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0:03 In a declining society, art
0:08 if honest, should also reflect the decline.
0:13 And unless he wants to betray the social function
0:19 Art must show the world as changeable.
0:24 And to help change.
0:28 -Ernst Fischer
0:31 Deadly unrest because of the government plan
0:34 renege on payments of loans ...
0:36 is that unemployment continues
0:38 to grow, and should continue to grow
0:40 simply because there is an oversupply of goods
... 0:44
all this is borrowed money ... 0:46
and the debt owned by banks in other countries ...
0:50 X-P-H-M-A in the form of a convenient personal
loan ... 0:55
... Cigarette filter ensures that the taste ...
0:57 45ARIA beer ... Are you hot? ...
1:00 planned by the U.S. to bomb Iran? ...
1:03 ... The U.S. fund terror attacks in Iran
... 1:07
Now, my grandmother was a wonderful person 1:10
I learned how to play the game Monopoly. 1:13
Understand that the name of the game is to acquire.
1:17 We accumulate all that could and
1:19 eventually became the master of the game.
1:23 And then I will always say the same thing.
1:24 We looked at me and say:
1:27 "One day I will learn to play the game."
1:30 One summer I played Monopoly almost every
day, all day 1:34
and that summer I learned to play the game. 1:37
I realized that the only way to win 1:39
is to declare full commitment to the acquisition. 1:42
I understand that money and property ... 1:44
This is the way which keeps the score. 1:48
And by the end of this summer 1:49
I was more ruthless than my grandmother. 1:51
I was ready to skip the rules if needed to win that game.
1:55 and sat with her to play that fall.
1:59 She got everything he had. I saw
2:01 and to give her last dollar and abandon completely
defeated. 2:06
And then, still had one thing to teach me. 2:10
Then he said: 2:14
"Now, everything goes back to the box. 2:20
All those houses and hotels. 2:23
All railroads and utilities ... 2:25
All that property and all those lovely money ...
2:30 now all go back to the box.
2:34 None of them were not really yours.
2:38 Took everything very seriously for a while.
2:41 However, they existed long before you sit
at the table 2:45
and will be here after you leave - coming players - players leaving.
2:52 Houses and cars ...
2:55 Securities and clothes ...
2:57 even your body. "
3:00 Because the truth is that everything you eat
and grab and save 3:04
going to go back to the box and it's gone. 3:07
So, you must ask yourself 3:09
when you finally get the ultimate promotion 3:11
when you make the ultimate market 3:13
when you buy the ultimate home 3:15
when you secure your financial security 3:17
and you climb the ladder of success in 3:19
highest rung you can probably go up ... 3:23
And the excitement weaken 3:25
and weakening ... 3:29
then what? 3:32
How far should I walk on this street 3:34
before you see where it goes? 3:39
Surely you understand 3:42
will never be enough. 3:45
So we have to position yourself the question: 3:48
What does it matter? 4:49
It's Hot! 4:52
Is Rich! 4:56
And it spoiled! 4:56
And it spoiled! 5:03
The N ° 1 Shows of America is back! 5:30
The Gentle Machine Productions Presents 5:43
A film by Peter Joseph 5:55
When I was young 5:57
Growing up in New York 6:00
refused to swear loyalty to the flag. 6:05
And of course, sent to the principal's office. 6:08
And he asked me why I do not want to swear loyalty?
6:11 After all they do!
6:13 He once said that everyone thought that the
earth is flat 6:16
but this does not mean that was something. 6:18
He explained that America owes everything he has
6:21 other cultures
6:23 and other nations
6:24 and would prefer to swear loyalty
6:26 Earth
6:27 and around the world on this.
6:30 Needless to say, that I soon
6:32 quit school altogether
6:35 and set up a lab in my room.
6:38 There he began to learn about science
6:41 and nature.
6:42 Then I realized that
6:44 universe governed by laws
6:46 and that the human being
6:48 as society itself
6:49 not exempt from these laws.
6:53 Then came the crash of 1929.
6:56 Which brought what we now call a
6:59 "The Great Depression."
7:00 It was difficult to understand why millions
of people 7:04
were unemployed, homeless and hungry 7:07
Once all the factories there yet. 7:10
The funds were unchanged. 7:12
It was then that I realized 7:15
that the rules of the economic game 7:18
was inherently wrong. 7:21
Soon followed the Second World War 7:24
where several states took turns 7:26
systematically destroy one another. 7:29
He later figured out that all the decay 7:32
and kataspatalimenoi Resources 7:34
worked on this war 7:36
could easily have covered every 7:38
human need in the world. 7:43
Since watching humanity 7:46
prepare its own extinction. 7:50
I watch as precious and finite natural resources 7:53
wasted and destroyed continuously 7:56
in the name of profit and free market. 7:59
I have seen the degradation of social values 8:03
in a basically artificial materialism 8:06
and reckless consumerism. 8:09
And watch as the forces of money 8:13
control the political structure 8:15
the alleged free society. 8:19
I am now 94 years old. 8:22
And I fear that I am in the same position 8:24
I was 8:26
before 75 years. 8:30
This *** must go. 8:37
ZEITGEIST 8:45
ZEITGEIST: MOVING FORWARD 9:00
[Never doubt that a small group of thinking, 9:03
committed citizens can change the world. 9:05
Indeed, the only way done. 9:07
- Margaret Mead] 9:10
Part 1: Human Nature 9:13
Let's say you're a scientist 9:15
and somewhere along the way, clamped to your head
9:19 the inevitable question of "Nature vs. Raising"
9:22 as we say, Coke vs. Pepsi
9:25 or Greeks against the Trojans.
9:27 Thus, nature versus raising is, until now
9:30 a very simplistic perspective
9:33 as to their influences.
9:35 Influences of how a cell facing
9:40 an energy crisis by
9:42 what makes us who we are in a more personalized
9:45 levels of our personality.
9:47 And what we have is a completely false dichotomy
9:50 that sees nature as the default
9:54 the core of causality.
9:57 Life is DNA and the code of codes
10:00 and the Holy Grail, and all motivated by this
... 10:03
on the other hand, there is 10:05
understanding of social science which indicates 10:07
that we are "social organizations" 10:09
and biology are fungi. 10:13
People are free organic 10:15
and of course the two perspectives are stupid. 10:18
In contrast, what we see is 10:20
it is seemingly impossible to understand 10:23
how biology 10:25
outside the context of the environment 10:28
[Is genetic] 10:30
One of the wildest 10:33
but also widespread and 10:35
perception is rather risky: 10:38
"Well, this behavior is genetic." 10:42
Now, what does this mean? 10:43
It means different things immaterial whether 10:46
know modern biology, but 10:48
most out there, a summary of means: 10:51
a predetermined view of life 10:54
which is rooted in biology and genetics · 10:57
genes mean things can not be changed; 11:00
genes means that things are 11:03
inevitable and may be unnecessary 11:05
wasting resources trying to fix it; 11:08
not trying through social models 11:11
to the improvements because it is inevitable and immutable ...
11:14 and this is a great folly
11:20 [Disease]
11:23 Widespread that cases such as
11:26 hyperactivity (ADHD) is a genetically programmed
11:29 cases such as schizophrenia is genetically
programmed. 11:31
The truth is the opposite. 11:33
Nothing is genetically programmed 11:34
It is very rare diseases 11:37
a small portion 11:38
with an extremely low occurrence in the general population
11:42 is really genetically determined.
11:46 More complicated cases
11:48 may be predisposed to have a genetic component
11:52 However, a predisposition is not synonymous
with the advance. 11:56
The whole search for the source of disease in the genome
12:00 was doomed to failure before you even think
12:03 because most diseases are not genetically
predetermined. 12:07
Heart disease, cancers, strokes 12:10
rheumatoid conditions, autoimmune conditions in general
12:16 mental illness, addictions ...
12:18 None of this is genetically determined.
12:21 Breast cancer, for example, 100 women in this
12:25 Only seven will carry the genes of this cancer.
12:28 93 did not have
12:30 and from 100 women with the genes
12:32 not all affected by cancer.
12:37 [Behavior]
12:39 Genes are not things that just make us behave
12:42 in a certain way, regardless of our environment.
12:47 These genes give us different ways to react
to our environment. 12:50
And, in fact, it seems that some of the first 12:55
influences of childhood and nature of child rearing
12:59 affect gene expression
13:01 activating or deactivating different genes
13:04 to put in a different developmental trajectory
13:08 which can match the kind of world that you
may encounter. 13:12
Thus, for example. 13:13
A study conducted in Montreal with victims of suicide
13:18 examined the brain autopsies of those people
13:21 and demonstrated that when a suicide victim
13:24 (These are usually young adults)
13:26 had been abused as a child abuse actually
13:29 caused a genetic change in brain
13:32 who was absent from the brains of people who
have been abused. 13:37
This is an epigenetic influence 13:38
"On" means "above", so 13:41
The epigenetic influence is what happens 13:45
the environment either to activate or deactivate certain genes.
13:51 In New Zealand, a study
13:53 conducted in a town called Dunedin
13:56 where a few thousand people
14:00 studied from birth up to the third decade
of life 14:05
What they discovered was that they could recognize 14:11
a genetic mutation, an abnormal gene 14:14
who indeed had a relationship with 14:17
the propensity for violence 14:21
but only if the person had also 14:24
of heavily abused as a child. 14:28
In other words, children with this abnormal gene
14:31 it would likely be more violent than anyone
else 14:34
and in fact were actually lower rate of violence 14:37
than people with normal genes 14:39
if they were abused as children. 14:43
A great example of how additional 14:45
where genes are A and Z. 14:47
An advanced technique, where you can 14:49
removing a gene from a mouse 14:52
and mouse and his descendants will not have it.
14:54 Have you "delete" this gene.
14:56 Therefore, there is a gene that encodes
14:58 a protein that has to do
14:59 with learning and memory, and this wonderful
show 15:04
"Erase" this gene, and 15:05
got a mouse and learn so well. 15:07
"Oh! A genetic basis for intelligence!". 15:10
What is less appreciated in this landmark study
15:13 which was screened widely by the media
15:16 is that if we take these mice genetically
attenuated 15:19
and grow in a more enriched 15:21
and stimulating environment of normal laboratory mice
15:24 then, these fully overcome the deficit.
15:27 So when someone says in the modern sense
15:32 "Oh, this behavior is genetic"
15:35 to the extent that this is even a valid kind
words to use 15:38
what you are saying is there is a 15:41
genetic contribution to how this 15:43
The body responds to the environment; 15:45
genes may influence the 15:48
ingenuity with which an organization 15:50
handle a number of environmental challenges. 15:53
You know, this is not the version that most have in mind
15:56 and not to be too dramatic
15:59 They operate with the old
16:02 version "is genetic"
16:04 and not far from the history of eugenics
16:07 and things of that kind.
16:09 It is a widespread misconception
16:11 and possibly quite dangerous.
16:14 One reason that
16:17 biological explanation for the violence ...
16:20 one reason why this case is
16:23 potentially dangerous, not just misleading
16:25 can really make bad ...
16:28 is because, if you believe,
16:31 You could easily say:
16:33 "So we can not do anything"
16:35 to change the disposition
16:37 people need to become violent;
16:39 The only thing we can do is punish them -
to detain 16:44
or to perform 16:45
but do not have to worry about changing 16:48
social environment or social conditions 16:52
that can lead people to become violent, because 16:56
"Is meaningless." 16:58
The genetic argument allows us the luxury to ignore
17:02 past and current historical and social factors
17:05 and in the words of Louis Menand
17:08 who wrote in the magazine New Yorker
17:10 Very cunning, said:
17:11 "Everything is in the genes ... an explanation
of how things are 17:15
which threatens not how things are. 17:18
Why should someone feel unhappy 17:20
or engage in antisocial behavior 17:23
where the person lives in the most 17:25
free and prosperous country on earth? 17:28
Can not blame the system. 17:30
There must be a flaw somewhere in it. " 17:33
Where is a good way to put it. 17:35
Therefore, the genetic argument is just an excuse
17:39 which allows us to ignore
17:41 social, and economic and political factors
17:44 which essentially form the basis
17:47 many problem behaviors.
17:53 [Research Subject: Addiction]
17:55 The addictions, usually
17:57 considered issues related to drug
17:59 but looking at the broader
18:01 read addiction as any behavior
18:04 associated with a strong desire
18:07 temporary relief
18:09 and long-term negative consequences
18:11 and a weakening of control over there, so
the person 18:15
hopes to be let go or promises to do 18:18
but can not cope 18:20
and once you understand this, you see that 18:23
there are many more addictions 18:24
beyond those associated with drugs. 18:26
Is there addiction to work; addiction to consumption; 18:28
Internet; in video games ... 18:30
There is the addiction to power. People who have power, but
18:33 seeking more; nothing is enough for them.
18:36 The acquisition - the companies must have
more and more. 18:40
An addiction to oil 18:42
or at least in the riches and products made 18:44
accessible to us through the oil. 18:47
Look at the negative environmental impact. 18:50
Destroying the very land 18:52
inhabit, for the sake of this addiction. 18:55
But these addictions are much more 18:57
destructive to the social consequences 18:59
from dependence to *** or ***, patients in my heart of Eastside.
19:04 However rewarded, and are respected.
19:08 The director showing higher profits in a tobacco
company 19:11
will receive a much higher fee. 19:14
It addresses legal or other consequences. 19:19
In fact, it is a respected member 19:21
the Board of several other companies. 19:24
However, diseases associated with tobacco smoke
19:27 kill 5 ½ million people worldwide each year.
19:31 In the U.S. kill 400,000 people a year.
19:35 And these people are addicted to what? In
profit. 19:37
So much is addicted; 19:39
which are essentially in denial 19:42
on the impact of their activities 19:44
which is typical of addicts ... be denied! 19:47
And this is something respectable. Is respected 19:50
Being addicted to profit, whatever the cost. 19:52
So, what is acceptable and what is respected 19:56
is a highly arbitrary phenomenon in our society 19:59
and it seems that larger 20:00
the damage is more respected addiction. 20:05
[The Legend] 20:07
There is a widespread myth that drugs alone are addictive.
20:10 In fact, the war on drugs based on
20:13 idea that if the source of the prohibitions
20:15 drugs can in this way to deal with addiction.
20:18 But if you understand addiction in the broadest
sense 20:21
we see that nothing is addictive in itself. 20:24
No substance, no drug is not addictive by itself
20:27 and no behavior is not addictive by itself.
20:29 Many people can not buy are addicted to shopping.
20:32 There are all addicted to food.
20:34 Which is not alcoholic drinks a glass of wine.
20:37 Thus, the real question is what makes people
vulnerable 20:40
because it is the combination of a vulnerable person
20:44 and potentially addictive substance or behavior
20:47 contributing to total elation addiction.
20:51 In short, it is not the drug is addictive
20:54 the problem is the vulnerability of individuals
20:57 addicted to a substance or behavior.
21:01 [Environment]
21:02 If we, therefore, to understand
21:04 what makes some people vulnerable
21:06 must look to the experience of life.
21:08 The old idea, though old, still
21:14 widely accepted that addictions are due to
a genetic cause 21:17
is simply scientifically unfounded. 21:20
What actually happens is that certain life experiences
21:23 make people vulnerable.
21:25 Life experiences not only shape
21:29 personality and psychological needs of the
individual 21:33
but also his own mind in certain ways. 21:36
And it begins in the womb. 21:41
[Before birth] 21:43
It has been shown, for example 21:44
that if their mothers become stressed during pregnancy
21:48 children are more likely to have
21:50 characteristics that predispose to addiction
21:52 That is because the development is formed
21:55 the psychological and social environment.
