
conditioned to the brand.
-
Then you see, that's how
-
people have been such fools.
-
They have been taught to be fools.
-
It's a value system disorder.
-
You know, if there is any testament to the plasticity
-
of the human mind.
-
If there is any proof to how malleable
-
human thought is and how easily
-
conditioned and guided people can become
-
based on the nature of their environmental stimulus
-
and what it reinforces:
-
the world of commercial advertising is the proof.
-
You have to stand in awe
-
at the level of brainwashing
-
where these programmed robots known as "consumers"
-
wander the landscape
-
only to walk into a store and spend, say
-
4000$ on a handbag
-
that likely cost 10 dollars to make
-
in a sweatshop overseas.
-
Only for the brand status it supposedly
-
represents in the culture.
-
Or perhaps the ancient communal traditions
-
which increase trust and cohesiveness in society -
-
which have now been hijacked by acquisitive
-
materialistic values where now we annually
-
exchange useless crap a few times a year.
-
And we might wonder why so many today have a
-
compulsion to shopping and acquisition
-
when it is clear that they have conditioned from childhood
-
to expect material goods
-
as a sign of their status with friends and family.
-
The fact is, the foundation of any society
-
are the values that support its operation
-
and our society, as it exists
-
can only operate if our values support
-
the conspicuous consumption it
-
requires to continue the market system.
-
75 years ago consumption in America
-
and much of the 1st world was half
-
of what we see today, per person.
-
Today's new consumer culture
-
has been manufactured and imposed
-
due to the very real need for higher
-
and higher levels of consumption.
-
And this is why most corporations now spend
-
more money on advertising, than the actual process
-
of product creation itself.
-
They work diligently to create a false need for you to fill.
-
And it happens to work.
-
[The “Economists”]
-
You know economists, in fact, are not economists at all.
-
They're propagandists of money value
-
and you will find that all of their
-
models basically get down to token
-
exchanges that are true to profit
-
of one side or both sides or whatever
-
but they are completely disconnected from the actually
-
existing world of reproduction.
-
In Ohio, an old man failed to pay his electric bill
-
you may be familiar with the case
-
and the electric company turned off the electricity and he died.
-
The reason they turned it off was
-
because it wouldn't have been profitable
-
for them to keep it on because he didn't pay his bill.
-
Do you believe that was right?
-
The responsibility really lies not on
-
the electric company for turning it off
-
but on those of this man's neighbors and friends
-
and associates
-
who were not charitable enough
-
to enable him, as an individual
-
to meet the electric bill.
-
HMMMMMM...
-
Did I hear that right?
-
Did he just say the death of a man
-
caused by not having money
-
was the responsibility of...
-
other people...
-
or, in effect, charity?
-
Well then, I guess we're gonna need
-
a whole lot of infomercials, little miserable
-
coin slot donations for bodega counters
-
and a bunch of pickle jars
-
for the billion people now starving to death
-
on this planet...
-
because of the very system Milton Friedman promotes.
-
Whether you are dealing with the philosophies of
-
Milton Friedman, F.A. Hyack
-
John Maynard Keynes, Ludwig von Mises
-
or any other major market economist
-
the basis of rationale
-
rarely leaves the money sequence.
-
It is like a religion.
-
Consumption analysis, stabilization policies
-
deficit spending, aggregate demand...
-
it exists as a never ending, self-referring
-
self-rationalizing circle of discourse
-
where universal human need, natural resources
-
and any form of physical life supporting efficiency
-
is ruled out by default
-
and replaced by the singular notion that humans
-
seeking advantage over each other for money alone
-
motivated by their own, narrow self-interest
-
will magically create a sustainable, healthy, balanced society.
-
There is no life coordinate in this whole theory
-
this whole doctrine.
-
What are they doing?
-
What they are doing is tracking the money sequences.
-
That's all it is, is tracking money sequences
-
presupposing everything that matters.
-
One: There is no life coordinates...
-
whoa... no life coordinates!
-
Two: That all the agents are
-
self-maximizing preferences seekers.
-
That is, they think of nothing other than themselves
-
and what they can get most for themselves.
-
That's the ruling notion of rationality:
-
self-maximizing choice
-
and the only thing that they are interested in self-maximizing
-
is money or commodities.
-
Well, where does social relations come in?
-
It doesn't, except in the exchange to self-maximize.
-
Where do our natural resources come in?
-
They don't, except to exploit.
-
Where does the family come in as being able to survive?
-
It doesn't. They have to have
-
money in order to purchase any good.
-
Well, shouldn't an economy
-
deal somewhere with human need?
-
Isn't that what the fundamental issue is?
-
Oh, "need" isn't even in your lexicon.
-
You dissolve it into "wants"...
-
and what is a want? That means
-
money demand that wants to buy.
-
Well, if it's money demand that wants to buy
-
it has nothing to do with need
-
because maybe the person has no money demand
-
and desperately needs, say, water supply.
-
Or, it may be money demand wants a gold toilet seat.
-
Well, where does it all go?
-
To the gold toilet seat.
-
And you call this economics?
-
Really, when one thinks of it
-
it's got to be the most bizarre
-
delusion in the history of human thought.
-
[Monetary System]
-
Now- so far we have focused on the market system.
-
But this system is actually only
-
half of the global economic paradigm.
-
The other half is the “Monetary System”.
-
While the Market System deals with the interaction of people
-
gaming for profit across the spectrum of labor
-
production and distribution
-
the Monetary System is an underlying set of policies
-
set by financial institutions
-
which create conditions for the
-
market system, among other things.
-
It includes terms we often hear
-
such as interest rates, loans, debt, the money supply
-
inflation, etc.
-
And while you might want to pull your hair out listening
-
to the gibberish coming from the monetary economists:
-
"Modest preemptive actions, can obviate the need
-
of more drastic actions, at a later date."
-
the nature and effect of this
-
system is actually quite simple:
-
Our economy has...
-
or the global economy has
-
three basic things that govern it.
-
One is fractional reserve banking
-
the banks printing money out of nothing.
-
It's also based upon compound interest.
-
When you borrow money, you have to pay back more
-
than you borrowed, which means that you, in effect
-
create money out of thin air
-
again, which has to be serviced by creating still more money.
-
We live in an infinite growth paradigm.
-
The economic paradigm we live in now is a Ponzi scheme.
-
Nothing grows forever.
-
It's not possible.
-
As a great psychologist James Hillman wrote
-
“The only thing that grows in the human body after
-
a certain age is cancer.”
-
It's not just the amount of money that has to keep growing
-
it's the amount of consumers.
-
Consumers to borrow money at interest
-
to generate more money and obviously, that's not possible
-
on a finite planet.
-
People are basically vehicles to just create money
-
which must create more money
-
to keep the whole thing from falling apart
-
which is what's happening right now.
-
There are really only two things anyone needs to know
-
about the monetary system:
-
1: All money is created out of debt.
-
Money is monetized debt
-
whether it materialized from treasury bonds
-
home loan contracts or credit cards.
-
In other words, if all outstanding debt
-
was to be repaid right now
-
there would not be one dollar in circulation.
-
And 2: Interest is charged on virtually all loans made
-
and the money needed to pay back this interest
-
does not exist in the money supply outright.
-
Only the principal is created by the loans
-
and the principal is the money supply.
-
So, if all this debt was to be repaid right now
-
not only would there not be one dollar left in circulation
-
there would be a gigantic amount of money owed
-
that is literally impossible to pay back, for it does not exist.
-
The consequence of all of this is that two things are inevitable:
-
Inflation
-
and Bankruptcy.
-
As far as inflation, this can be seen as a historical trend
-
in virtually every country today
-
and easily tied to its cause
-
which is the perpetual increase of the money supply
-
which is required
-
to cover the interest charges and keep the system going.
-
As far as Bankruptcy
-
it comes in the form of debt collapse.
-
This collapse will inevitably occur with a person
-
a business or a country
-
and typically happens when the interest payments
-
are no longer possible to make.
-
But there is a bright side to all of this...
-
well, at least in terms of the market system
-
Because debt creates pressure
-
Debt creates wage slaves.
-
A person in debt is much more likely to take a low wage
-
than a person who isn't
-
hence becoming a cheap commodity
-
so it's great for corporations to have a pool of people
-
that have no financial mobility.
-
But hey - that same idea also goes for entire countries...
-
the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund
-
which mostly serve as proxies for
-
transnational corporate interests
-
give gigantic loans to troubled countries
-
at very high interest rates
-
and then, once the countries are
-
deeply in the hole and can't pay
-
austerity measures are applied
-
the corporations swoop in
-
set up sweatshops and take their natural resources.
-
Now that's market efficiency.
-
But wait – there's more:
-
you see- there's this unique
-
hybrid of the monetary and market system
-
called the stock market
-
which rather than, you know, actually produce anything real
-
they just buy and sell money itself.
