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  • "The old appeals to racial, sexual and religious chauvinism,

  • to rabid nationalist fervor are beginning not to work."

  • "The business of who I am and whether I'm good or bad

  • or achieving or not, all that's learned along the way."

  • "It's just a ride

  • and we can change it anytime we want. It's only a choice.

  • No effort, no work, no job, no savings of money."

  • "I realized that I had the game wrong,

  • that the game was to find out what I already was."

  • "We were saying,

  • how very important it is

  • to bring about, in the human mind,

  • the radical revolution.

  • The crisis is a crisis in consciousness.

  • A crisis that cannot, anymore,

  • accept the old norms,

  • the old patterns,

  • the ancient traditions.

  • And, considering what the world is now,

  • with all the misery,

  • conflict,

  • destructive brutality,

  • aggression,

  • and so on...

  • Man

  • is still as he was.

  • Is still brutal,

  • violent,

  • aggressive,

  • acquisitive,

  • competitive.

  • And, he's built a society along these lines."

  • .

  • ZEITGEIST ADDENDUM

  • "It is no measure of health to be well adjusted

  • to a profoundly sick society." J. Krishnamurti

  • Society today, is composed of a series of institutions.

  • .

  • From political institutions,

  • legal institutions,

  • religious institutions.

  • To institutions of social class,

  • familial values,

  • and occupational specialization.

  • It is obvious, the profound influence

  • these traditionalized structures have

  • in shaping our understandings and perspectives.

  • Yet, of all the social institutions, we are born into,

  • directed by and conditioned upon,

  • there seems to be no system as taken for granted,

  • and misunderstood,

  • as the monetary system.

  • Taking on nearly religious proportions,

  • the established monetary institution exists

  • as one of the most unquestioned forms of faith there is.

  • How money is created, the policies by which it is governed,

  • .

  • and how it truly affects society,

  • are unregistered interests of the great majority of the population.

  • In a world where 1% of the population owns 40% of the planet's wealth.

  • In a world where 34.000 children die every single day

  • from poverty and preventable diseases,

  • and where 50% of the world's population

  • lives on less than 2 dollars a day...

  • One thing is clear.

  • Something is very wrong.

  • And, whether we are aware of it or not,

  • the lifeblood of all of our established institutions,

  • and thus society itself, is money.

  • Therefore, understanding this institution of monetary policy

  • is critical to understanding why our lives are the way they are.

  • Unfortunately, economics is often viewed with confusion and boredom.

  • Endless streams of financial jargon,

  • coupled with intimidating mathematics,

  • quickly deters people from attempts at understanding it.

  • However, the fact is:

  • The complexity associated with the financial system is a mere mask,

  • designed to conceal one of the most socially paralyzing structures,

  • humanity has ever endured.

  • "None are more hopelessly enslaved

  • than those who falsely believe they are free."

  • -Johann Wolfgang von Goethe - 1749-1832

  • A number of years ago,

  • the central bank of the United States, the Federal Reserve,

  • produced a document entitled "Modern Money Mechanics".

  • This publication detailed the institutionalized practice

  • of money creation as utilized by the Federal Reserve

  • and the web of global commercial banks it supports.

  • On the opening page the document states its objective:

  • "The purpose of this booklet is to describe

  • the basic process of money creation

  • in a 'fractional reserve' banking system."

  • It then proceeds to describe this fractional reserve process

  • through various banking terminology.

  • A translation of which goes something like this:

  • The United States government decides it needs some money.

  • So it calls up the Federal Reserve

  • and requests, say, 10 billion dollars.

  • The FED replies saying:

  • "Sure, we'll buy ten billion in government bonds from you".

  • So the government takes some pieces of paper,

  • paints some official looking designs on them

  • and calls them treasury bonds.

  • Then it puts a value on these bonds to the sum of 10 billion dollars,

  • and sends them over to the FED.

  • In turn, the people of the FED

  • draw up a bunch of impressive pieces of papers themselves,

  • only this time, calling them "Federal Reserve notes",

  • also designating a value of ten billion dollars to the set.

  • The FED than takes these notes and trades them for the bonds.

  • Once this exchange is complete,

  • the government then takes the ten billion in federal reserve notes,

  • and deposits it into an bank account.

  • And, upon this deposit,

  • the paper notes officially become legal tender money,

  • adding ten billion to the US money supply.

  • And there it is, ten billion in new money has been created.

  • Of course, this example is a generalization.

  • For, in reality, this transaction would occur electronically,

  • with no paper used at all.

  • In fact, only 3% of the US money supply exists in physical currency.

  • The other 97 percent essentially exists in computers alone.

  • Now, government bonds are by design instruments of debt.

  • And when the FED purchases these bonds,

  • with money it essentially created out of thin air,

  • the government is actually promising

  • to pay back that money to the FED.

  • In other words, the money was created out of debt.

  • This mind numbing paradox,

  • of how money or value can be created out of debt or a liability,

  • will become more clear as we further this exercise.

  • So, the exchange has been made,

  • and now ten billion dollars sits in a commercial bank account.

  • Here is where it gets really interesting.

  • For, as based on the fractional reserve practice,

  • that ten billion dollar deposit

  • instantly becomes part of the bank's reserves,

  • just as all deposits do.

  • And, regarding reserve requirements,

  • as stated in "Modern Money Mechanics":

  • "A bank must maintain legally required reserves

  • equal to a prescribed percentage of its deposits".

  • It then quantifies this by stating: "Under current regulations

  • .

  • the reserve requirement against most transaction accounts is 10%".

  • This means that with a ten billion dollar deposit,

  • 10%, or one billion, is held as the required reserve,

  • .

  • while the other nine billion is considered an excessive reserve,

  • and can be used as the basis for new loans.

  • .

  • Now, it is logical to assume, that this nine billion

  • is literally coming out of the existing ten billion dollar deposit.

  • However, this is actually not the case.

  • What really happens, is that the nine billion

  • is simply created out of thin air

  • on top of the existing 10 billion dollar deposit.

  • This is how the money supply is expanded.

  • As stated in "Modern Money Mechanics":

  • "Of course they" -the banks-

  • "do not really pay out loans for the money they receive as deposits.

  • If they did this, no additional money would be created.

  • What they do when they make loans

  • is to accept promissory notes" -loan contracts-

  • "in exchange for credits" -money-

  • "to the borrowers' transaction accounts."

  • In other words, the nine billion can be created out of nothing,

  • simply because there is a demand for such a loan,

  • and that there is a 10 billion dollar deposit

  • to satisfy the reserve requirements.

  • Now, let's assume that somebody walks into this bank

  • and borrows the newly available nine billion dollars.

  • They will then most likely take that money

  • and deposit it into their own bank account.

  • The process then repeats.

  • For that deposit becomes part of the bank's reserves.

  • 10% is isolated and in turn 90% of the nine billion, or 8.1 billion,

  • is now available as newly created money for more loans.

  • And, of course, that 8.1 can be loaned out and redeposited

  • creating an additional 7.2 billion.

  • To 6.5 billion... to 5.9 billion... etc.

  • This deposit money creation loan cycle

  • can technically go on to infinity.

  • The average mathematical result is that about 90 billion dollars

  • can be created on top of the original 10 billion.

  • In other words, for every deposit

  • that ever occurs in the banking system,

  • about nine times that amount can be created out of thin air.

  • Money-Jitters. Ask the obliging Bank of America

  • for a jar of soothing instant money.

  • M-O-N-E-Y in the form of a convenient personal loan.

  • So, now that we understand how money is created

  • by this fractional reserve banking system,

  • a logical yet illusive question might come to mind:

  • What is actually giving this newly created money value?

  • The answer: the money that already exists.

  • The new money essentially steals value from the existing money supply.

  • For the total pool of money is being increased

  • irrespective to demand for goods and services.

  • And, as supply and demand finds equilibrium, prices rise,

  • diminishing the purchasing power of each individual dollar.

  • This is generally referred to as inflation.

  • And inflation is essentially a hidden tax on the public.

  • What is the advice that you generally get?

  • And that is, inflate the currency.

  • They don't say: debase the currency.

  • They don't say: devalue the currency.

  • They don't say: cheat the people who are safe.

  • They say: lower the interest rates.

  • The real deception is when we distort the value of money.

  • When we create money out of thin air, we have no savings.

  • Yet there's so called "capital".

  • So, my question boils down to this:

  • How in the world can we expect to solve the problems of inflation?

  • That is: the increase in the supply of money, with more inflation."

  • Of course, it can't.

  • The fractional reserve system of monetary expansion

  • is inherently inflationary.

  • For the act of expanding the money supply,

  • without there being a proportional expansion of goods and services

  • in the economy, will always debase a currency.

  • In fact, a quick glance at the historical values of the US dollar,

  • versus the money supply, reflects this point definitively

  • for inverse relationship is obvious.

  • One dollar in 1913 required $21.60 in 2007 to match value.

  • That is a 96% devaluation

  • since the Federal Reserve came into existence.

  • Now, if this reality of inherent and perpetual inflation

  • seems absurd and economically self defeating,

  • hold that thought, for absurdity is an understatement

  • in regard to how our financial system really operates.

  • For in our financial system money is debt,

  • and debt is money.

  • Here is a chart of the US money supply from 1950 to 2006.

  • Here is a chart of the US national debt for the same period.

  • How interesting it is that the trends are virtually the same.

  • For the more money there is, the more debt there is.

  • The more debt there is, the more money there is.

  • To put it a different way, every single dollar in your wallet

  • is owed to somebody by somebody. For remember:

  • The only way the money can come into existence is from loans.

  • Therefore, if everyone in the country were able to pay off all debts,

  • including the government,

  • there would not be one dollar in circulation.

  • "If there were no debts in our money system,

  • there wouldn't be any money."

  • -Marriner Eccles- Governor of the Federal Reserve September 30th, 1941

  • In fact, the last time in American history

  • the national debt was completely paid off was in 1835

  • after president Andrew Jackson shut down the central bank

  • that preceded the Federal Reserve.

  • In fact, Jackson's entire political platform essentially revolved

  • around his commitment to shut down the central bank.

  • Stating at one point:

  • "The bold efforts the present bank has made to control the government

  • are but premonitions of the fate that awaits the American people

  • should they be deluded into a perpetuation of this institution

  • or the establishment of another like it."

  • Unfortunately his message was short lived,

  • and the international bankers succeeded

  • to install another central bank in 1913, the Federal Reserve.

  • And as long as this institution exists, perpetual debt is guaranteed.

  • .

  • Now, so far we have discussed the reality

  • that money is created out of debt through loans.

  • These loans are based on a bank's reserves,

  • and reserves are derived from deposits.

  • And through this fractional reserve system,

  • any one deposit can create 9 times its original value.

  • In turn, debasing the existing money supply,

  • raising prices in society.

  • And, since all this money is created out of debt,

  • and circulated randomly through commerce,

  • people become detached from their original debt,

  • and a disequilibrium exists

  • where people are forced to compete for labor

  • in order to pull enough money out of the money supply

  • to cover their costs of living.