21:57 So the biology of humans and is highly influenced
22:01 "Programmed" from life experiences ranging
from the uterus. 22:06
The environment does not start from birth. 22:08
The environment starts from the moment you have an environment
22:11 since you're baby is submitted as
22:14 information comes through the body of the
mother. 22:17
The hormone levels of nutrients ... 22:19
A notable example of this - 22:21
something called the "Dutch Hunger Winter". 22:24
In 1944 the Nazis had occupied the Netherlands 22:28
and for various reasons decided to 22:30
get all the food and send it to Germany; 22:32
for three months all there starving 22:34
tens of thousands of people died of hunger 22:36
The phenomenon of "Dutch Hunger Winter" are: 22:38
if you were a fetus in the second or third trimester of pregnancy during the famine
22:43 your body "learned" something unique at this
time. 22:47
It seems that the second and third trimester your body
22:51 trying to learn about the environment:
22:53 How offensive is the place out there?
22:57 How abundant? How nutrients get
23:00 the body of the mother?
23:02 If you're a starving baby, your body
23:06 scheduled thereafter be
23:09 too parsimonious with sugars and fats
23:13 and so you store as many as you can.
23:16 Being baby syndrome Dutch Hunger Winter, half
a century after 23:19
and all other factors the same 23:21
are more likely to have high blood pressure 23:24
obesity or metabolic syndrome. 23:26
The environment is then displayed in a very unexpected place.
23:30 May bring psychological pressure in laboratory
animals when pregnant 23:34
and their descendants will be more likely 23:35
to use *** and alcohol as adults. 23:38
May bring psychological pressure on mothers. In a British study
23:41 Women who were abused during pregnancy
23:44 had higher levels
23:46 the stress hormone cortisol in the placenta
at birth 23:49
and their children were more likely to have 23:52
predisposition to addiction to 7 or 8 years old.
23:55 So the stress is already preparing the endometrium
scene 23:58
for any psychological problems. 24:00
An Israeli research was conducted in children 24:04
women who were pregnant 24:07
before the war started in 1967. 24:12
These women, of course, was very anxious 24:14
and their descendants ultimately have a greater incidence of schizophrenia
24:16 the average population.
24:18 So, now there is ample evidence that prenatal
24:22 effects have a huge impact on the developing
human being. 24:28
[Neonatal] 24:30
The argument that human development 24:31
namely the development of human brain 24:33
that is attributed to the influence of environmental 24:35
especially after the birth. 24:37
Now, if we compare with a horse 24:39
that can run on the first day of his life 24:41
we see that we have not evolved much. 24:45
We can not achieve as good neurological coordination 24:49
balance, muscle strength, visual acuity 24:52
only until the age of eighteen or two years. 24:54
This is because the developing brain of the horse
24:56 is within the safety of the womb
24:58 and human beings should be done after birth
25:01 and this has to do with a simple evolutionary
logic. 25:04
As the head grows, which is what makes us human beings
25:08 The rapid development of the forebrain is
25:11 This creates the human race actually.
25:13 At the same time, we walk on two legs, so
the river narrows 25:16
to enable us. So now we have 25:18
narrower pelvis, more head. 25:20
Bingo! be born prematurely. 25:22
This means that the developing brain, which in other animals
25:25 happens in the womb
25:26 happens to us after birth
25:28 and a large part under the influence of the
environment. 25:30
The concept of neural Darwinism simply means 25:35
circuits that will receive the appropriate stimulus from the environment
25:38 perfectly developed, and those not
25:40 will take it, will develop perfectly or even
at all. 25:43
If you take a child with perfect eyesight at birth
25:46 and put it in a dark room for five years
25:48 will be blinded and will remain so until the
end of his life 25:51
because the neuronal visual require light to grow
25:55 and without even the most elementary
25:57 circuit current and active at birth
26:00 will atrophy and die, and will develop new
circuits. 26:06
[Memory] 26:07
There is one important way in which 26:10
early experiences shape adult behavior 26:16
especially early 26:18
experiences for which there is no memory. 26:21
It turns out that there are two types of memory: 26:24
a declarative memory is the recall 26:26
ie when you can remember events 26:29
details, events, conditions. 26:32
But the structure of the brain called the hippocampus
26:35 which encodes the recall of memory
26:37 not even begin to fully developed until the
first half year 26:40
and not fully developed until much later. 26:42
So almost no one 26:44
recall memories earlier than eighteen months. 26:47
But there is another kind 26:48
memory called latent memory 26:49
which in reality is an emotional memory 26:52
where the emotional impact and interpretation of the child
26:56 these emotional experiences are rooted in
the brain 26:59
in the form of neural circuits that could be quickly
27:01 no specific recall.
27:03 So to give you a clear example
27:05 People who have adopted a
27:07 lifelong sense of rejection often.
27:09 Can not remember the adoption.
27:11 Can not remember the separation from biological
mother 27:13
because there is something to remember. 27:15
But the emotional memory of the separation and disposal
27:18 is deeply rooted in their brains.
27:20 Therefore, it is most likely
27:22 to experience a feeling of rejection
27:24 and a strong emotional disturbance
27:26 when they perceive themselves as rejected
27:29 compared with other people.
27:30 This not only happens to people
27:31 is employed, but is particularly strong in
these 27:33
due to the operation of implicit memory. 27:36
People who are addicted, according to 27:39
research literature and my experience 27:42
hardliners addicts, almost all 27:47
had abused largely as were children 27:49
or have a severe emotional loss. 27:51
The emotional or implicit memories 27:54
are those of a world that is not safe 27:56
nor supportive of parenting that you can not be trusted
28:00 and relationships that are not
28:03 safe enough to open while you are vulnerable
28:06 and, therefore, their reactions tend
28:07 to keep themselves away from
28:09 truly close personal relationships;
28:11 not trust the guardians
28:14 doctors and other people trying to help
28:17 and generally see the world as an unsafe environment
... 28:20
and this is strictly a function of implicit memory
28:24 where sometimes associated with events that
do not remember ch 28:32
[Physical contact] 28:34
Infants born prematurely are often incubators 28:36
and various types of machinery 28:39
for weeks or perhaps months. 28:42
It is known that if they 28:46
for only ten minutes a day, it promotes brain development.
28:49 Thus, physical contact is necessary for growth
28:52 and indeed, infants who have not touched will
never die. 28:56
So fundamental is the need 28:58
contact human beings. 29:01
In our society, there is an unfortunate trend 29:04
to tell parents not to take their children to embrace, not to keep
29:07 not to get lap babies cry for fear of the
spoil 29:12
or to encourage them to sleep at night 29:15
not to get lap ... 29:16
which is exactly the opposite of what a child needs
29:18 and these children may be falling back to
sleep because resign 29:22
their minds and just "off" finding a way 29:24
to address the vulnerability found 29:27
having been, in truth, abandoned by their parents
29:29 but what lurks in the memories
29:31 is the image of a world that does not give
a damn. 29:35
[Childhood] 29:37
Many of these differences, constructed early in life.
29:42 Somehow, the experience of parents in difficult
circumstances 29:48
whether life is easy or difficult 29:51
transmitted to children 29:52
through its parent depression 29:55
or when parents mistreat 29:56
their children because they had a hard day 29:58
or simply because they are too tired at the end of the day ...
30:02 and they have very strong effects in the "planning"
30:06 child development, which we now know a lot.
30:09 But this early sensibility is not simply an
evolutionary mistake. 30:14
There are also many different species. 30:17
Even in young plants, is an early process of adaptation
30:20 the environment in which they grow,
30:22 But people adapt to the quality of social
relations. 30:28
And so early in life: 30:31
how much care how much conflict, how much care is taken
30:35 is a foretaste of the kind of world will grow.
30:40 Growing up in a world where
30:41 must fight for what you can get it?
30:43 Take care of your back? To fend yourself,
you learn not to trust ... 30:47
Or growing up in a society based 30:50
in retaliation, reciprocity and cooperation, where understanding is important
30:55 where your safety depends on good relations
with others ... 30:59
and this requires a very different 31:01
emotional and cognitive development 31:03
and this very early associated sensitivity 31:06
and parental attention is almost always quite unconsciously
31:10 a transmission of that experience to the children
... 31:13
about the kind of world we are. 31:16
The great British psychiatrist DW Winnicott, said
31:20 that, basically, two things can go wrong during
childhood 31:23
One is when things happen that should not be happening
31:26 and second, when things had to happen but
it happened. 31:29
In the first category shall be as dramatic and brutal experience
31:33 and those who have abandoned the
31:36 my patients from the Central Eastside and
many addicted users. 31:39
This is what should not happen, but it happened. 31:42
On the other hand there is the concerted 31:46
and no pressure, no step-care 31:48
the parent, to which every child needs 31:51
and which often takes. 31:53
Not abused. There amellountai 31:55
and not hurt psychologically. 31:58
But what would happen 31:59
where the presence of a loving and emotionally available parent
32:02 simply not available to them, because
32:05 social pressures and parental environment.
32:07 The psychologist Allan Schore called the "immediate
withdrawal" 32:14
ie if the parent is physically present 32:17
but emotionally absent. 32:20
I have spent ... 32:23
almost 40 years of my life 32:27
working with the most violent people in society take us;
32:31 murderers, rapists and other
32:34 In my attempt to understand what is causing
this violence. 32:38
I found that most violent criminals in our prisons
32:42 have been themselves victims
32:45 a degree child abuse, which exceeded any measure
32:48 I think as you give to the term child abuse.
32:51 I had no idea of the depth
32:54 of misery in which the children of our society
32:58 often encountered.
33:00 The most violent people I saw were the survivors
themselves 33:04
an assassination attempt against them, often at the hands of their parents
33:07 or other people in their social environment
33:11 or were survivors of family killed
33:14 the closest person to other people.
33:19 The Buddha argued that everything depends
on everything else. 33:23
He says that 'one contains many, and many contain a'.
33:26 That can not understand anything in isolation
from the environment. 33:30
The package contains, obviously, the sun, sky and earth.
33:38 This, of course, has now proven to be true
33:41 general and especially when it comes to human
development. 33:44
The modern scientific term for this 33:46
is the "bio psycho social" nature of human development
33:49 saying that the biology of human beings
33:52 highly dependent on their interaction with
33:54 social and psychological environment.
33:56 Specifically, the psychiatrist and researcher
34:02 Daniel Siegel, University UCLA, Los Angeles,
California 34:06
has coined the phrase "Interpersonal Neurobiology" 34:10
which wants to say that the way 34:12
operating the nervous system 34:14
depends very much on our personal relationships. 34:17
First, to those who have parental responsibility 34:20
Secondly, with important, near our faces 34:23
and thirdly, the whole of our culture. 34:26
So we can not separate the 34:28
neurological function of a human 34:31
from the environment in which he or she grew 34:35
and which continues to be 34:37
and this applies throughout the life cycle. 34:40
Especially true when we 34:42
dependent and powerless in the process that our brain develops
34:44 but applies also to adults, even to the end
of life. 34:51
[Culture] 34:53
Human beings have lived in almost any society. 34:56
One of the most fair ... hunter gatherer societies 35:01
for example, seems to be very fair 35:03
based on the sharing of food, exchange gifts ...
35:06 Small groups of people who lived primarily
35:09 from foraging and hunting a little
35:13 particularly among people at least know
35:15 throughout their lifetime
35:17 even between the closest third cousins;
35:20 in a world in which there is great
35:22 fluidity between different groups;
35:24 in a world where there are no
35:26 too much in terms of material culture ...
35:28 So people have spent most of hominid history.
35:31 And without surprise, this makes a very different
One of the things that you as a result is much less violence.
35:38 The organized group violence is not
35:41 something was happening at that time
35:43 human history, and this is clear.
35:46 So we made a mistake?
35:50 Violence is not universal.
35:54 It is symmetrically distributed throughout
the human species. 35:58
There is enormous variation in the magnitude of violence in different societies.
36:03 There are some societies that have virtually
no violence. 36:07
There are others who are suicidal. 36:10
Some of the religious Anavaptistikes 36:14
groups are entirely strict pacifists 36:18
like the Amish, the Mennonites, the Hutterites ...
36:21 among some groups such as the Hutterites
36:24 there are no documented cases of homicide.
36:29 During the long wars, like the Second World
War 36:32
where people were invited to a recruitment 36:34
They would refuse to serve in the army. 36:36
They would prefer to go to jail rather than serve in the army
36:40 In Kimpoutsim Israel
36:42 the level of violence is so low that the criminal
courts there 36:45
send often violent offenders 36:48
people who have committed crimes 36:51
to live in order to Kimpoutsim 36:54
learn how to live a nonviolent life ... 36:56
so because people live there. 36:58
Therefore, we are very much shaped by society. 37:02
Our societies, in the broadest sense, including the theological us
37:07 metaphysical, our language our influences,
etc. 37:11
The communities contribute to the shaping of our picture of life
37:14 whether we believe it is a sin or the beauty;
37:18 if the afterlife has a price for
37:20 how we live our lives or is irrelevant.
37:23 Generally, several large communities could
37:27 be described as individualistic or
37:29 collective and "earn" very different people
37:32 different cultures, and I suspect that a
37:33 different set of minds grow with them.
37:35 We in America are one of the most individualistic
societies 37:40
and capitalism is a system that allows you to reach
37:43 increasingly high levels of the pyramid
37:47 the point is that it is accompanied by increasingly
fewer safeguards, 37:50
By definition, the more stratified society is one
37:54 the fewer people are equal and so fewer people
with whom 37:57
have a symmetrical, reciprocal relationship; 38:00
Instead, all we have is endless gradations and hierarchies ...
38:05 and a world in which has less equal partners
38:08 is a world with much less altruism.
38:14 Human nature
38:17 So this brings us to a very unlikely situation
where 38:22
should try to understand from a scientific point of view ...
38:25 What is the nature of human nature.
38:28 You know, to some extent
38:30 the nature of our nature should not be
38:33 particularly limited by nature.
38:36 To human nature is much more social
38:37 variability than any other species in nature.
38:40 Most belief systems, attitudes, family structures
38:44 ways of raising our children. Size
38:47 the variety we have is amazing.
38:51 In a society based on competition
38:55 and very often the ruthless exploitation
39:01 one man by another.
39:03 Speculation on the problems of our fellow
39:06 and very often the creation of such
39:08 problems to speculation
39:11 the prevailing ideology very often justify
this behavior 39:14
the invocation of a fundamental and invariable human nature.
39:19 Thus, the myth of our society is
39:20 that humans are competitive by nature
39:22 and that is individualistic and selfish.
39:27 The true reality is quite the opposite.
39:30 We all have certain human needs.
39:31 The only way to legitimately talk about human
nature 39:34
is to recognize that there are certain human needs.
39:37 We all have a human need for companionship
and close contact 39:40
to love us, to denomaste to become eligible 39:43
us to calculate and accept us for who we are. 39:47
If these needs are met, we develop 39:50
people sympathetic 39:52
cooperative and who care about other people. 39:58
So ... 40:01
otherwise, which is often seen in 40:03
Our society is in fact a distortion of human nature
40:05 because so few people meet their needs.
40:09 So, yes, we talk about human nature
40:11 but only with respect to basic human needs
40:14 caused instinctively
40:16 or rather, concrete human needs
40:18 which leads to where certain features met
40:21 and a different set of features if not met.
40:27 So ...
40:28 when you recognize the fact that the human
body 40:31
who has a very high degree of adaptive flexibility 40:34
allowing us to survive in very different circumstances 40:37
is also strictly programmed for specific environmental requirements
40:42 the human need
40:44 a social need arises.
40:47 Just as our bodies require nutrients
40:50 the human brain requires a positive forms
of environmental stimuli 40:55
at all stages of development 40:57
and also needs protection 41:00
other forms of negative stimuli. 41:03
And if things do not happen to be ... 41:05
or if things happen that should not be .. 41:08
is now apparent that opened the worms of not only
41:11 a variety of mental and physical illnesses
41:14 but for many harmful human behaviors.