-
And when it comes to debt, you know what they do?
-
That's right - they trade it.
-
They actually buy and sell debt for profit.
-
From credit default swaps
-
and collateralized debt obligations for consumer debt
-
to complex derivative schemes used
-
to mask the debt of entire countries
-
such as the collusion of
-
investment bank Goldman Sachs and Greece
-
which nearly collapsed the entire European economy.
-
So when it comes to the stock market and Wall Street
-
we have an entirely new level of insanity
-
born out of the Money Sequence of value.
-
All you need to know about markets
-
was written in an editorial in the Wall Street Journal
-
a couple years ago
-
it was called 'Lessons of the Brain-Damaged Investor".
-
And in this editorial, they explained why
-
people with slight brain damage
-
do better as investors
-
than people with normal brain functionality.
-
Why? Because the slightly
-
brain-damaged person has no empathy.
-
That's the key. If you don't have any empathy
-
you do well as an investor
-
and so Wall Street breeds people who have no empathy.
-
To go in there and to make decisions
-
and to make trades they have no compunction about
-
no thought whatsoever as to how what they are doing
-
might affect their fellow human being.
-
So they breed these robots.
-
These people who have no souls
-
and since they don't even want to pay these people anymore-
-
they are now breeding robots – real robots –
-
real algorithmic traders.
-
Goldman Sachs in the high frequency trading scandal:
-
they put a computer next to the New York Stock Exchange.
-
This computer, this “co-located” computer, as they call it:
-
it front-runs all the trades on the exchange and
-
hits the exchange with volumes of orders
-
in ways that "scalp"
-
pennies and nickels away from the exchange.
-
It's like they're siphoning money all day long.
-
They went one quarter last year 30
-
or 60 straight days without a single down day
-
and made millions of dollars every single day?
-
That statistically impossible!
-
When I worked on Wall Street, the way it works is
-
everyone kicks upstairs to bribes.
-
The brokers bribe to the office manager
-
the office manager bribes to the regional sales manager.
-
The regional sales manager
-
bribes to the national sales manager.
-
It's a common understanding.
-
At Christmas, who gets the biggest bonus at Christmas
-
in an average broker job? The compliance officer.
-
The compliance officer sits there all day long;
-
he's supposed to be making sure you
-
don't violate any of the margin rules
-
and you're "complying" with the law.
-
Of course, yeah, to the extent that
-
you can bribe the compliance officer
-
yeah, that's right, you are complying with the law!
-
So how has fraud become the system?
-
It's no longer a byproduct.
-
It is the system.
-
It's like that old Woody Allen joke. He says:
-
“Doctor, my brother thinks he's a chicken.”
-
And the doctor says, “Take a pill
-
and that should cure the problem.”
-
And he says, “No doctor. You don't understand
-
We need the eggs.”
-
Okay?
-
So, the trading of fraudulent claims back and forth
-
between banks
-
to generate fees
-
to generate bonuses
-
has become the GDP producing growth
-
engine of the United States economy
-
even though they are essentially trading fraudulent claims
-
that there is absolutely no hope of ever paying back.
-
They are processing, generating and re-securitizing nothing.
-
If I write $20 billion on a cocktail napkin
-
and I sell it to J.P. Morgan and J.P. Morgan writes
-
$20 billion on a cocktail napkin
-
and we swap those two cocktail napkins at a bar
-
and we each pay ourselves a quarter of 1% in a fee
-
we make a lot of money for our Christmas bonus.
-
We each have on our books a $20 billion cocktail napkin
-
which has no real value until such time as
-
the system is no longer able to absorb bogus
-
cocktail napkins in which case we go to the government
-
to get bailed out.
-
And because of Wall street and the global stock market
-
there are now conservatively about 700 Trillion dollars
-
of outstanding fraudulent claims-
-
know as derivatives
-
still waiting to collapse.
-
A value amounting to over 10
-
times the gross domestic product
-
of the entire planet.
-
And while we have seen the bailouts of
-
corporations and banks by governments...
-
which, of course, comically borrow
-
their money from banks to begin with.
-
We are now seeing attempts to bailout whole countries
-
by conglomerates of other countries
-
through the International banks.
-
But how do you bailout a planet?
-
There is no country out there that isn't now saturated in debt.
-
The cascade of sovereign debt defaults we have seen
-
can only be the beginning, when the math is taken into account.
-
It has been estimated in the United States alone
-
that income tax would need to be raised to 65%
-
per person just to cover the interest in the near future.
-
Economists are now foreshadowing that within a few decades
-
60% of the countries on the planet will be bankrupt.
-
But hold on-- Let me get this straight.
-
The world is going bankrupt
-
whatever the hell that means
-
because of this idea called "debt"
-
which doesn't even exist in the physical reality.
-
It's only part of a game we've invented...
-
and yet the well being of billions of people
-
is now being compromised.
-
Extreme layoffs - tent cities- accelerating poverty
-
Austerity measures imposed - schools shutting down -
-
child hunger...and other levels of familial deprivation
-
all because of this elaborate fiction...
-
What are we, fucking stupid?!
-
Hey! Hey! Mars- my man.
-
Help a brother out, uh?
-
Grow up, kid.
-
Saturn! What's up man?
-
You remember that smokin' nebula I hooked you up with
-
a while back?
-
uh- listen Earth.
-
We're getting really tired of you.
-
You've been given everything and yet you waste it all.
-
You've got plenty of resources and you know it.
-
Why don't you grow up and learn
-
some responsibility for Christ's sake.
-
You're making your mother miserable.
-
You're on your own, pal.
-
Yeah, whatever.
-
[Public Health]
-
Now, all of this considered...
-
from the waste machine known as the market system-
-
to the debt machine known as the monetary system-
-
hence creating the monetary-market paradigm
-
which defines the global economy today...
-
there is one consequence that runs through
-
the entire machine:
-
Inequality.
-
Whether it is market system which creates a natural
-
gravitation towards monopoly and power consolidation
-
while also generating pockets of wealthy industries
-
that tower over others
-
regardless of utility-
-
such as the fact that top
-
hedge fund managers on wall street
-
now take home over 300 million dollars a year
-
for contributing literally nothing.
-
While a scientist looking for a cure for a disease
-
trying to help humanity
-
might make 60 thousand dollars a year if they're lucky.
-
Or whether it is the monetary system
-
which has class division built right into its structure.
-
For example:
-
If I have 1 million dollars to spare and I put it into a CD
-
at 4% interest-
-
I will make 40,000 dollars a year.
-
No social contribution- no nothing.
-
However, if I'm a lower class person and have to take loans
-
to buy my car or home
-
I am paying in interest which
-
in abstraction
-
is going to pay that millionaire with the 4% CD.
-
This stealing from the poor to pay the rich
-
is a foundational, built in aspect of the monetary system.
-
And it could be labeled “Structural Classism”.
-
Of course, historically, social stratification
-
has always been deemed unfair
-
but obviously accepted overall
-
as now 1% of the population owns 40% of the planet's wealth.
-
But material fairness aside
-
there is something else going on
-
underneath the surface of inequality
-
causing an incredible deterioration in public health as a whole.
-
Well, I think people often are puzzled by the contrast
-
between the material success of our societies
-
- unprecedented levels of wealth -
-
and the many social failings.
-
If you look at the rates of
-
drug abuse or violence or self harm
-
amongst kids or mental illness
-
there is clearly something going deeply wrong
-
with our societies.
-
The data I have been describing
-
simply shows that intuition that people
-
have had for hundreds of years, that inequality is divisive
-
and socially corrosive.
-
But, that intuition is truer than I think we ever imagined.
-
There are very powerful psychological and social effects
-
of inequality. More to do I suppose with feelings
-
of superiority and inferiority.
-
That kind of division...
-
Maybe going with the respect or disrespect
-
- people feeling looked down on at the bottom
-
which, by the way, is why violence is
-
more common in more unequal societies -
-
the trigger to violence is so often people feeling looked down
-
upon and disrespected.
-
If there is one principle I could emphasize
-
that is, the most important principle underlying
-
the prevention of violence
-
it would be “Equality”.
-
The single most significant factor
-
that affects the rate of violence
-
is the degree of equality versus the degree of inequality
-
in that society.
-
So, what we're looking at is a sort of
-
general social dysfunction.
-
It's not just one or two things that go wrong
-
as inequality increases
-
it seems to be everything, whether we are talking about
-
crime or health or mental illness or whatever.
-
One of the really disturbing findings out there in public health
-
is never ever make the mistake of being poor.
-
Or being born poor.
-
Your health pays for it in endless sorts of ways:
-
something known as the 'health socioeconomic gradient'.
-
As you move down from the highest strata
-
in society, in terms of socioeconomic status
-
every step down, health gets worse
-
for umpteen different diseases.
-
Life expectancy gets worse.
-
Infant mortality rate-
-
everything you could look at.
