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There was nothing left. Nothing of value. After the crash.

I told them I used to live there and they asked me how. I didn’t know. I lied. I said the government provided for me. It provided for everybody. That what it was there for. Before. Before the crash.

They taxed the rich and that was enough, I explained. Enough for me to live here that is. The middle of the city. People close enough to provide for each other. All within walking distance. Able to provide the services needed to have some honor. Honor had become important again. And was distributed via the computing power the remaining technology had provided. The programs only worked with an equal playing field and we got it. Our history erased, our memories lost, our culture destroyed.

It had become a meritocracy. Not a democratic society, not a sudden apocalypse, no more violence, none of it. Life was too short and we’re all that’s left. “Is that why you take care of us?”, they asked. I shook my head, shoulders and body. It was a strange response to combine it all. I said nothing. I should have said, “Who says you’re not taking care of me?”. But I didn’t. And it never happened. A lost chance. One among many.

Though, perhaps, not that many.

I always thought the end of times, if it were to happen, would be an egalitarian society. Something we’d accomplished. We’d distributed everything fairly. But fair had become a different things. Sure, after the riots (and they were smal in scale compared to the significance of the event) there was no more violence. None. That was surely a good thing. It wasn’t demanded. Not be force. Perhaps by fear. Or worse, apathy. People had stopped caring enough to be willing to kill. Life had become finite and too precious. I say precious because it had a price. It was easily calculable now. There are X people. We don’t know how many there were. We know there will be no more people. We know what we have. There’s no more virtual economy. There’s no more real economy.

First there were news reports about bombs and murders and disasters. It all seemed normal. Nothing suspicious about that. But it was the last news we had before it all really went bad. After the internet pretty much broke down, electricity soon followed. There was screw ups in the food supply and soon everybody who wasn’t growing their own plants was dead. It all happened so fast. The disasters piled up and nature wasn’t pretty after our fragile last fragment of ecomanagement crumbled. The floods. I’ll never forget the floods. The floated around. I picked them up. We’ve been together since. It was touch and go there for a while. Where did that phrase originate from? I never bothered to learn. Good thing perhaps. None of the planes can fly anymore. None that depend on fuel anyway. Or can’t handle a decent storm now and then. The humidity was inhuman. It was always humid now. I looked at the building and realized that if I’d live there now, it would never be as it once was. Besides, the person who lived there now deserved it. I deserve a lot, but this was a little too lucky to be honest. We walked away. Too many building have collapsed in the city. With the quakes and the rats, we may as well leave and had for the nearest town. It would be difficult, no doubt.

The remaining people had huddled together and every nucleus of Peoples that remained had gathered all material wealth. Entire trucks of non-contaminated earth was brought in with the remaining bio-fuel. We couldn’t get to the fossil anymore. It was all gone, outside of reach. Since then, we’ve not had a chance to exploit our surroundings. We’ve failed as a race. Well, as the human race. The little race that could. A rat race. They’re the only ones that could have survived us. But they didn’t. Our lab rats were released and a success. Artificial animals, though not born alive, were among us for a long time. But to survive and adapt in this climate, they soon become movable molds. Clinging to whatever wasn’t blown away by the winds. It wasn’t the smell that bothered me. It was the air. It became hard to breath when they were around. Whenever humans were around too, but never that bad. And it was always worth it. If things still have value. But they don’t. They can’t. We moved on. A village with some people remaining had decided that all were equally worthy. They had no outside contact, so they were entitled to do so. Provided they didn’t need providing. But that meant death. Perhaps they were right. A quick death. They couldn’t have lived over a month after we passed through. It was impossible to survive without help. We asked how long they thought they’d last. A couple of days, a week tops they responded. They were all so calm about it. Everybody was, I suppose. There’s nothing to panic about anymore. It ends with us.

