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Bank Fraud in Australia is Systemic -
part 2 -
part 3
Bank Fraud in Australia Is a Step Toward
Controlling the Economy and the People
Australian Bank Malpractice: Crucifixion and Resurrection
Australian Justice, Court Jesters, and
Constitutional Crisis
Unfinished Business: Searching for a National
Conscience
The Australian Bank Heist Condoned by Reserve Bank
Watchdog
The Foreign Currency Loan Experience in 1980s
Australia: Dwyer v Commonwealth Bank of Australia -
2
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3
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4
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5
Gov Witness Admits in Court Testimony that "Federal
Reserve Note is Not a Dollar"
Unalienable vs Inalienable
Bank Fraud Exposed - Money out of YOUR Pocket!
Paul McLean is Back to Expose Bank Fraud
The Foreign Currency Loan Experience in 1980s
Australia: Dwyer v Commonwealth Bank of Australia -
2
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3
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4
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5
The Quade Appeal on Decision vs CBA
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2
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3
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4
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5
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6
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7
Jones Letter to CBA Noting Hypocrisy concerning
Dwyer
Dwyer Letter to Kevin Rudd
Bank Fraud in Australia Is a Step Toward
Controlling the Economy and the People
Final Warning: A History of the New World Order
The Cash Cows of Personal Debt
I Want The Earth Plus 5%
-- an
allegory that's not a fairy tale.
Collapse of the Dollar:
How America Was Set Up to Take a Fall
Pycnogenol--the
natural super-antioxidant for relief of most chronic disorders
Seroctin--the
natural serotonin enhancer to reduce stress and depression, and
enjoy better sleep
Plant by Nature is Organic Gardening Nature's Way
Accelerated Mortgage Pay-off can
help you own your home in half to one third the time and save many
thousands of dollars.
Dream Catchers
of the Seventh Fire
A New Beginning: A
Practical Course in Miracles
1 INTRODUCTION
2HISTORY OF COMMERCE
3 RESPONSIBILITY
4 REDEMPTION
5
POWER OF ACCEPTANCE
6
BEING A DIPLOMAT
7
BEING A SOVEREIGN
8
PRIVATE BANKING
Draft Freedom
can mean the difference between life and
deathand show the way to your true and natural freedom.
Child Protection:
How to keep bureaucrats out of family affairs
Drug Smuggling
Is Another Way that the Money Powers Have Profited from Control of
Government
Why Taxes Are Not Necessary
Income Taxes are Cartoon Images of the Law
Hidden Truth about Income Taxes
Stopping an IRS Audit with 32 questions
Social Security Number and W-4
Recording a Notice of Lien as a Lien
Agent Reveals IRS is a Fraud
CAFRs Are the True State of the State, Not Budgets
Comprehensive Annual Financial Reports Expose Fraud 1
Comprehensive Annual Financial Reports Expose Fraud
Behind the Stock Market Illusion is Government
Collusion
Taking Back Your Power
1-Introduction
2-Revolution in Spirit
3-Bank Fraud, Bribery
4-Shadow Government
5-Corporate State
6-Great Depression
7-Court from Common Law
8-Uniform Commercial Code
9-Me and My SHADOW
House of Cards:
Why
home prices are about to plummet--and take the recovery with them.
Geopolitical struggle between the US / UK and the rest of the world is
weakening the US Dollar and portends devaluation and depression soon.
Get gold and silver.
The real war is in the currency markets.
That was why 9-11: to draw America into deficits and war. Get rid of debt.
Get gold and silver.
Your Credit File Rights
For debt elimination to be successful
you must know your rights.
Zombie Debt:
Debt is Hard to Kill
There's a hot new growth
industry: companies that buy ancient bad debts for pennies and squeeze
you to pay. Here's debt elimination ideas how to get them off your
back.
Sleazy
New Debt Collector Tactics
It may not be your debt,
but it could be your problem. Collection agencies are bullying
blameless consumers into paying debts they never owed. Eliminate your
debt and be free.
Debt Collection Practices: When
Hardball Tactics Go Too Far
Dealing with a debt
collector can be one of life's most stressful experiences. Harassing
calls, threats, and use of obscene language can drive you to the edge.
Debt elimination is the solution.
