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A Resource-Based Economy in its working state is really quite simple
deceptively simple given the complexity, imbalance
confusion and uncertainty of the monetary-market system
that we all endure today:
a method I will point out as I go along
that is completely decoupled from the natural world, from human needs.
It exists as a mere abstraction floating in the air.
In Part Three: Objections and Projections
which will hopefully be a little bit fun
I will touch upon some of the more common criticisms of this direction
along with what we, those of us that identify with this
in a very sincere way, are likely to expect
as this direction gains more attention across the world.
I think it's really important we come to terms with the inevitable hostility
that arises when we broach the deep-seeded subjects that we do.
It's important to remember that we are all victims of culture
as has been pointed out by previous speakers
and while many people are indeed
coming to terms with the growing social problems
and do see the Zeitgeist Movement, the Venus Project and the Resource-Based Economy
as a viable solution, there are also many
that have a very powerful identification with the current model
and in all seriousness, view our work as an extreme threat
to their identity, and it's something that unfortunately I think will grow.
[applause] You're applauding that?
You're funny.
Then in Part Four, I will talk briefly about the transition
something that's also been alluded to very well.
I come at it from a similar angle although a little more general.
The complexity and lack of predictability it holds is often illusive
to those that immediately hear about this information
and ask the immediate question "How do we do it?" Changing the world is not easy
especially when the concept presented is probably the most radical
social shift this species has ever faced or considered.
But this is why we're here. The core interest of the Zeitgeist Movement is...
The defining interest is to put our heads together
to work together, to figure out how to actually get this done.
That's why we're here.
If anyone, by the way, is simply waiting for me to tell them what to do
or anyone else to guide their way, sorry you're going to be disappointed.
The Zeitgeist Movement is not a follow-the-leader movement.
The only way this movement will work is if each one of you in this audience
each one of you listening to this webcast or viewing this event archive
in the future, sees the merit of this and is prepared
to take the time and sacrifice to become an expert
on this material and be able to transmit it to your fellowman in a fluid way.
[applause] Thank you.
I've ended two of my previous films with "The Revolution is now" and I want to clarify:
The Revolution is a revolution of thought.
It's a revolution of creativity, of ingenuity, a revolution of consciousness.
I want to make it very, very clear that this
is an information-based movement. It's an enlightenment of understanding
what can be if we cared enough.
Part One: A Self-Generating Model
A wise man once said "The most profound understandings
tend to be the most obvious, yet overlooked."
I want everyone to keep that in mind as I run down the following section
for as elementary as what I'm about to point out may seem
these issues are far from being given the relevance they deserve.
You know that 'of course mentality'.
Those who say that tend to not understand what you are saying.
Natural Law:
A natural law is a property of what we call nature
or the whole of the physical phenomenon around us
to which we are symbiotically connected.
Classic example is the law of gravity.
[It] doesn't matter how much faith I have
to believe I can jump up right now and dance on the ceiling.
The law of gravity simply won't allow it.
Since the effects of gravity are also measurable and predictable
becoming a tool, this knowledge becomes the basis of inference
which we use to make more accurate decisions.
Once this law was discovered, all sorts of possibilities began to emerge
and the world became a little bit more intelligent about what was possible
and what wasn't, when it comes a phenomenon related to it.
It builds up upon... We build upon natural law.
As another example, before the germ basis of disease
was discovered by Louis Pasteur, there were many ineffective
and outright dangerous treatments for human sickness
(as anyone who studies medical history will know)
and we look back at these strange
suspicious and often superstitious methods
and wonder, how could we possibly have been so misinformed?
Yet, we seldom recognize this trend as a universal
and how it applies to us today. Most rarely consider
that many of our current modern practices might be in the same boat
to be looked back upon by future human societies which will wonder
"What the hell were they thinking?
Didn't they see the natural law referent for that issue?"
Etcetera.
The point here is that the evolution of scientific discoveries
discoveries which always originate from feedback
from the natural world, constantly refine our understandings
(if we're open to receive it, which is a conversation in and of itself).
It creates dependable, testable reference
that we can use to assist in our reasoning about the problems
solutions or even invention.
The process of transfer or reason from a given law
to an extrapolated conclusion
is called inferential logic
as if anyone's ever studied these things in college.
Nearly every man-made thing you see in the modern world
is essentially a product of this reasoning.
Everything. However there is a one area of human life
which we all have to admit goes virtually untouched
by the natural law 'reference'
and the extrapolation of this reasoning
and that is our Social System.
Somehow human organization is excluded here.
For some reason the social arrangement that we utilize goes untouched
as evolution continues as information.
It exists as one of the most dated practices of organization I think we have left.
I can break off into many different areas from this point
in regard to how provably ineffective and archaic
the whole of human social management is conducted
from our prison systems
to the banking oligarchs that we blindly accept
to the grand distortion that I literally could talk for hours on end
and if you hadn't seen my prior presentations, 'Social Pathology'
I strongly suggest them, but that's not the point
of what this presentation is about because I want to hone in.
I want to narrow it down to one thing
and that is universal human needs.
Many, throughout modern history, have been trying
to find a universal distinction for what we call human nature
a very open word these days used almost flagrantly by the population.
The question becomes "What traits are universal
across the whole of the human species?" You really can't define human nature
without that essentially being the case.
Rather than speculate, which is what the great majority of public does
(and I'm going to talk about it later as an argument that moves against us.
People often bring this up.) let's actually think about
what we actually know.
Human nature in a general sense is at least
a set of immutable human needs
that run through the species without exception.
Needs which not only govern our physical health (which is the first thing
most people think of when they think of a human need such as food)
but can actually also trigger different predictable behavioral
and physiological tendencies that are quite elusive in the organism
that are not readily apparent in the sense of causality
that we typically think of.
Furthermore, it isn't just those needs must be met
in a traditional 'input' sense. There's also the very real need
for all of us to have protection against other forms of stimulus
that can corrupt and distort us.
As will be touched upon in a moment, certain environmental or social stressors
for example, can create profound
yet initially unnoticed consequences in human development
and it's a very misunderstood and underappreciated fact.
Needless to say, if I don't get proper nutrition: water, air
I will cease to exist over time.
If I'm exposed to substances that are chemically toxic
to my biology, such as ingesting mercury
I will likely get very sick or have permanent brain damage.
If I suffer serious vitamin deficiency as a child
there's a predictable detrimental outcome for my personal health
such as stunted growth or immunity deficiencies.
Human needs do not stop at that basic level.
Humans are bio-psychosocial organisms
meaning we are affected by our environment, symbiotically
in very subtle and complex ways.
and before I continue... Who's water is this? It's mine? Beautiful.
(Audience member) It's all ours.
[applause]
For instance
if a mother in the late stages of pregnancy
suffers extreme emotional stress
flooding her system with cortisol (a stress hormone)
the nervous system of that child could be predictably compromised
in a negative way for the rest of his or her life
for the fetus is in a stage of learning about what the world actually