  • As dysfunctional and backwards as all of this might seem,

  • there is still one thing we have omitted from this equation.

  • And it is this element of the structure

  • which reveals the truly fraudulent nature of the system itself.

  • The application of interest.

  • When the government borrows money from the FED,

  • or when a person borrows money from a bank,

  • it almost always has to be paid back with a crude interest.

  • In other words, almost every single dollar that exists

  • must be eventually returned to a bank with interest paid as well.

  • But, if all money is borrowed from the Central Bank,

  • and is expanded by commercial banks through loans,

  • only what would be referred to as the "principal"

  • is been created in the money supply.

  • So then, where is the money

  • to cover all of the interest that is charged?

  • Nowhere.

  • It doesn't exist.

  • The ramifications of this are staggering,

  • for the amount of money owed back to the banks will always exceed

  • the amount of money that is available in circulation.

  • This is why inflation is a constant in the economy,

  • for new money is always needed

  • to help cover the perpetual deficit built into the system,

  • caused by the need to pay the interest.

  • What this also means, is that mathematically,

  • defaults and bankruptcy are literally built into this system,

  • and there will always be poor pockets of society

  • that get the short end of the stick.

  • An analogy would be a game of musical chairs,

  • for the once music stops, somebody is left out to dry.

  • And that's the point.

  • It invariably transfers true wealth from the individual to the banks.

  • For, if you are unable to pay for your mortgage,

  • they will take your property.

  • This is particularly enraging when you realize

  • that not only is such a default inevitable,

  • due to the fractional reserve practice, but also because of the fact

  • that the money that the bank loaned to you

  • didn't even legally exist in the first place.

  • In 1969 there was a Minnesota court case

  • involving a man named Jerome Daly

  • who was challenging the foreclosure of his home by the bank,

  • which provided the loan to purchase it.

  • His argument was that the mortgage contract

  • required both parties -being he and the bank-

  • each put up a legitimate form of property for the exchange.

  • In legal language this is called consideration:

  • [ a contract's basis. a contract is founded on an exchange

  • of one form of consideration for another. ]

  • Mr. Daly explained that the money was, in fact,

  • not the property of the bank, for it was created out of nothing

  • as soon as the loan agreement was signed.

  • Remember what "Modern Money Mechanics" stated about loans?

  • "What they do, when they make loans, is to"

  • "accept promissory notes in exchange for credits".

  • "Reserves are unchanged by the loan transactions."

  • "But, deposit credits constitute new additions"

  • "to the total deposits of the banking system."

  • In other words, the money doesn't come out of their existing assets.

  • The bank is simply inventing it, putting up nothing of it's own,

  • except for a theoretical liability on paper.

  • As the court case progressed,

  • the bank's president Mr. Morgan took the stand

  • and in the judge's personal memorandum, he recalled that

  • the Plaintiff - bank's president - admitted that,

  • in combination with the Federal Reserve Bank

  • did create the money and credit upon its books by bookkeeping entry.

  • The money and credit first came into existence when they created it.

  • Mr. Morgan admitted that

  • no US Law or Statute existed which gave him the right to do this.

  • A lawful consideration must exist and be tendered to support the Note.

  • The Jury found that there was no lawful consideration and I agree.

  • He also poetically added,

  • "Only God can create something of value out of nothing".

  • And, upon this revelation

  • the court rejected the bank's claim for foreclosure

  • and Daly kept his home.

  • The implications of this court decision are immense.

  • For every time you borrow money from a bank,

  • whether it is a mortgage loan or a credit card charge,

  • the money given to you is not only counterfeit,

  • it is an illegitimate form of consideration.

  • And hence, voids the contract to repay.

  • For the bank never had the money as property to begin with.

  • Unfortunately such legal realizations are suppressed and ignored.

  • And the game of perpetual wealth transfer and perpetual debt continues.

  • And this brings us to the ultimate question:

  • Why?

  • During the American Civil War

  • President Lincoln bypassed the high interest loans

  • offered by the European banks

  • and decided to do what the founding fathers advocated.

  • Which was to create an independent and inherently debt-free currency.

  • It was called "The Greenback".

  • Shortly after this measure was taken, an internal document circulated

  • between private British and American banking interests, stated:

  • "...slavery is but the owning of labor"

  • "and carries with it the care of laborers,"

  • "while the European plan..."

  • "is that capital shall control labor by controlling wages."

  • "This can be done by controlling the money."

  • "It will not do to allow the Greenback... as we cannot control that."

  • The fractional reserve policy

  • perpetrated by the Federal Reserve which has spread in practice

  • to the great majority of banks in the world,

  • is, in fact, a system of modern slavery.

  • Think about it, money is created out of debt.

  • And what the people do when they are in debt?

  • They submit to employment to pay it off.

  • But if money only can only be created out of loans,

  • how can society ever be debt free?

  • It can't and that's the point.

  • And it is the fear of losing assets

  • coupled with the struggle to keep up

  • with the perpetual debt and inflation inherent in the system

  • compounded by the inescapable scarcity within the money supply itself

  • created by the interest that can never be repaid,

  • that keeps the wage-slave in line,

  • running on a hamster wheel, with millions of others,

  • in effect powering an empire

  • that truly benefits only the elite at the top of the pyramid.

  • For, at the end of the day, who are you really working for?

  • .

  • The banks.

  • Money is created in a bank and invariably ends up in a bank.

  • They are the true masters,

  • along with the corporations and governments they support.

  • Physical slavery requires people to be housed and fed.

  • Economic slavery requires people to feed and house themselves.

  • It is one of the most ingenious scams

  • for social manipulation ever created.

  • And at its core,

  • it is an invisible war against the population.

  • Debt is the weapon used to conquer and enslave societies,

  • and interest is its prime ammunition.

  • And, as the majority walks around oblivious to this reality,

  • the banks in collusion with governments and corporations

  • continue to perfect and expand their tactics of economic warfare,

  • spawning new bases, such as the World Bank

  • and International Monetary Fund [IMF],

  • while also inventing a new type of soldier:

  • The birth of the Economic Hit Man.

  • There are two ways to conquer and enslave a nation.

  • One is by sword. The other is by debt.- John Adams - 1735-1826

  • We, economic hit men, really have been the ones responsible for creating

  • this first truly global empire and we work many different ways.

  • John Perkins Former Chief Economist for Chas. T. Main Inc. Author: Confessions of an Economic Hitman

  • But perhaps the most common is that we will

  • identify a country that has resources our corporations covet, like oil

  • and then, arrange a huge loan to that country

  • from the World Bank or one of its sister organizations.

  • But the money never actually goes to the country.

  • Instead it goes to our big corporations

  • to built infrastructure projects in that country.

  • Power plants, industrial parks, ports.

  • Things that benefit a few rich people in that country

  • in addition to our corporations

  • but really don't help the majority of the people at all.

  • However, those people, the whole country is left holding a huge debt.

  • It's such a big debt they can't repay it and that's part of the plan

  • that they can't repay it. And so, at some point

  • we economic hit men, go back to them and say, "Listen,

  • you owe us a lot of money. You can't pay your debt. So, sell your oil

  • real cheap to our oil companies",

  • "allow us to build a military base in your country", or

  • "send troops in support of ours to someplace in the world like Iraq"

  • or "vote with us in the next UN vote",to have their

  • electric utility company privatized and

  • their water and sewage system privatized

  • and sold to US corporations or other multinational corporations."

  • So there is a whole mushrooming thing and

  • it's so typical the way the IMF and the World Bank work.

  • They put a country in debt and it's such a big debt it can't pay it

  • and then you offer to refinance that debt and pay even more interest

  • and you demand this quid pro quo

  • which you call a "conditionality" or "good governance"

  • which means basically that they've got to sell off their resources

  • including many of their social services, their utility companies,

  • their school systems sometimes, their penal systems,

  • their insurance systems, to foreign corporations.

  • So it's a double - triple - quadruple whammy!

  • IRAN; 1953

  • The precedent for economic hit men really began back in the early 50's

  • when the democratically elected Mossadegh who was elected in Iran.

  • He was considered to be the hope for democracy in the middle east

  • and around the world. He was in Time-Magazine's "Man of the year". But...

  • one of the things that he brought on and began to implement was

  • the idea that foreign oil companies needed to pay the Iranian people

  • a lot more for the oil that they were taking out of Iran

  • and the Iranian people should benefit from their own oil. Strange policy.

  • We didn't like that of course. But...

  • we were afraid to do what we normally were doing

  • which was to send in the military. Instead we sent in one CIA agent

  • Kermit Roosevelt, Teddy Roosevelt's relative.

  • And Kermit went in with a few million dollars and

  • was very, very effective and efficient and in a short amount of time

  • he managed to get Mossadegh overthrown

  • and brought in the shah of Iran to replace him,

  • who always was favorable to oil. And it was extremely effective

  • [ Revolt in Iran ]

  • "Mobs overthrow Tehran.

  • Army officers shout that Mossadegh has surrendered and his regime as

  • virtual dictator of Iran is ended. Pictures of the Shah are paraded

  • through the streets as sentiment reverses. The Shah is welcomed home."

  • So back here in the United States, in Washington

  • people looked around and said: "Wow, that was easy and cheap".

  • So this established a whole new way

  • of manipulating countries, of creating empire.

  • The only problem with Roosevelt was that he was a

  • card carrying CIA agent. And if he'd been caught

  • the ramifications could have been pretty serious.

  • So very quickly, at that point, the decision was made to

  • use private consultants to channel the money through the

  • World Bank or the IMF or one of the other such agencies

  • to bring in people like me, who worked for private companies.

  • So that if we got caught

  • there would be no governmental ramifications.

  • GUATEMALA 1954

  • When Árbenz became president of Guatemala

  • the country was very much under the thumbs of

  • United Fruit company, the big international corporations

  • and Árbenz ran on this ticket that said: "You know

  • we want to give the land back to the people".

  • And once he took power, he was implementing policies that would

  • would do exactly that, give the land rights back to the people.

  • United Fruit didn't like that very much.

  • And so, they hired a public relations firm, launched a huge campaign

  • in the United States to convince the United States people

  • the citizens of the United States, the press of the United States and

  • the Congress of the United States, that Árbenz was a soviet puppet

  • and that if we allowed him to stay in power

  • the Soviets would have a foothold in this hemisphere.

  • And that, at that point in time, was a huge fear on everybody's mind

  • of the red terror, the communist terror.

  • And so, to make a long story short, out of this public relations campaign

  • came a commitment on the part of the CIA and the military to take this man out.

  • And in fact, we did. We sent in planes, we sent in soldiers, we sent

  • in jackals, we sent everything in to take him out. And did take him out.

  • And as soon as he was removed from office,

  • the new guy that took over after him basically reinstated everything to

  • the big international corporations, including United Fruit.

  • Ecuador, for many, many years had been ruled by pro-US dictators,

  • often relatively brutal. Then it was decided they were gonna have

  • a truly democratic election. Jaime Roldos ran for office and his main goal,

  • he said, as president would be to make sure that Ecuador's

  • resources were used to help the people. And he won. Overwhelming.