An
Outcry Rises as Debt Collectors Play Rough
The rise in American consumer debt
has been accompanied by a sharp increase in complaints about
aggressive and sometimes unscrupulous tactics by debt collection
agencies, a phenomenon that has government regulators increasingly
concerned. Debt elimination removes any advantage they claim.
Debt Collection Puts on a
Suit
As consumer loans hit an all-time
high, the industry gets more sophisticated. That means that debt
elimination skills must are even more important.
The Constitution of N0
Authority - Lysander Spooner
Jewish Dominance
in the Porn Industry
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2 -
3
Jewish Dominance in the Prostitution Industry
Jewish Pedophilia
Jewish Sexual Abuse
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The Limits to Growth
- Abstract
established by Eduard Pestel. A Report to
The Club of Rome
(1972), by Donella H. Meadows, Dennis l. Meadows, Jorgen Randers, William
W. Behrens III
Short Version of the Limits to Growth
Our world model was built specifically to investigate five major trends of
global concern – accelerating industrialization, rapid population growth,
widespread malnutrition, depletion of nonrenewable resources, and a
deteriorating environment.
The model we have constructed is, like every model, imperfect,
over-simplified, and unfinished.
In spite of the preliminary state of our work, we believe it is important
to publish the model and our findings now. (...) We feel that the model
described here is already sufficiently developed to be of some use to
decision-makers. Furthermore, the basic behavior modes we have already
observed in this model appear to be so fundamental and general that we do
not expect our broad conclusions to be substantially altered by further
revisions.
Our conclusions are :
1. If the present growth trends in world population, industrialization,
pollution, food production, and resource depletion continue unchanged, the
limits to growth on this planet will be reached sometime within the next
one hundred years. The most probable result will be a rather sudden and
uncontrollable decline in both population and industrial capacity.
2. It is possible to alter these growth trends and to establish a
condition of ecological and economic stability that is sustainable far
into the future. The state of global equilibrium could be designed so that
the basic material needs of each person on earth are satisfied and each
person has an equal opportunity to realize his individual human potential.
If the world's people decide to strive for this second outcome rather than
the first, the sooner they begin working to attain it, the greater will be
their chances of success.
All five elements basic to the study reported here--population, food
production, and consumption of nonrenewable natural resources--are
increasing. The amount of their increase each year follows a pattern
that mathematicians call exponential growth.
A quantity exhibits exponential growth when it increases by a constant
percentage of the whole in a constant time period.
Such exponential growth is a common process in biological, financial, and
many other systems of the world.
Exponential growth is a dynamic phenomenon, which means that it involves
elements that change over time.
(...)
When many different quantities are growing simultaneously
in a system, however, and when all the quantities are interrelated in a
complicated way, analysis of the causes of growth and of the future
behavior of the system becomes very difficult indeed.
Over the course of the last 30 years there has evolved at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology a new method for understanding the
dynamic behavior of complex systems. The method is called System Dynamics.
The basis of the method is the recognition that the structure of any
system--the many circular, interlocking, sometimes time-delayed
relationships among its components--is often just as important in
determining its behavior as the individual components themselves. The
world model described in this book is a System Dynamics model
Extrapolation of present trends is a time-honored way of looking into the
future, especially the very near future, and especially if the quantity
being considered is not much influenced by other trends that are occurring
elsewhere in the system. Of course, none of the five factors we are
examining here is independent. Each interacts constantly with all the
others. We have already mentioned some of these interactions. Population
cannot grow without food, food production is increased by growth of
capital, more capital requires more resources, discarded resources become
pollution, pollution interferes with the growth of both population and
food.
Furthermore, over long time periods each of these factors also feeds back
to influence itself.
In this first simple world model, we are interested only in the broad
behavior modes of the population-capital system. By behavior modes we mean
the tendencies of the variables in the system (population or pollution,
for example) to change as time progresses.
A major purpose in constructing the world model has been to determine
which, if any, of these behavior modes will be most characteristic of the
world system as it reaches the limits to growth. This process of
determining behavior modes is "prediction" only in the most limited sense
of the word.
Because we are interested at this point only in broad behavior modes, this
first world model needs not be extremely detailed. We thus consider only
one general population, a population that statistically reflects the
average characteristics of the global population. We include only one
class of pollutants--the long-lived, globally distributed family of
pollutants, such as lead, mercury, asbestos, and stable pesticides and
radioisotopes--whose dynamic behavior in the ecosystem we are beginning to
understand. We plot one generalized resource that represents the combined
reserves of all nonrenewable resources, although we know that each
separate resource will follow the general dynamic pattern at its own
specific level and rate.