-
So, a huge issue has been
-
why is it that this gradient exists.
-
A simple obvious answer
-
which is, 'if you're chronically sick, you're not
-
going to be very productive
-
so, health causes drive socioeconomic differences.'
-
Not that in the slightest-
-
on the very simple level that
-
you could look at the
-
socioeconomic status of a 10-year-old
-
and that's going to predict something about their health
-
decades later.
-
So, that's the direction of causality.
-
Next one- 'Oh, it's perfectly obvious'-
-
poor people can't afford to go to the doctor...
-
it's healthcare access?
-
It's got nothing to do with that
-
because you see these same gradients
-
in countries with universal health care and
-
socialized medicine.
-
Okay – next 'simple explanation':
-
Oh -on the average- the poorer you are
-
the more likely you are to smoke
-
and drink and all sorts of lifestyle risk factors.
-
Yeah, those contribute but careful studies have shown
-
that it explains maybe about a third of the variability.
-
So what's left?
-
What's left is having a ton to do
-
with the STRESS of poverty
-
So, the poorer you are, starting off being
-
the person who is one dollar of income behind Bill Gates...
-
the poorer you are in this country
-
on the average, the worse your health is.
-
This tells us something really important:
-
the health connection with poverty
-
it's not about being poor it's about feeling poor.
-
Increasingly we recognize that chronic stress
-
is an important influence on health
-
but the most important sources of stress
-
are the quality of social relations.
-
and if there is anything that
-
lowers the quality of social relations
-
it is the socioeconomic stratification of society.
-
What science has now shown is
-
that regardless of material wealth
-
the stress of simply living in a stratified society
-
leads to a vast spectrum of public health problems
-
and the greater the inequality, the worse they become.
-
Life expectancy: longer in more equal countries.
-
Drug Abuse: Less in more equal countries.
-
Mental Illness: Less in more equal countries.
-
Social Capital - meaning the
-
ability of people to trust each other:
-
Naturally greater in more equal countries.
-
Educational Scores: Higher in more equal countries.
-
Homicide rates: less in more equal countries.
-
Crime and Rates of Imprisonment:
-
Less in more equal countries.
-
It goes on and on:
-
Infant mortality – obesity - teen birth rate:
-
Less in more equal countries.
-
and perhaps most interesting:
-
Innovation: Greater in more equal countries.
-
which challenges the age old notion that a competitive
-
stratified society is somehow more creative and inventive.
-
Moreover, a study done in the UK
-
called The WhiteHall Study
-
confirmed that there is a social distribution of disease
-
as you go from the top of the socioeconomic ladder
-
to the bottom.
-
For example, it was found that the lowest rungs
-
of the hierarchy had a 4-fold increase
-
of heart disease based mortality
-
compared to the highest rungs.
-
And this pattern exists, irrespective of access to health care.
-
Hence - the worse a person's relative financial status
-
the worse their health is going to be on average.
-
This phenomenon is rooted in what could be termed
-
Psychosocial Stress'
-
and it is at the foundation of the greatest social distortions
-
plaguing our society today.
-
Its cause?
-
The Monetary-Market System.
-
Make no mistake:
-
The greatest destroyer of ecology...
-
the greatest source of waste, depletion and pollution...
-
the greatest purveyor of violence-
-
war - crime - poverty - animal abuse and inhumanity...
-
the greatest generator of social and personal neurosis...
-
mental disorders - depression anxiety...
-
Not to mention, the greatest source of social paralysis
-
stopping us from moving into new methodologies
-
for personal health, global sustainability
-
and progress on this planet
-
is not some corrupt Government or legislation...
-
not some rogue Corporation or banking cartel...
-
not some flaw of human nature...
-
and not some secret hidden cabal that controls the world.
-
It is, in fact:
-
The Socio-Economic System itself
-
at its very foundation.
-
[Part 3: Project Earth ]
-
Let's imagine for a moment we had the option
-
to redesign human civilization from the ground up.
-
What if, hypothetically speaking
-
we discovered an exact replica of the planet Earth
-
and the only difference between
-
this new planet and our current one
-
is that human evolution had not occurred.
-
It was an open palette.
-
No countries, no cities, no pollution, no republicans....
-
just a pristine, open environment.
-
So what would we do?
-
Well, first we need a “goal”, right?
-
And it's safe to say that goal would be to survive.
-
And not to just survive, but to do so in an optimized, healthy
-
prosperous way.
-
Most people, indeed, desire to live and
-
they would prefer to do so without suffering.
-
Therefore, the basis of this civilization
-
needs to be as supportive and hence
-
sustainable for human life as possible-
-
taking into account the material needs
-
of all the world's people
-
while trying to remove anything
-
that can could hurt us in the long run.
-
With that goal of “Maximum Sustainability” understood
-
next question regards our “method”.
-
What kind of approach do we take?
-
Well, let's see-
-
last I checked, politics was the method of social operation on Earth...
-
so what do the doctrines of the republicans, liberals
-
conservatives or socialists have to say about societal design?
-
Hmmm... not a damn thing.
-
Okay then - what about religion?
-
Surely the great creator had to have left some blueprints somewhere...
-
Nope...nothing I can find.
-
Okay then - so what's left?
-
It appears something called “Science”.
-
Science is unique in that its methods demand not only that ideas
-
proposed be tested and replicated...
-
but everything science comes up with is also inherently falsifiable.
-
In other words, unlike religion and politics
-
science has no ego
-
and everything it suggests accepts the possibility
-
of being proven wrong eventually.
-
It holds on to nothing and evolves constantly.
-
Well, that sounds natural enough to me.
-
So then - based on the current state of scientific knowledge
-
in the early 21st century
-
along with our goal of “maximum sustainability”
-
for the human population
-
how do we begin the actual process of construction?
-
Well, the first question to ask is:
-
What do we need to survive?
-
The answer, of course, are Planetary Resources.
-
Whether it is the water we drink, the energy we use
-
or the raw materials we utilize to create tools and shelter
-
the planet hosts an inventory of resources-
-
many of which are demanded for our survival.
-
So, given that reality
-
it then becomes critical to figure out what we have and where it is.
-
This means we need to conduct a survey.
-
We simply locate and identify every physical resource on the planet
-
we can, along with the amount available at each location
-
from the deposits of copper, to the most potent locations for
-
wind farms to produce energy
-
to the natural fresh water springs
-
to an assessment of the amount of fish in the ocean
-
to the most prime arable land for food cultivation, etc.
-
But, since we humans are going to be
-
consuming these resources over time
-
we then realize that not only do we need to locate and identify-
-
we also need to track.
-
We need to make sure we don't run out of any of this stuff...
-
that would be bad.
-
And this means not only tracking our rates of use
-
but the rates of earthly regeneration as well
-
such as how long it takes for, say
-
a tree to grow or a spring to replenish.
-
This is called “Dynamic Equilibrium”.
-
In other words, if we use up trees faster than they can be grown back-
-
we have a serious problem, for it is unsustainable.
-
So then, how do we track this inventory
-
especially when we recognize that all
-
of this stuff is scattered everywhere.
-
We have large mineral mines in what we call Africa
-
energy concentrations in the Middle East
-
huge tidal power possibilities on the Atlantic coast of North America
-
the largest supply of fresh water in Brazil, etc.
-
Well, once again, good old science has a suggestion:
-
it's called “Systems theory”.
-
Systems theory recognizes that the fabric of the natural world
-
from human biology to the earthly biosphere
-
to the gravitational pull of the solar system itself
-
is one huge synergistically connected system - fully interlinked.
-
Just as human cells connect to form our organs
-
and the organs connect to form our bodies
-
and since our bodies cannot live without the earthy resources
-
of food, air and water, we are intrinsically connected to the earth.
-
And so on.
-
So - as nature suggests, we take all of this inventory
-
and tracking data and create a “system” to manage it.
-
A “Global Resource Management System”, in fact
-
to account for every relevant resource on the planet.
-
There is simply no logical alternative if our goal as a species
-
is survival in the long run. We have to keep track as a whole.
-
That understood, we can now consider production.
-
How do we use all this stuff?
-
What will our process of production be and what do we need
-
to consider to make sure it is as optimized as possible
-
to maximize our sustainability?
-
Well the first thing that jumps right out at us is the fact that
-
we need to constantly try and preserve.
-
The planet's resources are essentially finite.
-
So it is important that we be “strategic”.
-
"Strategic Preservation" is key.
-
The second thing we recognize, is that some resources
-
are really not as good as others in their performance.
-
In fact, some of this stuff, when put into use
-
has a terrible effect of the environment
-
which invariably hinders our own health.
-
For example: oil and fossil fuels, no matter how you cut it
-
release some pretty destructive agents into the environment.
-
Therefore, it is critical that we do our best to use such things
-
only when we really have to - if at all.