TOBY
[enters] Excuse me. I was waylaid.
C.J.
By what?
TOBY
30,000 tourists.
LARRY
You know, the protesters.
TOBY
No, don’t call them protesters, I’ve seen better organized crowds at the DMV.
LEO
Two tons this block of cheese weighed…
TOBY
[still muttering] In my day, we knew how to protest.
C.J.
What day was that?
TOBY
1968.
JOSH
How the hell old were you when you were protesting?
TOBY
My sisters took me. [staffers chuckle] Anybody have a problem with that?
LEO
No one has a problem with that.
TOBY
The police are always seven steps ahead of them. The cops know exactly where they’re
going to be and what’s going to happen. You know how they know? By logging onto their
website. We had the underground. We had rapid response.
C.J.
And by God, you were home by supper on a school night.
TOBY
These people are amateurs. What’s my assignment?
LEO
Meeting with the amateurs.
TOBY
Huh?
LEO
World Policy Studies is having a forum… there’ll be about a hundred of them.
TOBY
Doing what?
LEO
Listening to you conduct a free exchange of ideas.
TOBY
Really?
LEO
Josh thinks it’s a good idea.
TOBY
Oh well, if Josh thinks it’s a good idea, then you bet, I’ll do it.
LEO
Look…
TOBY
What else is there?
C.J.
I’ve got Cartographers for Social Equality.
JOSH
So, now you have two choices… meeting with an unruly mob or meeting with lunatic
mapmakers.
TOBY
Or getting paid a lot more money working almost anywhere else I want.
LEO
Seriously, Toby, there’ll be security there. But still…
TOBY
What about press?
C.J.
Just wires.
TOBY
No, I mean T.V.
C.J.
No cameras.
TOBY
You negotiated that?
C.J.
Yeah.
TOBY
They agreed to it?
C.J.
You want to make out with me right now, don’t you?
TOBY
Well, when don’t I?
CUT TO: EXT. WASHINGTON, D.C. – DAY
The protesters are on the sidewalks, yelling. Toby is sitting in a car, whistling. The
car stops, and he rolls the window down.
TOBY
Toby Ziegler.
OFFICER
Yeah.
Toby continues whistling as he gets out of car.
CUT TO: INT. BUILDING – CONTINUOUS
RHONDA SACHS, another police officer, is standing by the door.
OFFICER
[over radio] Rhonda, this guy coming in is Toby Ziegler.
SACHS
Copy that.
Toby enters.
SACHS
Mr. Ziegler?
TOBY
Yes, ma’am.
SACHS
Rhonda Sachs. They asked me to make sure you go home in one piece.
TOBY
You fully trained?
SACHS
Yes.
TOBY
How many different ways you know how to kill a man?
SACHS
How many different ways do I need?
TOBY
I like you.
SACHS
Thank you.
TOBY
Officer Sachs?
SACHS
Yeah?
TOBY
It’s going to be a day at the beach.
FADE IN: INT. A SMALL AUDITORIUM – DAY
The protesters are gathered, yelling. Toby and Rhonda are on stage in the front.
TOBY
Fire your gun.
SACHS
I can’t fire a warning shot indoors.
TOBY
No, I mean fire at them. [beat] Just kidding.
TOBY
[to lead protester Webber] Hey, Solzhenitsyn. Come here. You’re the group leader?
TERRY WEBBER
Yeah, I am. I’m Terry Webber.
TOBY
You know what you did today that was really stupid? You gave away the cameras. With
cameras in here I’ve got a problem ‘cause I don’t want to look like I can’t control
the crowd. Without the cameras, I can sit here, read the sports section for two hours,
walk outside and say we talked. So, if you guys want to talk, that’s fine. But you’re
in charge of crowd control, know what I’m saying?
WEBBER
Yeah. [over bullhorn] Folks. People, let’s listen up.
The yelling subsides.
TOBY
Good morning… [microphone doesn’t work, raises voice] Good morning, my name is Toby
Ziegler and I’m the White House Communications Director and a senior domestic policy
advisor to the President.
PROTESTER 1
Advise him we need clean air more than free trade!
Yelling begins again.
PROTESTER 2
How many 12-year-olds made your shoes, Toby!?
GROUP
Global justice now! Global justice now! Global justice now!
TOBY
[to Sachs] You want to send out for pizza or something?
GROUP
Global justice now! Global justice now!
Toby sits down with a newspaper and puts his feet on the table.
CUT TO: INT. WORLD POLICY AUDITORIUM – DAY
The crowd is still yelling. Toby and Rhonda are at a table on stage.
WEBBER
[to protesters] Look, I’m not saying that we’re going to like their answers. I’m saying
we’re going to give him a chance to talk. Now if you do have a question…
PROTESTER 4
Yeah, my question is who elected his boss the people or Kaiser-Permanente?
PROTESTER 5
He’s not my President, let’s vote.
PROTESTER 6
Who do you really work for?
More yelling.
SACHS
[to Toby] You’re having a pretty good time, aren’t you?
TOBY
Well, it’s not like being at a Yankee game.
PROTESTER 7
You suck!
TOBY
Well, actually… [chuckles] Yeah, it’s like being at a Yankee game.
SACHS
So, Toby?
TOBY
Officer?
SACHS
Since you’re not really doing anything right now, I was wondering, what’s this all about?
TOBY
It’s about the WTO, Rhonda, the World Trade Organization.
SACHS
Well, I get that from the signs and the newspapers.
TOBY
The World Trade Organization’s a group of 140 countries who have agreed to specific trade
policies.
SACHS
So, what’s wrong with that?
TOBY
Nothing’s wrong with that.
SACHS
What would they say if I asked them the same question?
TOBY
They’d say the WTO benefits corporations and not people.
SACHS
Does it?
TOBY
Benefits both. [pause] Look at them.
SACHS
Yeah.
TOBY
Philistines.
SACHS
Take my nightstick and go kick their ass.
TOBY
Yeah, make all the jokes you want but let me tell you something they claim to speak for
the underprivileged but here in the blackest city in America, I’m looking at a room with
no black faces. No Asians, No Hispanics. Where the hell’s the Third World they claim to
represent?
SACHS
Lot of Third-Worlders in the Cabinet Room today, were there?
TOBY
You’re starting to bother me.
SACHS
That’s ‘cause I’m armed.
TOBY
No, I like that. [pause] I’m going outside.
The crowd continues yelling.
CUT TO: INT. WASHINGTON, D.C. STREET – DAY
The protesters are shouting.
TOBY
It’s activist vacation is what it is. Spring break for anarchist wannabes. The black
t-shirts, the gas masks as fashion accessories.
SACHS
These kids today, with the hair and the clothes…
TOBY
All right, that’s it, flatfoot.
SACHS
I got great feet.
TOBY
You want the benefits of free trade? Food is cheaper.
SACHS
Yes.
TOBY
Food is cheaper, clothes are cheaper, steel is cheaper, cars are cheaper, phone service
is cheaper. You feel me building a rhythm here? That’s ‘cause I’m a speechwriter and I
know how to make a point.
SACHS
Toby…
TOBY
It lowers prices, it raises income. You see what I did with ‘lowers’ and ‘raises’ there?
SACHS
Yes.
TOBY
It’s called the science of listener attention. We did repetition, we did floating opposites
and now you end with the one that’s not like the others. Ready? Free trade stops wars. And
that’s it. Free trade stops wars! And we figure out a way to fix the rest! One world, one
peace. I’m sure I’ve seen that on a sign somewhere.
SACHS
God, Toby… Wouldn’t it be great if there was someone around here with communication skills
who could go in there and tell them that?
TOBY
Shut up.
Josh enters through the police line.
JOSH
Toby…
TOBY
What are you doing here?
JOSH
Came down to see how it was going. [to Sachs] How’s it going? Josh Lyman.
SACHS
Rhonda Sachs.
JOSH
Any trouble?
SACHS
No.
TOBY
[raises his hand] Josh. The WTO is undemocratic, and accountable to no one, decisions
are made by Executive Directors and the developing world has little to say about
institutional policy.
JOSH
What was that?
TOBY
I protested to you.
JOSH
Why?
TOBY
‘Cause I’m not allowed to get arrested anymore.
JOSH
Let’s go back.
TOBY
No, I hate these people with the heat of a nova. Yet here I go.
SACHS
Attaboy.
TOBY
Shut up.
SACHS
I got your back, man, you know? Or not.
All three enter the building.

