You
don't need money to live. Money has no intrinsic value. What you need in order to live are the basic
needs that money buys.
There is nothing that money can do for us that the things we trade it for can't do much better. You can't eat or drink money, and you can't make a house out of it. That is, unless you're using Chinese tea bricks as currency, which are used as construction material, and also for making medicinal tea. They can even be eaten as food in emergency situations such as famines. Durable foods, foods that don't go bad, well-preserved foods, and foods that are meant to go bad - like canned goods, honey, beef jerky, and sour cream and croutons (respectively) - could potentially be used as food-based currency. After all, as the Greenpeace slogan goes, "When the last tree is cut down, the last fish eaten, and the last stream poisoned, you will realize that you cannot eat money."
As I explained above, money shouldn’t be the only way to get our needs. But moreover, money isn’t the only way to get our needs. It’s the simple law of supply and demand; when demand and other variables hold constant, lower prices (and, eventually, free products) are the results of increased supply.
The money creators at the Federal Reserve Bank make astronomical, exponential profits off of the creation of money. They loan-out money - at face-value, plus interest - to the U.S. Department of the Treasury, in exchange for government bonds. Through the low cost of printing money, the Federal Reserve makes 95% profit off of the creation of $1 bills, and about 99.88% profit off of the creation of $100 bills. But that's only the first stage.
Our merely agreeing to continue to use this money has rendered us, and will continue to render us, impoverished. On top of that, it renders us liable to fill out all sorts of forms for as much as a solid year-and-a-half after we earn the money to begin with. This tax calendar keeps us from escaping the use of money. You can pay your taxes in Bitcoin, but you can't avoid paying taxes, and the government prefers that we pay it back in the money that it buys from the Federal Reserve.
Almost
everything else that you buy are wants,
not needs. You can obtain things that are redeemable for your needs, without
working to earn mass-printed Federal Reserve currency (whose value is
determined by government fiat, and public faith therein).
You
can work for real constitutional currency made of precious metals (like the
U.S. Golden Eagle). You can work for non-monetary compensation, or use local
currencies (like the "Mountain-Hours" currency in Colorado), or
alternative e-currencies such as Bitcoin.
In
the past, you could work for interest-free money such as Greenbacks, and gold
and silver certificates. Admittedly, eliminating interest and debt from money
doesn't go anywhere near as far as necessary to solve the money problem. To
eliminate interest would merely halve the
infinite profit on money; and of course half of infinity is infinity).
But
you can also sell something you have. Of course, when you sell something,
you're trading something with intrinsic value, for money that has no intrinsic value, so selling is out.
But if you feel that the value of your labor can be expressed as an hourly
wage, then you might prefer to use labor notes and time-based currency (for
more information on this, read about the Cincinnatti Time Store, and TimeBanks
and TimeDollars).
But
if you reject the wage system entirely - remember, you don't buy things with
money; because of the wage system, you buy things with hours of your life that
you trade away for money - you can
also trade-out, barter, gift, share, or donate your time. Additional
developments in non-monetary trade include free stores, social credit, mutuum
checks, and mutual aid. Finally, "paying it forward" could help avoid
coercive reciprocity and help achieve truly voluntary reciprocal altruism.
Regardless
of whether you engage (or want to engage) in monetary or non-monetary
transactions, your purpose of engaging in these transactions is always the
same. That purpose is to satisfy your six most basic needs - air, water, food,
medicine, shelter, and clothing - and, once you have satisfied those, to
satisfy your wants and desires.
There is nothing that money can do for us that the things we trade it for can't do much better. You can't eat or drink money, and you can't make a house out of it. That is, unless you're using Chinese tea bricks as currency, which are used as construction material, and also for making medicinal tea. They can even be eaten as food in emergency situations such as famines. Durable foods, foods that don't go bad, well-preserved foods, and foods that are meant to go bad - like canned goods, honey, beef jerky, and sour cream and croutons (respectively) - could potentially be used as food-based currency. After all, as the Greenpeace slogan goes, "When the last tree is cut down, the last fish eaten, and the last stream poisoned, you will realize that you cannot eat money."
And
you can't use money as a medicine; you can't rub it all over yourself to make
yourself feel better. I mean, you can,
but there won't be a medicinal effect. Unless you consider that 70-80% of
American bills have trace amounts of cocaine on them. Unless you also consider that American bills are
processed with the hormone disruptor bisphenol-A (B.P.A.). Money is literally
covered with poison; you can buy medicine with it, but you're going to need
some extra medicine to treat the B.P.A. that you're absorbing cutaneously when
you touch it. I'd warn against handling money without gloves on, but some
sterile gloves contain toxins as well.
I
suppose it's also possible to make clothing out of money, and to burn it for
energy and heat. However, making clothing out of money is only practical on a
mass scale if it is almost totally worthless (although perplexingly, it is).