-
Fortunately for us, we see a ton of solar – wind – tidal – wave -
-
heat differential and geothermal possibilities for energy production
-
so we can strategize objectively about what we use and where
-
to avoid what could be called “negative retroactions”
-
or anything that results from production or use
-
that damages the environment and hence, ourselves.
-
We will call this “Strategic Safety”
-
to couple in with our "Strategic Preservation”.
-
But production strategies do not stop there.
-
We are going to need an "Efficiency Strategy”
-
for the actual mechanics of production itself.
-
And what we find is that there are roughly
-
three specific protocols we must adhere to:
-
One: Every good we produce must be
-
designed to last as long as possible.
-
Naturally, the more things breakdown
-
the more resources we are going to need to replace them
-
and the more waste produced.
-
Two: When things do break down
-
or are no longer usable for whatever reason
-
it is critical that we harvest, or recycle as much as we possibly can.
-
So the production design must take this into
-
account directly at the very earliest stages.
-
Three: Quickly evolving technologies, such as electronics
-
which are subject to the fastest rates of technological obsolescence
-
would need to be designed to
-
foreshadow and accommodate physical updates.
-
The last thing we want to do is throw away an entire computer
-
system just because it has only one broken part or is outdated.
-
So we simply design the components to be easily updated
-
part by part, standardized and universally interchangeable
-
foreshadowed by the current trend of technological change.
-
And when we realize that the mechanisms of "Strategic Preservation”
-
“Strategic Safety” and “Strategic Efficiency”
-
are purely technical considerations
-
devoid of any human opinion or bias
-
we simply program these strategies into a computer
-
which can weigh and calculate all the relevant variables
-
allowing us to always arrive at the
-
absolute best method for sustainable production
-
based on current understandings.
-
And while that might sound complex
-
all it is is a glorified calculator
-
not to mention that such multi-varied
-
decision making and monitoring systems
-
are already used across the world today
-
for isolated purposes. It is simply a process of scaling it out.
-
So...
-
Now, we not only have our Resource Management System
-
but also a Production Management System
-
both of which are easily computer automated
-
to maximize efficiency, preservation & safety.
-
The informational reality is that the human mind
-
or even a group of humans, cannot track what needs to be tracked.
-
It must be done by computers and it can be.
-
And this bring us to the next level: Distribution.
-
What sustainability strategies make sense here?
-
Well, since we know that the shortest
-
distance between two points is a straight line
-
and since energy is required to power transport machines
-
the less transport distance, the more efficient.
-
Producing goods in one continent and shipping them over to another
-
only makes sense if the goods in question simply cannot
-
be produced in the target area.
-
Otherwise, it is nothing but wasteful.
-
We must localize production, so distribution is simple
-
fast and requires the least amount of energy.
-
We'll call this the “Proximity Strategy”
-
which simply means we reduce the
-
travel of goods as much as possible
-
whether raw materials or finished consumer products.
-
Of course, it might also be important to
-
know what goods are we transporting and why...
-
And this falls under the category of Demand.
-
And demand is simply what people need to be
-
healthy and to have a high quality of life.
-
The spectrum of material human needs
-
range from core life supporting necessities
-
such as food, clean water and shelter...
-
to social and recreational goods which allow for relaxation
-
and personal - social enjoyment -
-
both important factors in human and social health overall.
-
So - very simply- we take another survey.
-
People describe their needs, demand is
-
assessed and production begins based on that demand.
-
And since the level of demand of different goods will
-
naturally fluctuate and change around different regions
-
we need to create a “Demand / Distribution Tracking System"
-
so to avoid overruns and shortages.
-
Of course, this idea is old news
-
it is used in every major store chain today
-
to make sure they keep up with their inventory.
-
Only this time, we are tracking on a global scale.
-
But wait a minute. We really can't fully understand demand
-
if we don't account for the actual usage of the good itself.
-
Is it logical and sustainable for every single human to, say
-
have one of everything made? Regardless of their usage?
-
No. That would be simply wasteful and inefficient.
-
If a person has a need for a good but that need is only for say:
-
45 minutes a day on average
-
it would be much more efficient if
-
that good was made available to them
-
and to others when needed.
-
Many forget that it isn't the good they want
-
it is the purpose of that good.
-
When we realize that the good itself
-
is only as important as its utility
-
we see that “external restriction”
-
or what we might call today “ownership”
-
is extremely wasteful and environmentally illogical
-
in a fundamental, economic sense.
-
So we need devise a strategy called: “Strategic Access”.
-
This would be the foundation of our
-
"Demand / Distribution Tracking System.”
-
which makes sure we can meet the
-
demand of the population's needs
-
for access of whatever they need, when they need it.
-
And as far as physically obtaining the goods
-
centralized and regional access
-
centers all make sense for the most part
-
placed in close proximity to the population
-
and a person would simply come in, take the item
-
use it and when finished, return it when no longer needed...
-
sort of how a library works today.
-
In fact, these centers could not only exist in
-
the community in the way we see local stores today
-
but specialized access centers would exist in specific areas
-
where often certain goods are utilized
-
saving more energy with less repeat transport.
-
And once this Demand Tracking System is in order
-
it is tied into our Production Management system
-
and, of course, into our Resource Management system
-
hence creating a unified dynamically updating
-
global economic management machine
-
that simply makes sure we remain sustainable
-
starting with securing the integrity of our finite resources
-
moving to make sure we only create the best
-
most strategic goods possible
-
while distributing everything in the
-
most intelligent and efficient way.
-
And the unique result of this preservation based approach
-
which is intuitively counter to many
-
is that this logical, ground up
-
empirical process of preservation and efficiency
-
which can only define true human sustainability on the planet
-
would likely enable something never before seen in human history.
-
Access Abundance...
-
not just for a percentage of the global population...
-
but the entire civilization.
-
This economic model, as was just generalized...
-
This responsible, systems approach to total Earth
-
resource management and processes
-
designed again to do nothing less
-
than take care of humanity as whole
-
in the most efficient and sustainable way
-
could be termed:
-
a “RESOURCE-BASED ECONOMY”.
-
The idea was defined in the 1970s by
-
Social Engineer- Jacque Fresco.
-
He understood back then that society was on a collision course
-
with nature and itself - unsustainable on every level
-
and if things didn't change
-
we would destroy ourselves, one way or another.
-
Are all of these things you are saying, Jacque...
-
could they be built with what we know today?
-
Or are you guessing... based on what we know today.
-
No, all of these things can be built with what we know today.
-
It would take 10 years to change the surface of the earth.
-
To rebuild the world into a second Garden of Eden.
-
The choice lies with you.
-
The stupidity of a nuclear arms race...
-
the development of weapons...
-
trying to solve your problems politically
-
by electing this political party or that political party...
-
that all politics is immersed in corruption.
-
Let me say it again:
-
Communism, socialism, fascism... the Democrats
-
the liberals- we want to absorb human beings.
-
All organizations that believe in a better life for man:
-
there are no Negro problems or Polish problems
-
or Jewish problems or Greek problems
-
or women's problems – there are human problems!
-
I'm not afraid of anybody; I don't work for anyone;
-
no one can discharge me.
-
I have no boss.
-
I am afraid to live in the society we live in today.
-
Our society cannot be maintained by this type of incompetency.
-
It was great - the free enterprise system -
-
about 35 years ago. That was the last of its usefulness.
-
Now, we have got to change our way of thinking or perish.
-
The horror movies of the future will be our society...
-
the way it didn't work
-
and politics...
-
would be part of a horror movie.
-
Well, lots of people today use the term 'cold science'
-
because it's analytical
-
and they don't even know what analytical means.
-
Science means: closer approximations
-
to the way the world really works.
-
So, it's telling the truth - is what it is
-
A scientist doesn't try to get along with people.
-
They tell them what their findings are.
-
They have to question all things
-
and if some scientist comes up with an experiment that shows
-
certain materials have certain strengths
-
other scientists have to be able to duplicate
-
that experiment and come up with the same results.
-
Even if a scientist feels that an airplane wing
-
due to mathematics or calculations
-
can hold up a given amount of weight
-
they still pile sandbags on it
-
to see when it breaks and they say
-
you know my calculations are right or they are not correct'.
-
I love that system because it's free of bias
-
and free of thinking that math can solve all the problems.
-
You have to put your Math to test also.
-
I think that every system that can
-
be put to test should be put to test.
-
And that all decisions should be based upon research.
-
A Resource-Based Economy is simply the
-
scientific method applied to social concern-
-
an approach utterly absent in the world today.
-
Society is a technical invention.
-
And the most efficient methods of optimized human health
-
physical production, distribution, city infrastructure and the like
-
reside in the field of science and
-
technology - not politics or monetary economics.
-
It operates in the same systematic way as, say an airplane
-
and there is no Republican or Liberal way to build an airplane.