This high level of aggregation is necessary at this point to keep the
model understandable. At the same time it limits the information we can
expect to gain from the model.
Can anything be learned from such a highly aggregated model? Can its
output be considered meaningful? In terms of exact predictions, the output
is not meaningful.
On the other hand it is vitally important to gain some understanding of
the causes of growth in human society, the limits to growth, and the
behavior of our socio-economic systems when the limits are reached.
All levels in the model (population, capital, pollution, etc.) begin with
1900 values. From 1900 to 1970 the variables agree generally with their
historical value to the extent that we know them. Population rises from
1.6 billion in 1900 to 3.5 billion in 1970. Although the birth rate
declines gradually, the death rate falls more quickly, especially after
1940, and the rate of population growth increases. Industrial output, food
and services per capita increase exponentially. The resource base in 1970
is still about 95 percent of its 1900 value, but it declines dramatically
thereafter, as population and industrial output continue to grow.
The behavior mode of the system is that of overshoot and collapse. In this
run the collapse occurs because of nonrenewable resource depletion. The
industrial capital stock grows to a level that requires an enormous input
of resources. In the very process of that growth it depletes a large
fraction of the resource reserves available. As resource prices rise and
mines are depleted, more and more capital must be used for obtaining
resources, leaving less to be invested for future growth. Finally
investment cannot keep up with depreciation, and the industrial base
collapses, taking with it the service and agricultural systems, which have
become dependent on industrial inputs (such as fertilizers, pesticides,
hospital laboratories, computers, and especially energy for
mechanization). For a short time the situation is especially serious
because population, with the delays inherent in the age structure and the
process of social adjustment, keeps rising.
Population finally decreases when the death rate is driven upward by lack
of food and health services. The exact timing of these events is not
meaningful, given the great aggregation and many uncertainties in the
model. It is significant, however, that growth is stopped well before the
year 2100. We have tried in every doubtful case to make the most
optimistic estimate of unknown quantities, and we have also ignored
discontinuous events such as wars or epidemics, which might act to bring
an end to growth even sooner than our model would indicate. In other
words, the model is biased to allow growth to continue longer than it
probably can continue in the real world. We can thus say with some
confidence that, under the assumption of no major change in the present
system, population and industrial growth will certainly stop within th
next century, at the latest.
To test the model assumption about available resources, we doubled the
resource reserves in 1900, keeping all other assumptions identical to
those in the standard run. Now industrialization can reach a higher level
since resources are not so quickly depleted. The larger industrial plant
releases pollution at such a rate, however, that the environmental
pollution absorption mechanisms become saturated. Pollution rises very
rapidly, causing an immediate increase in the death rate and a decline in
food production. At the end of the run resources are severely depleted in
spite of the doubled amount initially available.
Is the future of the world system bound to be growth and then collapse
into a dismal, depleted existence? Only if we make the initial assumption
that our present way of doing things will not change. We have ample
evidence of mankind's ingenuity and social flexibility. There are, of
course, many likely changes in the system, some of which are already
taking place. The Green Revolution is raising agricultural yields in non
industrialized countries. Knowledge about modern methods of birth control
is spreading rapidly.
Although the history of human effort contains numerous incidents of
mankind's failure to live within physical limits, it is success in
overcoming limits that forms the cultural tradition of many dominant
people in today's world. Over the past three hundred years, mankind has
compiled an impressive record of pushing back the apparent limits to
population and economic growth by a series of spectacular technological
advances. Since the recent history of a large part of human society has
been so continuously successful, it is quite natural that many people
expect technological breakthrough to go on raising physical ceilings
indefinitely.
Will new technologies alter the tendency of the world system to grow and
collapse?
Let us assume, however, that the technological optimists are correct and
that nuclear energy will solve the resource problems of the world.
Let us also assume a reduction in pollution generation all sources by a
factor of four, starting in 1975.
Let us also assume that the normal yield per hectare of all the world's
land can be further increased by a factor of two. Besides we assume
perfect birth control, practiced voluntarily, starting in 1975.
All this means we are utilizing a technological policy in every sector of
the world model to circumvent in some way the various limits to growth.
