Desperate times call for desperate measures. So here's what we will have to do. The first thing that has to happen is that we have to simultaneously, worldwide, realize that money is a FICTION. It's a representation of value, not value itself. Value is not the same thing as cost. Cost is value measured, traditionally in money. We've been doing that since the Babylonians, so long that we have forgotten that cost and value are different, Value is only what a thing can be used for, even if that is merely to find pleasure in it or in its beauty. So here's the solution. It's very simple--only three steps.
- Abolish all currencies and all debt.
- Keep doing the work you have been doing.
- Take care of everyone who needs it.
Obviously the financial institutions and those who work in them will have nothing to do. Great! Volunteer somewhere. Everyone else should continue on as if nothing had happened. At the grocery, people will still come for food and leave with it. But nothing will be exchanged for it. Everything is free. Trucks will arrive with more food. Gasoline will be pumped into the trucks' tanks. Refineries will still make the gas, oil companies will pick it up and deliver it where it is needed.
Farmers will still grow food and deliver it to the markets through whatever distribution networks exist. Hospitals will continue to deliver health care. Everything will continue as before, except that everyone will be giving away their labor, and everyone will receive what they need.
Whatever you have or live in or wear or drive will be yours to keep or give away as you see fit. If you need a new car, refrigerator, suit, pair of shoes, or house, it will be given to you. BUT...
The most important thing to understand is that we are all in this together, and it is your responsibility to receive only what you need and no more than you need! Hoarding makes no sense anyway unless something is no longer being produced.
The word "afford" has to simply vanish. It especially means that we all need to take responsibility for those who previously were in need because they could not "afford" what they needed. We must all see to it that everybody gets what they need.
But with this great shift there is great responsibility. People must work just as they did before if this new economy is going to succeed. Your value as a person will be measured by the extent to which you contribute, not the amount of "stuff" you have piled up around you.
Much will have to be negotiated; we understand that. But the world cannot simply grind to a halt because we won't exchange the value of our labor for the value of goods and services we need (and want) because currency isn't involved in that exchange.
We can turn crisis into opportunity and opportunity into Utopia, if we just realize what we are actually dealing with.
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