-
Likewise, nature itself is the
-
physical referent we use to prove our science
-
and it is a set system-
-
emerging only from our increased understanding of it.
-
In fact, it has no regard for what you
-
subjectively think or believe to be true.
-
Rather, it gives you an option:
-
you can learn and fall in line with its
-
natural laws and conduct yourself accordingly-
-
invariably creating good health & sustainability...
-
or you can go against the current - to no avail.
-
It doesn't matter how much you believe you can just
-
stand up right now and walk on the wall next to you
-
the law of gravity will not allow it.
-
If you do not eat - you will die.
-
If you are not touched as an infant - you will die.
-
As harsh as it may sound, nature is a dictatorship
-
and we can either listen to it and come in harmony with it
-
or suffer the inevitable adverse consequences.
-
So, a Resource-Based Economy is nothing more
-
than a set of proven, life supporting understandings
-
where all decisions are based upon
-
optimized human and environmental sustainability.
-
It takes into account the empirical “Life Ground”
-
which every human being shares as a need
-
regardless, again, of their political or religious philosophy.
-
There is no cultural relativism to this approach.
-
It isn't a matter of opinion.
-
Human needs are human needs
-
and having access to the necessities of life, such as clean air
-
nutritious food and clean water
-
along with a positively reinforcing, stable
-
nurturing, non-violent environment, is demanded
-
for our mental and physical health
-
our evolutionary fitness
-
and hence, the species survival itself.
-
A Resource-Based Economy
-
would be based upon available resources.
-
You can't just bring a lot of people to an island
-
or build a city of 50,000 people without having access
-
to the necessities of life.
-
So, when I use the term 'a comprehensive systems approach'
-
I'm talking about doing an inventory of the area first
-
and determining what that area can supply-
-
not just architectural approach-
-
not just design approach-
-
but design must be based on all of the requirements
-
to enhance human life
-
and that's what I mean by an integrated way of thinking.
-
Food, clothing, shelter, warmth, love -
-
All those things are necessary
-
and if you deprive people of any of them
-
you have a lesser human being, less capable of functioning.
-
As previously outlined, a Resource-Based Economy's ground up
-
global, systems approach to extraction, production and distribution
-
is based upon on a set of true economic mechanisms, or 'strategies'
-
which guarantee efficiency and
-
sustainability in every area of the economy.
-
So, continuing this train of thought regarding logical design-
-
what is next in our equation?
-
Where does all this materialize?
-
Cities.
-
The advent of the city is a defining feature of modern civilization.
-
Its role is to enable efficient access to the necessities of life
-
along with increased social support and community interaction.
-
So how would we go about designing an ideal city?
-
What shape should we make it?
-
Square? Trapezoid?
-
Well, given we are going to be moving around the thing
-
we might as well make it as equidistant as possible for ease...
-
hence the circle.
-
What should the city contain?
-
Well, naturally we need a residential area, a goods production area
-
a power generation area; an agricultural area.
-
But we also need nurturing as human beings - hence culture
-
nature, recreation and education.
-
So lets include a nice open park
-
an entertainment/events area for cultural purposes and socializing
-
and educational and research facilities.
-
And since we are working with a circle
-
it seems rational to place these functions in Belts
-
based on the amount of land required for each goal
-
along with ease of access.
-
Very good.
-
Now, let's get down to specifics:
-
First we need the consider the core
-
infrastructure or intestines of the city organism.
-
These would be the water, goods
-
waste and energy transport channels.
-
Just as we have water and sewage systems under our cities today
-
we would extend this channeling concept to
-
integrate waste recycling and delivery itself.
-
No more mailmen or garbage men.
-
It is built right in. We could even use
-
automated pneumatic tubes and similar technologies.
-
Same goes for transport.
-
It needs to be integrated and strategically designed to reduce
-
or even remove the need for wasteful, independent automobiles.
-
Electric trams, conveyors, transveyors and
-
maglevs which can take you virtually
-
anywhere in the city, even up and down
-
along with connecting you to other cities as well.
-
And of course, in the event a car is required
-
it is automated by satellite for safety and integrity.
-
In fact, this automation technology is in working order right now.
-
Automobile accidents kill about 1.2 million people every single year;
-
injuring about 50 million.
-
This is absurd and doesn't have to occur.
-
Between efficient city design and automated, driverless cars
-
this death toll can be virtually eliminated.
-
Agriculture.
-
Today, through our haphazard, cost-cutting industrial methods
-
using pesticides, excessive fertilizers and other means
-
we have successfully destroyed much
-
of the the arable land on this planet
-
not to mention also extensively poisoning our bodies.
-
In fact, industrial and agricultural chemical toxins
-
now show up in virtually every human being tested, including infants.
-
Fortunately, there is a glaring alternative -
-
the soilless mediums of hydroponics and aeroponics
-
which also reduce nutrient and water
-
requirements by up to 75 % of our current usage.
-
Food can now be organically grown on an industrial scale
-
in enclosed vertical farms.
-
Such as in 50 story 1 acre plots -
-
virtually eliminating the need for
-
pesticides and hydrocarbons in general.
-
This is the future of industrial food cultivation.
-
Efficient, clean and abundant.
-
So, such advanced systems would be, in part
-
what comprise our agricultural belt
-
producing all the food required for the entire city's population
-
with no need to import anything from the outside
-
saving time, waste and energy.
-
And speaking of Energy-
-
The Energy Belt would work in a systems approach to
-
extract electricity from our abundant renewable mediums
-
-specifically wind, solar, geothermal and heat differentials
-
and if near water potentials - tidal and wave power.
-
To avoid intermittency and make sure
-
a positive net energy return occurs
-
these mediums would operate in an integrated system
-
powering each other when needed
-
while storing excessive energy to large
-
super capacitors under the ground
-
so nothing can go to waste.
-
And not only does the city power itself
-
particular structures will also power independently
-
and generate electricity through photovoltaic paints
-
structural pressure transducers, the thermocouple effect
-
and other current but under utilized technologies.
-
But, of course, this begs the question:
-
how does this technology, and goods in
-
general, get created in the first place?
-
This bring us to Production:
-
The Industrial Belt, apart from having hospitals and the like
-
would be the hub of factory production.
-
Completely localized overall
-
it would, of course, obtain raw materials by way of
-
the global resource management system, just discussed-
-
with demand being generated by the population of the city itself.
-
As far as the mechanics of production
-
we need to discuss a new, powerful phenomenon
-
which was sparked very recently in human history
-
and is on pace to changing everything.
-
It's called Mechanization
-
or the automation of labor.
-
Well, if you look around, you'll notice that almost
-
everything that we use today
-
is built automatically.
-
Your shoes, your clothes, your home appliances, your car and so on...
-
they are all built by machines in an automatic way.
-
Can we say that the society has not been
-
influenced by these major technological advancements?
-
Of course not.
-
These systems really dictate new structures
-
and new needs and they make a lot of other things obsolete.
-
So, we have been going up in the development
-
and use of technology in an exponential way.
-
So, definitely automation is going to continue. You cannot stop
-
technologies that just make sense.
-
Labor automation through technology is at the bottom
-
of every major social transformation in human history.
-
From the agricultural revolution and the invention of the plow
-
to the industrial revolution and the invention of the powered machine
-
to the information age we live in now through
-
essentially the invention of advanced electronics and computers.
-
And with regard to advanced production methods today
-
mechanization is now evolving on its own.
-
Moving away from the traditional method of
-
assembling component parts into a configuration -
-
into an advanced method of creating
-
entire products in one single process.
-
Like most engineers, I'm fascinated by biology because it is
-
so full of examples of extraordinary pieces of engineering.
-
What biology is - is the study of things that copy themselves.
-
As good a definition of life as we've got.
-
Again, as an engineer, I have always been
-
intrigued by the idea of machines copying themselves.
-
RepRap is a three-dimensional printer-
-
that's to say it is a printer that you plug into your computer and
-
instead of making two-dimensional sheets of paper with patterns on
-
it makes real, physical, three-dimensional objects.
-
Now there's nothing new about that
-
3-D printers have been around for about 30 years.
-
The big thing about RepRap is that it prints most of its own parts.
-
So, if you've got one, you could
-
make another one and give it to a friend
-
as well as being able to print lots of useful things.
-
From the simple printing of basic household goods in your home
-
to the printing of an entire automobile body in one swoop
-
advanced, automated 3d printing now has the
-
potential to transform virtually every field of production.
-
Including home construction.
-
Contour Crafting is
-
actually a fabrication technology-
-
the so-called 3-D printing- when you directly build
-
3-D objects from a computer model.
-
Using Contour Crafting, it will be possible
-
to build a 2000 square-foot home
-
entirely by the machine, in one day.
-
The reason that people are interested in automating construction
-
is that it really brings a lot of benefits.
-
For example, construction is pretty labor-intensive
-
and although it provides jobs for a sector of the society
-
it also has issues and complications.