TOBY [enters] Excuse me. I was waylaid.
C.J. By what?
TOBY 30,000 tourists.
LARRY You know, the protesters.
TOBY No, don’t call them protesters, I’ve seen better organized crowds at the DMV.
LEO Two tons this block of cheese weighed…
TOBY [still muttering] In my day, we knew how to protest.
C.J. What day was that?
TOBY 1968.
JOSH How the hell old were you when you were protesting?
TOBY My sisters took me. [staffers chuckle] Anybody have a problem with that?
LEO No one has a problem with that.
TOBY The police are always seven steps ahead of them. The cops know exactly where they’re going to be and what’s going to happen. You know how they know? By logging onto their website. We had the underground. We had rapid response.
C.J. And by God, you were home by supper on a school night.
TOBY These people are amateurs. What’s my assignment?
LEO Meeting with the amateurs.
TOBY Huh?
LEO World Policy Studies is having a forum… there’ll be about a hundred of them.
TOBY Doing what?
LEO Listening to you conduct a free exchange of ideas.
TOBY Really?
LEO Josh thinks it’s a good idea.
TOBY Oh well, if Josh thinks it’s a good idea, then you bet, I’ll do it.
LEO Look…
TOBY What else is there?
C.J. I’ve got Cartographers for Social Equality.
JOSH So, now you have two choices… meeting with an unruly mob or meeting with lunatic mapmakers.
TOBY Or getting paid a lot more money working almost anywhere else I want.
LEO Seriously, Toby, there’ll be security there. But still…
TOBY What about press?
C.J. Just wires.
TOBY No, I mean T.V.
C.J. No cameras.
TOBY You negotiated that?
C.J. Yeah.
TOBY They agreed to it?
C.J. You want to make out with me right now, don’t you?
TOBY Well, when don’t I?