  • By more votes than anybody had ever won anything in Ecuador.

  • And he began to implement these policies.

  • To make sure that the profits from oil went to help the people.

  • Well, we didn't like that in the United States.

  • I was sent down as one of several economic hit men to change Roldos.

  • To corrupt him. To bring him around. To let him know, you know.

  • "Ok, you know, you can get very rich, you and your family, if you play

  • our game. But if you continue to try to keep these policies you've promised,

  • you're gonna go." He wouldn't listen.

  • He was assassinated.

  • As soon as the plane crashed, the whole area was cordoned off.

  • The only people allowed in were US military from a nearby base

  • and some of the Ecuadorian military.

  • When an investigation was launched,

  • two of the key witnesses died in car accidents

  • before they had a chance to testify.

  • A lot of very, very strange things that went on around

  • the assassination of Jaime Roldos.

  • I, like most people who've really looked at this case,

  • have absolutely no doubt that it was an assassination.

  • And, of course, in my position as an economic hit man,

  • I was always expecting something to happen to Jaime,

  • whether it'd be a coup or assassination, I wasn't sure, but that

  • he would be taken down, because he was not being corrupted, he would

  • not allow himself to be corrupted the way we wanted to corrupt him.

  • PANAMA 1981

  • Omar Torrijos, president of Panama,

  • was, you know, one of my favorite people. I really really liked him.

  • He was very charismatic. He was a guy who really wanted to help his country.

  • And when I tried to bribe him or corrupt him, he said: "Look, John"

  • - he called me Juanito - He said: "Look Juanito,

  • I don't need the money. What I really need is for my country

  • to be treated fairly. I need for the US to repay the

  • debts that you owe my people for all the destruction you've done here.

  • I need to be in a position where I can help other Latin American countries

  • win their independence and be free of this,

  • of this terrible presence from the North.

  • You people are exploiting us so badly.

  • I need to have the Panama Canal back in the hands of the Panamanian people.

  • That's what I want.

  • And so, leave me alone, don't, you known, don't try to bribe me".

  • It was 1981 and, in May, Jaime Roldos was assassinated.

  • And Omar was very aware of this.

  • Torrijos got his family together and he said:

  • "I'm probably next, but it's OK,

  • because I've done what I came here to do

  • I've renegotiated the Canal.

  • The Canal will now be in our hands." He'd just finished negotiating

  • the treaty with Jimmy Carter.

  • In June of that same year, just a couple of months later,

  • he also went down in an airplane crash,

  • which, there's no question, was executed by CIA sponsored jackals.

  • A tremendous amount of evidence that

  • one of Torijos' security guards handed him, at the last moment,

  • as he was getting on the plane, a tape recorder.

  • A small tape recorder that contained a bomb.

  • VENEZUELA 2002

  • It is interesting to me how this

  • system has continued pretty much the same way

  • for years, and years, and years, except the economic hit men

  • have got better and better and better.

  • Then we come up with, very recently, what happened in Venezuela.

  • In 1998, Hugo Chavez gets elected president,

  • following a long line of presidents

  • who'd been very corrupt and basically destroyed the economy

  • of the country. And Chavez was elected amidst all that.

  • Chavez stood up to the United States

  • and he's done it primarily demanding that Venezuelan oil

  • be used to help the Venezuelan people.

  • Well, we didn't like that in the United States.

  • So in 2002,

  • a coup was staged, which there's no question in my mind,

  • and most other people's minds, that the CIA was behind that coup.

  • The way that that coup was fomented

  • was very reflective of what Kermit Roosevelt had done in Iran.

  • Of paying people to go out onto the streets

  • to riot, to protest, to say that Chavez was very unpopular.

  • You know, if you can get a few thousand people to do that,

  • television can make it look like it's the whole country

  • and things start to mushroom

  • except in the case of Chavez. He was smart enough

  • and the people were so strongly behind him, that they overcame it,

  • .

  • which was a phenomenal moment in the history of Latin America.

  • IRAQ 2003

  • Iraq, actually, is a perfect example

  • of the way the whole system works.

  • So we, economic hit men, are the first line of defense.

  • We go in, we try to corrupt the governments

  • and get them to accept this huge loans,

  • which we then use as leverage to basically own them.

  • If we fail, as I failed in Panama with Omar Torrijos

  • and Ecuador with Jaime Roldos, men who refused to be corrupted,

  • then the second line of defense is we send in the jackals.

  • And the jackals either overthrow governments or they assassinate.

  • And, once that happens and a new government comes in

  • boy it's gonna tow the line because

  • that new president knows what will happen if he doesn't.

  • In the case of Iraq, both of those things failed.

  • The economic hit men were not able to get through to Saddam Hussein.

  • We tried very hard, we tried to get him to accept a deal

  • very similar to what the House of Saud had accepted in Saudi Arabia,

  • but he wouldn't accept it.

  • And so the jackals went in to take him out.

  • They couldn't do it. His security was very good.

  • After all, he, at one time, had worked for CIA.

  • He'd been hired to assassinate a former president of Iraq and failed,

  • but he knew the system.

  • So, in '91, we send in the troops and we take out the Iraqi military.

  • .

  • So, we assumed at that point

  • that Saddam Hussein is gonna come around.

  • We could have take him out, of course at that time,

  • but we didn't want to. He's the kind of strong man we like.

  • He controls his people. We thought he could control the Kurds,

  • and keep the Iranians in their border and keep pumping oil for us.

  • And that once we took this military, now he's gonna come around.

  • So the economic hit men go back in in the 90's, without success.

  • .

  • If they'd had success he'd still be running the country.

  • We'd be selling him all the fighter jets he wants,

  • and everything else he wants, but they couldn't; they didn't have success.

  • The jackals couldn't take him out again,

  • so we sent the military in once again,

  • and this time we did the complete job and took him out.

  • And in the process, created for ourselves

  • some very, very lucrative construction deals

  • to reconstruct the country that we'd essentially destroyed.

  • Which is a pretty good deal

  • if you own construction companies, big ones.

  • So, Iraq shows the three stages.

  • The economic hit men failed there.

  • The jackals failed there. And as final measure the military goes in.

  • And in that way we've really created an empire,

  • but we've done it very very subtly. It's clandestine.

  • All empires of the past were built on the military,

  • and everybody knew they were building them.

  • The British knew they were building them, the French,

  • the Germans, the Romans, the Greeks,

  • and they were proud of it, and they always had some excuse

  • like spreading civilization, spreading some religion,

  • something like that, but they knew they were doing it.

  • We don't.

  • The majority of the people in the United States have no idea

  • that we're living off the benefits of the clandestine empire.

  • That today there is more slavery in the world than ever before.

  • Then you have to ask yourself,

  • well, if it's an empire, then who is the emperor?

  • Obviously our Presidents of the United States are not emperors.

  • An emperor is someone who is not elected,

  • doesn't serve under the term

  • and doesn't report to anyone, essentially.

  • So you can't classify our presidents that way.

  • But we do have what I consider to be the equivalent of the emperor

  • and it's what I call the corporatocracy.

  • The corporatocracy is this group of individuals

  • who run our biggest corporations.

  • And they really act as the emperor of this empire.

  • They control our media,

  • either through direct ownership or advertising.

  • They control most of our politicians

  • because they finance their campaigns,

  • either through the corporations or through personal contributions

  • .

  • that come out of the the corporations.

  • They're not elected, then don't serve a limited term,

  • .

  • they don't report to anybody,

  • and at the very top of the corporatocracy,

  • you really can't tell whether the person

  • is working for a private corporation or the government

  • because they're always moving back and forth.

  • So, you know, you've got a guy who one moment

  • is the president of a big construction company like Halliburton,

  • and the next moment he's Vice President of the United States

  • or the President who was in the oil business. And this is true,

  • whether you get Democrats or Republicans in the office.

  • .

  • You have this moving back and forth through a revolving door.

  • And in a way, our government is invisible a lot of the time,

  • and his policies are carried out by our corporations

  • on one level or another. And then again,

  • the policies of the government are basically

  • forged by the corporatocracy, and then presented to the government

  • .

  • and they become government policy. So, there's an incredibly

  • cozy relationship.

  • This isn't a conspiracy theory type of thing. These people don't have to

  • get together and plot to do things.

  • .

  • They all basically work under one primary assumption,

  • and that is that they must maximize profits

  • .

  • regardless of the social and environmental costs.

  • -This process of manipulation by the corporatocracy

  • through the use of debt, bribery and political overthrow is called

  • Globalization

  • Just as the Federal Reserve keeps the American public in a position

  • of indentured servitude though perpetual debt, inflation and interest,

  • the World Bank and IMF serve this role on a global scale.

  • The basic scam is simple.

  • Put a country in debt either by its own indiscretion,

  • or through corrupting the leader of that country,

  • then impose "conditionalities" or "structural adjustment policies"

  • often consisting of the following:

  • Currency devaluation--

  • When the value of a currency drops, so does everything valued in it.

  • This makes indigenous resources available to predator countries

  • at a fraction of their worth.

  • Large funding cuts for social programs--

  • These usually include education and healthcare,

  • compromising the well-being and integrity of the society,

  • leaving the public vulnerable to exploitation.

  • Privatization of state-owned enterprises--

  • This means that socially important systems

  • can be purchased and regulated by foreign corporations for profit.

  • For example, in 1999, the World Bank insisted

  • that the Bolivian government sell

  • the public water-system of its third-largest city

  • to a subsidiary of the US corporation "Bechtel."

  • As soon as this occurred, water bills

  • for the already impoverished local residents, skyrocketed.

  • It wasn't until after a full-blown revolt by the people

  • that the Bechtel contract was nullified.

  • Then there is trade liberalization

  • or the opening up of the economy

  • through removing any restrictions on foreign trade.

  • This allows for a number of abusive economic manifestations,

  • such as transnational corporations

  • bringing in their own mass-produced products,

  • undercutting the indigenous production and ruining local economies.

  • An example is Jamaica;

  • which, after accepting loans and conditionalities from the World Bank,

  • lost its largest cash crop markets

  • due to competition with Western imports.

  • Today, countless farmers are out of work for they're unable to compete

  • with the large corporations.

  • Another variation is the creation of numerous

  • seemingly unnoticed, unregulated, inhuman sweatshop-factories

  • which take advantage of the imposed economic hardship.

  • Additionally, due to production-deregulation,

  • environmental destruction is perpetual, as a country's resources

  • are often exploited by the indifferent corporations

  • while outputting large amounts of deliberate pollution.

  • -The largest environmental lawsuit in the history of the world

  • today is being brought on behalf of

  • 30,000 Ecuadorian and Amazonian people

  • against Texaco, which is now owned by Chevron;

  • so it's against Chevron, but for activities conducted by Texaco.

  • They're estimated to be more than 18 times

  • what the Exxon Valdez dumped into the Coast of Alaska.

  • In the case of Ecuador it wasn't an accident.