-
For example, construction is the most dangerous job that there is.
-
It is worse than mining and agriculture.
-
That has the highest level of fatality in almost every country.
-
Another issue is the waste.
-
An average home in the United States has 3 to 7 tons of waste.
-
So this is huge if we look at the impact of construction
-
and knowing about 40% of all materials
-
in the world are used in construction.
-
So, a big waste of energy and resources
-
and big damage to the environment as well.
-
Making homes using hammers and nails and wood
-
with the state of our technology today, is really absurd
-
and will go the way of our labor class in
-
regards to manufacturing in the United States.
-
Recently, there was a study by economist David Autor of MIT
-
that states that our middle class is obsolete
-
and being replaced by automation.
-
Quite simply, Mechanization is more productive
-
efficient and sustainable than human labor
-
in virtually every sector of the economy today.
-
Machines do not need vacations, breaks, insurance, pensions
-
and they can work 24 hours a day, everyday.
-
The output potential and accuracy
-
compared to human labor, is unmatched.
-
The bottom line: repetitive human labor is becoming obsolete
-
and impractical across the world
-
and the unemployment you see around you today
-
is fundamentally the result of this
-
evolution of efficiency in technology.
-
For years, market economists have dismissed this growing pattern
-
which could be called “Technological Unemployment”
-
because of the fact that new sectors always seemed
-
to emerge to re-absorb the displaced workers.
-
Today, the service sector is the only real hub left
-
and currently employs over 80% of the American workforce
-
with most industrialized countries maintaining a similar proportion.
-
However, this sector now being
-
challenged increasingly by automated kiosks-
-
automated restaurants and even automated stores.
-
Economists today are finally
-
acknowledging what they had been denying for years:
-
not only is technological unemployment exasperating the current
-
labor crisis we see across the
-
world due to the global economic downturn
-
but the more the recession deepens
-
the faster the industries are mechanizing.
-
The catch, which is not realized
-
is that the faster they mechanize to save money;
-
the more they displace people-
-
the more they reduce public purchasing power.
-
This means that, while the corporation
-
can produce everything more cheaply
-
fewer and fewer people will actually have money to buy anything
-
regardless of how cheap they become.
-
The bottom line is that the “labor for
-
income” game is slowly coming to an end.
-
In fact, if you take a moment to reflect
-
on the jobs which are in existence today
-
which automation could take over right now, if applied
-
75% of the global workforce could be
-
replaced by mechanization tomorrow.
-
And this is why, in a Resource-Based Economy
-
There is no Monetary-Market system.
-
No money at all...
-
for there is no need.
-
a Resource-Based Economy
-
recognizes the efficiency of mechanization
-
and accepts it for what it offers.
-
It doesn't fight it, like we do today.
-
Why? Because it is irresponsible not to
-
given any interest in efficiency and sustainability.
-
And this brings us back to our city system.
-
In the center is the Central Dome
-
which not only houses the
-
educational facilities and transportation hub-
-
it also hosts the mainframe that
-
runs the cities technical operations.
-
The city is, in fact, one big automated machine.
-
It has sensors in all technical belts
-
to track the progress of architecture-
-
energy gathering, production, distribution and the like.
-
Now, would people be needed to oversee these
-
operations in the event of a malfunction and the like?
-
Most probably: yes.
-
But that number would decrease
-
over time as improvements continue.
-
However, as of today, maybe 3% of
-
the city population would be needed
-
for this job when you break it down.
-
And I can assure you:
-
that in an economic system which is
-
actually designed to take care of you
-
and secure your well being
-
without you having to submit to
-
private dictatorship on a daily basis...
-
usually to a job that is either
-
technically unnecessary or socially pointless
-
while often struggling with debt that doesn't exist
-
just to make ends meet...
-
I guarantee you: people will volunteer their time left and right
-
to maintain and improve a system
-
that actually takes care of them.
-
And coupled with this issue of 'Incentive'-
-
comes the common assumption that
-
if there isn't some external pressure
-
for one to “work for a living”
-
people would just sit around, do nothing
-
and turn into fat lazy blobs.
-
This is nonsense.
-
The labor system we have today is
-
in fact the generator of laziness-
-
not a resolver of it.
-
If you think back to when you were a child-
-
full of life, interested in new things to understand-
-
likely creating and exploring...
-
but as time went on, the system pushed you
-
into the focus of figuring out how to make money.
-
And from early education
-
to study at a university, you are narrowed.
-
Only to emerge as a creature which serves
-
as a cog in a wheel in a model that
-
sends all the fruits to the upper 1%.
-
Scientific Studies have now shown that people are, in fact
-
not motivated by monetary reward
-
when it comes to ingenuity and creation.
-
The creation itself is the reward.
-
Money, in fact, appears only to serve as an incentive
-
for repetitive, mundane actions-
-
a role we have just now shown can be replaced by machine.
-
When it comes to innovation
-
the actual use of the human mind
-
the monetary incentive has proven to be a hindrance
-
interfering and detracting from creative thought.
-
And this might explain why Nikola Tesla, the Wright Brothers
-
and other inventors who contributed massively
-
to our current world
-
never showed a monetary incentive to do so.
-
Money is, in fact, a false incentive
-
and causes 100 times more distortion
-
than it does contribution.
-
Good morning class. Please settle down.
-
The first thing I would like to do is go around the room
-
and ask what everyone would like to be when they grow up.
-
Who would like to go first?
-
Okay, how about you Sarah?
-
When I grow up I want to work at McDonald's like my mom!
-
Oh, family tradition, eh?
-
How about you, Linda?
-
When I grow up, I'm going to be a
-
prostitute on the streets of New York City!
-
Oh! glamour girl, huh?
-
Very ambitious.
-
How about you, Tommy?
-
When I grow up, I'm going to be a
-
rich, elitist businessman who works
-
on Wall Street and profits off of
-
the collapse of foreign economies.
-
Enterprising...
-
And great to see some multicultural interest!
-
[Victims of Culture]
-
As stated before, a Resource-Based
-
Economy applies the Scientific Method to social concern
-
and this isn't limited to simply technical efficiency.
-
It also has the consideration of
-
human and social well-being directly and what comprises it.
-
What good is a social system if, in the end
-
it doesn't produce happiness and peaceful coexistence?
-
So, it is important to point out that
-
with the removal of the money system
-
and the necessities of life provided
-
we would see a global reduction in
-
crime by about 95% almost immediately
-
for there is nothing to steal, embezzle, scam, or the like.
-
95% of all people in prisons today are there
-
due to some monetary related crime or drug abuse
-
and drug abuse is a disorder - not a crime.
-
So what about the other 5%?
-
the truly violent...
-
often seeming to some as being
-
violent for the sake of being violent...
-
are they just “evil” people?
-
The reason that I frankly think it's a waste of time
-
to engage in moral value judgments
-
about people's violence is
-
because it doesn't advance by one iota
-
our understanding of either the causes
-
or the prevention of the violent behavior.
-
People sometimes ask if I believe in “forgiving” criminals.
-
My answer to that is
-
“No, I don't believe in forgiveness
-
anymore than I believe in condemnation”.
-
It's only if we, as a society
-
can take the same attitude of treating violence as
-
a problem in public health and preventive medicine
-
rather than as a moral "evil"...
-
it's only when we make that change in our
-
own attitudes and assumptions and values
-
that we will actually succeed in reducing the
-
level of violence rather than stimulating it-
-
which is what we do now.
-
The more justice you seek, the more hurt you become
-
because there's no such thing as justice.
-
There is whatever there is out there. That's it.
-
In other words, if people are conditioned to be racist bigots-
-
if they are brought up in an environment that advocates that
-
why do you blame the person for it?
-
They are a victim of a subculture.
-
Therefore they have to be helped.
-
The point is, we have to redesign the environment
-
that produces aberrant behavior.
-
That's the problem.
-
Not putting a person in jail.
-
That's why judges- lawyers-
-
“freedom of choice” - such concepts
-
are dangerous, because it gives you mis-information.
-
That the person is “bad”... or that person is a “serial killer”.
-
Serial killers are made
-
just like soldiers become serial killers with a machine gun.
-
They become killing machines, but nobody
-
looks at them as murderers or assassins
-
because that's “natural”.
-
So we blame people.
-
We say, “Well, this guy was a Nazi - he tortured Jews”.
-
No, he was brought up to torture Jews.
-
Once you accept the fact that people
-
have individual choices and they are free
-
to make those choices... Free to make
-
choices means without being influenced
-
and I can't understand that at all.
-
All of us are influenced in all of our choices
-
by the culture we live in, by our parents
-
and by the values that dominate.
-
So, we're influenced- so there can't be “free” choices.
-
What's the greatest country in the world?' - the true answer:
-
I haven't been all over the world and I don't know
-
enough about different cultures to answer that question.'
-
I don't know anybody that speaks that way.