My
point is that money buys our needs, but it shouldn't be the only way to get our needs (I mean, they're our needs, for God's sake). I'm fine with working to pay for my wants and desires that I have in excess of my base needs. But we
shouldn't have to pay taxes or fines or fees on being alive or taking up space;
things we can't help but do, if not for killing ourselves. Furthermore, money isn’t the only way to get our needs.
We
must make the negative rights vs.
positive rights dichotomy obsolete. We will do this by developing an
open-access theory of rights, which holds that nobody is obligated to do
anything for anyone, except leave them alone, and also cease to impede them
from accessing basic means of survival. After all, nobody goes into the food
service industry because they want to deny
people food. Nobody goes into health care because they want to hurt people instead of heal them, nor
because they get a kick out of denying people care. People come in to work
because they want to give goods, and provide services, to people in need.
Safe
foods and drinks are usually specialty items, and for the most part, foods and
drinks are not available in generic forms. This means that most foods and
drinks do not resemble raw materials sufficiently to qualify as land; at least
not in the sense that the full economic definition of land includes raw
materials. Hence, foods and drinks are not strictly common resources.
However,
even without commonwealth of (that is, common possession of, or common access
to) our most basic needs, each one of our needs could each be made so
accessible, abundant, cheap, and distributed so widely, such that anyone could
access them on demand without being expected to pay, nor to use money, nor to
work to earn the given need.
As I explained above, money shouldn’t be the only way to get our needs. But moreover, money isn’t the only way to get our needs. It’s the simple law of supply and demand; when demand and other variables hold constant, lower prices (and, eventually, free products) are the results of increased supply.
We can improve the
quality of the air we breathe by imposing intentionally punitive Pigouvian
taxes on pollution and the release of toxins into air, streams, groundwater,
and land.
We
can start programs to distribute and drive down the costs of straw devices that
filter water. We can continue to refrain from preventing people from accessing
free water on both public and private property.
We
can improve the efficiency of food distribution. Spread information about the
T.L.C. (The Learning Channel) program Extreme Couponing, and teach
people the time- and money- saving couponing techniques featured in the show.
These techniques allow people to afford their expensive needed items by
coupling them with the significant savings provided through coupons for small,
cheap, mass-produced items for which shoppers often have little need.
Additionally, we can make it easier for people to grow produce, and keep small
livestock, in their own yards, in order to decrease dependence on mass-produced
foods; foods which would otherwise have to travel long distances and go through
questionably healthful sanitation procedures before they reach our plates.
We
can boycott companies that send food overseas to be processed, and protest
against any subsidies that your tax dollars provide to such companies (but of
course, to fully boycott such companies, we would have to lobby our governments
to get them to stop sending those companies our tax dollars). We can give
supermarkets tax incentives to donate excess food to the needy. We can stop
enforcing food patents, or stop enforcing them for such long periods of time.
We can get our F.D.A. to stop bleaching farm-to-fork meals, stop destroying
homemade baked goods, and stop disposing of donated meals simply because they
haven't been inspected by local authorities.
Most
nurses and doctors would have no problem becoming formally subject to the
provision of the Hippocratic Oath that says they can't turn people away due to
inability to pay. Either government or non-state dispute resolution agencies
could enforce these obligations. This would render the health insurance
industry obsolete, since no co-pays would be necessary on a zero-dollar charge.
We
can repeal vagrancy laws. We can loosen homesteading laws such that people do
not have to occupy homes for such long periods of time before government
recognizes the homestead as the new occupant’s legitimate property. We can
extend homesteading tax credits, by allowing them to apply to apartments,
trailers, and other small residences. We can give apartment owners and boards
tax incentives to allow homeless people to sleep in their empty units. We can
stop arresting members of the public for sleeping or squatting on public land.
We can relax local building codes in such a way that allows for experimentation
in architecture, in order to allow the re-use of safe building materials that
would have been otherwise discarded. For more information on this, please look
up Mike Reynolds and Earth Ships.
We
can do less to hinder people's abilities to donate clothing to clothing drives
that benefit the poor and homeless. Set up free laundry services in homeless
shelters. We can repeal public nudity laws and other laws that dictate dress
codes to the public.
There
are six vacant homes for each homeless person in America. There are car
graveyards, sitting in deserts because they're not in perfect condition, and
the people who own them think that they can't make money off of selling more of
them, because they would flood the market and prices would plummet. We can do
something about that.
Most importantly, we
can increase awareness that scarcity is a myth; and increase awareness that
hoarding – and police protection of the right to accumulate unlimited capital
and wealth on private property – is the true cause of the scarcity that we think we experience and feel.
These steps will help
ensure universal and open access to the basic means of survival for all human
beings. Additionally, they will ensure that nobody is harmed, nor stolen from,
for failing to purchase goods or services in what the government judges to be
insufficient quantity or of insufficient quality.
Universal access to our basic needs will help eliminate the need for money, taxation, the social and corporate welfare state, the criminal justice system, the health insurance industry, the for-profit market for land, the banking industry, competition for reasons other than recreation, and the study of economics.