  • The oil companies did it intentionally. Tthey knew they were doing it

  • to save money rather than arranging for proper disposal.

  • -Furthermore, a cursory glance

  • at the performance record of the World Bank

  • reveals that the institution, which publicly claims to

  • help poor countries develop and alleviate poverty

  • has done nothing but increase poverty and the wealth-gap

  • while corporate profits soar.

  • In 1960, the income-gap between the

  • fifth of the world's people and the richest countries

  • versus the fifth in the poorest countries was thirty to one.

  • By 1998, it was seventy-four to one.

  • While global GNP rose 40% between 1970 and 1985

  • those in poverty actually increased by 17%.

  • While from 1985 to 2000,

  • those living on less than one dollar a day increased by 18%.

  • Even the Joint Economic Committee of the U.S. Congress

  • admitted that there is a mere 40% success rate

  • of all World Bank projects.

  • In the late 1960's, the World Bank

  • intervened in Ecuador with large loans.

  • During the next 30 years, poverty grew from 50% to 70%.

  • Under or unemployment grew from 15% to 70%.

  • Public debt increased from 240 million to 16 billion,

  • while the share of resources allocated to the poor

  • went from 20% to 6%.

  • In fact, by the year 2000, 50% of Ecuador's national budget

  • had to be allocated for paying its debts.

  • It is important to understand: The World Bank is, in fact,

  • a U.S. bank, supporting U.S. interests.

  • For the United States holds veto-power over decisions,

  • as it is the largest provider of capital.

  • And where did it get this money?

  • You guessed it. It made it out of thin air

  • through the fractional reserve banking system.

  • Of the world's top 100 economies, as based on annual GDP,

  • 51 are corporations and 47 of that 51 are U.S.-based.

  • Walmart, General Motors and Exxon are more economically powerful

  • than Saudi Arabia, Poland, Norway, South Africa,

  • Finland, Indonesia and many others.

  • And, as protective trade-barriers are broken down,

  • currencies tossed together and manipulated in floating markets

  • and State economies overturned in favor of open competition

  • in global capitalism, the empire expands.

  • -You get up on your little 21-inch screen

  • and howl about America and democracy.

  • There is no America, there is no democracy.

  • There is only IBM, and ITT, and AT&T,

  • and Dupont, Dow, Union Carbide, and Exxon.

  • Those are the nations of the world today.

  • What do you think the Russians talk about in their councils of state?

  • Karl Marx?

  • They get out their linear programming charts,

  • statistical decision theories, min and max solutions

  • and compute the price-cost probabilities

  • of their transactions and investments, just like we do.

  • We no longer live in a world of nations and ideologies, Mr. Beale.

  • The world is a college of corporations,

  • inexorably determined by the immutable by-laws of business.

  • The world is a business, Mr. Beale.

  • Taken cumulatively, the integration of the world as a whole,

  • particularly in terms of economic globalization

  • and the mythic qualities of "free market" capitalism,

  • represents a veritable "empire" in its own right.

  • Few have been able to escape the "structural adjustment" and

  • .

  • "conditionalities" of the W.B, the IMF, or the WTO,

  • those international financial institutions that, however inadequate,

  • still determine what economic globalization means.

  • Such is the power of globalization that, within our lifetime, we are likely to see

  • the integration, even if unevenly, of all national economies in the world

  • .

  • into a single global, free market system.

  • -The World is being taken over by a handful of business powers

  • who dominate the natural resources we need to live,

  • while controlling the money we need to obtain these resources.

  • The end result will be world monopoly

  • based not on human life but financial and corporate power.

  • And, as the inequality grows, naturally,

  • more and more people are becoming desperate.

  • So the establishment was forced to come up with a new way

  • to deal with anyone who challenges the system.

  • So they gave birth to the "Terrorist."

  • The term "terrorist" is an empty distinction

  • designed for any person or group

  • who chooses to challenge the establishment.

  • This isn't to be confused with the fictional "Al Qaida,"

  • which was actually the name of a computer database

  • of the U.S.-supported Mujahideen in the 1980's.

  • "The truth is, there is no Islamic army or terrorist group

  • called Al Qaida. And any informed intelligence officer knows this.

  • But there is a propaganda campaign to make the public believe

  • in the presence of an identified entity...The country behind this propaganda is the U.S."

  • - Pierre-Henri Bunel, Former French Military Intelligence

  • In 2007,

  • the Department of Defense received 161.8 billion dollars

  • for the so-called global war on terrorism.

  • According to the national counter-terrorism center,

  • in 2004 roughly 2000 people were killed internationally

  • due to supposed terrorist acts.

  • Of that number, 70 were American.

  • Using this number as a general average, which is extremely generous,

  • it is interesting to note that twice as many people die

  • from peanut allergies a year than from terrorist acts.

  • Concurrently, the leading cause of death in America

  • is coronary heart disease, killing roughly 450,000 each year.

  • And in 2007, the government's allocation of funds for research

  • on this issue was about three billion dollars.

  • This means that the US government, in 2007

  • spent 54 times the amount for preventing terrorism

  • than it spent for preventing a disease

  • which kills 6600 times more people annually, than terrorism does.

  • Yet, as the name terrorism and Al Qaida are arbitrarily stamped

  • on every news report relating to any action taken against US interests

  • the myth grows wider.

  • In mid 2008, the US Attorney General actually proposed

  • that the US Congress officially declare war against the fantasy.

  • .

  • Not to mention, as of July 2008, there are now over 1 million people

  • currently on the US terrorist watch list.

  • These so called "Counter-Terrorism Measures,"

  • of course, had nothing to do with social protection

  • and everything to do with preserving the establishment

  • amongst the growing anti-American sentiment

  • both domestically and internationally

  • which is legitimately founded on

  • the greed-based corporate empire expansion

  • that is exploiting the world.

  • The true terrorists of our world, do not meet at the docks at midnight

  • or scream "Allah Akbar" before some violent action.

  • The true terrorists of our world, wear 5000 dollar suits

  • and work in the highest positions of finance, government and business.

  • So, what do we do?

  • How do we stop a system of greed and corruption

  • that has so much power and momentum?

  • How do we stop this aberrant group behavior, which feels no compassion

  • for say, the millions slaughtered in Iraq and Afghanistan,

  • so the corporatocracy can control

  • energy resources and opium production for Wall St. profit?

  • Before 1980, Afghanistan produced 0% of the world's opium.

  • After the US/CIA backed Mujahideen won the Soviet/Afghan war,

  • by 1986 they were producing 40% of the world's heroin supply.

  • By 1988, they were producing 80% of the total market supply.

  • But then, something unexpected happened.

  • The Taliban rose to power and by 2000, they had destroyed most of the opium fields.

  • Production dropped from 3000+ tons to only 185 tons, a 94% reduction.

  • On Sept. 9th 2001, the full Afghanistan invasion plans were on President Bush's Desk.

  • Two days later they had their excuse.

  • Today, opium productions in US controlled Afghanistan,

  • which now provides more than 90% of the world's heroin

  • breaks new production records nearly every year.

  • How do we stop a system of greed and corruption

  • that condemns poor populations to "Sweatshop-Slavery"

  • for the benefit of Madison Avenue?

  • Or that engineers false-flag terror attacks

  • for the sake of manipulation?

  • Or that generates built-in modes of social operation

  • which are inherently exploited?

  • Or that systematically reduces civil liberties

  • and violates human rights

  • in order to protect itself, from its own shortcomings.

  • How do we deal with the numerous covert institutions,

  • such as the Council on Foreign Relations

  • the Trilateral Commission and the Bilderberg Group

  • and the other undemocratically elected groups

  • which behind closed doors collude to control the political

  • financial, social and environmental elements of our lives?

  • In order to find the answer, we must first find

  • the true underlying cause.

  • For the fact is:

  • The selfish, corrupt power and profit- based groups

  • are not the true source of the problem.

  • They are symptoms.

  • "Greed and Competition are not the result of immutable human temperament...

  • ...greed and fear of scarcity are in fact being created and amplified...

  • the direct consequence is that we have to fight with each other in order to survive.

  • - Bernard Liertaer - Founder of the EU Currency System

  • -My name is Jacque Fresco.

  • I'm an industrial designer and a social engineer.

  • I'm very much interested in society

  • and developing a system that might be sustainable, for all people.

  • First of all, the word "corruption" is a monetary invention,

  • that aberrant behavior,

  • behavior that's disruptive to the well-being of people.

  • Well you're dealing with human behavior.

  • And human behavior appears to be environmentally determined.

  • Meaning, if you were raised by the Seminole Indians as a baby,

  • never saw anything else, you'd hold that value system.

  • And this goes for nations, it goes for individuals, for families.

  • They try to indoctrinate their children to their particular faith

  • and their country and make them feel like their are part of that.

  • And they build a society, which they call established.

  • They established a workable point of view and tend to perpetuate that.

  • Whereas, all societies are really emergent, not established.

  • And so they fight new ideas

  • that would interfere with the establishment.

  • Governments try to perpetuate that which keeps them in power.

  • People are not elected to political office to change things.

  • They are put there to keep things the way they are.

  • So you see, the bases of corruption is in our society.

  • Let me make it clear. All nations then are basically corrupt

  • because they tend to uphold existing institutions.

  • I don't mean to uphold or downgrade all nations,

  • but communism, socialism, fascism, the free enterprise-system

  • and all other sub-cultures are the same.

  • They are all basically corrupt.

  • -The most fundamental characteristic of our social institutions

  • is the necessity for self-preservation.

  • Whether dealing with a corporation, a religion or a government,

  • the foremost interest is to preserve the institution itself.

  • For instance, the last thing an oil company would ever want

  • is the utilization of energy that was outside of its control.

  • For it makes that company less relevant to society.

  • Likewise the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union

  • was, in reality, a way to preserve and perpetuate

  • the established economic and global hegemony of the United States.

  • Similarly, religions condition people

  • to feel guilty for natural inclinations,

  • each claiming to offer the only path to forgiveness and salvation.

  • At the heart of this institutional self-preservation

  • lies the monetary system.

  • For it is money that provides the means for power and survival.

  • Therefore, just as a poor person

  • might be forced to steal in order to survive,

  • it is a natural inclination to do whatever is needed

  • to continue an institution's profitability.

  • This makes it inherently difficult

  • for profit-based institutions to change, for it puts in jeopardy

  • not only the survival of large groups of people,

  • but also the coveted materialistic lifestyle

  • associated with affluence and power.

  • Therefore, the paralyzing necessity to preserve an institution,

  • regardless of its social relevance

  • is largely rooted in the need for money or profit.

  • [ Industry ]

  • - "What's in it for me?" is why people think.

  • And so if a man makes money selling a certain product,

  • that's where he's going to fight the existence of another product

  • that may threaten his institution.

  • Therefore, people cannot be fair.

  • And people do not trust each other.

  • A guy will come over to you and say,

  • "I've got just the house you're looking for." He's a salesman.

  • When a doctor says, "I think your kidney has to come out,"

  • I don't know if he's trying to pay off a yacht

  • or that my kidney has to come out.