CUT TO: EXT. WASHINGTON, D.C. – DAYThe protesters are on the sidewalks, yelling. Toby is sitting in a car, whistling. The car stops, and he rolls the window down.
TOBY Toby Ziegler.
OFFICER Yeah.
Toby continues whistling as he gets out of car.
CUT TO: INT. BUILDING – CONTINUOUSRHONDA SACHS, another police officer, is standing by the door.
OFFICER [over radio] Rhonda, this guy coming in is Toby Ziegler.
SACHS Copy that.
Toby enters.
SACHS Mr. Ziegler?
TOBY Yes, ma’am.
SACHS Rhonda Sachs. They asked me to make sure you go home in one piece.
TOBY You fully trained?
SACHS Yes.
TOBY How many different ways you know how to kill a man?
SACHS How many different ways do I need?
TOBY I like you.
SACHS Thank you.
TOBY Officer Sachs?
SACHS Yeah?
TOBY It’s going to be a day at the beach.

FADE IN: INT. A SMALL AUDITORIUM – DAYThe protesters are gathered, yelling. Toby and Rhonda are on stage in the front.
TOBY Fire your gun.
SACHS I can’t fire a warning shot indoors.
TOBY No, I mean fire at them. [beat] Just kidding.
TOBY [to lead protester Webber] Hey, Solzhenitsyn. Come here. You’re the group leader?
TERRY WEBBER Yeah, I am. I’m Terry Webber.
TOBY You know what you did today that was really stupid? You gave away the cameras. With cameras in here I’ve got a problem ‘cause I don’t want to look like I can’t control the crowd. Without the cameras, I can sit here, read the sports section for two hours, walk outside and say we talked. So, if you guys want to talk, that’s fine. But you’re in charge of crowd control, know what I’m saying?
WEBBER Yeah. [over bullhorn] Folks. People, let’s listen up.
The yelling subsides.
TOBY Good morning… [microphone doesn’t work, raises voice] Good morning, my name is Toby Ziegler and I’m the White House Communications Director and a senior domestic policy advisor to the President.
PROTESTER 1 Advise him we need clean air more than free trade!
Yelling begins again.
PROTESTER 2 How many 12-year-olds made your shoes, Toby!?
GROUP Global justice now! Global justice now! Global justice now!
TOBY [to Sachs] You want to send out for pizza or something?
GROUP Global justice now! Global justice now!
Toby sits down with a newspaper and puts his feet on the table.—
CUT TO: INT. WORLD POLICY AUDITORIUM – DAYThe crowd is still yelling. Toby and Rhonda are at a table on stage.
WEBBER [to protesters] Look, I’m not saying that we’re going to like their answers. I’m saying we’re going to give him a chance to talk. Now if you do have a question…
PROTESTER 4 Yeah, my question is who elected his boss the people or Kaiser-Permanente?
PROTESTER 5 He’s not my President, let’s vote.
PROTESTER 6 Who do you really work for?
More yelling.
SACHS [to Toby] You’re having a pretty good time, aren’t you?
TOBY Well, it’s not like being at a Yankee game.
PROTESTER 7 You suck!
TOBY Well, actually… [chuckles] Yeah, it’s like being at a Yankee game.
SACHS So, Toby?
TOBY Officer?
SACHS Since you’re not really doing anything right now, I was wondering, what’s this all about?
TOBY It’s about the WTO, Rhonda, the World Trade Organization.
SACHS Well, I get that from the signs and the newspapers.
TOBY The World Trade Organization’s a group of 140 countries who have agreed to specific trade policies.
SACHS So, what’s wrong with that?
TOBY Nothing’s wrong with that.
SACHS What would they say if I asked them the same question?
TOBY They’d say the WTO benefits corporations and not people.
SACHS Does it?
TOBY Benefits both. [pause] Look at them.
SACHS Yeah.
TOBY Philistines.
SACHS Take my nightstick and go kick their ass.
TOBY Yeah, make all the jokes you want but let me tell you something they claim to speak for the underprivileged but here in the blackest city in America, I’m looking at a room with no black faces. No Asians, No Hispanics. Where the hell’s the Third World they claim to represent?
SACHS Lot of Third-Worlders in the Cabinet Room today, were there?
TOBY You’re starting to bother me.
SACHS That’s ‘cause I’m armed.
TOBY No, I like that. [pause] I’m going outside.
The crowd continues yelling.—CUT TO: INT. WASHINGTON, D.C. STREET – DAYThe protesters are shouting.
TOBY It’s activist vacation is what it is. Spring break for anarchist wannabes. The black t-shirts, the gas masks as fashion accessories.
SACHS These kids today, with the hair and the clothes…
TOBY All right, that’s it, flatfoot.
SACHS I got great feet.
TOBY You want the benefits of free trade? Food is cheaper.
SACHS Yes.
TOBY Food is cheaper, clothes are cheaper, steel is cheaper, cars are cheaper, phone service is cheaper. You feel me building a rhythm here? That’s ‘cause I’m a speechwriter and I know how to make a point.
SACHS Toby…
TOBY It lowers prices, it raises income. You see what I did with ‘lowers’ and ‘raises’ there?
SACHS Yes.
TOBY It’s called the science of listener attention. We did repetition, we did floating opposites and now you end with the one that’s not like the others. Ready? Free trade stops wars. And that’s it. Free trade stops wars! And we figure out a way to fix the rest! One world, one peace. I’m sure I’ve seen that on a sign somewhere.
SACHS God, Toby… Wouldn’t it be great if there was someone around here with communication skills who could go in there and tell them that?
TOBY Shut up.
Josh enters through the police line.
JOSH Toby…
TOBY What are you doing here?
JOSH Came down to see how it was going. [to Sachs] How’s it going? Josh Lyman.
SACHS Rhonda Sachs.
JOSH Any trouble?
SACHS No.
TOBY [raises his hand] Josh. The WTO is undemocratic, and accountable to no one, decisions are made by Executive Directors and the developing world has little to say about institutional policy.
JOSH What was that?
TOBY I protested to you.
JOSH Why?
TOBY ‘Cause I’m not allowed to get arrested anymore.
JOSH Let’s go back.
TOBY No, I hate these people with the heat of a nova. Yet here I go.
SACHS Attaboy.
TOBY Shut up.
SACHS I got your back, man, you know? Or not.
All three enter the building.