41:18 So, as broaden our understanding
41:21 and consider the current state of relations
41:23 to do the question:
41:26 The situation we have created the modern world
41:28 helps really to our health?
41:31 The foundation of our socio-economic
41:34 system function effectively as a positive
factor 41:36
for human and social development and progress? 41:40
Or maybe our society is fundamentally 41:44
contrary to the basic evolutionary requirements 41:48
needed to create and maintain 41:51
personal and social well-being? 42:11
[Part II: Social Medicine] 42:17
So, could you ask from where it all began? 42:21
What we have today ... essentially a world in a state
42:24 cumulative collapse.
42:27 [Market]
42:30 To whole thing begins with John Locke.
42:33 And John Locke introduces the concept of property.
42:36 And he has three conditions for a private
law right and property. 42:40
All three conditions are: 42:42
To have surplus for other 42:45
and not let it spoil 42:47
and, above all, you worked for it. 42:51
It seems justified, working with the world 42:54
and thus is entitled to ownership of the product 42:56
and as a surplus for other 42:59
and does not spoil 43:01
and does not cast anything, then it is okay. 43:04
And he spends much time in the famous treatise on government
43:07 and since then has become the norm
43:10 for economic, political and legal understanding
43:13 and still is the classic text study.
43:16 Well - after giving the conditions
43:20 and for a moment thinking about whether you
43:22 for or against private property
43:23 has proceeded at a very reasonable and strong
defense 43:28
private property then ... 43:29
To give up! 43:31
To give up so easily. In a single sentence. 43:33
He says, 'Well, since the introduction 43:35
money was the tacit consent of the people '
43:38 then became ...
43:40 and it says that all conditions are canceled
or deleted; 43:43
but this is what happens. 43:46
So now we have 43:48
product and property you gained from your work-
43:50 oh no - now the money buys work.
43:53 There is no longer an issue
43:55 whether there is surplus to others;
43:57 there is no longer about whether damaged
44:00 it says that money is like
44:01 silver and gold, and gold does not spoil
44:03 and so the money can not be responsible for
wasting ... 44:07
which is ridiculous. We are not talking about money
44:09 and silver, but their effects.
44:11 The unreasonable one after another.
44:14 Simply the most impressive
44:17 logical sleight of hand which gets here
44:21 but it suits the interests of capitalists.
44:26 Then comes Adam Smith and what adds
44:28 this is the religion ...
44:30 The Locke began with the fact that God created
everything so 44:33
that God is right 44:34
and now we have the Smith 44:36
saying, 'is not only a right of God ... " 44:39
well, not exactly say so, but 44:40
this is what happens philosophically, basically 44:43
says it is not just a matter of private property ... "
44:46 all these are 'already assuming' - is given!
44:49 And there are 'investors money buying work'
- Fact! 44:51
'There is no limit to the amount of work of others who can buy
44:55 on how to accumulate in how inequality yparchei'-
44:57 All are now data.
44:59 And so comes the great idea
45:02 which again suggests in parentheses, by the
way ... 45:07
You know, when people sell products that offer 45:10
Other people buy them - that demand and so on
45:15 how can we supply equals demand
45:19 or demand equals supply?
45:21 How to get a balance?
45:23 And this is one of the key concepts of economic
45:25 how to balance between them ...
45:28 and reports (by Smith): is the "Invisible
Hand of the Market" 45:32
who carries a balance. 45:34
Thus, "in reality is about God." 45:37
Just do not give rights to property 45:41
and all necessary and "natural rights" of 45:45
about what is said Locke ... 45:47
Now we have the same system as "God". 45:51
In fact, Smith, when he speaks, 45:55
and should read the entire book 45:57
"The Wealth of Nations" to find this phrase. 45:59
He says: "The lack of vital resources 46:02
sets limits on reproduction of the poor 46:06
and nature can not confront, rather than 46:11
only to kill their children " 46:14
So a revolutionary theory contrasted with the worst sense ...
46:19 long before Darwin.
46:20 And he named "The Nation of Workers'
46:23 So you can see: There was an inherent racism
in this sense 46:27
was no inherent anti-humanism to kill 46:32
countless children 46:34
and thought "this is the invisible hand that makes the offer
46:37 To meet the demand, and demand supply.
46:40 So, you see how wise is the "God"?
46:43 So you can see a lot of really unhealthy
46:46 destructive to life things, an ecological
genocide 46:50
is happening now is somewhat 46:54
a "gene thought" such as Smith. 47:00
When thinking about the original meaning 47:02
and the so-called "free market - capitalism" 47:05
as introduced by the first political philosophers 47:08
such as Adam Smith 47:09
we see that the primary purpose of a "market" 47:12
based on real, tangible, life-supporting goods trade.
47:17 O Adam Smith never realized that the most
47:19 economically profitable industry on the planet
47:22 would eventually "arena" of banking and stock
trading 47:25
or otherwise referred to as "investment-trade 47:27
where the money is simply kath'afta 47:28
won the "move" other money 47:30
in an arbitrary game which has not 47:33
no progressive vision for society 47:35
Nevertheless, whatever the intention of Smith 47:38
the door to such seemingly anomalous events 47:40
was left wide open by a fundamental principle of this theory:
47:45 That money is treated as a commodity itself.
47:50 Today, in every economy in the world
47:52 regardless of social system that relied
47:54 hunt for money is only seeking more money
and nothing else. 47:58
The underlying idea which mysteriously promoted 48:01
from Adam Smith to the religious declaration 48:05
"Invisible Hand" 48:07
is that narrow, selfish search 48:10
this imaginary goods 48:12
will show in some magical way 48:14
human and social prosperity and progress. 48:18
The reality is that financial self-interest 48:22
or what some call the "Money as a determination of value"
48:26 is now completely disconnected from the fundamental
48:29 "Interest in life, which could be defined
as 48:32
"Life as the value" 48:34
What has happened is a complete confusion 48:38
in economic doctrine 48:40
between these two determinations. 48:42
They believe that "money as a determination of value"
48:44 brings "Life as a determination of value"
48:47 and so we say that if more goods sold,
48:49 If GDP rises etc. ..
48:51 there will be greater prosperity
48:54 and that we should consider the GDP as the
key indicator 48:58
social health ... 48:59
So you see the confusion. 49:01
He talks about monetary valuations 49:03
ie, all receipts and profits 49:05
generated from the sale of goods 49:08
and confuse it with the reproductive process of life
49:11 So, you incorporate the principle
49:15 a complete mixing of money
49:18 and life as a determination of value.
49:20 So we have a structural form of fraud
49:24 which becomes more deadly
49:26 as the monetary determination disconnected
from producing 49:29
anything. 49:30
So it is a system malfunction 49:33
and this impairment appears to be fatal 49:38
[Welcome to the Machine] 49:41
In today's society, rarely hear someone talking 49:44
the progress of the country or society 49:47
in terms of personal prosperity, happiness level,
49:51 confidence and social stability.
49:53 However, the figures presented to us
49:55 through abstract financial concepts.
49:57 We gross domestic product, consumer price
index 50:01
the price of the stock market, the rate of inflation ...
50:04 and so forth.
50:05 But does this tell us something worthy
50:08 the quality of life?
50:11 No. All these figures have to do with
50:13 sequence of his own money and nothing else.
50:17 For example, the Gross Domestic Product of
a country 50:20
is a measure of the value of goods and services sold.
50:23 This measure seems to correspond to
50:26 "Living standards" of the people of a country.
50:29 In the U.S. health care accounted for over
50:31 17% of GDP in 2009
50:34 expenditure amounting to over 2.5 trillion
dollars. 50:38
Creating thus a positive effect in this economic size.
50:41 And based on this logic
50:43 would be even better for the U.S. economy
50:45 whether health services have increased more
... 50:48
perhaps 3 trillion ... or 5 trillion dollars. 50:51
since this would create more growth, 50:52
more jobs and thus boast as economists, 50:55
a rise in living standards of their country. 50:59
But wait a minute. 51:00
What in fact represent health services? 51:04
Well ... ill and ETOIMOTHANATOUS PEOPLE 51:07
Exactly - the more people are unhealthy in America
51:11 the better the economy.
51:13 Now, this is not an exaggeration or a cynical
view. 51:17
In fact, if you look at the big picture 51:19
will realize that the GDP 51:21
not only reflects the true public health or social
51:24 on any real level
51:25 is, in fact, primarily a measure
51:28 industrial failure
51:30 and social degradation.
51:32 And as you see "rising", the worse things
are done 51:35
for individual, social 51:38
and environmental integrity. 51:40
It can create problems to create profit. 51:44
There is no profit in the current model 51:47
to you save lives, you put a balance on the planet
51:50 to have justice and peace, or anything else.
51:53 Simply, there is no profit in it.
51:56 There is an old saying;
51:57 "Passed a law, and created a business."
52:00 Whether you create business for a lawyer or
anything else. 52:02
So, crime does give rise 52:04
companies, like the destruction creates 52:07
operations in Haiti. 52:08
Today we have approximately 2,000,000 people in prison
52:12 in this country (USA)
52:13 and many of them are in prison
52:16 private companies:
52:17 Corrections Corporation of America, Wackenhut
52:19 trading in their shares on Wall Street,
52:21 based on how many people are in prison.
52:24 Well, that's sick.
52:26 But this is a reflection of what
52:28 requires that the economic model.
52:32 So, what requires this economic model?
52:35 What is it that keeps our economic system
to function? 52:39
Consumption. 52:40
Or more accurately-Cyclic 52:44
When degradation of the 52:45
foundations of classical economic market 52:47
we are left with a financial plan exchange 52:50
that simply can not be allowed to stop 52:52
or even significantly slowed, 52:54
if society as we know it 52:56
is to remain functional. 52:58
There are three main protagonists in the economic scene:
53:01 the employee, the employer
53:03 and the consumer.
53:04 The worker sells labor to the employer for
income. 53:07
The employer sells the services of production, and thus goods
53:11 the consumer income
53:13 and the consumer, of course, is just another
role 53:15
employer and employee 53:17
spending back into the system, 53:19
to allow the consumption cycle to continue. 53:22
In other words, the global market system based 53:25
the assumption that there will always be enough 53:27
product demand in a society 53:29
to move a lot of money at a rate 53:32
which can maintain the process of consumption. 53:35
And the faster the rate of consumption 53:36
greater "economic development" is supposed to have,
53:39 so the cycle continues ...
53:42 But, wait -
53:43 I had the impression that an economy has to
do not know ... 53:46
"Saves"? 53:48
Not the same term to do with the maintenance 53:51
and efficiency and reduce wastage? 53:54
So, how our system requires consumption 53:58
and the more the better, can maintain effective 54:00
or "save" even a little? 54:03
Well ... does not. 54:05
The intention of the market system is, in fact, the opposite
54:08 from what is supposed to make a real economy
- 54:11
that is efficient and protective gear 54:13
materials for the production and distribution 54:15
goods that support life. 54:18
We live in a finite planet with finite resources, 54:21
where, for example, the oil we use got 54:23
million years to create ... 54:25
where we use fossil took billions of years to form.
54:29 So ... To have a system that deliberately
promotes 54:32
accelerating consumption 54:35
for the sake of so-called "economic development" 54:38
Insanity is clear ecological genocide. 54:42
Lack of waste, this is efficiency. 54:45
Lack of waste? 54:47
This system is more wasteful than all the other
54:49 systems that existed in the history of the
planet. 54:52
Each level of organization of life and system life
54:55 in a situation of crisis and challenge,
54:58 and decline or collapse.
55:00 No journal in the last 30 years
55:03 will tell you something else:
55:05 is that any system of life is in decline,
55:09 as the social programs ...
55:11 as is our access to water.
55:13 Try to name an average life
55:15 not threatened and not in danger ...
55:17 You can not.
55:18 In fact there is someone, and this is very,
very desperate. 55:21
But we still have not figure out the causal mechanism.
55:24 We do not address the causal mechanism.
55:26 We just want to continue. You know, this is
where lies the madness 55:29
where you continue to do so again and again 55:32
even when it obviously does not work. 55:35
So, you really 55:37
to do with an economic system 55:39
but we arrived and as to say, an anti-economic system.
55:44 [The Bye-Economy]
55:47 There is an old saying that the competitive
55:49 market model seeks to
55:51 "Create the best goods at the lowest possible
prices. 55:55
This statement is essentially the concept of motivation
55:58 justifying market competition,
56:01 based on the assumption that the result
56:02 is to produce goods of higher quality.
56:06 If you were to build one on my own table from
scratch 56:09
I was making would, of course, the best, 56:11
more durable materials, right? 56:13
With the intention to hold as much as possible. 56:16
Why would I want to make something bad 56:18
knowing that ultimately will have to rebuild 56:20
and spend more materials and more energy? 56:24
Well, as it may seem logical that the natural world
56:28 when we pass the world market
56:29 not only categorically absurd
56:32 there is even an option.
56:34 It is technically impossible to produce
56:36 Best of everything
56:37 if a company is to retain its competitive
advantage 56:40
and remain affordable to the consumer. 56:43
Literally everything is made and sold 56:45
the global economy is less directly 56:48
currently produced 56:50
as it is mathematically impossible 56:53
to build the most scientifically advanced, efficient
56:56 and strategically viable products.
56:59 This is because the market system
57:01 requires a "cost effective"
57:03 or the need to reduce costs
57:05 at all stages of production.
57:08 Since labor costs, costs
57:10 materials and packaging and so on.
57:12 This competitive strategy, of course
57:15 seeks to ensure that people buy their own
products 57:18
and not those of a rival producer 57:20
... In exactly the same thing 57:22
making their goods so competitive, and accessible. 57:27
This invariably wasteful consequence of the system
57:30 could be defined as: Native obsolescence.
57:34 However, this is only part of a widespread
A fundamental tenet of the dominant market economy
57:40 which, incidentally, will not find in any
manual 57:43
is as follows: 57:45
"No product shall have a lifetime 57:48
higher than the permissible 57:50
to maintain the circular Consumption 57:53
In other words, it is critical to spoil things 57:56
be scrapped and expire after a certain time. 58:00
This is defined as - "planned obsolescence". 58:04
Planned obsolescence is the backbone of the underlying strategy
58:07 the market for any company producing goods.
58:11 While very few natural
58:12 would admit such a strategy is strongly
58:14 what we do is to camouflage the
58:16 those already listed as a phenomenon inherent
Vrachyviotitas 58:20
often ignore or even conceal 58:22
new technological discoveries 58:24
that perhaps they made a pio-resistant and long-lived asset.
58:28 So if you were not so wasteful
58:30 since the system can not inherently allow
58:33 produce more durable and efficient products
58:36 Planned obsolescence, the deliberate
58:38 recognizes that as much as any product in
operation 58:41
the worse for the maintenance of cyclic duty 58:44
hence the system itself in the market. 58:47
In other words, the durability of products 58:50
is actually the inverse of growth 58:53
and therefore there is an immediate, sustained motivation
58:57 to ensure a limited lifetime
58:59 for any goods produced.
59:01 And in fact, the system can not function any
other way. 59:06
A look at the endless landfills that now span 59:09
around the world shows us the reality of vrachyviotitas. 59:12
There are now billions of cheap manufactured cell phones
59:15 computers and other technology products
59:17 each filled with precious and difficult to
be mined materials 59:20
as gold-koloumvitis tantalitis, copper ... 59:22
which is now dissolved into vast piles 59:24
usually because of a simple malfunction or vrachyviotitas
59:27 small parts, which a prudent society
59:31 could be repaired or upgraded
59:33 and the life of the product increased.
59:35 Unfortunately, as efficient as it may seem
59:38 for our physical reality, living in a
59:40 finite planet with finite resources,
59:43 is very inefficient for the market.