  • It's hard in a monetary system to trust people.

  • If you came into my store and I said, "This lamp that I've got

  • is pretty good, but the lamp next door is much better,"

  • I wouldn't be in business very long. It wouldn't work.

  • If I were ethical, it wouldn't work.

  • So when you say industry cares for people, that's not true.

  • They can't afford to be ethical.

  • So your system is not designed to serve the well-being of people.

  • If you still don't understand that there would be no outsourcing of jobs

  • if they cared about people.

  • Industry does not care. They only hire people

  • because it hasn't been automated yet.

  • So don't talk about decency and ethics.

  • We cannot afford it and remain in business.

  • -It is important to point out that regardless of the social system -

  • whether fascist, socialist, capitalist or communist -

  • the underlying mechanism is still money, labor and competition.

  • Communist China is no less capitalistic than the United States.

  • The only difference is the degree

  • by which the state intervenes in enterprise.

  • The reality is that "Monetary-ism", so to speak,

  • is the true mechanism that guides the interests

  • of all the countries on the planet.

  • The most aggressive and hence dominant variation

  • of this monetary-ism is the free enterprise system.

  • The fundamental perspective, as put forth

  • by early free market economists like Adam Smith,

  • is that self interest and competition leads to social prosperity,

  • as the act of competition creates incentive,

  • which motivates people to persevere.

  • However, what isn't talked about, is how a competition based economy

  • invariably leads to strategic corruption,

  • power and wealth consolidation, social stratification,

  • technological paralysis, labor abuse and ultimately a covert form

  • of government dictatorship by the rich elite.

  • The word "corruption" is often defined as moral perversion.

  • If a company dumps toxic waste into the ocean to save money,

  • most people recognize this as "corrupt behavior".

  • On a more subtle level, when Walmart moves into a small town

  • and forces small businesses to shut down,

  • for they are unable to compete, a grey area emerges.

  • For what exactly is Walmart doing wrong?

  • Why should they care about the Mom and Pop organizations they destroy?

  • Yet, even more subtly, when a person gets fired from their job

  • because a new machine has been created,

  • which can do the work for less money,

  • people tend to just accept that as "the way it is",

  • .

  • not seeing the inherent corrupt inhumanity of such an action.

  • Because the fact is, whether it is dumping toxic waste,

  • having a monopoly enterprise or downsizing the workforce,

  • the motive is the same: Profit.

  • .

  • They are all different degrees of the same self-preserving mechanism,

  • which always puts the well-being of people second to monetary gain.

  • Therefore, corruption is not some byproduct of monetary-ism,

  • it is the very foundation.

  • And while most people acknowledge this tendency,

  • on one level or another, the majority remains naive

  • as to the broad ramifications

  • of having such a selfish mechanism

  • as the guiding mentality in society.

  • -Internal documents show

  • that after this company positively absolutely knew

  • that they had a medication that was infected with the AIDS virus,

  • they took the product off the market in the US,

  • and then they dumped it in France, Europe, Asia and Latin America.

  • The US government allowed it to happen.

  • The FDA allowed this to happen

  • and now the government is completely looking the other way.

  • Thousands of innocent hemophiliacs have died from the AIDS virus.

  • This company knew absolutely that it was infected with AIDS,

  • they dumped it because they wanted to turn this disaster into a profit.

  • -So you see, you have built-in corruption.

  • We're all chiseling off each other,

  • and you can't expect decency in that sort of thing.

  • Politics

  • ...a feeling that they don't know who to elect.

  • They think in terms of a democracy,

  • which is not possible in a monetary based economy.

  • If you have more money to advertise your position,

  • -the position you desire in government- that isn't a democracy.

  • .

  • It serves those in positions of differential advantage.

  • So it's always a dictatorship of the elitist, the financially wealthy.

  • .

  • "We can either have democracy in this country or

  • we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few,

  • but we can't have both." - Louis Brandeis - Supreme Court Justice

  • -It is an interesting observation

  • to note how seemingly unknown personalities

  • magically appear on the scene as presidential candidates.

  • Then before you know it, somehow you are left to choose

  • from a small group of extremely wealthy people

  • who suspiciously have the same broad social view.

  • Obviously it's a joke.

  • The people placed on the ballot are done so

  • because they have been pre-decided to be acceptable

  • by the established financial powers who actually run the show.

  • Yet many who understand this illusion of democracy, often think

  • "If only we could just get our honest, ethical politicians in power,

  • then we would be okay".

  • Well, while this idea, of course, seems reasonable

  • in our established oriented world view,

  • it is unfortunately another fallacy.

  • For when it really comes down to what is actually important,

  • the institution of politics and thus politicians themselves,

  • have absolutely no true relevance as to

  • what makes our world and society function.

  • -It's not politicians that can solve problems.

  • They have no technical capabilities.

  • They don't know how to solve problems.

  • Even if they were sincere, they don't know how to solve problems.

  • It's the technicians that produce the desalinization plants.

  • It's the technicians that give you electricity.

  • That give you motor vehicles.

  • That heat your house and cool it in the summer time.

  • It's technology that solves problems, not politics.

  • Politics cannot solve problems 'cause they are not trained to do so.

  • -Very few people today stop and consider

  • what it is that actually improves their lives.

  • Is it money? Obviously not.

  • One cannot eat money or stuff money into their car to get it to run.

  • Is it politics?

  • All politicians can do is create laws,

  • establish budgets and declare war.

  • Is it religion? Of course not.

  • Religion creates nothing except

  • intangible emotional solace for those who require it.

  • The true gift that we as human beings have,

  • which has been solely responsible for everything

  • that has improved our lives

  • is technology.

  • What is technology?

  • Technology is a pencil,

  • which allows one to solidify ideas on paper for communication.

  • Technology is an automobile, which allows one to travel faster

  • than feet would allow.

  • Technology is a pair of eye glasses,

  • which enables sight for those who need it.

  • Applied technology itself is merely an extension of human attributes,

  • which reduces human effort

  • freeing humans from a particular chore or problem.

  • Imagine what your life would be like today

  • without a telephone, or an oven,

  • or a computer, or an airplane.

  • .

  • Everything in your home, which you take for granted,

  • from a doorbell, to a table,

  • to a dishwasher, is technology

  • generated from the creative scientific ingenuity of human technicians.

  • Not money, politics or religion.

  • These are false institutions.

  • ...and writing your congressman is fantastic.

  • They tell you to write your congressman if you want something done.

  • The men in Washington should be at the forefront of technology.

  • The forefront of human study.

  • The forefront of crime.

  • All the factors that shape human behavior.

  • You don't have to write your congressman.

  • What kind of people are they that are appointed to do that job?

  • The future will have great difficulty...

  • and the question that's raised by politicians is:

  • How much will a project cost?

  • The question is not "how much will it cost".

  • Do we have the resources?

  • And we have the resources today to house everyone,

  • build hospitals all over the world,

  • build schools all over the world,

  • the finest equipment in labs for teaching and doing medical research.

  • So you see, we have all that, but we're in a monetary system,

  • and in a monetary system there's profit.

  • -And what is the fundamental mechanism that drives the profit system

  • besides self-interest?

  • What is it exactly that maintains that competitive edge at it's core?

  • Is it high efficiency and sustainability?

  • No. That isn't part of their design.

  • Nothing produced in our profit based society

  • is even remotely sustainable or efficient.

  • If it was, there wouldn't be a multi-million dollar a year

  • service industry for automobiles.

  • Nor would the average lifespan for most electronics

  • be less than three months before they're obsolete.

  • Is it abundance?

  • Absolutely not.

  • Abundance, as based on the laws of supply and demand,

  • is actually a negative thing.

  • If a diamond company finds

  • ten times the usual amount of diamonds during their mining,

  • it means the supply of diamonds has increased,

  • which means the cost and profit per diamond drops.

  • The fact is: efficiency, sustainability and abundance

  • are enemies of profit.

  • To put it into a word,

  • it is the mechanism of scarcity that increases profits.

  • -What is scarcity?

  • Based on keeping products valuable.

  • Slowing up production on oil raises the price.

  • Maintaining scarcity of diamonds keeps the price high.

  • They burn diamonds at the Kimberly Diamond Mine.

  • They are made of carbon. That keeps the price up.

  • -So then, what does it mean for society when scarcity,

  • either produced naturally or through manipulation

  • is a beneficial condition for industry?

  • It means that sustainability and abundance

  • will never ever occur in a profit system,

  • for it simply goes against the very nature of the structure.

  • Therefore, it is impossible to have a world without war or poverty.

  • It is impossible to continually advance technology

  • to its most efficient and productive states.

  • And most dramatically,

  • it is impossible to expect human beings

  • to behave in truly ethical or decent ways.

  • Human nature

  • or human behavior?

  • -People use the word instinct

  • because they can't account for the behavior.

  • They sit back and they evaluate

  • with their lack of knowledge, you know,

  • and they say things like,

  • "Humans are built a certain way. Greed is a natural thing,"

  • as though they'd worked for years on it.

  • And it's no more natural than wearing clothing.

  • -What we want to do is to eliminate

  • the causes of the problems.

  • Eliminate the processes

  • that produce greed and bigotry and prejudice,

  • and people taking advantage of one another and elitism,

  • eliminating the need for prisons and welfare.

  • We have always had these problems

  • because we have always lived within scarcity and barter

  • and monetary systems that produce scarcity.

  • -If you eradicate the conditions that generate

  • what you call socially offensive behavior, it does not exist.

  • .

  • A guy says: "Well, isn't that in-born?" No it's not.

  • .

  • -There is no human nature; there's human behavior,

  • and that's always been changed throughout history.

  • You're not born with bigotry and greed and corruption and hatred.

  • You pick that up within the society.

  • -War, poverty, corruption, hunger, misery, human suffering

  • will not change in a monetary system;

  • that is, there will be very little significant change.

  • It's going to take the redesign of our culture, our values,

  • .

  • and it has to be related to the carrying capacity of the earth,

  • not some human opinion or some politicians notions

  • of the way the world ought to be,

  • or some religious notion of the conduct of human affairs.

  • And that's what The Venus Project is about.

  • The society, that we're about to talk about,

  • is a society that is free of all the old superstitions,

  • incarceration, prisons, police cruelty and law.

  • All laws will disappear,

  • and the professions will disappear, that are no longer valid,

  • such as stockbrokers, bankers, advertising.

  • Gone! Forever.

  • Because it's no longer relevant.

  • -When we understand that it is technology

  • devised by human ingenuity

  • which frees humanity and increases our quality of life,

  • we then realize that the most important focus we can have

  • is on the intelligent management of the earth's resources.

  • For it is from these natural resources, we gain the materials

  • to continue our path of prosperity. Understanding this we then see

  • that money fundamentally exists as a barrier to these resources,

  • for virtually everything has a financial cost.

  • And why do we need money to obtain these resources?

  • Because of real or assumed scarcity.

  • We don't usually pay for air and tap water,

  • because it is in such high abundance,

  • selling it would be pointless.