I recently heard Plato’s idea reflected that politicians should have no stake in the decisions they make. That they ought to live in some proto-communist society. In most European countries bribing politicians is illegal, in north America it’s called lobbying. Here’s my innovation: Let’s all be politicians. No doubt, we’ll be at least just as flawed. But the main flaw is that power corrupts, therefor we should all be equally flawed. Being able to make decisions without fear of repercussion. Risk aversion is a real psychological phenomenon. We’re afraid or too busy to think about these things. Making a decision without any repercussion isn’t taking a risk at all, so how can this be possible? We can’t guarantee the survival of the human species without interfering (further) with our habitat. There’s only one planet, we can’t pretend our resources are infinite. So what’s the solution to this very basic problem? My premise is that it is shouldn’t be left to someone else. Somebody who will take the time to think, the risk, the energy to investigate, the blame, … for us. Because we ARE all involved, whether we like it or not. We ALL have something at stake here. So let’s be equals in being able to make a decision. This is not centralism, nor leadership in the sense that it implies followers. Rather it includes the willingness to follow ideas and therefor the leadership to challenge them where they are not yet perfected. And they will never be perfected. Which is why we all have to pitch in. It’s not enough to leave it up to the ‘leaders’. YOU are the leader, just as much as you’re the follower. We can’t elect leaders, because we’ll effectively elect ourselves out of ‘office’. Now, nobody wants to be in the office. Not even politicians, they’re humans too. Some dare say that’s what makes (some) politicians voteworthy. I say it makes them equal to use. And no less, nor more qualified than us.

On a brighter note, one could easily claim this is already the case. Therefor there’s nothing to worry about. Those who CONSIDER themselves to be entities with something at stake – be it lifeform, human, westerner, politician, etc. – already have such a system. Bankers profit from the socialism for the rich and the retards who refuse to be engaged end up with what’s often called capitalism. Which, using the strict definition (as I do), implies that some people have the money and others have the labor. Both are equally interchangeable at the marketplace which as only rule has Demand versus Supply. In labor markets, this implies simple things like: The more people are willing to work, the less their labor is (per capita) worth.

So get off your arses and stop working! There are things to be done!

I’ll come down to earth for a minute and keep some facts in mind. The problem with government is governing. The same problem exists within any structure of decisionmaking. These can claim to be egalitarian. However, in a socialist party there’s often more hierarchy than in others. This is hard to explain. I’ll give it a shot. Everybody gets behind the ideology rather than behind the idea of having ideas. Of course, a party system isn’t the only way. Nevertheless, it’s the one we see most clearly in what’s called the (in my opinion, very narrowly defined) political arena. When we vote, we are part of that system. Only at this moment. When we are unable to vote or influence this sphere, we are by very definition not part of that network. However, most people are at work most of the time (not voting). Who will defend your rights there? So far, if you’re ‘lucky’, it’s the unions. These are filled with human flaws as well as organisational flaws. But one thing is often left out. You’re there more often. This seems to be obviously stated in the premise. However, we don’t consider ourselves to be voting for our job (and working conditions) by showing up. But this is what we implicitly do by not getting fired. Now, being without a job is no fun. But neither is a job.