-
They say 'it's the good old USA!
-
the greatest country in the world!'
-
There is no survey... 'Have you been to India?' - 'No.'
-
Have you been to England?' - 'No.'
-
Have you been to France?' - 'No.'
-
Then what do you make your assumptions on?'
-
They can't answer- they get mad at you.
-
They say, 'God dammit! Who the hell
-
are you to tell me what to think?!'
-
You know... Don't forget: you're dealing with aberrated people.
-
They are not responsible for the answers;
-
they're victims of culture and that means
-
they have been influenced by their culture.
-
[Part 4: Rise]
-
When we consider a Resource-Based Economy
-
there are often a number of arguments that tend to come up with...
-
[EH!] (Interrupted)
-
[Eh! Hey!]
-
[Now hold on just a minute!]
-
[I know what this is. This is called Marxism, buddy.]
-
[Stalin killed 800 billion people because of ideas like this...]
-
[My father died in the Gulag!]
-
[Communist! Fascist!]
-
[You don't like America you should just leave!]
-
All right, everybody just calm down...
-
[Death to the New World Order!]
-
[Death to the New World Order!]
-
And as the irrationality of the
-
audience grew, shocked and confused:
-
suddenly the narrator suffered a fatal heart attack.'
-
And the seemingly communist propaganda film was no more.
-
[System Error]
-
[Backup Initiated - Restored]
-
But you know, I've said that sort of thing to people
-
in 'think tank' type situations
-
you know these Club of Rome types and so forth...
-
they say ”Marxist!”
-
What? Marxist? Where did that come from?
-
They just got this icon they hold onto-
-
It's their Holy Grail
-
and it's such an easy one, you know.
-
People ask if I'm a Socialist or a Communist or Capitalist
-
I say I am none of the above. Why do you
-
think that those are the only options?
-
All of those political constructs
-
were created by writers who assumed
-
we lived on a planet of infinite resources.
-
Not one of those political philosophies even
-
contemplates that there might be a shortage of anything.
-
I believe that communism, socialism, free enterprise, fascism
-
are part of social evolution.
-
You can't take a giant step
-
from one culture to another-
-
there are in-between systems.
-
Before there's any “Ism”, we have a life ground
-
and the life ground is as I've just described
-
most easily as all the conditions
-
required to take your next breath
-
and that involves the air you breathe
-
the water you get, the safety you have
-
the education you can access- all
-
these things that we share and use and that
-
no life, in any culture, can do without.
-
So we've got to reset down to the Life Ground
-
and the life ground is no longer any “Ism”.
-
It's “life value analysis.”
-
[Beyond The Pale]
-
It's simply a matter of historical fact
-
that the dominant intellectual culture
-
of any particular society reflects the
-
interests of the dominant group in that society.
-
In a slave owning society
-
the beliefs about human beings and human rights
-
and so on will reflect the needs of the slave owners.
-
In the society, again, which is based on
-
the power of certain people to control and profit from
-
the lives and work of millions of others
-
the dominant intellectual culture will
-
reflect the needs of the dominant group.
-
So, if you look across the board, the
-
ideas that pervade psychology and
-
sociology and history
-
and political economy and political science
-
fundamentally reflect certain elite interests.
-
And the academics who question that too much
-
tend to get shunted to the side or
-
to be seen as sort of “radicals”.
-
The dominant values of a culture
-
tend to support and perpetuate
-
what is rewarded by that culture.
-
And in a society where success and
-
status is measured by material wealth
-
- not social contribution -
-
it is easy to see why the state of the world is what it is today.
-
We are dealing with a value system disorder
-
- completely denatured -
-
where the priority of personal and social health
-
have become secondary to the detrimental
-
notions of artificial wealth and limitless growth.
-
And, like a virus, this disorder now
-
permeates every facet of government
-
- news media - entertainment - and even academia.
-
And built into its structure
-
are mechanisms of protection
-
from anything that might interfere.
-
Disciples of the Monetary-Market religion
-
the Self-Appointed Guardians of the Status Quo
-
constantly seek out ways to avoid any form of thought
-
which might interfere with their beliefs.
-
The most common of which: are Projected Dualities.
-
If you're not a Republican, you must be a Democrat.
-
If you are not Christian, you might be a Satanist
-
and if you feel society can be greatly improved
-
to consider, perhaps - I don't know-
-
taking care of everyone?
-
you're just a “Utopianist”.
-
And the most insidious of them all:
-
if you are not for the "free-market"
-
you must be against freedom itself.
-
I'm a believer in freedom!
-
Every time you hear the word freedom
-
being said anywhere or government interference
-
said anywhere, it means, decoded:
-
blocking maximization of turning money
-
into more money for private money possessors.
-
That's it. Every other thing they'll say:
-
'Oh, we need more commodities for people';
-
'Oh, this is freedom against tyranny' and so forth
-
every time you see it, you can decode it down to
-
that and I think you'll find a one-to-one correlation
-
with every time they use it.
-
And this, in a sense, we might call:
-
a Syntax. A governing syntax of understanding and of value.
-
So, it governs beneath their own recognition of it
-
so they might say: 'Oh, I didn't mean that at all!'
-
but in fact, that's what they do.
-
Just like you may speak a grammar
-
and you have rules of grammar you follow
-
without recognizing what the rules are...
-
and so what we have is what I call the “Ruling Value Syntax”
-
that underlies this. So, every time they use these words:
-
government interference'; 'lack of freedom' or 'freedom'
-
or 'progress' or 'development'
-
you can decode them all to come back to mean that.
-
Of course, when you hear the word 'freedom'
-
it tends to be in same sentence
-
with something called 'democracy'.
-
It's fascinating how people today seem to believe
-
that they actually have a relevant
-
influence on what their government does
-
forgetting that the very nature of
-
our system offers everything for sale.
-
The only vote that counts is the monetary vote
-
and it doesn't matter how much any
-
activist yells about ethics and accountability.
-
In a market system, every politician, every legislation
-
and hence, every government is for sale.
-
And even with the 20 trillion dollar bank bailouts
-
starting in 2007
-
an amount of money which could have changed
-
say, the global energy infrastructure
-
to fully renewable methods
-
instead going to a series of institutions
-
that literally do nothing to help society
-
institutions that could be
-
removed tomorrow with no recourse...
-
the blind conditioning that politics and
-
politicians exist for the public well-being still continues.
-
The fact is, politics is a business
-
- no different than any other in a market system
-
and they care about their self-interest before anything else.
-
I don't really, honestly, deep down believe in political action.
-
I think the system contracts and expands as it wants to.
-
It accommodates these changes.
-
I think the civil rights movement was an accommodation
-
on the part of those who own the country.
-
I think they see where their self-interest lies;
-
they see a certain amount of freedom seems good
-
-an illusion of liberty- give these people a voting day every year
-
so that they will have the illusion of meaningless choice.
-
Meaningless choice- that we go, like slaves and say
-
“Oh, I Voted.” The limits of debate in this country are established
-
before the debate even begins and everyone
-
else is marginalized and made to seem either
-
to be communist or some sort of disloyal person
-
-a “kook”- there's a word...
-
and now it's “conspiracy”. See- they made that.
-
Something that should not be even entertained for a minute:
-
that powerful people might get together and have a plan!
-
Doesn't happen! You're a “kook”! Your a “conspiracy buff”!
-
And of all the mechanisms of defense of this system
-
there are two that repeatedly come up.
-
The first is this idea that the system has been the “cause”
-
of the material progress we have seen on this planet.
-
Well...No.
-
There are basically two root causes which
-
have created the increased so-called “wealth”
-
and population growth we see today.
-
One: the exponential advancement of production technology;
-
hence scientific ingenuity.
-
And Two: the initial discovery of abundant hydrocarbon energy
-
-which is currently the foundation of the entire socio-economic system.
-
The free-market / capitalist / monetary
-
market system - whatever you want to call it -
-
has done nothing but ride the wave of these advents
-
with a distorted incentive system and a haphazard
-
grossly unequal method of utilizing and distributing those fruits.
-
The second defense is a belligerent social bias
-
generated from years of propaganda
-
which sees any other social system
-
as a route to so called "tyranny”
-
with various name droppings of Stalin, Mao, Hitler...
-
and the death tolls they generated.
-
Well, as despotic as these men might have been
-
along with the societal approaches they perpetuated...
-
when it comes to the game of death
-
- when comes to the systematic
-
daily mass murder of human beings -
-
Nothing in history compares to what we have today.
-
Famines - throughout at least the last century of our history
-
have not been caused by a lack of food.
-
They have been caused by relative poverty.
-
The economic resources were so inequitably distributed
-
that the poor simply didn't have enough money
-
with which to buy the food that would've been
-
available if they could have afforded to pay for it.
-
That would be an example of Structural Violence.
-
Another example: in Africa and other areas-
-
I'll particularly focus on Africa-
-
tens of millions of people are dying of AIDS.