The model system is producing nuclear power, recycling resources, and
mining the most remote reserves; withholding as many pollutants as
possible; pushing yields from the land to undreamed-of heights; and
producing only children who are actively wanted by their parents. The
result is still an end to growth before the year 2100.
Because of three simultaneous crises. Overuse of land leads to erosion,
and food production drops. Resources are severely depleted by a prosperous
world population (but not as prosperous as the present US
population). Pollution rises, drops, and then rises again dramatically,
causing a further decrease in food production and a sudden rise in the
death rate. The application of technological solutions alone has prolonged
the period of population and industrial growth, but it has not removed the
ultimate limits to that growth.
Given the many approximations and limitations of the world model, there is
no point in dwelling glumly on the series of catastrophes it tends to
generate. We shall emphasize just one more time that none of these
computer outputs is a prediction. We would not expect the real world to
behave like the world model in any of the graphs we have shown, especially
in the collapse modes. The model contains dynamic statements about only
the physical aspects of man's activities. It assumes that social
variables--income distribution, attitudes about family size, choices among
goods, services, and food--will continue to follow the same patterns they
have followed throughout the world in recent history. These patterns, and
the human value they represent, were all established in the growth phase
of our civilization. They would certainly be greatly revised as population
and income began to decrease. Since we find it difficult to imagine what
new forms of human societal behavior might emerge and how quickly they
would emerge under collapse conditions, we have not attempted to model
such social changes. What validity our model has holds up only to the
point in each output graph at which growth comes to an end and collapse
begins.
The unspoken assumption behind all of the model runs we have presented in
this chapter is that population and capital growth should be allowed to
continue until they reach some "natural" limit. This assumption also
appears to be a basic part of the human value system currently operational
in the real world. Given that first assumption, that population and
capital growth should not be deliberately limited but should be left to
"seek their own levels", we have not been able to find a set of policies
that avoids the collapse mode of behavior.
The hopes of the technological optimists center on the ability of
technology to remove or extend the limits to growth of population and
capital. We have shown that in the world model the application of
technology to apparent problems of resource depletion or pollution or food
shortage has no impact on the essential problem, which is exponential
growth in a finite and complex system. Our attempts to use even the most
optimistic estimates of the benefits of technology in the model did not
prevent the ultimate decline of population and industry, and in fact did
not in any case postpone the collapse beyond the year 2100.
Unfortunately the model does not indicate, at this stage, the social
side-effects of new technologies. These effects are often the most
important in terms of the influence of a technology on people's lives.
Social side-effects must be anticipated and forestalled before the
large-scale introduction of a new technology.
While technology can change rapidly, political and social, institutions
generally change very slowly. Furthermore, they almost never change in
anticipation of social need, but only in response to one.
We must also keep in mind the presence of social delays--the delays
necessary to allow society to absorb or to prepare for a change. Most
delays, physical or social reduce the stability of the world system and
increase the likelihood of the overshoot mode. The social delays, like the
physical ones, are becoming increasingly more critical because the
processes of exponential growth are creating additional pressures at a
faster and faster rate. Although the rate of technological change has so
far managed to keep up with this accelerated pace, mankind has made
virtually no new discoveries to increase the rate of social, political,
ethical, and cultural change.
Even if society's technological progress fulfills all expectations, it may
very well be a problem with no technical solution, or the interaction of
several such problems, that finally brings an end to population and
capital growth.
Applying technology to the natural pressures that the environment exerts
against any growth process has been so successful in the past that a whole
culture has evolved around the principle of fighting against limits
rather than learning to live with them.
Is it better to try to live within that limit by accepting a self-imposed
restriction on growth? Or is it preferable to go on growing until some
other natural limit arises, in the hope that at that time another
technological leap will allow growth to continue still longer? For the
last several hundred years human society has followed the second course so
consistently and successfully that the first choice has been all but
forgotten.
There may be much disagreement with the statement that population and
capital growth must stop soon. But virtually no one will argue that
material growth on this planet can go on forever. At this point in man's
history, the choice posed above is still available in almost every sphere
of human activity. Man can still choose his limits and stops when he
pleases by weakening some of the strong pressures that cause capital and
population growth, or by instituting counterpressures, or both. Such
counterpresures will probably not be entirely pleasant. They will
certainly involve profound changes in the social and economic structures
that have been deeply impressed into human culture by centuries of growth.