59:48 To put it all in one sentence:
59:49 "Efficiency, Sustainability and
59:51 Maintenance is the enemy of our economic system.
" 59:56
Moreover, just as material goods needed 59:59
continually produced and reproduced 60:00
regardless of environmental impact 60:03
The trade in services has the same logic. 60:07
The fact is that there is no monetary benefit 60:10
by solving 60:12
which are now fixed. 60:14
After all, writing 60:16
the last thing we want the medical establishment 60:19
the treatment of diseases such as cancer 60:22
which would eliminate jobs and countless trillions of revenue.
60:27 And since we're on the subject ...
60:28 The crime and terrorism in this system is
a good thing! 60:32
At least for the economy ... 60:34
hired as police 60:36
and produces high value on safety 60:38
not to mention the value of prisons 60:40
belonging to private individuals for profit. 60:43
And what about the war? 60:45
The arms industry in America is a huge driver of gross domestic product
60:49 one of the most profitable industries
60:51 which produces weapons of death and destruction.
60:55 The favorite game of this industry is to blow
things 60:58
and then goes to make up for profit. 61:01
We saw the unexpected billion dollar contracts 61:03
which made the war in Iraq. 61:06
The bottom line is that the negative 61:09
social characteristics 61:10
have become positively antamoivomenes investment industry
61:14 and any interest in solving problems
61:16 or for the conservation and environmental
sustainability 61:20
is immediately opposite to the economic viability. 61:25
And for this reason 61:27
whenever the gross domestic product increased at a country
61:30 seeing increased needs
61:33 real or artificial
61:35 and by definition, need a root from the unproductive.
61:39 Therefore, increasing needs greater mean unproductive.
61:44 [Disorder of the value system]
61:47 The American dream is based on
61:49 rampant consumerism.
61:50 Based on the fact that
61:53 major media and
61:54 especially commercial advertising
61:56 - All companies need this forever Development
- 62:00
we have been persuaded or brainwash 62:02
most people in America and around the world 62:06
we must have an X number of material goods 62:08
and the ability to get infinitely more 62:11
material things to be happy. 62:14
This is simply not true. 62:15
So why do people continue to buy in this way 62:19
who is the ultimate ecological genocide 62:22
to the cumulative effects of systemic; 62:24
It's just a classical conditioned learning. 62:27
Simply putting the learning organization amplifiers 62:32
and got the results desired behaviors 62:35
goals or objectives 62:38
And using all means of technology 62:41
and boast about how 62:42
penetrate the minds of infants. 62:44
What makes them so listen 62:47
learn to get used to the brand. 62:49
So understand that this way 62:51
people have become so stupid. 62:52
Trained to be stupid. 62:55
It is a disorder of the system of values. 62:59
You know, if there is some evidence for the plasticity
63:02 the human mind.
63:03 If there is any evidence of how malleable
63:05 the human mind and how easily
63:07 people can get used to guide behavior and
63:10 dependent on the nature of the environmental
stimuli 63:12
and what it supports: 63:14
the world of commercial advertising is proof. 63:18
We can only stand in awe 63:21
front at the level of brainwashing 63:23
where they are programmed robots known as "consumers"
63:27 wander in the landscape
63:29 just to go into a shop and spend, say
63:32 $ 4000 in a Bag
63:35 which probably costs $ 10 to build
63:37 in a sweatshop overseas.
63:40 Just in prestige hypothetical
63:42 is the brand culture.
63:45 Or maybe the ancient social traditions
63:48 which reinforce the confidence and consistency
in society 63:52
which have now become hostage to greed 63:54
and materialistic values, where each year more
63:57 exchange garbage several times a year.
64:01 And you wonder why so many people today
64:03 is addicted to shopping and markets
64:06 when it is clear that developed by children
64:09 to expect tangible goods
64:11 as a sign of prestige with their friends and
family. 64:15
The fact is that the foundations of any society 64:18
are the values that underpin the functioning of
64:20 and our society as it exists,
64:22 can only work if our values underpin
64:25 the ostentatious consumerism
64:27 requires the perpetuation of the market system.
64:31 Before 75 years the consumption in the U.S.
64:34 and in many countries in the developed world,
was half 64:36
than we see today, per person. 64:38
The new consumer culture of today 64:40
constructed and imposed 64:43
because of the very real need for 64:45
with increasing levels of consumption. 64:48
And that is why most companies today spend 64:51
more money on advertising than on the actual process
64:55 the very creation of the product.
64:57 They work diligently to create a virtual you
need to meet. 65:01
And this seems to have an effect. 65:05
[The "Economists"] 65:07
You know, economists, in fact, not all economists. 65:11
They are propagandists of the value of money 65:13
and discover that all 65:16
the models are basically grapple with symbolic 65:18
trade, which is loyal to gain 65:21
of one side or both, or any other, 65:23
but it is completely detached from 65:26
the current world player. 65:28
In Ohio, an elderly person could not pay the electricity bill,
65:32 may know the case
65:34 and the power company "cut" the power and
he died. 65:38
The reason the "cut" was 65:39
because it would not be profitable 65:41
for them to continue providing, because they paid the bill.
65:44 Do you think this was right?
65:46 The responsibility lies not really
65:48 the utility for disconnection
65:50 but those friends and neighbors
65:53 and relevant human
65:55 who were not sufficiently sympathetic
65:56 to enable him as a person
65:58 to pay the electricity bill.
66:01 Chmmmm ...
66:02 I heard this good?
66:04 When told that the death of man
66:06 caused by lack of money
66:07 was the responsibility ...
66:09 other people ...
66:11 or essentially charity?
66:13 Well, then I guess it's going to need
66:15 a lot of awareness campaigns, small pitiful
66:18 coin donations for benches wineries
66:21 and a bunch of jars with pickled
66:23 for billions of people die today from hunger
66:26 in this world ...
66:27 Because of the very system that promotes the
Milton Friedman. 66:32
Whether you are dealing with the philosophies 66:35
Milton Friedman, the F.A. Hyack 66:36
of John Maynard Keynes, the Ludwig von Mises 66:39
or any other major market economist 66:41
The premise 66:43
rarely leave their money sequence. 66:46
It's like a religion. 66:47
Analysis of consumption stabilization policies 66:50
deficit spending, overall demand ... 66:53
exists as an endless, self-referring 66:55
self-motivated bargaining round 66:59
where the universal human need, natural resources 67:03
and any form of performance that supports life
67:06 precluded
67:08 and replaced with the unique concept that
people 67:11
seeking advantage over others for money and only
67:14 motivated by their own, narrow self-interest
67:17 will create as if by magic a viable, healthy,
balanced society. 67:22
There is no connection to life in this whole theory
67:25 this whole doctrine.
67:26 What do they do?
67:28 What you do is follow the sequences of money.
67:31 That's it, follow the sequences of money.
67:35 making assumptions about what concerns them.
67:38 A: There are variables related to life ...
67:41 Wow ... all key variables?
67:43 Two: that all actors
67:45 hunt to maximize the benefits for them.
67:49 This is not only thinking of themselves
67:51 and how to grab most of them.
67:53 This is the dominant idea of rationality:
67:57 The choice of self-maximization
67:59 and what we are only interested in maximizing
68:03 is money or goods.
68:05 Oh well, have a place where social relations;
68:07 Nowhere, only the transaction for their personal
benefit. 68:11
What position are our natural resources? 68:13
Nowhere, unless it is in operation. 68:16
Set by the family and its ability to survive? 68:21
Nowhere. They have money 68:23
to buy goods. 68:26
Oh well, it would have an economy 68:28
to deal with some human needs? 68:29
This is not the real issue here? 68:35
Ah, the "need" is not even in the vocabulary. 68:38
Disintegrating into "wants" ... 68:41
and what is a desire? means 68:43
money demand that wants to buy. 68:45
If money demand is the one who wants to buy 68:48
This has nothing to do with the need 68:49
perhaps because people do not have a claim for money
68:52 and desperately needed, say, water.
68:55 Or, can the money demand to want a gold toilet
seat. 68:58
And then, who would go around? 69:00
In the golden toilet seat. 69:02
And in saying this economy? 69:04
Actually, if you think about 69:06
should be the most bizarre 69:09
illusion in the history of human thought. 69:14
[EMS] 69:16
Until now we focus on a market system. 69:20
But this system is in fact only 69:22
half the world's economic model. 69:24
The other half is the "monetary system". 69:28
While the market system deals with the interaction of humans
69:31 who "play" for profit in the range of work
69:34 production and distribution
69:36 the monetary system is a set of policy guidelines
69:39 set by financial institutions
69:41 and, inter alia, creating conditions
69:43 the market system.
69:46 It includes terms we often hear
69:48 as interest rates, loans, debt, money supply
69:52 inflation, etc.
69:54 And while you would like to pull your hair
69:57 listening to the gibberish that economists
say: 69:59
"Moderate precautions can prevent the need 70:04
for more drastic measures in the future. "
70:07 the nature and essence of this system
70:10 is basically quite simple:
70:12 Our economy has ...
70:14 rather, the global economy has
70:16 three basic things to govern.
70:17 One is the fractional reserve system
70:19 banks print money out of nowhere.
70:21 It is also based on the compound.
70:24 When you borrow money and to return more
70:27 than they borrowed, which means that you,
in fact 70:29
recreated money from thin air 70:32
which must be maintained by creating more money.
70:36 We live in a model of infinite growth.
70:39 The economic model in which we live now is
a figure Ponzi. 70:42
Nothing grows forever. 70:45
It is not possible. 70:46
As he wrote a great psychologist by James Hillman:
70:49 "The only thing that grows in the human body
70:51 after a certain age as cancer. "
70:53 And not only money to be increasing
70:56 and the number of consumers.
70:57 Consumers need to borrow money at interest
70:59 to create more money and, of course, can not
71:02 on a finite planet.
71:04 People are simply means of generating money
71:08 to create more money
71:10 not to collapse the entire structure
71:12 which is what happens now.
71:15 Basically there are only 2 things one should
know 71:17
the monetary system: 71:20
1: All the money created from debt 71:23
The money is "chrimatopoiisi 'debts 71:25
implemented either by bonds 71:28
mortgages or credit cards. 71:31
In other words, if all outstanding debts 71:33
now repaid 71:35
there would remain a single dollar in circulation. 71:38
And 2 The interest charged on virtually all loans made
71:43 and the money to pay the interest
71:46 are not directly move money.
71:49 Only the capital generated from loans
71:52 and this chapter is the amount of circulating
money. 71:54
So if all debts should be repaid now 71:57
will not only remained a single dollar in circulation
72:00 there would be a huge amount of money owed
72:04 is virtually impossible to meet because there
are none. 72:10
The consequence of all this is that two things are inevitable:
72:14 Inflation
72:16 and Bankruptcy.
72:18 As for inflation, it seems like a historical
trend 72:21
almost every country today 72:23
and easily connected to the cause of 72:25
which is the steady increase of money in circulation 72:28
required 72:29
to cover the interest and maintain the system. 72:34
As for Bankruptcy 72:35
comes in the form of collapse due to debt. 72:39
The collapse will inevitably happen in a person 72:42
a company or a country 72:44
usually happens when interest payments 72:46
no longer be done. 72:50
But there is a positive side to all this ...
72:52 at least as regards the markets.
72:56 Because debt is a constraint.
72:58 Debt creates wage slaves.
73:01 A man in debt is more likely to accept a low
salary 73:04
than a person without 73:05
and thus become a cheap commodity; 73:08
is perfect for companies to have a reserve of human
73:10 not afford.
73:13 But of course - the same idea applies to entire
countries ... 73:18
the World Bank and International Monetary Fund
73:21 mainly serve as attorneys for
73:23 transnational business interests
73:25 give huge loans to countries in difficulty
73:28 with very high interest rates
73:29 and then, when countries
73:31 vathismenes is in debt and can not pay
73:33 implement austerity measures
73:35 firms seize opportunity
73:37 slave erect and take natural resources.
73:41 This is indeed market efficiency.
73:45 But wait - there's more:
73:46 see - this is the only
73:48 nomsmatikou hybrid system and markets
73:50 called the stock market
73:52 that instead of actually producing something
real 73:56
is simply trading money. 73:59
And when it comes to debt, do you know what? 74:02
That's right - the market. 74:05
In fact, buy and sell debt for speculative purposes.
74:09 Since the risk premium from bankruptcy
74:10 and collateralised debt obligations on consumer
debt 74:14
in complex derivatives used 74:16
to cover the entire debt Member 74:19
such as the collusion of 74:20
Investment bank Goldman Sachs and Greece (2001) 74:22
brought close to collapse throughout the economy. 74:26
So on the stock market and Wall Street 74:29
We have a whole new level of insanity 74:32
Born in the valuation of Money. 74:35
All you need to know about markets 74:37
written in an article in the Wall Street Journal 74:40
some years ago 74:41
called "Lessons of brain damaged Investor" 74:45
And this editorial explained why 74:48
People with mild brain injury 74:50
outperform as investors 74:52
than that people with normal brain function. 74:54
Why? As a person with mild brain injury 74:56
has no empathy. 74:59
And this is the most important. If you have no empathy
75:02 performs better as an investor
75:04 and so the Wall Street plays people without
empathy. 75:09
To go there, to make decisions 75:11
and make transactions means that there are moral inhibitions
75:14 that what they can
75:17 influence their fellow man.
75:19 And so reproduce these robots.
75:21 These people have no soul
75:24 and they do not even want to pay these people
anymore 75:27
now creating robots - real robots - 75:29
real algorithmic traders. 75:31
The Goldman Sachs scandal in high frequency trading:
75:33 put a computer next to the New York Stock
Exchange. 75:37
This computer, the "co-located" computer as he is called,
75:40 carry large volumes of small transactions
to Goldman 75:42
downloading transactions with large volume orders
75:45 and thereby robbing
75:47 small amounts each time the stock market.
75:49 It's like channel smuggled money all day.
75:52 Last year and a quarter were 30 or 60
75:54 consecutive days without losing
75:57 and were making millions of dollars every
day? 76:00
This is statistically impossible! 76:04
When I worked on Wall Street the way it was organized
76:06 was that everyone gave bribes to his superiors.
76:08 The brokers bribe the office manager,
76:11 The Director bribe the sales manager of the
area. 76:15
The area sales manager 76:16
bribe the sales manager of the country. 76:18
It is a common informal agreement. 76:20
Christmas, who gets the biggest bonus 76:23
on an average business broker? The legally responsible.
76:26 The legal officer sat there all day;
76:28 supposed to ensure that you
76:30 not the slightest breach of rule
76:31 and complies with the law.
76:34 Of course if you
76:36 to bribe the legally responsible
76:38 substantially comply with the law!
76:40 So how the fraud was the system?
76:43 It is no longer a byproduct of the system.
76:44 Is the system.
76:46 It's like the old jokes of *** Allen. Says:
76:49 "Doc, my brother thinks it's chicken."
76:51 And the doctor says "take a pill
76:53 and this will cure the problem. "
76:55 And he says "no doctor, do not understand,
76:57 we need the eggs. "
76:59 Okay?
77:00 Therefore, the continued trade of false claims
77:03 between banks
77:05 to create commissions
77:06 to create bonus
77:07 have become the engine of growth of GDP
77:11 the economy of the United States
77:14 although market essentially false claims
77:17 that there is absolutely no hope of repayment.
77:19 Edit, create and re-guaranteeing anything.