-
Why are they dying?
-
It's not because we don't know how to treat AIDS.
-
We have millions of people in the wealthy countries
-
getting along remarkably well because
-
they have the medicines that will treat it.
-
The people in Africa who are dying of AIDS
-
are not dying because of the HIV virus...
-
they are dying because they don't have the money with
-
which to pay for the drugs that would keep them alive.
-
Gandhi saw this. He said:
-
“The deadliest form of violence is poverty.”
-
And that's absolutely right.
-
Poverty kills far more people than all the wars in history;
-
more people than all the murderers in history;
-
more than all the suicides in history...
-
not only does Structural Violence kill more people
-
than all the behavioral violence put together
-
Structural Violence is also the
-
main cause of behavioral violence.
-
[Beyond the Peak]
-
Oil is the foundation of
-
and is present throughout, the edifice of human civilization.
-
There are 10 calories of hydrocarbon energy –oil and natural gas–
-
in every calorie of food you and I eat in the industrialized world.
-
Fertilizers are made from natural gas.
-
Pesticides are made from oil.
-
You drive oil-powered machines to plant - plow - irrigate – harvest
-
transport - package. You wrap the food
-
in plastic – that's oil. All plastic is oil.
-
There are 7 gallons of oil in every tire.
-
Oil is everywhere; it's ubiquitous. And it's only because
-
of oil that there are 7 billion people or
-
almost 7 billion people on this planet right now.
-
The arrival of this cheap and easy energy
-
which is equivalent, by the way, to
-
billions of slaves working around the clock
-
changed the world in such a radical way over the last century
-
and the population has gone up 10 times.
-
But, by 2050, oil supply is able to support
-
less than half the present world's
-
population in their present way of life.
-
So, the scale of adjustment to live differently is just enormous.
-
The world is now using six barrels of oil for every barrel of finds.
-
Five years ago it was using four
-
barrels of oil for every barrel it finds.
-
A year from now it is going to be using
-
eight barrels of oil for every barrel of finds.
-
What's disturbing to me is the
-
lack of any real effort from governments worldwide
-
and industry leaders worldwide to do something different.
-
We have these, sort of, attempts to build more wind power
-
and to maybe do something with Tide...
-
we've got attempts to make our cars a little bit more efficient
-
but there's nothing which really looks like a
-
revolution coming along- these are all pretty minor
-
and that I think is pretty frightening.
-
And the governments who are driven by these economists
-
who don't really appreciate what we're talking about
-
are trying to stimulate consumerism to restore past prosperity
-
in the hope that they can restore the past.
-
They're printing yet more money lacking any collateral at all.
-
So, if the economy improves and
-
recovers and the famous growth comes back
-
it will only be short-lived because
-
within a short period of time counted in months
-
rather than years it will hit the supply barrier again;
-
there will be another price shock-
-
and a deeper recession. So I think
-
we go into a series of vicious circles
-
So you have the economic growth going up- price
-
spike- everything shuts down. That's where we are now.
-
Then it starts to come up again but what we have now is this
-
area where there's no more ability to produce cheap energy.
-
We're at the peak- were on the down slope of oil production.
-
No way you're going to get any more out of the ground any faster
-
which means that things shut down, the price of oil drops
-
which it did in early 2009 but then as you have a “recovery”
-
the price of oil starts to come back.
-
It's recently been hovering at about $80
-
a barrel and what we see is that at even at $80 a
-
barrel now, with the financial and economic collapse
-
people are having a hard time affording that.
-
World oil production right now is about 86 million barrels a day.
-
Over 10 years, you're looking at
-
roughly 14 million barrels a day having to be replaced.
-
There's nothing around which can come even
-
within 1% of meeting that sort of demand.
-
If we don't do something pretty quickly
-
there's going to be a huge energy deficiency.
-
I think the big mistake is in not recognizing
-
a decade or so ago that a concerted effort
-
needed to be made to develop
-
these sustainable forms of energy.
-
I think that's something our grandchildren will look back on with
-
total disbelief. 'You people knew you
-
were dealing with a finite commodity...
-
how could you possibly have build your economy
-
around something which was going to disappear?'
-
For the first time in human history
-
the species is now faced with the depletion of a core resource
-
central to our current system of survival.
-
And the punchline of the whole thing is
-
that even with oil becoming more scarce
-
the economic system will still blindly push
-
its cancerous growth model...
-
so people can go out and buy more oil powered cars
-
to generate GDP and jobs... exasperating the decline.
-
Are there solutions to replace the
-
edifice of the hydrocarbon economy?
-
Of course.
-
But the path needed to accomplish these changes
-
will not manifest through the Market System Protocols required
-
since new solutions can only be
-
implemented through the Profit Mechanism.
-
People are not investing in renewable energies
-
because there is no money in it in both long and short term.
-
And the commitment needed to make it happen
-
can only occur at a severe financial loss.
-
Therefore, there is no monetary incentive and in this
-
system, if there is no monetary incentive, things do not happen.
-
And on top of it all, Peak Oil is
-
just one of many surfacing consequences
-
of the environmental-social train wreck gaining speed today.
-
Other declines include Fresh Water
-
-the very fabric of our existence-
-
which is currently showing
-
shortages for 2.8 billion people
-
and those shortages are on pace to reach 4 billion by 2030.
-
Food Production:
-
The destruction of arable crop land, from which
-
99.7% of all human food comes from today
-
is occurring up to 40 times faster than it is being replenished
-
and over the last 40 years, 30% of the
-
arable land has become unproductive.
-
Not to mention that hydrocarbons are the backbone
-
of agriculture today and as it declines...
-
so will the food supply.
-
As far as resources in general
-
at our current patterns of consumption, by 2030
-
we will need 2 planets to continue our rates.
-
Not to mention the continual destruction
-
of life supporting biodiversity
-
causing extinction spasms and
-
environmental destabilization across the globe.
-
And with all of these declines
-
we have the near exponential population growth
-
where by 2030 there might be over
-
8 billion people on this planet.
-
Energy production alone would need to
-
increase 44% by 2030 to meet such demand.
-
And again, since money is the only initiator of action-
-
are we to expect that any country on
-
the planet is going to be able to afford
-
the massive changes needed to revolutionize agriculture
-
water processing, energy production and the like?
-
When the global debt pyramid scheme is
-
slowly shutting the entire world down...
-
Not to mention the fact that
-
the unemployment you currently see
-
is going to become normality due to
-
the nature of technological unemployment.
-
The jobs are not coming back.
-
And finally, a broad social perspective.
-
From the 1970 to 2010, poverty on this
-
planet doubled due to this system...
-
and given our current state-
-
do you honestly think we will see
-
anything less than more doubling...
-
more suffering and more mass starvation?
-
[The Beginning]
-
There is not going to be any recovery.
-
This is not some long depression
-
that we're some day going to pull out of.
-
I think the next phase that we are going to see after the
-
next round of economic collapses is massive civil unrest.
-
When unemployment checks stop being
-
paid because the states have no money left.
-
And when things get so bad that people lose confidence
-
in their elected leaders, they will demand change
-
if we don't kill each other in the process
-
or destroy the environment.
-
I'm just afraid that we might get to the point of no return...
-
and that bothers me to no end.
-
We do all we can to avoid that condition.
-
It's clear that we're on the verge of a great transition in human life...
-
That what we face now is this fundamental
-
change of the life we've known over the last century.
-
There has to be a link between the economy and
-
the resources of this planet
-
the resources being, of course, all animal and plant life;
-
the health of the oceans and everything else.
-
This is a monetary paradigm that will not
-
let go until it's killed the last human being.
-
The "in" group will do all it can to stay in power
-
and that's what you've got to keep in mind.
-
They'll use the army and navy and lies..
-
or whatever they have to use to keep in power.
-
They're not about to give it up
-
because they don't know of any other system that will perpetuate their kind.
-
[Live from New York]
-
[Global Protests Shut Down World Economy]
-
[London-Live]
-
[China-Live]
-
[South Africa - Live]
-
[Spain - Live]
-
[Russian - Live]
-
[Canada - Live]
-
[Saudi Arabia - Live]
-
[Western Crime Rates Soar]
-
[UN Declares State of Global Emergency]
-
[Global Unemployment Hits 65%]
-
[Fears of World War Continue]
-
[Debt Collapse now causing food shortages]
-
[Take it Back]
-
[While no violence has been reported as
-
the unprecedented protests continue...
-
it appears that the equivalent of trillions of dollars
-
are being systematically withdrawn from bank accounts
-
across the world and in turn..
-
evidently now being dumped in
-
front of the world's central banks.]
-
[THIS IS YOUR WORLD]
-
[THIS IS OUR WORLD]
-
[THE REVOLUTION IS NOW]
-
[WWW.THEZEITGEISTMOVEMENT.COM]