The alternative is to wait until the price of technology becomes more than
society can pay, or until the side-effects of technology suppress growth
themselves, or until problems arise that have no technical solutions. At
any of those points the
choice of limits will be gone.
Faith in technology as the ultimate solution to all problems can thus
divert our attention from the most fundamental problem--the problem of
growth in a finite system--and prevent us from taking effective action to
solve it.
On the other hand, our intent is certainly not to brand technology as evil
or futile or unnecessary. We strongly believe that many of the
technological developments mentioned here--recycling, pollution-control
devices, contraceptives--will be absolutely vital to the future of
human society if they are combined with deliberate checks on growth. We
would deplore an unreasoned rejection of the benefit of technology as
strongly as we argue here against an unreasoned acceptance of them.
Perhaps the best summary of our position is the motto of the Sierra Club :
"Not blind opposition to progress, but opposition to blind progress".
We would hope that society will receive each technological advance by
establishing the answers to three questions before the technology is
widely adopted. The questions are:
- What will be the side-effects, both physical and social, if this
development is introduced on a large scale?
- What social changes will be necessary before this development can be
implemented properly, and how long will it take to achieve them ?
- If the development is fully successful and removes some natural limits
to growth, what limit will the growing system meet next? Will society
prefer its pressures to the ones this development is designed to remove?
We are searching for a model that represents a world system that is:
1. sustainable without sudden and uncontrollable collapse; and
2. capable of satisfying the basic material requirements of all of its
people
The overwhelming growth in world population caused by the positive
birth-rate loop is a recent phenomenon, a result of mankind's very
successful reduction of worldwide mortality. The controlling negative
feedback loop has been weakened, allowing the positive loop to operate
virtually without constraint. There are only two ways to restore the
resulting imbalance. Either the birth rate must be brought down to equal
the new, lower death rate, or the death rate must rise again. All of the
"natural" constraints to
population growth operate in the second way--they raise the death. Any
society wishing to avoid that result must take deliberate action to
control the positive feedback loop--to reduce the birth rate.
But stabilizing population alone is not sufficient to prevent overshoot
and collapse; a similar run with constant capital and rising population
shows that stabilizing capital alone is also not sufficient. What happens
if we bring both positive feedback loops under control simultaneously? We
can stabilize the capital stock in the model by requiring that the
investment rate equal the depreciation rate, with an additional model link
exactly analogous to the population-stabilizing one.
The result of stopping population growth in 1975 and industrial capital
growth in 1985 with no other changes is that population and capital reach
constant values at a relatively high level of food, industrial output and
services per person. Eventually, however, resource shortages reduce
industrial output and the temporally stable state degenerates. However, we
can improve the model behavior greatly by combining technological changes
with value changes that reduce the growth tendencies of the system.
Then the stable world population is only slightly larger than the
population today. There is more than twice as much food per person as the
average value in 1970, and world average lifetime is nearly 70 years. The
average industrial output per capita is well above today's level, and
services per capita have tripled. Total average income per capita
(industrial output, food, and services combined) is about half the present
average US income, equal to the present average European income, and three
times the present average world income. Resources are still being
gradually depleted, as they must be under any realistic assumption, but
the rate of depletion is so slow that there is time for technology and
industry to adjust to changes in resource availability.
If we relax our most unrealistic assumption--that we can suddenly and
absolutely stabilize population and capital, replacing them with the
following:
1. The population has access to 100 percent effective birth control.
2. The average desired family size is two children.
3. The economic system endeavors to maintain average industrial output per
capita at about the 1975 level. Excess industrial capability is employed
for producing consumption goods rather than increasing the industrial
capital investment rate above the depreciation rate.
We do not suppose that any single one of the policies necessary to attain
system stability in the model can or should be suddenly introduced in the
world by 1975. A society choosing stability as a goal certainly must
approach that goal gradually. It is important to realize, however, that
the longer exponential growth is allowed to continue, the fewer
possibilities remain for the final stable rate.