77:22 If you write "$ 20 billion" on a cocktail
napkin 77:25
and sold to JP Morgan and JPMorgan 77:28
write "$ 20 billion" on a cocktail napkin 77:31
exchange and paper napkins in a bar 77:34
and pay each other commission 1% 77:37
Remove a lot of money for Christmas bonuses. 77:39
We are both in our books a cocktail napkin 77:43
of $ 20 billion that has no real value until 77:47
the system can no longer absorb non-existent 77:50
cocktail napkins and in this case 77:52
get the government to save us. 77:55
And because of Wall Street and world stock market
77:57 there is a conservative estimate, about 700
trillion 78:01
currently pending false claims 78:03
known as derivatives 78:05
which remains to collapse. 78:07
A value equivalent to 10 78:09
times the gross domestic product 78:11
entire planet. 78:14
And while we saw the financial rescues 78:16
multinational banks and governments ... 78:18
which, of course, in a comical way, borrow 78:20
the money from the banks. 78:22
We now attempted rescue of entire countries 78:25
by coalitions of other countries 78:27
through international banks. 78:30
But how do you save the financial world? 78:34
There is no country that has not sunk in debt now.
78:38 The escalating public debt default that we
78:41 is only the beginning, when we look at the
math of things. 78:46
It has been estimated that the U.S. only 78:49
The per capita income tax should be increased by 65%
78:52 just to cover interest in the near future.
78:57 Economists predict that within a few decades
79:00 60% of the countries of the world will be
bankrupt. 79:05
But wait a minute - to sort out. 79:09
People are driven to bankruptcy 79:12
what the hell you mean it 79:13
because this concept called "debt" 79:16
not even exist in physical reality. 79:19
It is only a piece of game we invented ... 79:22
and at the same time the standard of living of billions of people
79:25 at risk.
79:27 Mass layoffs - Slums - Accelerated Poverty
79:32 Austerity measures implemented - schools closed
- 79:35
... children are malnourished and many other indicators of poverty
79:40 for all this elaborate myth ...
79:44 We are so damn stupid eh?!
79:48 Hello! Hello! Mars - my people.
79:50 It will help a brother, huh?
79:54 Matured, my child.
80:04 Saturn! What's up?
80:06 Remember the "hot" I knew nebula
80:08 some time ago?
80:12 So, listen to the earth.
80:13 We are very tired with you.
80:15 I have given everything and still spends it
all. 80:18
You have plenty of resources and you know it.
80:21 Why not learn to grow
80:22 Being responsible, at last.
80:24 You make your mother miserable.
80:32 You're on your own, buddy.
80:34 Anyway.
80:42 [Public Health]
80:45 Now, given all these ...
80:47 from wasteful machine known as the market
system, 80:50
Debt the machine known as the monetary system, 80:53
creating the system of financial market 80:57
that defines today's global economy ... 81:00
there is an impact that penetrates 81:03
over the mechanism: 81:05
Inequality. 81:07
Whether the market system that creates 81:10
a natural tendency toward monopoly and centralized power
81:14 while filling the pockets wealthy industries
81:17 which supersede other
81:20 regardless of practicality;
81:22 such as the fact that larger
81:23 Investors on Wall Street
81:25 now receive over 300 million dollars a year
81:29 without contributing anything.
81:31 While a scientist researching the cure for
a disease 81:35
trying to help humanity 81:37
might draw $ 60 000 a year, when it is lucky. 81:41
Whether the monetary system 81:43
which incorporates the social stratification structure.
81:47 For example:
81:48 If I have 1 million U.S. dollars and deposits
in an account 81:52
4% interest rate - 81:53
will earn 40,000 extra dollars a year. 81:55
No social contribution - nothing. 81:59
On the other hand, if I am in a lower class and need to borrow
82:02 to buy a car or a house
82:04 pay interest
82:06 in abstract
82:07 go to repay the millionaire to a 4% bank deposit
rate. 82:11
The theft from the poor to pay the rich 82:14
is an essential, component of the monetary system.
82:18 And it could be called "Core class divide"
82:23 Of course, throughout history, the social
stratification 82:26
always seemed unfair 82:28
others were apparently generally accepted 82:30
and now, 1% of world population owns 40% of global wealth.
82:35 Others beyond the "law of matter"
82:38 something else happens
82:39 below the level of inequality,
82:41 causing incredible deterioration of public
health as a whole. 82:46
Well, I think people often get confused by the contrast
82:50 between the material success of our societies
82:53 - Unprecedented levels of wealth -
82:55 and many social failures.
82:58 If you look at the percentages of
83:02 drug abuse or violence or suicidal tendency
83:04 children or the mentally ill,
83:07 it is clear that something is very wrong
83:11 our societies.
83:12 The data describing
83:16 simply show the intuition that people had
83:20 for hundreds of years, that inequality is
divisive 83:23
and socially corrosive. 83:24
But this intuition is far more true than ever imagined.
83:28 There are very strong psychological and social
effects 83:32
inequality. I guess I have to do more with feelings
83:35 superiority and inferiority.
83:38 This kind of division-
83:40 together perhaps with a sense of respect or
disrespect - 83:43
people feel that some people see them from on high,
83:46 which incidentally is the cause of violence
83:48 is much more common in societies more unequal.
83:50 The reason for violence is too often when
people feel that those around them 83:54
facing them on high and do not respect them. 83:55
If there is something that would give emphasis 83:59
is that the main office 84:04
to prevent violence 84:07
would be "Equal". 84:10
The most important parameter 84:11
affects rates of violence 84:13
the degree of equality before the degree of inequality
84:17 in this society.
84:20 So what we see is a kind
84:22 general social dysfunction.
84:25 It is not just one or two things go wrong
84:27 with increasing inequality
84:29 everything seems to go wrong, be it
84:31 the crime, or mental illness or whatever.
84:34 One of the most disturbing findings in public
health 84:38
is that never, never make the mistake of being poor.
84:43 Or be born poor.
84:44 Your health is paying for it in countless
ways: 84:47
what is known as "socio-economic status health" 84:51
As we descend from the highest levels 84:53
society in terms of socio-economic area, 84:56
the lower strata, health deteriorates 84:59
for many different diseases. 85:01
Life expectancy is getting worse. 85:02
Infant mortality rates - 85:05
anything you can imagine. 85:06
Thus, it is a huge issue 85:08
Why this rating. 85:12
A simple obvious answer 85:14
is that if you have a chronic medical condition will not
85:16 Being very prolific
85:18 hence the socio-economic differences in health
causes. 85:21
Not by a long shot - 85:23
the simplest level 85:24
you could not look 85:26
the socioeconomic level of a 10-year 85:28
and to predict anything for the health of 85:30
decades later. 85:31
So this is the direction of causality. 85:33
The next is: "Oh, but it is obvious" - 85:37
the poor do not have enough money to go to the doctor ...
85:39 is access to health care?
85:40 It has nothing to do with it
85:42 because you see the same classification
85:44 and communities in an integrated health system
85:46 and a strong welfare state.
85:47 Okay, next 'simple explanation':
85:49 Oh! During an average, the poorer you are
85:51 more likely to smoke
85:54 and drinking and having all sorts of risk
factors in your lifestyle. 85:58
Yes, they go together but careful studies have shown
86:01 that explains about a third of the variance.
86:04 So what remains?
86:05 What remains is much to do
86:08 with STRESS on poverty.
86:11 Thus, the poorer you are, starting from
86:14 Being the one who turns out less than one
U.S. dollar to Bill Gates ... 86:18
as being poorer in this country 86:19
on average, the worse is your health. 86:21
This tells us something very important: 86:24
linking health to poverty 86:26
has nothing to do with the fact that you are poor, it has to do with feeling poor.
86:30 Increasingly we recognize that chronic stress
86:35 have a significant impact on health
86:38 but the most significant sources of stress
86:40 is the quality of social relations.
86:43 and if there is something that
86:45 degrades the quality of social relations
86:47 this is the socio-economic stratification
of society. 86:51
What has now shown that science is 86:53
that regardless of material wealth 86:55
stress when you just live in a stratified society
86:59 leads to a huge range of public health problems
87:02 and the greater the inequality, the worse
they become. 87:07
Life expectancy: Greater than more equal countries. 87:11
Addiction: A less in more equal countries. 87:15
Mental Illness: A less in more equal countries. 87:20
Social Capital - meaning the 87:22
people's ability to trust each other: 87:24
Of course, higher in more equal countries. 87:27
Educational Performance: Highest to more equal countries.
87:32 Homicide Rates: Smaller more equal countries.
87:37 Crime rates and imprisonment:
87:39 Smaller countries on more equal
87:42 And so on:
87:44 Infant mortality, obesity, teenage birth rate:
87:47 Less to more equal countries.
87:49 and perhaps most interesting:
87:52 Innovation: More on more equal countries.
87:56 The contest is the antiquated notion that
a competitive 87:59
stratified society is somehow more creative and inventive.
88:04 Furthermore, a study conducted in the UK
88:06 named Whitehall Study
88:08 found that there is a social distribution
of disease 88:11
As you go from the top of
the socioeconomic scale 88:14
to the base. 88:15
For example, it was found that lower levels 88:17
hierarchy had fourfold increase 88:20
in mortality from heart disease 88:22
compared with the highest levels. 88:24
And this model is, regardless of access to health care.
88:29 Therefore, as is comparatively worse the economic
situation of a person 88:32
the worse it will be averaged and health. 88:35
This phenomenon is associated with what could be defined as
88:38 'Psychosocial stress'
88:40 and is the foundation of the larger social
distortion 88:44
affecting our society today. 88:46
The event? 88:48
The Monetary System of the Market 88:51
Make no mistake: 88:53
The greatest destroyer of ecology ... 88:56
the largest source of waste, resource depletion and pollution ...
89:00 the largest supplier of violence
89:02 War, crime, poverty, abuse and animal cruelty
... 89:07
the largest creator of social and personal neuroses ...
89:10 mental disorders, anxiety depression ...
89:14 Not to mention the greatest source of social
paralysis 89:18
which prevents us to move to new methodologies 89:21
for personal health, global sustainability 89:24
and progress on this planet, 89:27
is not a corrupt government or law ... 89:30
or a multinational or banking cartel ... 89:34
nor any flaws of human nature ... 89:37
and not some hidden secret cabal that controls the world.
89:42 It is, in essence:
89:43 So the Socio-Economic System
89:46 from its foundations.
90:05 [Part 3: Draft Land]
90:10 Let us imagine that we had the option
90:13 to redraw the human civilization from scratch.
90:16 What if, hypothetically speaking,
90:18 discover an exact replica of planet Earth
90:21 the only difference between
90:23 this new world and our current
90:24 that had taken place human evolution.
90:27 It was a blank canvas.
90:28 No countries, no cities, no pollution, no
Republicans .... 90:32
just a ***, free environment. 90:35
So what would we do? 90:37
Well, first we need an "end", right? 90:40
And it's safe to say that the aim would be to survive.
90:43 And not just survive, but to do so with an
optimum, healthy 90:47
prosperous way. 90:49
Most people, however, wish to live and 90:51
would prefer to do without suffering. 90:54
Therefore, the basis of this civilization 90:56
be so supportive and so 90:58
possible viable for human life - 91:01
taking into account the material needs 91:03
all people in the world 91:05
trying to remove anything 91:07
could hurt us long term. 91:09
Having understood this purpose of "Peak Sustainability" 91:13
The next question concerns the "method" of us.
91:16 What kind of approach we have?
91:18 Well, look -
91:20 the last time I checked, the policy was the
method of social function in this world ... 91:24
so what they have to say the tenets of the Republicans, liberal
91:27 conservative or socialist for social planning?
91:32 Hmmm ... not a damn thing.
91:35 Okay then - what has to say religion?
91:38 Surely the great author should have left some
sketches somewhere ... 91:41
Nah ... nothing that I can find. 91:44
OK then - so what's left? 91:46
Apparently, something called "Science". 91:49
Science is unique in that its methods require not only the ideas
91:53 proposed to be controlled and repeated ...
91:56 but what he invents science is also inherently
falsifiable. 92:01
In other words, contrary to religion and politics 92:03
Science has no arrogance 92:05
and everything suggests the possibility of accepting
92:08 ultimately prove to be wrong.
92:11 It clings to anything and is constantly evolving.
92:14 Well, what I heard quite natural.
92:17 So - based on the current state of scientific
knowledge 92:20
in the early 21st century 92:22
with our objective of "maximum sustainable" 92:25
for the human population 92:27
how we begin this process of construction? 92:30
Well, the first question is: 92:32
What we need to survive? 92:35
The answer is, of course, Planetary Resources. 92:38
Whether it's the water we drink, the energy use
92:41 or raw materials we use to make tools and
shelters 92:45
planet hosts resources stocks 92:48
many of which are required for our survival. 92:52
So, given this reality 92:54
is vital to understand what we have and where it is.
92:58 This means that we must conduct some research.
93:01 Simply identify and acknowledge any natural
resource of the planet 93:05
we, along with the amount allocated to each region
93:09 by deposits of copper, the most lavish locations
93:12 for wind farms for power generation
93:14 to natural sources of drinking water
93:17 to estimate the quantity of fish in the ocean
93:19 the most fertile prime land for growing food,
etc. 93:24
But since we humans are to 93:27
consume these resources over time 93:29
So we realize that we must not only identify them and acknowledge them;
93:33 should also be watching.
93:36 We must make sure no one will run out ...
93:38 This would be bad.
93:40 This means not only to track our utilization
rates 93:42
but the rate of terrestrial regeneration 93:46
like how much time, say, a 93:49
to grow a tree or a source to replenish. 93:52
This is called "Dynamic Balance". 93:55
In other words, if you exhaust the trees faster than they can grow back;
93:59 We have a serious problem because it is not
viable. 94:03
So watch how this index funds, 94:06
especially when we know that all 94:09
These things are scattered everywhere: 94:11
We have big ore mines in the part we call Africa
94:15 concentrations of energy resources in the
Middle East 94:17
huge potential tidal energy on the Atlantic coast of North America
94:21 the largest supply of fresh water in Brazil,
etc. 94:25
Well, once again, our good old science has a suggestion:
94:29 called "Systems Theory".
94:32 Systems theory recognizes that the foundations
of the natural world 94:36
of human biology as the Earth's biosphere 94:39
as the gravitational pull of the same solar system
94:42 is a tremendous partner single system - fully
interconnected. 94:47
As the human cells are forming our institutions 94:50
and institutions linked to form the body 94:53
and since our bodies can not live without the earth resources
94:56 food, air and water are inextricably connected
to the earth. 95:01
And so on. 95:02
So - as we say nature, we take all these elements 95:06
stock and inventory and create a "system" to manipulate them.
95:10 Essentially, a "Global Resource Management
System" 95:13
for recording of any relevant resource on the planet.
95:17 There is no other reasonable alternative,
if our goal as a species 95:21
is the survival over time. We must record total.
95:26 With this understood, we can now look at the
output. 95:29
How we use these things? 95:31
What are our processes and what should be 95:34
we are reminded to make sure it is the more optimal
95:38 to maximize our viability?
95:41 Well, the first thing that comes to mind is
the fact that 95:44
must continually try and guard. 95:47
The planet's resources are essentially finite. 95:50
So it is important to be "strategic." 95:53
The "Conservation Strategy" is key. 95:57
The second thing to recognize is that some resources
96:00 not as good in performance as others.
96:03 In fact, some of these things when they enter
into service 96:06
have tremendous impact on the environment 96:08
which inevitably hinder our health. 96:10
For example, fossil fuels, as you see it, 96:15
release some pretty destructive agents in the environment.