  • So then, logically speaking, if resources

  • and technologies applicable to creating everything in our societies

  • such as houses, cities and transportation, were in high enough

  • abundance, there would be no reason to sell anything.

  • Likewise, if automation and machinery was so technologically advanced

  • as to relieve human beings of labor,

  • there would be no reason to have a job.

  • And with these social aspects taken care of,

  • there would be no reason to have money at all.

  • So the ultimate question remains:

  • Do we on Earth have enough resources

  • and technological understanding

  • to create a society of such abundance,

  • that everything we have now could be available without a price tag

  • and without the need for submission through employment?

  • Yes, we do.

  • We have the resources and technology to enable this at a minimum

  • .

  • along with the ability to raise the standards of living so high

  • that people in the future will look back at our civilization now

  • and gawk at how primitive and immature our society was.

  • -What The Venus Project proposes is an entirely different system

  • .

  • that's updated to present day knowledge.

  • -We've never given scientists the problem of

  • how do you design a society which would

  • eliminate boring and monotonous jobs,

  • that would eliminate accidents in transportation,

  • that would enable people to have a high standard of living,

  • that would eliminate poisons in our food,

  • give us other sources of energy that are clean and efficient.

  • We can do that out there.

  • A resource-based economy.

  • The major difference between a

  • Resource-Based Economy (RBE) and a monetary system

  • is that a RBE is really concerned with people and their well-being,

  • .

  • where the monetary system has become so distorted that the

  • concerns of the people are really secondary, if they're there at all.

  • The products that are turned out are for how much money you can get.

  • If there is a problem in society and

  • you can't earn money from solving that problem, then it won't be done.

  • The Resource-Based Economy is really

  • not close to anything that's been tried.

  • And with all our technology today we can create abundance.

  • It could be used to improve everyone's lifestyle,

  • abundance all over the world if we use our technology wisely

  • and maintain the environment.

  • -It's a very different system and it's very hard to talk about

  • .

  • because the public is not that well enough informed

  • as to the state of technology.

  • Energy

  • At present, we don't have to burn fossil fuels.

  • We don't have to use anything that would contaminate the environment.

  • There are many sources of energy available.

  • -Alternative energy solutions pushed by the establishment

  • such as hydrogen, biomass and even nuclear

  • are highly insufficient, dangerous and exist only

  • to perpetuate the profit-structure that industry has created.

  • When we look beyond the propaganda and self-serving solutions

  • put forth by the energy companies,

  • we find a seemingly endless stream

  • of clean, abundant and renewable energy for generating power.

  • Solar and wind energy are well known to the public,

  • but the true potential of these mediums remains unexpressed.

  • Solar energy, derived from the sun,

  • has such abundance that one hour of light at high noon

  • contains more energy than what the entire world consumes in a year.

  • If we could capture 1/100th of a percent of this energy,

  • the world would never have to use oil, gas or anything else.

  • The question then, is not availability,

  • but the technology to harness it.

  • And there are many advanced mediums today

  • which could accomplish just that

  • if they were not hindered by the need to compete for market share

  • with the established energy power structures.

  • Then there's wind energy.

  • Wind energy has long been denounced as weak,

  • and due to being location driven impractical.

  • This is simply not true.

  • The US Department of Energy admitted in 2007

  • that if wind was fully harvested in just three of America's 50 states,

  • it could power the entire nation.

  • And then there are the rather unknown mediums

  • of tidal and wave power.

  • Tidal power is derived from tidal shifts in the ocean.

  • Installing turbines which capture this movement generates energy.

  • In the United Kingdom, 42 sites are currently noted as available

  • forecasting that 34% of all the UK's energy

  • could come from tidal power alone.

  • Wave power, which extracts energy

  • from the surface motions of the ocean,

  • is estimated to have a global potential

  • of up to 80,000 terawatt-hours a year.

  • This means 50% of the entire planet's energy usage

  • could be produced from this medium alone.

  • Now, it is important to point out that

  • tidal, wave, solar and wind power

  • requires virtually no preliminary energy to harness

  • unlike coal, oil, gas, biomass, hydrogen and all the others.

  • In combination, these four mediums alone,

  • if efficiently harnessed through technology,

  • could power the world forever.

  • That being said, there happens to be another form

  • of clean renewable energy, which trumps them all.

  • Geothermal power.

  • Geothermal energy utilizes what is called "heat mining,"

  • which, through a simple process using water,

  • is able to generate massive amounts of clean energy.

  • In 2006, an MIT report on geothermal energy

  • found that 13,000 ZJ of power are currently available in the earth

  • with the possibility of 2,000 ZJ being easily tappable

  • with improved technology.

  • The total energy consumption of all the countries on the planet

  • is about half of a ZJ a year.

  • This means about 4000 years of planetary power

  • could be harnessed in this medium alone.

  • And when we understand that the earth's heat generation

  • is constantly renewed, this energy is really limitless.

  • It could be used forever.

  • These energy sources are only a few

  • of the clean renewable mediums available,

  • and as time goes on, we will find more.

  • The grand realization is that we have total energy abundance

  • without the need for pollution,

  • traditional conservation or, in fact, a price tag.

  • And what about transportation?

  • The prevailing means of transportation in our societies

  • is by automobile and aircraft,

  • both of which predominantly need fossil fuels to run.

  • In the case of the automobile, the battery technology

  • needed to power an electric car

  • that can go over a hundred miles an hour

  • for over two hundred miles on one charge,

  • exists and has existed for many years.

  • However, due to battery patents, controlled by the oil industry,

  • which limits their availability to maintain market share,

  • coupled with political pressure from the energy industry,

  • the accessibility and affordability of this technology is limited.

  • There is absolutely no reason,

  • other than pure corrupt profit interests,

  • that every single vehicle in the world

  • cannot be electric and utterly clean, with zero need for gasoline.

  • As far as airplanes, it is time we realize

  • that this means of travel is inefficient, cumbersome,

  • slow, and causes far too much pollution.

  • This is a maglev train.

  • It uses magnets for propulsion.

  • It is fully suspended by a magnetic field

  • and requires less than 2% of the energy used for plane travel.

  • The train has no wheels, so nothing can wear out.

  • The current maximum speed of versions of this technology,

  • as used in Japan, is three hundred and sixty one miles per hour.

  • However this version of the technology is very dated.

  • An organization called ET3,

  • which has connections with The Venus Project,

  • has established a tube-based maglev

  • that can travel up to 4000 miles per hour

  • in a motionless, frictionless tube,

  • which can go over land or under water.

  • Imagine going from LA to New York for an extended lunch break

  • or from Washington D.C. to Beijing, China, in two hours.

  • This is the future of continental and intercontinental travel.

  • Fast, clean, with only a fraction of the energy usage

  • we use today for the same means.

  • In fact, between maglev technology,

  • advanced battery storage and geothermal energy,

  • there will be no reason to ever burn fossil fuels again.

  • And we can do this now,

  • if we were not held back by the paralyzing profit structure.

  • work

  • -Now America is inclined toward fascism.

  • It has a propensity by its dominant philosophy and religion

  • to uphold the fascist point of view.

  • American industry is essentially a fascist institution.

  • If you don't understand that, the minute you punch that time clock

  • you walk into a dictatorship.

  • -We're given notions about the respectability of work.

  • And I really look at it as being paid slavery.

  • You brought up to believe that you shall earn your living

  • by the sweat of your brow. That holds people back.

  • Freeing people from drudgery,

  • repetitive jobs which make them ignorant.

  • You rob them.

  • In our society, that is a resource- based economy,

  • machines free people.

  • You see, we can't imagine that

  • because we've never known that kind of world.

  • automation

  • -If we look back at history,

  • we see a very clear pattern of machine automation

  • slowly replacing human labor.

  • From the disappearance of the elevator man

  • to the near full automation of an automobile production plant,

  • the fact is, as technology grows,

  • the need for humans in the work force will continually be diminished.

  • .

  • This creates a serious clash,

  • which proves the falseness of the monetary-based labor system,

  • for human employment is in direct competition

  • with technological development.

  • Therefore, given the fundamental priority of profit by industry,

  • people through time will be continually laid off

  • and replaced by machines.

  • -When industry takes on a machine

  • instead of shortening the work day, they downsize.

  • You lose your job so you have a right to fear machines.

  • -In a high technology, resource-based economy,

  • it is conservative to say that about 90% of all current occupations

  • could be phased out by machines.

  • Freeing humans to live their life without servitude.

  • For this is the point of technology itself.

  • And through time, with nanotechnology

  • and other highly advanced forms of science,

  • it is not far fetched to see how even complex medical procedures

  • could be performed by machines as well.

  • And based on the pattern, with much higher success rates

  • than humans get today.

  • The path is clear but our monetary-based structure,

  • which requires labor for income, blocks this progress,

  • for humans need jobs in order to survive.

  • The bottom line is that this system must go,

  • or we will never be free,

  • and technology will be constantly paralyzed.

  • -We have machines that clean out sewers

  • and frees a human being from doing that.

  • So look at machines as extensions of human performance.

  • -Furthermore, many occupations today

  • will have simply no basis to exist in a resource-based economy,

  • such as anything associated with the management of money,

  • advertising, along with the legal system itself.

  • For, without money, a great majority of the crimes

  • that are committed today would never occur.

  • Virtually all forms of crime are a consequence

  • of the monetary system, either directly or by neurosis,

  • inflicted through financial deprivation.

  • Therefore, laws themselves could eventually become extinct.

  • Instead of putting up a sign "Drive carefully,

  • slippery when wet," put abrasive on the highway,

  • so it is not slippery when wet.

  • And if a person gets in car, they're drunk

  • and a car oscillates a great deal

  • there's a little pendulum that swings up and back,

  • and that will pull the car over to the side.

  • Not a law... a solution.

  • .

  • Put sonar and radar on automobiles so they can't hit one another.

  • Man-made laws are attempts

  • to deal with occurring problems

  • and not knowing how to solve them,

  • they make a law.

  • -In the United States, the most privatized,

  • capitalist country on the planet, it should come as no surprise

  • that it also has the largest prison population in the world,

  • growing every year.

  • Statistically, most of these people are uneducated

  • and come from poor, deprived societies.

  • And, contrary to propaganda, it is this environmental conditioning,

  • which lures them into criminal and violent behavior.

  • However society looks the other way

  • in regard to this point.

  • The legal and prison systems are just more examples

  • of how our society avoids examining

  • the root causes of behaviour.

  • Billions are spent each year on prisons and police,

  • .

  • while only a fraction is spent on programs for poverty,

  • which is one of the most fundamental variables

  • responsible for crime to begin with.

  • And, as long as we have an economic system,

  • which prefers and in fact creates

  • scarcity and deprivation, crime will never go away.

  • incentive

  • -If people have access to the necessities of life

  • without servitude, debt, barter, trade,

  • they behave very differently.

  • You want all these things available without a price tag.

  • Now then, you gotta have a price tag, what will motivate people?

  • A man gets everything he wants, he'd just lay around in the sun.

  • This is the myth they perpetuate.