This is what I mean when I talk about wage slavery. Now, one could argue that paying people to do something is the only way to go about things. It’s true, that being productive could and perhaps should be rewarded. But what would be the value of that? Is it to simply make the system function? Sure, you’re functional. But only in the way that you’re perpetuating a system. You’re being payed to be obedient, not to think for yourself. That would imply that you’re paying yourself Being productive enough so you’ll have freedom to be [a creative creature]. Most jobs however consist mainly out of not questioning authority. Authority generally doesn´t stand for that. That´s what I`m talking about when I refer to anarchism. This is not the same as anarchy, which can be used to refer to chaos. This term is often used with the implication that some consistent theory exists which can state the full description of reality which we all know and abide by, thereby avoiding chaos. The world is transparant and already at an optimum. This is a view I´ve tend to adopt when concluding that thinking more about the issue would be of little use. In that it´ll be too hard, depressing or exhausting.

If we fight fire, we reserve something for it to feast on later on. I do not suggest we let it burn, while building new societies. But there´s something do be said for prevention and leisure.

Departing from Freudian analysis, I shall mainly take a more bioneural approach to the brain. Not disregarding concepts of the mind, as stablished by C.G. Jung and partners; this will be my main focus.

Sigmeund Freud has to be placed in historical context. In a time when fictional characters such as Sherlock Holmes were hailing the use of cocaine, it did not take long for Freud to look at it as a “wonderous medicine”. He, of course, explains his increased libido as a central enforced personal trait. In patients, he sees it makes them “more normal” and administers it if they feel depressed. After some research is done on this chemically refined use of coca leaves, he is devasted by the scientific consensus: It’s highly addictive and worse than a cup of coffee (which were the effects when chewed as done by native americans for millenia). He goes on to work with C. G. Jung, who places emphasis on the collective consciousness. We have evidence from 5000B.C. that mushrooms were used in Central and South America were reverence. The molecular biology of
Serotonin and Psilocybin deserves attention at this point.

These subjects are controversial because they were outlawed (but recreational users and medicinal research) during times of racism. A class of people was seen as not being able to control themselves. ‘Crazed negro’ with a ‘bullet to the heart…in self-defense’ would not stop a cocaine pumped agent of that class. This would leave a scar on our social consciousness and psychological freedom restricted to an irrational degree. After alcohol and opium, cocaine was pronounced as the third scourge of mankind. Pemberton treated his morphine addiction with a cocaine drink to provide an alternative to an alcoholic beverage (outlawed during the latest dry era). However in 1970 through the controlled substances act, research on psychedelics and cannabis (still described as marihuana to link it with mexicans rather than the industrial crop hemp) is prohibited. However, psychedelics are by definition:
From Greek psykhe- “mind” (see psyche) + deloun “make visible, reveal,” from delos “visible, clear.” Psychedelia is from 1967. Earliest in 1956, of drugs, suggested by H. Osmond in a letter to Aldous Huxley and used by Osmond in a scientific paper published the next year.
Fitting into a larger criminal market for over 300 billion dollars and over 200 billion euros a year, it remains outcast to the darkest corners of society.
Unlike coffee, alcohol in most countries and tabacco; these products are doomed to make profits near the size of oil revenus of users and addicts, none of whom receive any honest help from their government of social milieu. Most is based on myth and tradition, being biased one way or the other, without relevant data or educational information explaining levels of dependency, mortality rate and so forth.
This is part of the grander setting in which the Self must seated. The set, the internal framework of those who would use a substance to alter their state of mind and thereby enhance the effects of psychoanalysis and/or therapy. The id, ego and superego would in a freudian framework be connected to the set. The ego would be unable to reconcile with the superego on the basis that reality is slanted and only Id could possibly arise from such an irrational disaster.
In other words, the experience becomes tainted. Tryptamines are associated with trips, which are in turn associated with the possibility of a bad trip. In the free associations game that goes on during synaptic free firing neurons, such a view of reality is skewed and causes baseless conceptions of the world to enter what is essentially, a very delicate moment. In other, more ancient, cultures, traditions and rituals would do the same by declaring these as sacred. To view perceptions as real, say gods or aliens; would be to miss the point. Psychotherapy and sjaminism deserve no greater place on the cast system of society than mechanics and mathmeticians.
A lot of energy must first be invested in fixing such a society, which must divide and structure so competitivly.
No one occupation, status, class or use of leisure time should define a person in its entirety. I say it, because it’s a conceptual structure. This abstract person extends to all categorical aspects of life (social, political, economical, territorial, structural). The biological perspective has a lot of evolutionary twists and turns, so for now I’ll leave this page as it is. All of this should be part of the educational system. We ought to learn the basics of food. Nutrition and toxins for the body and mind.

In Confoederatio Helvetica, a utupic future (and not so distant past), might look like this.
Morning, get up. Wash with water.
Need soap and shampoo from pant H. It grows on the mountainside and requires no maintenance.
Just water. Which flows because of global warming from our precious glacier.
I like the smell, so I made deodorant (also made from H) also smell like it. I´m not a lavander person.