96:18 Therefore, it is important to do our best
to use them 96:22
Only when you really need to do - if not all. 96:25
Fortunately for us, we see a lot of features such as solar, wind, tide,
96:30 waves, diaforikotita thermal and geothermal
energy production, 96:35
so we can plan strategically and objectively what we use and where,
96:39 to avoid what could be termed a "boomerang
effect" 96:43
or anything resulting from the production or use
96:47 which destroys the environment and therefore
ourselves. 96:50
This will he called a "security strategy" 96:53
to anchor the "Conservation Strategy" us. 96:57
However, these strategies did not stop there. 97:00
You will also need a Strategic Performance "
97:03 for the actual mechanics of the production
process itself. 97:06
And what we find is that there are some 97:09
three specific protocols must adhere: 97:12
One: Anything we produce must be 97:14
designed to last as long as possible. 97:17
Obviously, the more things break down 97:19
the more resources we will need to replace 97:22
and the more waste produced. 97:24
Second: When things eventually break down 97:27
or no longer usable for any reason, 97:30
it is important to collect and recycle as much as possible as we can.
97:34 Therefore, the design of production must take
97:38 direct account of this fact, the very early
stages. 97:41
Thirdly, the rapid evolution of technologies such as electronic
97:45 subject to faster technological obsolescence
97:49 should be designed to
97:51 provide for and amenable to physical upgrade.
97:55 The last thing we want to do is to throw an
entire computer 97:59
just because he has a broken part or obsolete. 98:03
So we are planning just data to be easily upgradeable
98:06 piece by piece, standardized and universally
exchangeable 98:11
based on the current trend of technological change.
98:15 And when you understand the mechanisms of
the "Conservation Strategy" 98:19
the "Security Strategy" and "Strategic Performance" 98:22
purely technical issues 98:25
without any human opinion or bias 98:28
plan these strategies into a computer 98:31
weighing and calculates all the relevant variables 98:35
allowing us to arrive always 98:37
arguably better method for sustainable production 98:40
based on current knowledge. 98:43
And while this may n 'sounds complicated 98:46
is nothing other than a super-computer 98:48
not to mention that such polymorphic 98:50
decision-making systems and surveillance 98:52
already in use worldwide today 98:54
for specific purposes. It is simply the application of a larger scale.
99:00 Well ...
99:01 Now, we not only have the System Resource
99:04 but also a Production Management System
99:07 that both are easily automated computer
99:10 to maximize efficiency, maintenance and safety.
99:14 Reality teaches us that the human mind
99:17 or a group of people can not follow what should
be monitored. 99:21
This should be done by computers and can be done.
99:25 And this brings us to the next level: Distribution.
99:29 What sustainability strategies make sense
here? 99:32
Well, because we know that the shortest 99:33
distance between two points is a straight line
99:37 and since energy is required to move vehicles
99:40 the smaller the transport distance, the better.
99:44 The production of goods in a continent and
transported to another 99:48
only makes sense if these products simply can not
99:51 be produced in this region.
99:54 Otherwise, it is just wasted.
99:56 Should the production be localized, so that
distribution is simple 100:00
fast n 'requires the least amount of energy. 100:03
I will say this, "Strategic Proximity" 100:06
which simply means that we reduce the 100:08
movement of goods as much as possible 100:10
whether raw materials or finished consumer products.
100:14 Of course, it might be important to
100:16 know what goods are moved and why ...
100:19 This falls into the category of demand.
100:22 And demand is just what people need to be
100:25 healthy and have a high quality of life.
100:28 The range of material human needs
100:30 ranging from basic needs for life support
100:33 such as food, clean water and housing ...
100:36 to social and recreational goods that allow
relaxation 100:40
and personal - social recreation - 100:42
both important factors to human health and social whole.
100:47 So - quite simply - are conducting another
investigation. 100:50
People describe their needs, demand 100:52
identified and production begins with this demand.
100:56 And since the level of demand for various
goods 100:59
will fluctuate and change around different areas
101:02 must create a "Monitoring System Demand /
Distribution" 101:06
to avoid excesses and deficiencies. 101:10
Of course, this idea is known 101:12
and used in every major chain store now 101:15
to confirm that consistent with the inventory. 101:18
Only this time, watching worldwide. 101:21
But for a minute. I really can not understand fully the demand
101:25 if you do not take into account the actual
use of
the property. 101:30
It is logical and viable for each person separately 101:34
have such an object created from anything? Regardless of its use?
101:38 No. That would be just wasteful and inefficient.
101:43 If someone is in need of a good, but this
need only say: 101:46
45 minutes a day on average 101:49
would be more efficient if 101:51
This item was available 101:52
and others when they need it. 101:56
Many forget that it is not good what they want
101:58 is the purpose of this object.
102:00 When you realize that the very good
102:03 is just as important as its usefulness,
102:05 we see that the "external constraint"
102:08 or what might be called today "property"
102:10 is extremely wasteful and environmentally
perverse 102:14
as a fundamental, economic sense. 102:17
So we need to devise a strategy called "Access Strategy".
102:22 This will be the foundation for our
102:24 "Monitoring System Demand / Distribution.
102:26 ensures that we can cover
102:28 demand needs of the population
102:30 to access what they need when they need it.
102:34 On receipt of goods at a physical level,
102:37 headquarters and regional centers
102:39 access makes sense, mostly,
102:42 located near population
102:45 and one person will just come, he would get
the object, 102:48
would use and when finished, will return when no longer needed will ...
102:52 approximately the same as running a library
today. 102:54
Essentially, these centers could exist not only
102:57 communities, such as local stores today
103:00 but as specialized centers will exist in specific
areas 103:04
where some commonly used products 103:06
saving more energy with fewer recurring transfers. 103:10
And soon Monitoring System Demand is Ready 103:13
incorporated into the Production Management System
103:16 and certainly within the Resource Management
System 103:20
creating an integrated dynamically upgradeable 103:23
global economic management mechanism 103:26
that just ensures our viability 103:28
starting with ensuring the integrity of finite resources
103:32 and continuing to ensure that we create only
the best 103:35
most strategic assets as possible, 103:37
and distribute them all the 103:40
more intelligent and efficient manner. 103:42
And the only result of this approach based on maintenance
103:47 which is intuitively opposite to many,
103:50 is that this logic from scratch;
103:52 empirical process of maintenance and efficiency
103:56 which may determine the true human sustainability
on the planet 104:01
would probably not something we've never seen before in human history.
104:05 Access Abundance ...
104:07 not just a percentage of world population
... 104:11
but the whole culture. 104:15
This economic model, as just occurred ... 104:18
This responsible, systemic approach to the overall
104:21 management of global resources and procedures
104:24 redesigned to make anything less
104:26 the cause to humanity as a whole
104:28 the most efficient and sustainable manner,
104:31 could be called:
104:32 a "BASED ECONOMY IN RESOURCES"
104:35 The idea was in the 70s by
104:38 the Social Engineer - Jacque Fresco.
104:41 Then understood that society was on a collision
course 104:44
with nature and with itself - not sustainable at all levels
104:48 and if things did not change
104:50 will destroy ourselves in one way or another.
104:54 It's all on you, Jacque ...
104:56 can be made with what we know today?
104:58 Or do matters ... based on what we know today.
105:03 No, all that can be made with what we know
today. 105:06
It will take 10 years to change the earth's surface.
105:09 To rebuild the world into a Garden of Eden.
105:12 The choice lies with you.
105:13 The idiocy of the nuclear arms race ...
105:16 the development of weapons ...
105:17 trying to solve the problems with the policy
105:20 electing this or that political party ...
105:23 all politics is mired in corruption.
105:25 Let's say it again:
105:26 Communism, socialism, fascism ... Republicans
105:30 Liberals, want to absorb them.
105:33 All organizations who believe in a better
life for man; 105:37
there are no problems Negroes or polish problems 105:40
problems or Hebrew or Greek problems 105:42
or women's problems - there are human problems! 105:45
I do not fear anyone; not work for anyone; 105:47
no one can sack me. 105:49
I have no boss. 105:50
I'm afraid to live in our society today. 105:54
Our society can not maintain that type of disability.
105:57 It was wonderful - the free market system
- 105:59
Some 35 years ago. That was the end of its usefulness.
106:03 Now we need to change thinking or die.
106:08 The horror of the future will be to our society
... 106:12
way which did not work 106:14
and policy ... 106:15
will be part of a horror movie. 106:19
So many people today use the term "Cool Science" 106:24
because it is analytical, 106:27
and not even know what that means exhaustive. 106:29
Science means: closest approach 106:32
the way the world really works. 106:35
So it is telling the truth effectively. 106:38
A scholar tries to work well with people. 106:41
It tells them what their findings. 106:44
We must deny everything 106:47
if a scientist submits an experiment showing 106:51
specific materials that have specific strengths, 106:53
other scientists should be able to reproduce 106:56
the same experiment, and reach the same results. 106:59
Even if one feels epistimomas the wing of an airplane,
107:03 those of mathematics or calculations,
107:05 can withstand a certain amount of weight,
107:07 however stow bags of sand on it
107:10 to see when it will break, and say:
107:12 "You know, my calculations are correct or
not correct." 107:16
I love this system because it is free from bias
107:19 and the idea that mathematics can solve all
problems. 107:23
It should even be submitted to your math test. 107:26
I believe that any system which could 107:28
test should be tested. 107:31
And that all decisions should be based on research.
107:36 The economy based on resources, is simply
the 107:39
scientific method, applied for Social Care 107:42
an approach completely absent in the world today.
107:45 Society is a technical invention.
107:47 And the most efficient methods for improved
human health 107:50
physical production, distribution, city infrastructure and the like,
107:55 belong to the science and
107:57 technology - not in politics and finance.
108:00 It works the same systematic way, such as
an airplane 108:05
and there is no Republican or liberal way to fix a plane.
108:09 Similarly, the same nature is
108:11 physical reference that we use to prove our
science 108:14
and a single system- 108:16
drop only by increasing our understanding about this.
108:19 In fact, it cares about what you
108:22 subjectively think or believe is true.
108:24 Instead, it gives you a choice:
108:26 You can learn to align with
108:28 natural laws and to behave accordingly,
108:31 creating a stable, healthy and sustainable
108:34 or you can go against the tide - to no avail.
108:37 No matter how you think you can
108:40 get up and walk on the wall next to you.
108:42 The law of gravity will not allow it.
108:44 If you do not eat - it will die.
108:46 If you do not touch as a baby - will die.
108:49 As hard as it sounds, nature is a dictatorship
108:53 and either listen and keep in harmony with
it 108:56
or suffer the inevitable dire consequences. 109:00
So, a Resource Based Economy is nothing 109:03
rather than a set of proven understandings, life support,
109:06 where all decisions are based on
109:09 optimized human and environmental sustainability.
109:12 It takes into account the empirical "Vital
Ground" 109:16
which every human being has a common need 109:18
regardless, again, from their political or religious philosophy.
109:22 There is no social relativism in this approach.
109:26 It is a matter of opinion.
109:28 Human needs are human needs
109:30 and to have access to basic necessities of
life such as clean air, 109:34
nutritious food and clean water 109:37
with a positive aided, stable, 109:40
non-violent environment that cares for man, a
109:44 for our physical and mental health
109:47 the evolutionary capacity
109:49 and therefore the survival of mankind itself.
109:52 An economy based on resources,
109:54 will be based on available resources.
109:58 You can not just bring a lot of people on
an island 110:01
or to build a city of 50,000 people without access
110:06 the necessities of life.
110:08 So when I use the term, 'analytical systems
approach' 110:13
I mean first do an inventory of the region 110:17
and determine what can be offered by this region;
110:20 not only architectural approach;
110:23 not only design approach;
110:26 but the design must be based on all conditions
110:29 to improve human life
110:31 and this is what I mean by an integrated way
of thinking. 110:35
Food, clothing, shelter, warmth, love - 110:37
All that is necessary 110:40
if a deprivation of the people 110:43
then we have a poor human being less able to function.
110:49 As briefly presented in an economy based on
resources, the fundamental 110:53
global, systemic approach to the extraction, production and distribution
110:57 based on a real set of financial instruments
or 'strategic' 111:02
to ensure efficiency and 111:04
sustainability in every aspect of the economy. 111:08
So continuing with this reasoning about the logical design;
111:12 what next in our equation?
111:14 Where exactly did all this becomes reality?
111:16 Cities.
111:18 The advent of the city is a feature of modern
civilization. 111:22
Its role is to allow efficient access to the necessaries of life
111:26 together with increased social support and
social interaction. 111:31
So, how do you start designing an ideal city? 111:34
What shape would we gave? 111:35
Square? Trapezoid? 111:38
Well, since there will be moving around, 111:40
perhaps to designing possible equally spaced for ease of ...
111:43 That's the cycle.
111:45 What should be contained in the city?
111:47 Of course, we need an urban area, an area
of production, 111:51
an area of energy production; an area farming. 111:55
But at the same time nurture and as human beings - so culture
111:58 physical environment, recreation and education.
112:02 So let's include a nice open park
112:04 an area of entertainment / cultural events
and socialization purposes 112:08
and educational facilities and research. 112:11
And since we are dealing with a circle 112:13
seems reasonable to organize these functions into Zones
112:16 based on the amount of land required for any
purpose 112:19
along with ease of access. 112:22
Very good. 112:23
And now, let's get into the details: 112:25
First you must look at the main 112:27
infrastructure or else the vital organs of the body of the city.
112:31 These are water supply, transportation products
112:33 waste and energy.
112:35 As we now have water supply and waste water
beneath our cities 112:39
we could extend this idea to funnel 112:42
to integrate networks and recycling and product distribution.
112:45 No more couriers or garbage.
112:47 It will be built. We could still use
112:50 automated pneumatic tubes and similar technologies.
112:53 The same applies to the transport network.
112:55 You need to be integrated and strategically
designed to reduce 112:59
or even eliminate the need for wasteful, regardless cars.
113:02 Electric trams, transport conveyors and magnetic
levitation 113:05
which can literally take you 113:07
anywhere in the city, up and down 113:10
and to connect you with other cities. 113:13
Of course, if needed car 113:16
is guided by satellite security and integrity. 113:20
Actually, this automated technology is available right now.
113:24 The road accidents kill about 1.2 million
people annually 113:29
and injuring another 50 million. 113:31
This is unthinkable and there is no reason to happen.
113:34 With efficient design of cities and homing
vehicle 113:37
This death rate may literally be eliminated. 113:41
Agriculture. 113:42
Today, through its arbitrary processes are cutting costs
113:46 using pesticides, fertilizers and too much
other 113:50
We have successfully destroyed a large part 113:52
arable land on this planet, 113:54
not to mention the widespread poisoning of our organization.
113:57 It is a fact now, that industrial and agricultural
appear on virtually every man who has been tested, including infants.
114:07 Fortunately, there are light options -
114:10 such as soil-free hydroponic crops and aeroponikes
114:13 reducing the requirements of trace elements
and water 114:16
75% of today's use. 114:20
Organic food can now be produced at industrial level
114:24 in domestic, vertical-type crops.
114:26 As a 50-floor 4-acre plots
114:29 virtually eliminating the need for
114:32 pesticides and hydrocarbons in general.
114:34 This is the future of the industrial culture
of food. 114:37
Efficient, clean and plentiful. 114:40
Thus, such advanced systems are 114:43
in part, the agricultural zone 114:46
producing the necessary food for the entire population of the city
114:49 without the need to import anything from outside
114:52 saving time and wasted energy.
114:56 And speaking of energy-
114:58 The Energy Zone would work with a systems
approach 115:01
Extracting electricity from its abundant renewable within our
115:04 Namely, air, sun, geothermal heat and difference
115:08 and if hydrodynamic capabilities - energy
from tides and waves. 115:12
To avoid interruptions and to ensure 115:15
a positive energy return 115:17
These devices will operate within a single system
115:20 anefodiazontas one another when needed
115:22 and will store the excess energy
115:24 large underground super-capacitors
115:26 so anything not wasted.
