posted on Mar, 3 2010 @ 12:19 PM
Money has lost it's meaning. It was perhaps the grease that oils our movements as traders and purchasers, but more and more, it's value as a means
to facilitate those movements has been lost to an evil intent by our duped world population, from the top of the pyramid on down to the base of it. We
deny our own power to overcome this system. For example, if you do something, why do you do it? Do you do it because you want to? Do you do it because
you should? Do you do it because you have no other choice? Of course life is full of sticky decisions; so add the element of monetary currency
developed to facilitate your life now and what do you do? Do your decisions now have a different outcome? Think of Tesla and Edison when JP financed
their endeavors. You've been told this or that has a certain monetary value; by who? Did you decide the value of this or that? Probably not. You
gauge your ideas of a value according to the rest of the market right? Probably not. A supply of currency first had to be distributed to you by the
ones who created it. Human beings who do not know what the value of this or that really is. They do know this though, that the labor that uses the
thing is what has value. Not gold, not silver, not precious jewels or any of that; the value of the being is.
We, in the United States are now tens of trillions of "dollars" into debt. What does it mean? Nothing! It means nothing! It can't mean anything
because these numbers do not exist within the framework of a counting. Unless astronomical paper is lighting the sky at night. How many beans can one
count? As for me, I'd much prefer to make art or plant trees or pound nails for someone's house. But I don't because you can't make much money
doing those things, or so I'm told. If you do, you must have impressed someone with money. Now, on the other hand, money could be used in all of
it's forms much more than it now is. Economies based on many forms of currency could alleviate much of our suffering. A small example of this, a way
to begin, might take the form of giving some seeds you've collected to a gardner, or trading technical skills, one for another. Gifts are given in
return. The old maxim you are as good as your word can still apply. If not, then that is that, you don't deal with that individual again. That is
real market economics. Is this as impressive as flipping a gold coin to a vendor? As for construction, this is quite a new area. Do you believe we
need every one of the skyscrapers, cathedrals, stadiums, strip malls, and even endless tracts of houses that cover so much of our precious soft ground
and natural life? I don't know that for sure, but there is definitely enough construction material around on top of the ground now to build useful
buildings that would serve our true purposes, not extravagant, opulent offices for lawyers, accountants, insurance salesmen and banks.
While the value of labor has been set, these few think they know what it is, because they struggle so hard to make sure of it. It's a dumb game of
Monopoly. Everybody knows how it's played. While we pray for something, money does not develop responsibility, we do. But we are responsible for
it's destruction. Help me, can you, to teach them that it is meaningless unless the Sun shines and flowers grow there.
[edit on 3-3-2010 by IGottaBeMe]