Time to eat something. Ate last of my personally slaughtered chicken yesterday. Time for something less meaty today. Let´s see. Tomorrow I might eat soy, but for now, something more digestable. I´ll just take some seeds from plant H from the near brook. It´s got energy (567 calories/100g), Protein (30.6/100g), Carbohydrate (10.9) Dietary fiber (6), Fat (47.2), Saturated fat (5.2), Oleic (18:1 Omega-9, 5.8), Polyunsaturated fat (36.2), Linoleic (18:2 Omega-6 27.6), Linolenic (18:3 Omega-3 8.7), Linolenic (18:3 Omega-6 0.8). And zero cholesterol. About 5grams will be water from the near brook, but I’m cool with that.
It’s got Vitamin A, Thiamine (Vit B1) , Riboflavin (Vit B2), Vitamin C, Vitamin E, Calcium and Iron. So that’ll be enough for breakfast. Save some of the seed oil for treatment of eczema.
Also no gluten in it, so I can share it later with people who have celiac disease.

It´s noon. I just worked in the barn, feeding the animals with plant H I brought back from the mountainside. What they don´t eat can be used as hay. I´m exhausted. Still have a long day. Better eat something made of plant C butter. Can´t swallow the painkillers because they have too many side-effects on my stomach.

Evening. Just looked to see if plant C was doing fine. I try to keep it seperate from plant H. Otherwise it all turns H. Far relatives of hop, which I don´t brew. I don´t need to have an industrial only variety to make of for this lacking thirst as they call it. I harldy use Fords T-model. Made it after his and diesels design myself. Same fuel source and all. Made from, mainly plant H and runs on it too.
Time to relax. I eat some more butterscones from C. I throw some of the outdoor variety on the campfire, it was growing too close to H and might start mixing. I take some more blankets to keep warm, also made from H, as are my clothes.

As I write this down on paper made from H, I take some plants C and vaporize it to fight the depressing and grim reality. This isn´t utopia, this is the real world.

My plant H is of course, Herbicide. Plant C, Change.

Update: I couldn´t stop nature from crosspollinating. The plant spreads like a weed. Growing in all climates and deserts. Withstanding the conditions of central asia. Even though it originated from the rainforest. Started growing the domisticated variety, tribes used it a couple of thousand years in this manner. The molecule with medicinal values reaches 8% which is sufficient.

Here’s a quick recipe:
SeX & Drugs: Euphoria is easily reached with these. In many (pre-)religions, meaning shamanistic traditions and rituals, these were held up as the essential activities of human life.
Rock & amp; Roll: Happiness has been said to come in small doses (Dennis Leary). It´s little things. But mostly, it´s relaxing with background music and entertainment. I include non-reality television in this category.
Meals and home: George Carlin said the houselessness is a problem. And he´s right in the Maslow sense that the lower basic needs need to be satisfied first. Here, I´m simply referring to the certitude that you will be able to feed yourself and go home (safe from harm) when you want to (regardless of the intensity of the above categories).
Knowledge and Wisdom: These are personal choices. I don´t know what you like more, maybe you think ignorance is bliss. It well may be. But I like to make (know all and the consequences of) my choices, not have just one presented to me.

If I´m happy without some crucial component of homo sapiens sapiens existence. Please let me know, I wouldn´t want to be happy unjustly.

Ah yes, Freedom and Justice are my ideals. But these are too broad and unrealistic. So for the sake of happiness, be happy.

Furthermore, the economy should serve these intrests and these alone (on the basis of utilitarianism).

On education

Click on the icon.
Obama Facts: here

I suggest the corporation (moral person) be allowed a maximum of 150 people. Democratic control by the “employees”. Capital should flow in the same way, unless the majority decides otherwise.

Free associations by federation will rule this planet! :)

I just saw the clip “Rise Against – Re-Education (Through Labor)” and it reminded me of Fight Club. But also of 24 and Xe.
The clip started with a quotation from John F. Kennedy:”Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.”

Now, if all of us (wealthy worldcitizens, access to internet etc) were to adopt this principle; the world would be an ugly place.

Don’t get me wrong, I like JFK. But the (cold) war rethoric bothers me. If anarchists (meaning people who identify themselves with the anti-authoritarian tradition) were to use the ‘propaganda of the act’ as it were, we’d all be terrorists.

If ANYBODY, starts adressing their grievances (such as state terror on a massive scale) by mimicing the abhorrent behavior, we’re in for a very long and destructive circle (if not spiral, but I doubt cycle) of violence.

Imagine, the anarchist cookbook and the destructive nature of such literature being applied by all extremes of the political spectrum. From left wing commies, claiming all private property is theft, to right-wing contractors who feel the only way to keep order is to do it themselves.
That doesn’t include the people desecrating public property because they feel what one arm of government does, they should annihilate its legs.