115:29 And not only feeds the city
115:31 but concrete buildings will be fed regardless
115:34 producing electricity through photovoltaic
dyes 115:38
converters structural pressure, thermal phenomenon 115:41
and other ongoing but under-utilization technologies. 115:45
Of course, all this raises the question: 115:47
how this technology, and goods 115:49
generally be supposed made initially? 115:52
This brings us to the Production: 115:54
The Industrial Zone will not only hospitals and consistent;
115:57 is the center of factory output.
115:59 Being entirely local in its entirety
116:01 to obtain course materials through
116:03 the global system resource management, as
already mentioned, 116:07
Request to be created by the population of the city.
116:12 Regarding the mechanics of production
116:14 need to discuss a new, powerful phenomenon
116:17 caused recent human history
116:20 and is on the way to change everything.
116:23 Said Mechanise
116:25 The automation of work.
116:28 If you look around you will see that almost
116:31 Everything we use today
116:33 constructed automatically.
116:37 Your shoes, your clothes, your household appliances,
your car and so on ... 116:42
are made by machines in an automated manner. 116:48
We can say that society has 116:51
influenced by these great technological advances? 116:56
Of course not. 116:57
These systems actually dictate new structures 117:02
and new people and make many things obsolete. 117:07
Thus, we continue to walk towards the development 117:12
and use of technology at an exponential manner. 117:16
So far the automation will continue. Can not prevent
117:21 technologies that make sense.
117:24 The automation of work through technology
is behind 117:27
every major social transformation in human history.
117:31 Since the agricultural revolution and the
invention of the plow 117:34
the industrial revolution and the invention of the steam engine
117:37 in the information age that we live for now
117:40 conception of advanced electronics and computers.
117:45 And on advanced methods of production today
117:48 mechanization progresses on its own.
117:51 Moving away from the traditional method
117:53 assembly of components into a layout -
117:56 an advanced method for creating
117:59 whole products in a single process.
118:02 Like most of them engineers, excited by biology
because it is 118:05
so filled with stunning examples of engineering projects.
118:10 What is the biology - the study of things
that reproduce themselves. 118:16
A better definition for life. 118:18
Again, as an engineer, always exciting 118:20
with the idea of machines that replicate themselves. 118:23
The Rep-Rap is a three-dimensional printer; 118:25
is a printer that is connected to the computer and
118:29 Instead of printing two-dimensional paper
drawings 118:32
actually does, of course, three-dimensional objects.
118:35 There is nothing new in this
118:37 3-D printers have been around for 30 years.
118:40 The good thing about the Rep-Rap that prints
most of its parts. 118:45
So if you have one, you could 118:46
to make another one and give it to a friend 118:48
as you can print out many useful things. 118:51
From simple printing of basic household goods to your home
118:55 to print an entire car with a body scan
118:58 advanced, automated three-dimensional printing
is now 119:01
the ability to transform virtually every aspect of production.
119:05 Including residential construction.
119:07 The change contour
119:10 in fact a production technology -
119:13 the so-called three-dimensional printing-when
construct directly 119:16
dimensional objects from a computer model. 119:20
entirely from the machine in one day. 119:31
The reason people are interested in building automation
119:36 is because it really has many benefits.
119:39 For example, the construction is very laborious
119:43 and although it provides work for a segment
of society 119:49
also has issues and complications. 119:54
For example, the building is the most dangerous job there is.
119:59 It is worse than the metallurgy and agriculture.
120:02 It has the highest mortality rates in almost
every country. 120:07
Another issue is waste. 120:10
An average home in the United States is 3 to 7 tons of waste.
120:15 So this is huge if you look at the impact
of construction 120:21
and knowing that approximately 40% of all materials
120:24 worldwide, used for construction.
120:27 So, this is a great waste of energy and resources
120:31 and also a lot of damage to the environment.
120:34 In To Build houses using hammers, nails and
wood 120:39
the current state of technology is really absurd
120:43 and will follow the fate of our working class
120:47 in building the United States.
120:50 Recently, there has been a study by the economist
David Autor from MIT 120:56
indicating that the middle class are outdated 121:00
and replaced by automation. 121:03
Very simply, the mechanization is more productive, 121:06
efficient and sustainable than the human labor 121:09
almost every sector of the economy today. 121:13
The machines do not need holidays, breaks, insurance, pensions
121:16 and can work 24 hours a day, every day.
121:19 The production capability and accuracy
121:22 compared with the human work is impeccable.
121:25 The bottom line: the repetitive human labor
is obsolete 121:29
and impractical in the world 121:31
and unemployment that you see around you today 121:34
is basically the result of this 121:36
development of efficient technology. 121:40
For years, market economists have rejected this drop formation
121:43 that could be called "Technological Unemployment"
121:47 because of the new areas that always seemed
121:49 to emerge to re-absorb the displaced workers.
121:52 Today services are the only productive sector
remains 121:56
and currently employs over 80% of American workforce
121:59 in most industrial countries maintain similar
proportions. 122:04
However, this sector is now 122:06
under increasing pressure from automated kiosks; 122:09
automated restaurants, shops and even automated. 122:13
Eventually, economists now 122:14
refused to recognize this for years: 122:17
not only technological unemployment exacerbate the current
122:21 labor crisis we see around the
122:23 world because of global recession
122:26 but the longer the recession deepens
122:28 faster motorized industries.
122:31 The trap, which is not perceived
122:33 is that the sooner mechanize to save money
122:36 replace the more people-
122:37 more to reduce public spending power.
122:41 This means that while the company
122:42 can produce everything more cheaply
122:44 fewer will have money to buy anything
122:48 regardless of how cheaply made.
122:51 The bottom line is that the game of "working
122:53 income "reaches out to an end.
122:56 In fact, if you spend a minute to think
122:59 the jobs that exist today
123:01 which automation could take now, if implemented,
123:05 75% of global workforce could
123:08 be replaced tomorrow by mechanization.
123:11 And that is why in a Resource Based Economy
123:14 there is no monetary market system.
123:17 No money ...
123:19 because there is no need.
123:21 An Economy Based Resource
123:23 recognizes the efficiency of mechanization
123:25 and accepts it for what it offers.
123:27 Not the fighting, as we do today.
123:30 Why? Because it is irresponsible to
123:33 not given any importance to efficiency and
sustainability. 123:38
And this returns us to the system of our cities. 123:41
In the center is the Central Dome 123:43
which not only houses 123:45
educational facilities and transport center 123:47
Housing is also the main computer system 123:49
manage the technical operations of the city. 123:52
The city is, in fact, a large automated machine. 123:55
It has sensors in all technical areas 123:57
to monitor the progress of architecture - 123:59
collection of energy production, distribution and so forth.
124:04 Now, it is necessary for people to supervise
them 124:06
functions in case of malfunction or similar? 124:09
Probably, yes. 124:11
But this number will decrease 124:12
over time as the improvements would continue. 124:15
However, under present circumstances, probably a 3%
124:17 the city's population would be necessary
124:19 for this job if you think about it.
124:22 And I can assure you
124:24 that an economic system which is
124:26 in fact, designed to look after you
124:28 and to ensure your wellbeing
124:30 not be subordinated to some
124:32 private dictatorship on a daily basis ...
124:35 usually in a job that is either
124:37 technically redundant, or unnecessary social
124:40 often struggling with a debt that does not
exist 124:43
just to handle it ... 124:45
I guarantee you: people will volunteer right and left.
124:50 to maintain and improve a system
124:53 who really cares.
124:57 And in conjunction with the theme of "incentives"
- 125:00
is the usual assumption that 125:02
if there is no external pressure 125:04
for someone to 'work to live " 125:06
people will just sit, and would do anything 125:09
and would become obese idler. 125:12
This is nonsense. 125:14
The working system we have today is 125:16
in fact the creator of laziness 125:19
not a suppressant. 125:22
If you think of when you were kid- 125:24
full of life, interesting to understand new things;
125:27 possibly creating and exploring ...
125:29 but as time passed, the system prompted you
125:32 the goal of discovering how to make money.
125:36 And from the earliest stages of education
125:37 by studying in a university, you're limited.
125:40 Just to produce a plasma that serves
125:43 as cogs in a system
125:46 sends all the fruits in the top 1%.
125:49 Scientific studies have now shown that people
in fact 125:52
not motivated by financial rewards 125:55
when it comes to intelligence and creativity. 125:57
The creation itself is the reward. 126:00
Money, in fact, serve as an incentive, only 126:03
for repetitive, boring activities; 126:06
a role that has just shown that it can be replaced by machines.
126:10 When it comes to the forefront
126:12 actual use of the human mind
126:14 The financial incentive has proven to be an
obstacle 126:17
intervening and reducing their creative thinking. 126:21
And this may explain why Nikola Tesla, the Wright brothers
126:24 Other inventors who contributed massively
126:26 In today's world
126:28 never showed any financial incentive to do
so. 126:31
Money is essentially a wrong incentive 126:35
and produces 100 times more perversion 126:38
from that contribution. 126:42
Good morning children. Please sit down. 126:44
The first thing I would do is make a round 126:48
and ask you all what you would like to be when you grow up.
126:51 Who would like to respond first?
126:54 Well, how about you Sarah;
126:56 When I grow up I want to work at McDonald's
like my mom! 127:00
Oh, family tradition, huh? 127:03
How about you, Linda; 127:05
When I grow up, I will become a 127:08
*** on the streets of New York! 127:11
Oh! Glamour girl, huh? 127:13
Very ambitious. 127:15
You, Tommy; 127:16
When I grow up, I will become a 127:19
rich businessman chosen to work 127:21
on Wall Street will benefit from 127:23
the collapse of foreign economies. 127:25
Business ... 127:26
It is wonderful to see a multicultural and interesting!
127:32 [Victims of Culture]
127:33 As mentioned previously, a
127:36 Resource Based Economy applies the scientific
method in social care 127:40
and is not limited merely to technical efficiency. 127:43
It also takes into account the 127:45
human and social welfare together with those who are.
127:49 What good has to offer a social system where
the final 127:52
does not promote coexistence of happiness and peace.
127:55 Therefore, it is important to clarify
127:58 that the launching of the financial system
128:00 and provide the necessities of life
128:02 we would see a global reduction
128:05 crime by 95% almost instantly
128:08 since there is nothing to steal, to abuse,
fraud, etc. do 128:12
95% of prisoners today, there are 128:14
because of some type of financial crime or drug abuse
128:18 and drug abuse is a disorder - not a crime.
128:23 And what about the remaining 5%?
128:25 the really violent ...
128:27 apparently some are
128:28 violent, just to be violent ...
128:31 is simply "bad" people?
128:35 The reason why I sincerely believe that it
is a waste of time 128:40
to engage in this type of crises, moral values 128:43
on human violence is 128:46
why does not promote an inch in 128:50
our understanding of the causes or 128:53
or for the prevention of violent behavior. 128:57
Many times people ask me if I believe in "forgiveness" of criminals.
129:02 My answer to this is
129:04 "No, I do not believe in forgiveness
129:07 more than I believe in conviction. "
129:10 Only if they, as a society
129:13 keep a similar attitude to tackle violence
129:16 is a problem of public health and preventive
care 129:19
rather than a morally "bad" ... 129:22
Only when we change the 129:25
Our behavior, assumptions and values 129:28
will succeed to reduce the 129:31
levels of violence rather than stimulated; 129:34
as we do at the moment. 129:36
The more justice seeking, the more Hurt 129:39
because there is no such thing as justice. 129:41
There is only what's out there. So simple. 129:46
In other words, if people are formed to be racists, fanatics
129:50 if raised in an environment that supports
this 129:53
why do we put the responsibility on the individual? 129:55
They are the victims of a subculture. 129:58
For this reason you should help. 130:00
The bottom line is that we need to redesign the environment
130:03 that promotes this anomalous behavior.
130:06 This is the problem.
130:07 No, to throw a man in prison.
130:09 Hence the judges - lawyers -
130:12 "Choice" - such notions
130:15 is dangerous, because we misinform.
130:19 That a person is "bad" ... or that a person
is a "serial killer". 130:23
The serial killers are created 130:25
just as the soldiers are serial killers with a gun in his hand.
130:30 Transformed into engines of death, but none
130:32 do not treat them as murderers and killers
130:35 because something is "natural."
130:37 So blame them.
130:39 We say: "Well, this guy was a Nazi - tortured
Jews." 130:42
No, he was raised so as to torment Jews. 130:45
Once you accept the fact that people 130:47
have personal choices and that they are free 130:50
to make these choices ... free to do 130:53
choices, without affecting mean 130:55
I can not understand this at all. 130:58
All of us are affected at all our options 131:02
by the society in which we live by our parents 131:05
and the values that prevail. 131:07
So, we are influenced, therefore, there can be no "free" choices.
131:10 What is the best country in the world? -
The real answer: 131:13
"We've gone around the world and I do not know
131:16 enough for different cultures to be able to
answer that question. " 131:20
I know someone who speaks that way. 131:22
Say "are the good old USA! 131:24
the best country in the world! " 131:26
There is no analysis ... "You go to India?" - "No."
131:28 "You go to England?" - "No."
131:30 "You go to France?" - "No."
131:31 "Then basing your assumptions?"
131:33 They can not answer - angry with you.
131:35 They say, "Where to get it. What the hell
131:37 think you for telling me what to think? "
131:39 And do not forget: you can do with disoriented
people. 131:42
It is responsible for answering ˙ 131:44
are victims of culture, and that means 131:47
have been influenced by their culture. 132:09
[Part 4: Overcoming the current problems] 132:17
When considering a Resource Based Economy 132:20
There are often some arguments that tend to appear ...
132:23 [Hey!] (Interrupted by the speaker)
132:24 [Hey! Opa!]
132:26 [To wait a minute!]
132:29 [I know what it is. This is called Marxism,
my friend.] 132:33
[Stalin killed people because 800 billion of such ideas ...]
132:38 [My father died in the Gulag!]
132:41 [Communist! Fascist!]
132:44 [If you do not like America you can just leave!]
132:45 Okay, let's calm down a bit ...
132:47 [Death in the New World Order!]
132:49 [Death in the New World Order!]
132:51 And as the absurdity of
132:53 growing together, shocked and bewildered:
132:55 suddenly the narrator suffers a fatal heart
attack. 132:59
And the film's ostensibly communist propaganda no longer exists.
133:05 [System Fault]
133:10 [Recovery Backup started - restored]
133:13 But, you know, I say these things to people
133:16 in cases such as "think tanks"
133:19 You know, these so-called "Club of Rome and
so forth ... 133:23
Say: "Marxist!" 133:24
What? Marxist? From where did that come about? 133:26
They have just this picture that stuck 133:30
is the Holy Grail ˙ 133:32
and it is so easy, you know. 133:34
People ask me if I'm socialist or communist or capitalist.
133:38 I'm not saying that none of the above. Why
133:40 think these are the only options?
133:42 All these political constructs
133:44 created by authors who assumed
133:47 that we live in a world with unlimited resources.
133:50 Neither one of these political philosophies
133:53 considers that there may be deficient in anything.
133:56 I believe that communism, socialism, free
market, fascism 134:01
are part of social evolution. 134:03
You can make a giant step 134:06
from one culture to another; 134:07
there are intermediate systems. 134:09
Before there is any "ism", we have some vital needs
134:11 and the vital needs is, as just described
134:13 more easily, all conditions
134:15 needed to get the next breath
134:17 and this includes the air we breathe
134:19 water received, the security you
134:23 education you have access-all
134:25 those things we share and use, and
134:27 no life, no culture can not do without them.
134:31 We must therefore return to our vital needs
134:34 and the vital needs is no longer a "isms".
134:37 It's "analysis of the value of life."
134:41 [This is unacceptable behavior]
134:43 It's just a matter of historical reality
134:46 that the dominant intellectual culture
134:48 any given society reflects the
134:50 interests of the dominant group in this society.
134:54 In a slave society to hold
134:56 beliefs about humans and human rights
134:59 and so on, reflecting the needs of slave owners.
