We’d like to show the side of the world you don’t normally see on television.
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In my perception, your awareness and clarity of issues facing mankind is impressive. However, I find myself wondering how willing the average person is to make changes. In general, despite how the yoke may chafe, people fear releasing that which is familiar.
What methodology will work to effect this change? Don't you think the present fiscal crisis coupled with joblessness isn't causing people to rethink what is of true value and worth? It may in the end have the greatest impact.
You are so correct, and dead on target (dead as in debt/Debtor/Civilly Dead); what is needed is an information age economic model. Our explanation of one is at www.freedigitaluniverse.com, please take a look and let me know what you think. Here's a short video on the economic model that treats all users as Soules, and their currency is unencumbered.
i just finished reading "The Power of Awareness" by Neville. very powerful and empowering. he addresses the illusions we create. also, "The Active Side of Infinity" by Carlos Casteneda has a lot of information and ideas that explain why we might be at the mercy of predators. both books relate to your insightful and timely post. thank you.
I am going to enter this discussion but please don't think I am disagreeing with what you have said. We are in a Paradigm Shift. Many years ago the people in marketing discovered that consumers find it easier to accept gradual change over and above radical change. I am an organizational Architect. I thrive on change. This is the dilemma: If you feel secure in the status quo why change it. If you are suffering as a result of the status quo you can't wait for it to change.
The status quo of the USA has survived because in the beginning there was plenty of land to go around and if you didn't like it one place you could move. After WWII we had no economic competition from Europe because much of their infrastructure was destroyed in the War. The Federal government passed the GI bill and between that and the huge undertaking to build the Interstate Highway we were on a roll. Thanks to Unions, working class families had a chance to own a home and a car and live happily ever after. Oh yes and take the kids to Disneyland to celebrate.
Why was Jesus crucified? Change and threat to the status quo. At the start he was basically ignored by the Romans and the wealthy of the day. But his crowds kept getting larger. He posed a threat and had to be eliminated.
So change must be sold to people not forced on them. For at least 80% of any population the change needs to be gradual. Fear was and is used by many people to control others. Now you know the underpinnings of my formula = Education + Prosperity = Peace. Education needs to be done at the individual's speed. A genius can learn rapidly. A special needs child may get the education equivalent to high school at age 25. It is arbitrary to say all the children should go to school and learn at the same speed in the same way. We now have computers. Yes the kids need supervisors but home school has proven very successful in many cases. One of the issues we need to teach people is the error of duplication. We have a successful business and then we have a hundred more that try to copy them? We need more diversity. More choices. More creativity. Love, Deborah
You are so correct, and dead on target (dead as in debt/Debtor/Civilly Dead); what is needed is an information age economic model. Our explanation of one is at www.freedigitaluniverse.com, please take a look and let me know what you think. Here's a short video on the economic model that treats all users as Soules, and their currency is unencumbered.
a simple way to solve this dilemma of the illusionary value of stuff is to re-evaluiate what value stuff has in our imaginary world: we add taxes to things we need and value and give things away we no longer value...
Therefore, if change the rules that govern our economy, we change the value we place on things we need and change the amount we pay for things; food I would give away tax free and luxury things like ferraris I would tax heavily; likewise, housing could be given away according to a formula: one room per person tax free, anything above this, I would add tax;
then we get into problems: is an avocado food or luxury? Is meat more healthy than an avocado??
Government should change the tax rules so that essentials like solar and wind generators would be tax free, where as coal-and oil based fuels would be taxable; same with electric versus petrol/diesal engine cars: electricity from solar or windfarms would be cheaper than coal or oil based power stations...
Only by redistributing the tax regimes of the world would we change the behaviour of governments, militiaries and public economies, where good things are tax-free and bad-things are taxed according to how good or bad they were, heavy polluting industries like coal-fired power stations would be heavily taxed and good energy supplies would be tax-free or less taxed.
that sounds good to me, then all we need to do is persuade our idiot governors and political agencies to implement suchg a radical and forward thinking 'New World Economic System' to radically change the way we pay for things!!!
Any ideas how we change our economy to reflect how damaging or benevolent things are, so we can change the way they are taxed??
How about we get rid of Income Tax, Health Insurance, licence fees and other personal impositions and raise taxable income from the things we buy rather than on the wages we earn?? Individuals dont pollute the environment, but the things we build and produce and the way we deliver and transport those things cause climate change and emissions, not what we spend our money on!!!
An economic model based on the production of pollution and taxing that manufacturing process would be another new way of looking at the tax system to incentivise good production technologies and processes (growing food would be good, steel smelting would be bad, as two diametrically opposite examples) and taxing those inherently bad and/or damaging processes;
I think recent road tax changes by the british gov is one good way, where low emissions cars are less taxed than heavy goods vehicles, but doesnt go far enough; european scrappage schemes are also interesting in this context: £2000 for scrapping an old car and receiving a grant towards a new car is, however, a little counter-productive as an owner scraps a perfectly good vehicle in favor of a new vehicle, that basically produces twice as much pollution (two cars are produced to replace one old vehicle), aside from the recycled bits of the scrapped vehivcle and the lower emissions from the new car compared to the emissions of the scrapped car - needs a cost-benefit analysis report: is the car to be scrapped bad for the environment or would the £2,000 be better spent making the old car more fuel efficient: switching from petrol to biofuels for example?? How much does it cost to build the new car compared to keeping the old car on the road?? mmm....
Anyway, re-evaluating how much tax we apply to things is the major point here: good things cost less to buy than bad things; keeping it stupidly simple comparison between good and bad {for the environment or your health and wellbeing) should be the basis of our economy not whether it comes from china or your local farmer's market...
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