The logic is destructive. Meanly because it’s war logic. If you look at this as a war, we’re all going to be fucked.
But as george carlin points on (on education -must see!-), the owners of this country won’t allow us to learn anything. So if we (the masses) can’t think (if that’s reserved for elites), we’ll have to act. Without rational thought I feel this could easily lead into harsh situations.

However, if one (leftist) would replace say, class warfare with class cooperation, he’d quickly have a fundamental change of position (even it’s its only implemented after nationalising the collectives’ wealth); we’d end up with fascism.

Which is a difficult position to maintain. Of course, if you WANT power and you want to achieve your OWN political agenda: Fascism is the way to go.

It is the only thing that does not tolerate anarchy. It doesn’t even tolerate the mob. CIA had to rebuild that with the french connection (drug money, prohibition excluded liquids again). There was order in the streets. The manifesto had been somewhat realised. People listened, and the ones that didn’t were dealt with.

If I lived in the world wars, I hope I’d have been a pacifist. Maybe I’d had joined the resistance, because there was so much suffering around me and no wealth.

But right now, even if I were to -for the sake of argument- think of the current world regime/empire is more totalitarian than it could have been over 50 years ago, I’d still use non-violent means to address the issue.
Like say, words, ideas, concepts, etc.

There was a massive movement, even followed by the Czar (because his poor weaponry) leading up to the Great War. In the Second World War, it becomes hard to repeat Dwight on the american version of The Office and say that “it was a war we never should have gotten involved with”.
Even Einstein and Chomsky thought fighting it was right, and I kinda look upto these guys. But winning a war never determines who’s right, only who’s left.
In this case, the guys with the nukes won. Thank you a lot, Einstein!
And then there’s an MIT (pentagon budget) professor who teaches linguistics who can’t decide on paying taxes or not (or any other act of civil disobedience) because it might lead to fascism.

Of course, I don’t live in a country with the same budget lay-out (military is lik 15% here and most of it goes to social security and health, my region gives most its money away on education and health), so I pay my taxes (well I don’t because I’m a student and I hardly work, when I do the tariff is low and I give most of it away on causes so I get a refund). So even non-violent oppossition isn’t really an option for me either, either by voicing my opinion (because it’s easier to encounter people who might actually recognize me then in such a small country as mine) or by not paying taxes (even though 147 dossiers of 100000 known fraudulents cases are handed over to the justice department of further selection).

As for violence as legitimate means…To what? For what? What’s the end? In my world view it’s peace and non-violence. It’s dialogue, reason, and above all freedom and justice. The first two being the means. The latter two the goals, incompatible with legitimating violence.

For the ends are the means, and anarchism ought to be about deconstructing institutions of power (when classified as illegitimate), not about repeating mistakes of the past.

Make new ones. Do anything, try anthing. Just try not to infringe on other people’s right to do the same. And violence tends to target the weak. You may feel strong knowing that information is free and it’s surprisingly easy for any individual to destroy a lot of infrastructure, human lives, systems of dominance and whatnot.

If not, I’m sure EVERYONE will be able to find SOMETHING they’d be willing to burn, pillage and rape over.
Albeit, most might not abide by that order.

Deconstructing is the core of anarchism. Not destruction. The general consensus (and the media ferment this idea that the masses are violent and best adressed accordingly) seems to be that anarchists all want anarchy. That is to say, disorder, destruction. Destruction of wealth, merely because it is property (for the masses have little else to touch or stir when it comes to economy, especially in disarray). Rather than declaring it eg. a public good. Or concentrate on the fact that anarchism refers to the political theory which essentially deconstructs all systems of power and authority untill they are legitimized. And even then, further analysis has to prove that it works. Tradition and rituals are false gods.
That’s about it from a religious metaphor. I could give you an ideaological simile, but I’d be understood as being somebody decreeing some thing. And not another, to define oneself in the spectrum.
But that’s the problem within the mainstraim thought of both intellectuals and the sometimes hardly literate masses: The idea that politics is narrow and anything to fundamentally alter it must be violent in its nature, or at least very, very hard work and best done by the workers or, respectively, brainiacs.

Anarchism is deconstructing. Those systems of thought. And many others. For me, it’s about freedom. And perhaps that is justice, because it is inevitable, that one day, we will all be equally free. When vengeance becomes so codified as to agree to call it just and all else immoral.Or perhaps that day has already come and we move on. To something in which all of humanity has the same rights, conditions. abilities and all else that could be regarded as core fundamentals. Of the individual, within his community, within the environment and to know that they are all interconnected. And that frustration is not a stable path. All members of society ought to be free in mind and body. To decide their own path, within their own identity. I believe that identity begins with the human race (homo sapiens sapiens) and perhaps, in many years (Spain leading the way), all primate descendants. After that, mammals (starting with dolphins and whales), moving on to fish (like sharks etc) and so on and so on, untill we realise that we are all one.

As Hicks said, let us explore space. Both inner and outer. Together.

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