135:02 In society, again, based on
135:05 force some people to control and profiteering
by 135:10
the lives and millions of other job 135:13
the dominant intellectual culture would 135:16
reflects the needs of the dominant group. 135:18
So, if you look at all levels, 135:22
ideas that permeate the psychology and 135:25
sociology, and history 135:28
and political economy, political science 135:30
essentially reflect the specific interests of the elite.
135:34 And academics who deny it too
135:38 tend to be placed in the margin, or
135:41 be considered a kind of "radical".
135:43 The dominant values of a culture
135:45 tend to support and perpetuate
135:47 what is rewarded in this culture.
135:50 And in a society where success and
135:52 social position measured by material wealth
135:54 - Not social contribution -
135:56 is easy to see why the state of the world
is what it is today. 136:01
We treat a disorder of the value system 136:04
- Completely damaged - 136:06
where the priority of personal and social health
136:08 have become secondary to the damaging
136:11 concepts of artificial wealth and unlimited
growth. 136:15
And, like a virus, this disorder is now 136:17
covers every aspect of governance, 136:19
Media, entertainment, and even academia. 136:23
And embedded in the structure of 136:25
protection mechanisms are 136:27
from anything that might interfere. 136:30
Followers of the religion of the Monetary Market
136:33 the self-appointed Guardians of the status
quo 136:36
constantly looking for ways to prevent all forms of thinking
136:40 that may impede their beliefs.
136:42 The most common of which include: Planned
duality. 136:46
If you're Republican, you must be a Democrat. 136:49
If you are not Christians, you may be Satanists 136:52
and if you feel that society can be greatly improved
136:55 to pay attention, perhaps - I do not know
- 136:57
to care for all? 136:59
are, simply, a utopian. 137:01
And most insidiously they all: 137:03
if you're not a fan of "free market" 137:06
you must be against freedom itself. 137:08
I am a supporter of freedom! 137:11
Every time you hear the word freedom 137:12
be said anywhere, or the word for government intervention
137:15 be said anywhere, that means, decoded:
137:19 Obstruction of maximizing conversion money
137:23 more money for the speculators.
137:27 That's it. Any other thing to say:
137:29 "Oh, we need more goods for the people;
137:31 Oh, this is freedom against tyranny "and so
on. 137:35
Every time I see it, you can decode a 137:38
this, and I think you will find a 1-to-1 correlation 137:41
each time you use it. 137:42
And this, in a sense, we could call it: 137:45
an editor. A government clerical understanding and value.
137:50 So this rule in their own recognition
137:53 so they could say: "Oh, not what I meant at
all!" 137:56
but, in fact, that's what they do. 137:58
Just as you talk to a grammar 138:00
and have rules of grammar you follow 138:02
without recognizing what the rules ... 138:04
so, what we have is what I call "the author of Sovereign Securities"
138:08 which underpin it. So every time you use these
words: 138:11
government intervention, lack of freedom or liberty
138:15 The progress, development
138:17 you can decode all to understand their original
meaning. 138:22
Of course, when you hear the word "freedom" 138:25
usually located in the same sentence 138:27
with something called "democracy." 138:30
It's fascinating how people seem to think 138:33
that they have a relative 138:35
influence on what their government 138:37
forgetting that the very nature 138:40
our system puts everything on sale. 138:42
The only vote that counts is money vote 138:45
and it is irrelevant how 138:47
cries every activist ethics and responsibility. 138:50
In a market system, any politician, any law 138:54
and therefore any government is for sale. 138:58
And even with bank support package worth 20 trillion
139:01 starting in 2007
139:03 an amount of money that could have changed
139:06 eg energy infrastructure worldwide
139:08 a fully renewable
139:10 go instead to a set of institutions
139:12 not help at all to society
139:15 institutions that could
139:16 removed even tomorrow without any effect
blind link that political and 139:22
politicians are for the welfare of society still continues.
139:28 The fact is that politics is simply a bizna
139:31 - No different from any other in a market
system 139:34
and cares for its staff interests over anything else.
139:38 Frankly, I do not think deep down in political
action. 139:42
I think the system contracts and expands as it wants.
139:45 The system facilitates these changes.
139:47 I think the movement for civil rights was
to facilitate 139:50
toward those who own the country. 139:52
I think they understand who is in their interests; 139:55
see that a good dose of freedom seems 139:57
Illusion-a-day give them an election year 140:01
to have the illusion of choice meaningless. 140:04
Dull choice - you go, like slaves, and say 140:07
"I voted." The limits of the debates in this country have been established
140:11 before it even started, and all other
140:13 marginalized and presented either
140:15 as communists or as some kind of disobedient
human 140:17
-A "reactionary element" - to the word ... 140:19
and now "synomosiologia. You see, they invented the.
140:21 It's something you do not have to deal a minute:
140:24 powerful people unite for a project!
140:28 It happens! Are you a "reactionary element"!
You "synomosiologos! 140:33
And all the defense mechanisms of the system 140:37
These two are shown below. 140:40
The first is the idea that the system was the "cause"
140:43 the material progress we see in the world.
140:47 Well ... No.
140:49 There are basically two fundamental causes
are 140:51
created to increase the so-called "wealth" 140:54
and that population we see today. 140:57
Firstly, the exponential advances in production technology
141:01 hence the scientific ingenuity.
141:03 And second: the initial discovery of abundant
hydrocarbon energy 141:08
- Which is now the foundation of the whole socioeconomic system.
141:13 The capitalist, monetary system
141:15 the free market - say it as you want -
141:17 has done nothing but to exploit these findings
141:21 a perverse incentive system and a disorganized
141:24 and unequal distribution method and use these
fruits. 141:30
The second defense mechanism is a "war" social bias
141:33 suffered through years of propaganda
141:36 and considers any other social system
141:38 as a way to "tyranny"
141:41 with several examples, such as Stalin, Mao,
Hitler ... 141:44
and all victims who died. 141:47
The overbearing and if these people were 141:50
along with social approaches that perpetuate ...
141:53 when it comes to the game of death
141:55 - When it comes to systematic
141:57 daily mass *** of people -
142:00 Nothing in history can compare with what happens
today. 142:04
Famines - during the last century of our history -
142:10 not caused by lack of food.
142:12 Caused by relative poverty.
142:16 The financial resources so unevenly shared
142:20 that the poor simply do not have enough money
142:23 to buy food, which would
142:26 available if you have the money to pay for
it. 142:29
This is an example of Structural Violence. 142:32
Another example: in Africa and other regions 142:36
I will focus particularly on Africa 142:39
tens of millions of people dying from AIDS. 142:42
Why die? 142:44
Not because we do not know how to cure it. 142:47
We have millions of people in rich countries 142:51
the situation improved considerably since 142:54
have medicines to cure. 142:57
People in Africa die from AIDS 143:00
not die because the virus *** ... 143:03
die because they do not have the money to 143:06
pay for the drugs that kept them alive. 143:09
Gandhi had understood. Quote: 143:11
"The most deadly form of violence is poverty." 143:16
That is absolutely correct. 143:18
Poverty kills far more people than all wars in history
143:23 many more than all the murderers in history.
143:25 many more suicides than any in history ...
143:28 The structural violence not only kills most
people 143:32
all, types of interpersonal violence together 143:35
The structural violence is also 143:38
and the main cause of interpersonal violence. 143:42
[Beyond the Top] 143:46
Oil is the foundation of 143:51
edifice of human civilization. 143:55
There are 10 calories of hydrocarbon oil and natural gas;
143:59 each calorie of food consumed in the industrialized
world. 144:03
Fertilizers made from natural gas. 144:06
The insecticidal oil. 144:08
With diesel-powered plow-Plant-watering 144:11
collect, transport and packaging. Food Wrap 144:14
in plastic - equal oil. All plastic is petroleum. 144:16
There are 26 liters of oil in each tire. 144:19
Oil is everywhere. It is ubiquitous. And just because
144:22 oil there are 7 billion people
144:24 or nearly 7 billion people on the planet right
now. 144:27
The arrival of such a cheap and easy energy 144:30
which, incidentally, is equivalent 144:32
billions of slaves to work 24 hours a day 144:36
changed the world with such a radical way in the last century
144:40 that the population increased by 10 times.
144:43 But by 2050, oil reserves can cover
144:47 needs of the population below half
144:49 the current under current lifestyle.
144:52 Thus, the size adjustment to a different lifestyle
is just huge. 144:57
The world is now using 6 barrels of oil for every barrel found.
145:01 Five years ago using 4
145:03 barrels for every one he found.
145:05 In a year from now will use
145:07 8 barrels for every one that it finds.
145:09 What bothers me is
145:11 absence of any genuine effort by governments
worldwide 145:16
and industry leaders around the world to do something different.
145:20 We have these, let us say, efforts to produce
more wind 145:24
and perhaps to do with the tides ... 145:26
Attempts are being made to improve efficiency of our cars
145:31 but there is nothing resembling
145:33 the coming revolution, all these are trivial
145:36 and this is quite scary.
145:38 And governments are led by economists
145:42 not appreciate what we are talking about
145:45 and try to stimulate consumerism in order
to restore the last being 145:50
hoping to restore the past. 145:52
Print even more money which is devoid look at.
145:56 So if the economy improved and
145:58 recover and resume growth the famous
146:01 will be brief because
146:03 within a short period of time measured in
months 146:07
rather than years, will meet again the obstacle of supplies;
146:11 there will be another price shock
146:12 and an even deeper recession. So, I
146:14 that leads to a series of vicious circles.
146:16 Thus, the economic growth - prices outbreak
- 146:18
and everything closes. Here we are at this time.
146:21 Then we start up again but here we are
146:24 point where no longer able to produce cheap
energy. 146:28
We are at the top, with a downward trend in oil production.
146:31 This is not to extract more from the ground
faster 146:35
which means that things are closed, the oil price falls
146:39 as happened in early 2009 but then, as we
have a "recovery" 146:45
oil prices starting to recover. 146:47
Recently, it has fluctuated around $ 80 a barrel
146:49 and what we see is that, even with $ 80
146:51 barrel, the financial and economic collapse
146:54 people can not buy.
146:55 Global oil production is now about 86 million
barrels a day. 147:00
In about 10 years, provided 147:04
to replace nearly 14 million barrels a day. 147:08
There is nothing that can be approached and 147:12
to cover even 1% of such demand. 147:14
If you do not do something fast enough 147:17
will be a huge lack of energy. 147:20
I think the big mistake that is not recognized 147:24
A decade ago, it needed a concerted effort 147:28
development 147:30
these sustainable forms of energy. 147:31
I think this is something that our grandchildren will look
147:35 with tremendous suspicion. "Once you know
that 147:39
you can do with a finite resource ... 147:42
how could you build your economy 147:45
on something that was going to disappear? "
147:49 For the first time in human history
147:51 faced with the depletion of a key resource
147:54 key in our current system of survival.
147:57 And the whole damn thing is that
147:59 even with the oil becomes more scarce
148:02 the economic system will continue to drive
blind 148:05
the cancer's growth model ... 148:07
so people can buy a lot more diesel cars 148:10
to GDP and create jobs ... aggravating the decline.
148:16 There are solutions to replace the
148:18 hydrocarbon structure of the economy?
148:20 Of course.
148:21 But the path it takes to achieve change
148:24 will not occur through the protocols of the
Market 148:28
given that new solutions can be 148:30
implemented only through the mechanism of benefit.
148:33 People do not invest in renewable energy
148:36 because there is no profit both long and short
term. 148:40
And the commitment needed to become reality 148:42
can only occur with severe damage to the economy. 148:45
Therefore, there is no financial incentive, and this
148:48 system, if there is no financial incentive,
nothing happens. 148:53
And above all, the peak oil 148:55
Only one of the emerging consequences 148:58
Environmental-Social wrecked train speed wins today.
149:02 Other downgrades include the Drinking Water
149:05 -The very structure of our existence;
149:07 which has now
149:09 shortages for 2.8 billion people
149:11 and these shortages will reach 4 billion by
2030. 149:16
Production of food: 149:17
The destruction of farmland, which 149:21
obtained 99.7% of all human food 149:24
takes place up to 40 times faster than they can replenish
149:29 and in the last 40 years, 30% of
149:31 arable land has become counterproductive.
149:34 Not to say that oil is the backbone
149:37 agriculture today, and as they fall ...
149:40 so that our food supply.
149:42 Regarding general resources
149:44 with current patterns of consumption by 2030
149:47 will need two planets to keep our rates.
149:51 Not to mention the continuing destruction
149:53 Biodiversity supports life
149:55 causing seizures and disappearance
149:57 environmental instability across the land.
150:00 With all these downgrades
150:02 we have an almost exponential increase in
population 150:05
which by 2030 may be over 150:08
8 billion people on the planet. 150:10
Energy production and should only be 150:13
increased to 44% by 2030 to meet this demand. 150:17
Again, since money is the only primary factor for action;
150:22 Can we expect a country
150:24 the world to be able to withstand
150:26 the massive changes required for the revolution
in agriculture 150:29
in water treatment, energy production etc. 150:33
When a cabal of global debt 150:35
closes slowly around the world ... 150:37
Not to mention the fact that 150:39
unemployment we see today 150:40
going to do something in mind, 150:43
the nature of technological unemployment. 150:45
The jobs will not return. 150:48
And finally, an extensive social assessment. 150:50
From 1970 to 2010, poverty 150:53
world has doubled because of this system ...
150:56 and under the current situation,
150:58 really believe that we will see
151:00 something more than doubling ...
151:02 more suffering and more mass starvation?
151:06 [The Terminal]
151:08 There will be no recovery.
151:11 It is not a Great Depression
151:13 from which we can ever get out.
151:15 I think what will follow after the next phase
151:18 economic collapse is a huge social unrest.
151:21 When you cease to be paid unemployment benefits
151:23 because they have money left to the states.
151:25 And when things become so bad that people
lose confidence 151:29
to their elected leaders, will require change 151:33
if you do not kill each other on the road 151:36
or if not destroy the environment. 151:38
I just fear that they might reach the point of no return ...
151:43 and it bothers me but no go.
151:45 We do what we can to avoid this situation.
151:50 Clearly we are on the verge of a major transition
in human life ... 151:56
That's what we face now is that the radical 151:59
changing life as we know in the last century. 152:03
There should be a link between the economy and
152:06 resources of this planet
152:08 meaning, of course, all the flora and fauna;
152:11 health of the oceans and everything else.
152:15 It is a financial model that would
152:18 go up to kill the last human being.
152:22 H "dominant group" will do everything it can
to stay in power 152:27
and this is what we have in mind. 152:29
They will use the army and navy and lies ...
152:32 or anything else have to keep them in power.
152:35 We will not leave
152:37 because they know no other system that will
perpetuate their species. 153:36
[Live from New York] 153:51
[Global Protests Closing of International Economics]
154:06 [London - Live]
154:09 [China - Live]
154:12 [South Africa - Live]
154:15 [Spain - Live]
154:19 [Russia - Live]
154:23 [Canada - Live]
154:28 [Saudi Arabia - Live]
154:47 [The crime rate in the West off]
154:50 [The UN Declares State of Emergency World]
154:52 [World Unemployment Hits 65%]
154:55 [The Fear of World War II continues]
154:58 [The Collapse of Debt now causing food shortages]
156:54 [Get Back]
157:30 [Although no violence was reported as
157:34 The unprecedented protests continue ...
157:37 shown that the equivalent of trillions of
dollars 157:40
systematically withdrawn from bank accounts 157:44
around the world, and in turn ... 157:46
now finally thrown 157:50
front of the world's central banks.] 158:49
[THIS IS YOUR WORLD] 158:56
[THIS IS OUR WORLD] 159:04
[THE REVOLUTION IS NOW] 159:13
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