Universal access to our basic needs will help eliminate the need for money, taxation, the social and corporate welfare state, the criminal justice system, the health insurance industry, the for-profit market for land, the banking industry, competition for reasons other than recreation, and the study of economics.
Without
having to devote so much of our rewards from labor on bare subsistence,
cut-throat competition in the job market would drastically decline, as would
competition whose purpose is neither entertainment nor leisure (such as games
and sports).
Human
attention could be dedicated to more worthwhile ventures; such as the
development of medical technology and biological and astrophysical sciences,
the healing of communication disorders and preventable diseases, and the
eradication of toxins from our consumer products and environment (especially
air; common property that is arguably the
primary human need).
Additionally,
the engineering and advancement of robotics and training in the maintenance of
automatons, and the study of episodes of slavery in history in order to avoid
repeating the same bad habits that have plagued human experience since the dawn
of global consciousness. We shouldn't stand for this indoctrination any longer;
we're only perpetuating our own servitude by using money and agreeing to
associate and transact with others who still use it because they have no idea
how harmful it is.
The money creators at the Federal Reserve Bank make astronomical, exponential profits off of the creation of money. They loan-out money - at face-value, plus interest - to the U.S. Department of the Treasury, in exchange for government bonds. Through the low cost of printing money, the Federal Reserve makes 95% profit off of the creation of $1 bills, and about 99.88% profit off of the creation of $100 bills. But that's only the first stage.
After
the Federal Reserve lends this money out, it makes its money back again - almost in quadruplicate, nearly doubling that original near-doubling of value
- off of their investments in business, and in the government. They do this in
such a way that they receive the bulk of our taxes as well, the bulk of the
proceeds from most of our rent and property taxes, and the bulk of the profits
from nearly all of our purchases (of goods and services alike).
Land
owners, laborers, and capitalists all need land, labor, and capital. That's why
loaning money to government workers (under the guise of paying them), and collecting the money over and over again (through
each stage in the processes of loaning and trading), makes for theoretically
infinite profit off of the creation of money (that is, money creation in
exchange for more than the cost it took to produce it, factoring in the
interest at which it is loaned).
If
all of your disposable income goes to paying for the space that you occupy,
paying taxes, and paying for the things that you need to consume (and services
that you need to use) in order to survive, then you are arguably in the
position of a slave. Neither you, nor the slave, has any means with which to
obtain the wants and desires that you have in excess of your bare subsistence
needs (such as entertainment). Just like slaves, we are told that we aren't
working hard enough, and that we are free to buy our way to freedom. It's a
con.
Our merely agreeing to continue to use this money has rendered us, and will continue to render us, impoverished. On top of that, it renders us liable to fill out all sorts of forms for as much as a solid year-and-a-half after we earn the money to begin with. This tax calendar keeps us from escaping the use of money. You can pay your taxes in Bitcoin, but you can't avoid paying taxes, and the government prefers that we pay it back in the money that it buys from the Federal Reserve.
We
don't fully own the things that are really worth owning, like "our
houses" and "our cars"; we merely purchase some of their
use-rights, pay sales taxes on that, pay to register them, and then we occupy
and use them. For the most part, we can't sell them without filling out
paperwork and obeying all kinds of regulations. For the most part, we can't
exclude the police from our houses, nor from our cars. If we can't keep people
out of our property, then it's not our property. And that excludes our own
bodies, which we still can't manage to keep police out of, in so many ways. If
you can't own property, then you are property.
There's
no point in owning any property at all, if we're just going to be taxed for
"owning" it. Whether the highway robbers masquerading our government
"tax" us out of our property, or whether it's highway robbers not masquerading as our government
"taxing" us as we walk down the street, displaying wealth with our
sharp suits. Property makes you a target. Your labor is wealth, too, so owning
your own body as property makes you a target even if you use no currency, as
long as you are able to work, and agree to do favors for people (whether compensation
is assured or not).
If
you don't use any form of currency, you can't be taxed. You can't tax away a
third of a favor; not without
enslaving someone. Quantifying the value of that favor in national currency
(that is, monetizing it), and
commodifying a social exchange, makes that involuntary servitude easier and
less noticeable. Now we know.
Quit
your job and put some money aside for next year's taxes. Do with your savings
whatever you think is appropriate; put it in a safety deposit box, bury it somewhere,
or exchange it for durable items that will help you survive more easily without
money. Pay your taxes next year with U.S. dollars, and then don't ever use
national currency again.
Exit
the rat race.
For
more information, look up Daniel Suelo, "the man who quit money".
Written on February
17th, 2017
Edited on February 18th through 20th, and 25th,
March 19th and 23rd, and April 4th, 2017,
and August 16th, 2019
Edited on February 18th through 20th, and 25th,
March 19th and 23rd, and April 4th, 2017,
and August 16th, 2019
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