  • People in our culture are trained to believe

  • that the monetary system produces incentive.

  • If they have access to things, why should they want to do anything?

  • They would lose their incentive.

  • That's what you're taught to support the monetary system.

  • -When you take money out of the scenario,

  • there would be different incentives, very different incentives.

  • -When people have access to the necessities of life,

  • their incentives change.

  • What about the moon and the stars?

  • New incentives arise.

  • If you make a painting that you enjoy,

  • you will enjoy giving it to other people, not selling it.

  • education

  • -I think most of the education that I've seen today is essentially

  • producing a person for a job

  • It's very specialized. They're not generalists.

  • People don't know a lot about a lot of different subjects.

  • I don't think you can get people to go to war

  • if they knew a lot about a lot of things.

  • I think education is mostly rote,

  • and they're not taught how to solve problems.

  • They're not given the tools, emotionally or within their own field,

  • of how to do critical thinking.

  • In a resource-based economy, the education would be very different.

  • -Our society's major concern is mental development

  • and to motivate each person to their highest potential.

  • .

  • Because our philosophy is, the smarter people are, the richer the world

  • because everybody becomes a contributor.

  • The smarter your kids are, the better my life will be.

  • .

  • Because they'll be contributing more constructively

  • to the environment and to my life.

  • Because everything that we devise within a resource based economy

  • would be applied to society, there would be nothing to hold it back.

  • .

  • civilization

  • Patriotism, weapons, armies, navies,

  • all that is a sign that we're not civilized yet.

  • .

  • Kids will ask their parents:

  • "Didn't you see the necessity of the machines?"

  • "Dad, couldn't you see that war was inevitable

  • when you produce scarcity?" Isn't it obvious?

  • Of course, the kid will understand that you were pinheads,

  • .

  • -raised merely to serve the established institutions.

  • We're such an abominable, sick society,

  • that we won't make the history book.

  • They'll just say that large nations took land from smaller nations,

  • used force and violence.

  • You'll get history talked about as corrupt behavior

  • all the way along until the beginning of the civilized world.

  • .

  • That's when all the nations work together.

  • World unification, working toward common good

  • for all human beings

  • and without anyone being subservient to anyone else.

  • Without social stratification, whether it be technical elitism,

  • .

  • or any other kind of elitism, eradicated from the face of the Earth.

  • .

  • The "state" does nothing because there is no "state".

  • Because there is no state...

  • The system I advocate, a resource based global economy,

  • is not perfect, it's just a lot better than what we have.

  • .

  • We can never achieve perfection.

  • "My country is the world... and my religion is to do good."

  • .

  • - Thomas Paine - 1737-1809

  • The social values of our society,

  • which has manifested in perpetual warfare, corruption,

  • .

  • oppressive laws, social stratification, irrelevant superstitions,

  • .

  • .

  • environmental destruction, and a despotic,

  • socially indifferent, profit oriented ruling class,

  • is fundamentally the result of a collective ignorance

  • of two of the most basic insights humans can have about reality.

  • The emergent and symbiotic aspects of natural law.

  • The emergent nature of reality is that all systems,

  • -whether it is knowledge, society, technology,

  • philosophy or any other creation

  • will, when uninhibited, undergo fluid perpetual change.

  • .

  • What we consider commonplace today,

  • such as modern communication and transportation,

  • would have been unimaginable in ancient times.

  • Likewise, the future will contain technologies,

  • realizations and social structures

  • that we cannot even fathom in the present.

  • We have gone from alchemy to chemistry,

  • from a geocentric universe to a heliocentric,

  • from believing that demons were the cause of illness

  • to modern medicine.

  • This development shows no sign of ending,

  • and it is this awareness that aligns us and leads us

  • on a continuous path to growth and progress.

  • .

  • Static, empirical knowledge does not exist,

  • rather it is the insight of the emergence of all systems

  • we must recognize.

  • This means we must be open to new information at all times,

  • even if it threatens our current belief system,

  • and hence, identities.

  • Sadly, society today has failed to recognize this,

  • and the established institutions continue to paralyze growth

  • by preserving outdated social structures.

  • Simultaneously, the population suffers from a fear of change.

  • For their conditioning assumes a static identity

  • and challenging one's belief system,

  • usually results in insult and apprehension.

  • For being wrong is erroneously associated with failure.

  • When in fact to be proven wrong should be celebrated.

  • For it is elevating someone to a new level of understanding,

  • furthering awareness.

  • The fact is, there is no such thing as a smart human being,

  • for it is merely a matter of time

  • before their ideas are updated, changed or eradicated.

  • And this tendency to blindly hold on to a belief system,

  • sheltering it from new possibly transforming information

  • is nothing less than a form of intellectual materialism.

  • The monetary system perpetuates this materialism

  • not only by it's self-preserving structures,

  • but also through the countless number of people

  • who have been conditioned into blindly

  • and thoughtlessly upholding these structures,

  • therefore becoming self-appointed guardians of the status quo.

  • Sheep which no longer need a sheep-dog to control them.

  • For they control each other

  • by ostracizing those who step out of the norm.

  • This tendency to resist change and uphold existing institutions

  • .

  • for the sake of identity, comfort, power and profit,

  • .

  • is completely unsustainable.

  • And will only produce further imbalance,

  • fragmentation, distortion, and invariably,

  • .

  • .

  • destruction.

  • It's time to change.

  • From hunters and gatherers,

  • to the agricultural revolution,

  • to the industrial revolution,

  • the pattern is clear.

  • It is time for a new social system

  • which reflects the understandings we have today.

  • The monetary system is a product of a period of time

  • .

  • where scarcity was a reality.

  • Now, with the age of technology, it is no longer relevant to society.

  • .

  • Gone with the aberrant behavior it manifests.

  • Likewise, dominant world views, such as theistic religion

  • operate with the same social irrelevancy.

  • .

  • Islam, Christianity, Judaism, Hinduism and all of the others

  • exist as barriers to personal and social growth.

  • For each group perpetuates a closed world view.

  • And this finite understanding that they acknowledge

  • is simply not possible in an emergent universe.

  • Yet, religion has succeeded in

  • shutting down the awareness of this emergence

  • by instilling the psychological distortion of faith upon its followers.

  • .

  • Where logic and new information is rejected

  • in favor of traditionalized outdated beliefs.

  • The concept of god

  • is really a method of accounting for the nature of things.

  • In the early days people didn't know enough

  • about how things formed,

  • how nature worked.

  • So they invented their own little stories,

  • and they made god in their own image.

  • A guy that gets angry

  • when people don't behave right, he creates floods and earthquakes

  • .

  • and they say it's an act of god.

  • A cursory glance at the suppressed history of religion

  • reveals that even the foundational myths themselves

  • are emergent culminations developed through influence over time.

  • For example, a cardinal doctrine of the Christian faith

  • is the death and resurrection of Christ.

  • This notion is so important that the Bible itself states

  • "And if Christ be not risen

  • then is our preaching vain and your faith is also vain"

  • Yet it is very difficult to take this account literally,

  • for not only is there no primary source

  • denoting this supernatural event in secular history

  • awareness of the enormous number of pre-Christian saviors

  • who also died and were resurrected

  • immediately puts this story in mythological territory by association.

  • Early church figures, such as Tertullian

  • .

  • went to great lengths to break these associations,

  • even claiming that the devil caused the similarities to occur.

  • Stating in the second century:

  • "The devil, whose business is to pervert the truth,

  • mimics the exact circumstance of the Divine Sacraments.

  • He baptizes his believers and promises forgiveness of sins

  • he celebrates the oblation of bread

  • and brings in the symbol of the resurrection.

  • Let us therefore acknowledge the craftiness of the devil,

  • who copied certain things of those that be Divine."

  • What is truly sad however,

  • is that when we cease the idea that the stories from Christianity

  • Judaism, Islam and all the others

  • are literal history,

  • and accept them for what they really are,

  • which are purely allegorical expressions derived from many faiths

  • we see that all religions share a common thread.

  • And it is this unifying imperative

  • that needs to be recognized and appreciated.

  • Religious belief has caused more fragmentation and conflict

  • than any other ideology.

  • Christianity alone has 34,000 different subgroups.

  • The Bible is subject to interpretation.

  • When you read it, you say

  • "I think Jesus meant this. I think Job meant that."

  • "Oh No! He meant this."

  • So you have the Lutheran, the Seventh-day Adventist, the Catholic,

  • and a church divided is no church at all.

  • And a church divided, is no church at all.

  • And this point on division,

  • which is a trademark of all theistic religions,

  • brings us to our second failure of awareness.

  • The false assumption of separation

  • through the rejection of the symbiotic relationship of life.

  • Apart from the understanding that all natural systems are emergent,

  • where all notions of reality will be constantly developed,

  • altered and even eradicated,

  • we must also understand that all systems are, in fact,

  • invented fragments, merely for the sake of conversation.

  • For there is no such thing as independence in nature.

  • The whole of nature is a unified system of interdependent variables,

  • each a cause and a reaction, existing only as a concentrated whole.

  • You don't see the plug connected to the environment,

  • so it looks like we're free, wandering around.

  • Take the oxygen away, we all die immediately.

  • Take plant life away, we die.

  • And without the sun, all the plants die.

  • So we are connected.

  • We really must take into account the totality.

  • This isn't just a human experience on this planet,

  • this is a total experience.

  • And we know we can't survive without plants and animals.

  • We know we can't survive without the four elements, you know?

  • And so, when are we gonna really start taking that into account?

  • That's what it is to be successful.

  • Success depends on how well we relate to everything around us.

  • I'm very aware of the fact that my grandson

  • cannot possibly hope to inherit a sustainable,

  • .

  • peaceful, stable, socially just world

  • unless every child today growing up in

  • Ethiopia, in Indonesia, in Bolivia, in Palestine, in Israel

  • also has that same expectation.

  • You gotta take care of the whole community

  • or you're gonna have serious problems.

  • And now we have to see that the whole world is the community.

  • And we must all take care of each other that way.

  • And it's not just a community of human beings,

  • it's a community of plants and animals and elements.

  • And we really need to understand that.

  • That's what's gonna bring us joy too, and pleasure.

  • .

  • That's what's missing in our lives right now.

  • We can call it spirituality, but the fact of the matter is,

  • .

  • joy comes from that bliss of connectedness.

  • That's our god spirit, that's that side of ourselves

  • that really feels it, and you can feel it deep inside you.

  • It's this amazing wonderful feeling, and you know it when you get it.

  • .

  • .

  • You don't get it from money, you get it from connection.

  • .

  • "Now if that isn't a hazard to this country.

  • How are we gonna keep building nuclear weapons,

  • you know what I mean?

  • What's gonna happen to the arms industry

  • when we realize we're all one?

  • It's gonna fuck up the economy.

  • The economy that's fake anyway.

  • Which would be a real bummer.

  • You can see why the government's crackin' down...

  • ...on the idea of experiencing unconditional love."

  • "I believe that unarmed truth and unconditional love

  • will have the final word in reality."

  • - Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. - 1929-1968

  • Once we understand that the integrity of our personal existences

  • are completely dependent on the integrity

  • of everything else in our world,

  • we have truly understood the meaning of unconditional love.

  • For love is extensionality and seeing everything as you

  • and you as everything can have no conditionalities,

  • for in fact, we are all everything at once.

  • If it's true that we're all from the center of a star,

  • every atom in each of us from the center of a star,

  • then we're all the same thing.

  • Even a Coke machine or a cigarette butt in the street in Buffalo

  • is made out of atoms that came from a star.

  • They've all been recycled thousands of times,

  • as have you and I. And therefore, it's only me out there.

  • So what is there to be afraid of?

  • What is there that needs solace seeking?

  • Nothing. There's nothing to be afraid of because it's all us.

  • The trouble is we have been separated by being born

  • and given a name and an identity and being individuated.

  • We've been separated from the oneness and that's what religion exploits.

  • .

  • That people have this yearning to be part of the overall one again.

  • So they exploit that. They call it god, they say he has rules,

  • and I think it's cruel.

  • I think you can do it absent religion.

  • "An extraterrestrial visitor examining the differences among human societies

  • would find those differences trivial compared to the similarities

  • Our lives, our past and our future are tied to the sun, the moon and the stars...

  • We humans have seen the atoms which constitute all of nature and the forces that sculpted this work...

  • .

  • And we, we who embody the local eyes and ears and thoughts and feelings of the cosmos,

  • we have begun at least to wonder about our origins...star stuff contemplating the stars

  • .

  • organized collections of ten billion billion billion atoms,

  • contemplating the evolution of nature, tracing that long path

  • by which it arrived at consciousness here on the planet earth...

  • Our loyalties are to the species and to the planet. We speak for earth.

  • Our obligation to survive and flourish is owed not just to ourselves

  • but also to that cosmos ancient and vast from which we spring.

  • We are one species. We are star stuff harvesting star light.

  • - Carl Sagan - 1934-1996

  • It's time to claim the unity

  • our outmoded social systems have broken apart

  • and work together to create a sustainable, global society

  • where everyone is taken care of and everyone is truly free.

  • .

  • Your personal beliefs, whatever they may be,

  • are meaningless when it comes to the necessities of life.

  • Every human being is born naked

  • needing warmth, food, water, shelter.

  • Everything else is auxiliary.

  • Therefore, the most important issue at hand

  • is the intelligent management of the Earth's resources.

  • This can never be accomplished in a monetary system

  • for the pursuit of profit is the pursuit of self interest

  • and therefore imbalance is inherent.

  • Simultaneously, politicians are useless,

  • for our true problems in life are technical not political.

  • Furthermore, ideologies that separate humanity,

  • .

  • such as religion, need strong reflection in the community

  • in regard to its value, purpose and social relevancy.

  • Hopefully, through time,

  • religion will lose its materialism and basis in superstition

  • and move into the useful field of philosophy.

  • The fact is, society today is backwards,

  • with politicians constantly talking about protection and security

  • rather than creation, unity and progress.

  • The US alone now spends about

  • $500 billion dollars annually on defense.

  • That is enough to send every high school senior in America

  • to a four year college.

  • In the 1940s the Manhattan Project

  • produced the first true weapon of mass destruction.

  • This program employed 130,000 people, at an extreme financial cost.

  • Imagine what our life would be like today if that group of scientists,

  • instead of working on a way of killing people,

  • worked on a way to create a self-sustaining abundant world.

  • Life today would be very, very different if that was their goal.

  • .

  • Instead of weapons of mass destruction,

  • it is time to unleash something much more powerful.

  • Weapons of Mass Creation (WMCs).

  • Our true divinity is in our ability to create.

  • And armed with the understanding of the symbiotic connections of life,

  • while being guided by the emergent nature of reality,

  • there is nothing we cannot do or accomplish.

  • Of course, we face strong barriers

  • in the form of established power structures that refuse to change.

  • .

  • At the heart of these structures is the monetary system.

  • As explained earlier, the fractional reserve policy

  • is a form of slavery through debt

  • where it is literally impossible for society to be free.

  • In turn, free market capitalism in the form of free trade,

  • uses debt to imprison the world and manipulate countries

  • into subservience to a handful of large business and political powers.

  • Apart from these obvious amoralities,

  • the system itself is based on competition

  • which immediately destroys the possibility

  • of large scale collaborations for the common good.

  • Hence paralyzing any attempt at true global sustainability.

  • These financial and corporate structures are now obsolete,

  • and they must be outgrown.

  • Of course, we can not be naive enough to think that

  • the business and financial elite are going to subscribe to this idea

  • for they will lose power and control.

  • Therefore, peacefully yet highly strategic action must be taken.

  • The most powerful course of action is simple.

  • We have to alter our behavior

  • to force the power structure to the will of the people.

  • We must stop supporting the system.

  • The only way the establishment will change

  • is by our refusal to participate while continuously acknowledging

  • its endless flaws and corruptions.

  • They're not gonna give up the monetary system,

  • because of our designs or what we recommend.

  • The system has to fail,

  • and people have to lose confidence in their elected leaders.

  • That will be a major turning point

  • if The Venus Project is offered as a possible alternative.

  • If not, I fear the consequences.

  • The trends now indicate that our country is going bankrupt.

  • The probability is our country will move

  • toward a military dictatorship to prevent riots

  • and complete social breakdown.

  • Once the US breaks down, all the other cultures

  • will undergo similar things.

  • As of now, the world financial system

  • is on the brink of collapse due to its own shortcomings.

  • The controller of currencies stated in 2003

  • that the interest on the US national debt

  • will not be affordable in less than ten years.

  • This theoretically means total bankruptcy for the US economy

  • and its implications for the world are immense.

  • In turn the fractional reserve based monetary system

  • is reaching its theoretical limits of expansion

  • and the banking failures you are seeing are just the beginning.

  • This is why inflation is skyrocketing, all debt is at record levels

  • .

  • and the government and FED are hemorrhaging new money

  • to bailout the corrupt system.

  • For the only way to keep the banks going

  • is by making more money.

  • The only way to make more money is to create more debt and inflation.

  • .

  • It is simply a matter of time before the tables turn

  • and there's no one is willing to take new loans

  • while defaults grow as people are unable

  • to afford their current loans.

  • Then the expansion of money will stop

  • and contraction will begin on a scale never before seen,

  • ending a century long pyramid scheme.

  • This has already begun.

  • Therefore, we need to expose this financial failure for what it is,

  • using this weakness to our advantage.

  • Here are some suggestions:

  • Expose the banking fraud.

  • Citibank, JP Morgan Chase and Bank of America

  • are the most powerful controllers

  • within the corrupt Federal Reserve system.

  • It's time to boycott these institutions.

  • If you have a bank account or a credit card with any of them,

  • move your money to another bank.

  • If you have a mortgage, re-finance with another bank.

  • If you own their stock, sell it.

  • If you work for them, quit.

  • This gesture will express contempt

  • for the true powers behind the private banking cartel

  • known as the Federal Reserve.

  • And create awareness about the fraud of the banking system itself.

  • Two: Turn off the TV news.

  • Visit the emerging independent news agencies on the internet

  • for your information.

  • CNN, NBC, ABC, FOX and all the others

  • present all news pre-filtered to maintain the status quo.

  • With four corporations owning all major media outlets,

  • objective information is impossible.

  • This is the true beauty of the internet,

  • and the establishment has been losing control

  • because of this free flow of information.

  • We must protect the internet at all times,

  • as it is truly our savior right now.

  • Three: Don't ever allow yourself, your family or anyone you know

  • .

  • to ever join the military.

  • This is an obsolete institution,

  • now used exclusively for maintaining an establishment

  • that is no longer relevant.

  • US soldiers in Iraq work for US corporations, not the people.

  • .

  • Propaganda forces us to believe that war is natural

  • and the military is an honorable institution.

  • Well, if war is natural,

  • why are there 18 suicides every single day

  • by American veterans who have post-traumatic stress disorder?

  • .

  • If our military men and women are so honored,

  • why is it that 25% of the American homeless population are veterans?

  • .

  • Four: Stop supporting the energy companies.

  • .

  • If you live in a detached house, get off the grid.

  • .

  • Investigate every means of making your home self-sustainable

  • with clean energy.

  • Solar, wind and other renewable energies

  • are now affordable consumer realities,

  • and considering the never ending rising costs of traditional energies,

  • it will likely be a cheaper investment over time.

  • If you drive, get the smallest car you can

  • and consider using one of the many conversion technologies

  • that can enable your car to be a hybrid,

  • electric or run on anything other than establishment fuels.

  • Five: Reject the political system.

  • .

  • The illusion of democracy is an insult to our intelligence.

  • In a monetary system, there is no such thing as a true democracy,

  • and there never was.

  • We have two political parties

  • owned by the same set of corporate lobbyists.

  • They are placed in their positions by the corporations,

  • with popularity artificially projected by their media.

  • In a system of inherent corruption,

  • the change of personnel every couple of years,

  • has very little relevance.

  • Instead of pretending that the political game has any true meaning,

  • focus your energy on how to transcend this failed system.

  • And six: Join the movement.

  • .

  • Go to the thezeitgeistmovement.com

  • and help us create the largest mass movement for social change

  • the world has ever seen.

  • We must mobilize and educate everyone

  • about the inherent corruption of our current world system,

  • along with the only true sustainable solution,

  • declaring all the natural resources on the planet

  • as common heritage to all people,

  • while informing everyone as to the true state of technology

  • and how we can all be free if the world works together

  • rather than fights.

  • The choice lies with you.

  • You can continue to be a slave to the financial system

  • and watch the continuous wars, depressions and injustice across the globe

  • while placating yourself with vain entertainment

  • and materialistic garbage;

  • or, you can focus your energy on true, meaningful, lasting, holistic change

  • which actually has the realistic ability to support

  • and free all humans with no one left behind.

  • But in the end, the most relevant change

  • must occur first inside of you.

  • The real revolution is the revolution of consciousness,

  • and each one of us first needs to eliminate

  • the diversionary, materialistic noise

  • we have been conditioned to think is true;

  • while discovering, amplifying and aligning

  • with the signal coming from our true empirical oneness.

  • It is up to you.

  • "What we are trying in all these discussions and talks here

  • is to see if we cannot radically bring about a transformation of the mind.

  • Not accept things as they are

  • but to understand it, to go into it, to examine it,

  • give your heart and your mind with everything that you have to find out.

  • A way of living differently.

  • But, that depends on you and not somebody else.

  • Because in this there is no teacher,

  • no pupil,

  • there's no leader,

  • there's no guru,

  • there's no master, no savior.

  • You yourself are the teacher and the pupil, you're the master, you're the guru, you are the leader,

  • you are everything!

  • And,

  • to understand

  • is to transform what is."

"The old appeals to racial, sexual and religious chauvinism,

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時代精神2 ( Zeitgeist Addendum )

  • 14609 360
    Furong Lai に公開 2013 年 03 月 21 日
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