Many people will think that the changes we have introduced into the model
to avoid the growth-and collapse behavior mode are not only impossible,
but unpleasant, dangerous, even disastrous in themselves. Such policies as
reducing the birth rate and diverting capital from production of material
goods, by whatever means they might be implemented, seem unnatural and
unimaginable, because they have not, in most people's experience, been
tried, or even seriously suggested. Indeed there would be little point
even in discussing such fundamental changes in the functioning of modern
society if we felt that the present pattern of unrestricted growth were
sustainable into the future. All the evidence available to us, however,
suggests that of the three alternatives--unrestricted growth, a
self-imposed limitation to growth, or a nature-imposed limitation to
growth--only the last two are actually possible.
Achieving a self-imposed limitation to growth would require much effort.
It would involve learning to do many things in new ways. It would tax the
ingenuity, the flexibility, and the self-discipline of the human race.
Bringing a deliberate, controlled end to growth is a tremendous challenge,
not easily met. Would the final result be worth the effort? What would
humanity gain by such a transition, and what would it lose? Let us
consider in more detail what a world of nongrowth might be like.
We have after much discussion, decided to call the state of constant
population and capital, by the term "equilibrium". Equilibrium means a
state of balance or equality between opposing forces. In the dynamic terms
of the world model, the opposing forces are those causing population and
capital stock to increase (high desired family size, low birth control
effectiveness, high rate of capital investment) and those causing
population and capital stock to decrease (lack of food, pollution, high
rate of depreciation or obsolescence). The word "capital" should be
understood to mean service, industrial, and agricultural capital combined.
Thus the most basic definition of the state of global equilibrium is that
population and capital are essentially stable, with the forces tending to
increase or decrease them in a carefully controlled balance.
There is much room for variation within that definition. We have only
specified that the stocks of capital and population remain constant, but
they might theoretically be constant at a high level or a low level--or
one
might be high and the other low. The longer a society prefers to maintain
the state of equilibrium, the lower the rates and levels must be.
By choosing a fairly long time horizon for its existence, and a long
average lifetime as a desirable goal, we have now arrived at a minimum set
of requirements for the state of global equilibrium. They are:
1. The capital plant and the population are constant in size. The birth
rate equals the death rate and the capital investment rate equals the
depreciation rate.
2. All input and output rates--birth, death, investment, and
depreciation--are kept to a minimum.
3. The levels of capital and population and the ratio of the two are set
in accordance with the values of the society. They may be deliberately
revised and slowly adjusted as the advance of technology creates new
options.
An equilibrium defined in this way does not mean stagnation. Within the
first two guidelines above, corporations could expand or fail, local
populations could increase or decrease income could become more or less
evenly distributed. Technological advance would permit the services
provided by a constant stock of capital to increase slowly. Within the
third guideline, any country could change its average standard of living
by altering the balance between its population and its capital.
Furthermore, a society could adjust to changing internal or external
factors by raising or lowering the population or capital stocks, or both,
slowly and in a controlled fashion, with a predetermined goal in mind. The
three points above define a dynamic equilibrium, which need not and
probably would not "freeze" the world into the population
Capital configuration that happens to exist at present time. The object in
accepting the above three statements is to create freedom for society, not
to impose a straitjacket.
What would life be like in such an equilibrium state? Would innovation be
stifled? Would society be locked into the patterns of inequality and
injustice we see in the world today? Discussion of these questions must
proceed on the basis of mental models, for there is no formal model of
social conditions in the equilibrium state. No one can predict what sort
of institutions mankind might develop under these new conditions. There
is, of course, no guarantee that the new society would be much better or
even much different from that which exists today. It seems possible,
however, that a society released from struggling with the many problems
caused by growth may have more energy and ingenuity available for solving
other problems. In fact, we believe, that the evolution of a society that
favors innovation and technological development, a society based on
equality and justice, is far more likely to evolve in a state of global
equilibrium than it is in the state of growth we are experiencing today
Population and capital are the only quantities that need be constant in
the equilibrium state. Any human activity that does not require a large
flow of irreplaceable resources or produce severe environmental
degradation might continue to grow indefinitely. In particular, those
pursuits that many people would list as the most desirable and satisfying
activities of man--education, art, music, religion, basic scientific
research, athletics, and social interactions--could flourish.
All of the activities listed above depend very strongly on two factors.
