Money makes us tick?
When you are a child, you think that the
greatest thing is to grow up. Adults have all the freedom that you envy, and
they get to make the rules. I remember my teenage years and later watched a
“replay” as my kids were growing up. All adults can tell you that becoming an
adult is just the beginning, not the end. There is a lot to learn, but most
people are afraid to do things. The catchy phrase is, “who is going to pay for
it”. We try, learn, and pay for our mistakes that we adults know we will make.
Who is going to pay is also the main reason
for people to choose a political philosophy to follow through life. We have
three main political systems to choose from. Christian: give your material
possessions away and attend to helping the poor. Only monks and crazy people
follow it. “I fought and worked hard for my things and will not give them
away.” Well, the funeral director tells me that eventually, we do.
The Liberal system is another. We place all
of our resources and efforts into looking after all humans and guide them to be
fruitful if they can. They cheat and try to live well while we work hard to pay
for it. They should have done what we did, so they would have what we have. As
my old hunting partner used to say, If they want to eat they must work. We can
work moving forward or be stuck in a dead-end job until the end.
Next comes the Conservative view, greatly
promoted by the writings of Charles Darwin about evolution. Nature looks after
all problems. Now it’s the Market, not nature. The fittest survive and the
weakest perish. Big dog eats smaller dogs and governments should stay out of
it. That philosophy is missing a major component. The wolf pack can hunt the
great bear. The ants defeat the grasshopper and the viruses beat the mighty
humans. That philosophy denies taking chances and expanding.
Young people are eager to face life,
believing that they will work and study hard and have a significant life, and a
few do. If we include all the world population, we see that most people
struggle hard to have the bare minimum and often less. That is the direct
outcome of our greatest invention, money.
Gold and other rare metals used to be the
medium of exchange. For convenience, we changed it to paper money and recently
into electronic digits. Both are plentiful and can’t easily be controlled.
First, we were strict about how much was circulating and people could trust it
to some degree, but things have changed. We now see that it was just the
beginning.
Money is no longer a medium of exchange, it
became a way to buy pleasure, avoid work, and hoard wealth. Christ told us to
give it back to the issuing government, but we failed. Some did very well,
mostly by finding ways around just using the money for exchange, while others
slowly gave up freedom and became enslaved to some degree or another. Now we
are adults and life has no mercy. You owe, you pay.
In some places like Canada, we found ways to
live and negotiate credit, payments, jobs, and all else, but there is another
spectrum that we are unfamiliar with. Half of the world or more is living with
hardly any money and all that it brings. While we try to buy pleasure, others
can’t buy the necessities of life. They are on the move. Either they will find
a way to survive or they will march.
We believed that our military might will save
us but recently discovered that the great United States can’t even win a war
against the poorest most backwords country, such as Afghanistan. The Wolfpack
can hunt the great bear. Now we also have to deal with a war against a virus.
We could win, but the pursuit of money stops us. It also stops us from saving
our planet from being killed and buried under garbage on the surface, in the
water, and in the air.
For example, we can look south of us where
money won against people. We are honoured to be friends of the greatest empire
the world has ever seen, but we see it crumbling down. Large numbers of their
citizens don’t even have Health Care when they are sick. Many kids don’t have a
proper diet and education. Yet they and other countries have people who own so
much money they couldn’t spend it in many lifetimes. Some call them Oligarchs.
We print or create money all the time. It
finds its way to the richest people in the world rather quickly while others
work two jobs and hardly affords food and shelter. Eventually, the poor people
discover what the Taliban did. (I don’t like the Taliban.) They get weapons and
beat the system. That is not the desired outcome.
Humans could create money, as we do, and use
it directly to do what we need by hiring, building things, and serving people.
We don’t need to hand it over to a few individuals, in China, Russia, the USA,
etc, and borrow it back on interest. We, the majority in society, can set our
own new rules and not listen to those who say that we can’t. It’s just another
monetary theory and we don’t have to set off inflation. Money performs and is
taxed back to prevent inflation. Some very rich people advocate doing it when
asked for their opinion.
The main idea we must remember is that we are
adults and should fix things in a way that works for us, not against us. Even
the biggest business needs customers and starving people shoot not buy. Under
that system, all of us could have much more time for leisure, and we would pay
for it.
Here
is a link to my blog: https://thesimpleravenspost.blogspot.ca/ Feel
free to check other articles and comment.
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