P A N |
11-29-2014 08:04 PM |
the next paradigm is a one-world government. it's pretty much already here. the way it's being presented to to us is like baby steps. the problem is that it's not by or for the people. it's for rich folks. so the problem isn't really the people or the type of government. it's the type of economy. this type of economy is limitless. this means that a go-getter personality will do well. psychopaths do best, as the best way to get is to take. the constitution doesn't matter. men are vacuuming cocaine from the surface of the desk beside the wastebasket in which it's burning. someone will piss on it to ensure the english oak doesn't scar. someone rich. if the constitution has no power, neither do the people. except of course that the rich's biggest asset is us. they may do well to organize us, but we run the machine. we produce. we consume. we spend.
i think democracy is essential to a population of happy earthlings. i don't have the answers, but i have lots of ideas. one of them is to crowd-source everything. to maintain life we need resources. that's it. so if every farmer and every miner and air-traffic controller and every police officer and every teacher and every chocolatier put all the data they collected (data concerning what they offer and what they need) into a giant database, we would know what needs to go where. the only way this can work properly is in an economically borderless framework. the only way this can work is when people realize there are universal limits to everything, including the amount of money and real-estate a single person should be allowed to amass.
the planet has enough resources and the right technologies (mind you, a lot of these technologies have a hard time finding funding to further develop them) to give people more than what they need. if we crowd-sourced political questions... haha. imagine this. you have an app on your phone. The Planet gave you the phone in exchange for some of your time. say, two hours a week you have to spend reading articles published relating to a specific question you will have to vote on when you're done reading. the articles are picked by an algorithm (all algorithms would be open source and subject to constant peer-review) to ensure that you don't end up reading 25 articles that all lean one direction or the other. you are also picked by an algorithm. at any given time, out of 7 billion people, you will be one of 1 million people voting on a specific topic. in this alternate dimension i'm talking about, we can collectively answer questions like "does everyone actually need to own a car, or are driverless, solar-powered vehicles-on-demand which save space, gas, and lots of other resources a better idea?" someone poses a question such as this in a massive world-wide forum, hashtags the crap out of it, it gains popularity, articles and research papers are written, a vote is staged. or how about questions like "does anyone actually trust politicians? do we actually need politicians?" the answer would likely be "no", and then the next set of questions in a stem from it appear, such as "well, how do we live in a world without politicians?" people come up with alternative solutions. we whittle away the stupidity via creating an international mainframe of information and ways to use it.
the answers are in the people. this would be one way to get them out.
anyway. i just wanted to play.
|