First, they depend upon the availability of some surplus production after
the basic human needs of food and shelter have been met. Second, they
require leisure time. In any equilibrium state the relative levels of
capital and population could be adjusted to assure that human material
needs are fulfilled at any desired level. Since the amount of material
production would be essentially fixed, every improvement in production
methods could result in increased leisure for the population--leisure that
could be devoted to any activity that is relatively non-consuming and
non-polluting, such as those listed above
Technological advance would be both necessary and welcome in the
equilibrium state. The picture of the equilibrium state we have drawn here
is idealized, to be sure. It may be impossible to achieve in the form
described here, and it may not be the form most people on earth would
choose. The only purpose in describing it at all is to emphasize that
global equilibrium need not mean an end to progress or human development.
The possibilities within an equilibrium state are almost endless.
An equilibrium state would not be free of pressures, since no society can
be free of pressure. Equilibrium would require trading certain human
freedoms, such as producing unlimited numbers of children or consuming
uncontrolled amounts of resources, for other freedoms, such as relief from
pollution and crowding and the threat of collapse of the world system. is
possible that new freedoms might also arise--universal and unlimited
education, leisure for creativity and inventiveness, and, most important
of all, the freedom from hunger and poverty enjoyed by such a small
fraction of the world's people today.
We can say very little at this point about the practical, day by-day steps
that might be taken to reach a desirable, sustainable state of global
equilibrium. Neither the world model nor our own thoughts have been
developed in sufficient detail to understand all the implications of the
transition from growth to equilibrium. Before any part of the world's
society embarks deliberately on such a transition, there must be much more
discussion, more extensive analysis, and many new ideas contributed by
many different people.
The equilibrium society will have to weigh the trade-offs engendered by a
finite earth not only with consideration of present human values but also
with consideration of future generations. long-term goals must be
specified and short term goals made consistent with them.
We end on a note of urgency. We have repeatedly emphasized the importance
of the natural delays in the population-capital system of the world. These
delays mean, for example, that if Mexico's birth rate gradually declined
from its present value to an exact replacement value by the year 2000, the
country's population would continue to grow until the year 2060. During
that time the population would grow from 50 million to 130 million. We
cannot say with certainty how much longer mankind can postpone initiating
deliberate control of its growth before it will have lost the chance for
control. We suspect on the basis of present knowledge of the physical
constraints of the planet that the growth phase cannot continue for
another one hundred years. Again, because of the delays in the system, if
the global society waits until those constraints are unmistakably
apparent, it will have waited too long.
If there is cause for deep concern, there is also cause for hope.
Deliberately limiting growth would be difficult, but not impossible. The
way to proceed is clear, and the necessary steps, although they are new
ones for human society, are well within human capabilities. Man possesses,
for a small moment in his history, the most powerful combination of
knowledge, tools, and resources the world has ever known. He has all that
is physically necessary to create a totally new form of human society--one
that would be built to last for generations. The two missing ingredients
are a realistic, long-term goal that can guide mankind to the equilibrium
society and the human will to achieve that goal. Without such a goal and a
commitment to it, short-term concerns will generate the exponential growth
that drives the world system toward the limits of the earth and ultimate
collapse. With that goal and that commitment, mankind would be ready now
to begin a controlled, orderly transition from growth to global
equilibrium.

History of Banking Fraud:
The Coming Battle
By M. W. WALBERT
The
Coming Battle documents from Congressional records, newspaper reports
and writings by the founding fathers and others a chronology of events long
forgotten that shaped our fledgling nation from 1776 to 1899. Read about the
manipulation of our money and its supply, the intentional creation of
recessions, depressions and panics, manipulation of the stock markets, and
the demonetization of silver.
Secrets of the Federal Reserve
by Eustace Mullins
Eustace Mullins' carefully
researched and documented treatise picks up from Walbert's expose' of
control of the money supply and the economy and
brings it to the mid 1980's.
The
World Order
by Eustace Mullins
How control of the world's money has inexorably led to an ever tighter
grip on control of the world's people.
Uranium Wars by Leuren Moret
How control of the world's people has inexorably led to wider use of
depopulation methods which include spreading radioactivity in food,
water, air, and the human genome.
Taking Back Your Power
by Allen Aslan Heart
WHAT CAN YOU DO? Stop playing THEIR game.
Take back your power. Stop paying taxes that are not legal or lawful. Stop
paying bills you don't really owe. Stop using THEIR money. There ARE ways if
you open your mind and look for the gaps in their fences that keep the
sheeple in their pasture. Are you chattel or a real person? You are the one
who makes that choice.
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