President Obama said we’re going to restore science to its rightful place and transform our schools and universities to meet the demands of a new age. Scientists have been hard at work on that for 40 years. It doesn’t mean longer school days and more homework; it means a whole new approach to science and education. Find out how to get that education yourself with high school level books that are available at mainstream bookstores. This is an introduction to every other book on this site. Available in booklet and audio CD.


Evolutionary psychology is a biological approach to psychology that starts with human evolution. It’s the study of universal traits of humanity and of the origins of differences among groups. This is the most direct route to Peace on Earth. By discouraging people from learning about evolution, Christian fundamentalists are preventing Peace on Earth from happening. Available in book and two audio CD set.


The anti-globalization revolution is a struggle against the globalization of Capitalism. No matter what name it goes by, the concentration of resources among a small group of people results in a concentration of decision-making power. People are inherently self-interested, which means centralized decision making power can never be trusted. These and all the other main points of the anti-Capitalist revolution have been proven scientifically, while the idea that Capitalism can ever lead to a just or sustainable society is founded on lies and superstitions. Available in book and free audio download, and in condensed form in booklet and audio CD.


In the evolution versus intelligent design debate, the Christian fundamentalists had an advantage in that the Bible is a story of the world and a reference book to life, while the scientists don’t have anything similar. So this three-volume set is a scientific story of the world and reference book to life. Volume 1 is a philosophical approach to evolution and human psychology, which brings together major discoveries scientists have made into the origins of religion, the history of world civilization, the origins of emotions, social organization, learning, child development, and male/female relations. That scientific foundation creates a solid foundation for a humanistic philosophy of life, death, metaphysics, and choices we have for the future. Available in book and free audio book.


The philosophical foundation of Volume 1 is so solid that by changing a few words I switch to a scientific approach in Volume 2. That’s an easier foundation to use to build up to complicated forms of human behavior, like political, economic, and environmental systems. Available in book and free audio download.


Now that I’ve shown how the psychology of individual people turns into political, economic, and environmental systems, in Volume 3 I use that as a common ground to fit together the goals of progressive movements and ideologies. That includes the anti-Capitalist, anti-corporate, anti-border, anti-nuclear, peace, environmental, animal rights, and feminist movements, Atheism, progressive religion, Indigenous Decolonization, Socialism, Communism, and Anarchism. Available in book and free audio download.


The content of Planetary Biology and the Anti-Capitalist Revolution has been established so thoroughly that you can learn how the global environment and evolutionary psychology work with cycles you can see happening in a garden. That means all the third-world farmers who are being driven off their land by globalization can learn planetary biology as easily as anyone else. And that means they can prove that college educated politicians have no excuse for not knowing that Capitalism isn’t environmentally sustainable and will lead to people fighting over resources. The global educational feudal system ends here. Available in book and free audio download, and the text is posted in its entirety on this site.


This is a rigorous academic version of the connections between evolutionary psychology and the theatrical directing style developed by Constatin Stanislavski, and how I have used them to draw connections among the observations about life different groups of people have made. That is followed by a working class activist perspective on science and the education system in America. Beware, because this is college level evolutionary psychology, followed by my first hand account of what it’s like to have been condemned by the education system to live in a neighborhood where racial hate crimes are a fact of life. Available in book only.


This is an expanded version of Planetary Biology and the Anti-Capitalist Revolution, with 10 additional chapters on topics specific to the Anarchist movement. That includes classist attitudes by the middle class majority, and the misguided rejection of science. This is written for Anarchists specifically, so if you don’t have any experience in the Anarchist movement, you won’t be able to keep up with the terminology and obscure references. If you are an Anarchist, beware, because I grew up in Down East Maine, and I wrote this in my native dialect. If you middle class radicals can’t wrap your brains around the fact that the speaking habits of sailors and lumberjacks aren’t part of the system of oppression like you accuse them of being, you don’t have a global working class revolution. Available in book only until I can find time to finish the audio recording.

Introduction

I have decided to take over the world as a practical joke.

Now you, lucky reader, are just one book away from the punch line.

Don’t bother skipping to the end, because if you do, the joke won’t make any sense.

I gave the mainstream liberal side three years’ head start, and they chose to throw it away.  But in that time I’ve made friends with a hell of a lot of people who use the words “post-revolutionary society” in everyday conversation.  So in this book, I’m going to show you how everything I’ve told you about in the first two books can be used in a global non-violent revolution, complete with its own political system, economic system, and military.  And along the way, I’m going to show you how various groups of people are already working on just about every component of the global revolution.  Really, all they need to win is for someone to show them how all the pieces of the puzzle fit together.

I call Book 6 The Apocalypse (Don’t Panic) because as I showed you in Volume II, politics is a product of economics, and in a world with an environmentally unsustainable economic system, political revolution is inevitable.  It isn’t too late for that political revolution to be carried out non-violently, but our window of opportunity is closing fast.  An environmentally unsustainable global economic system is a threat to all of us, and it must be stopped within a certain period of time that we can’t precisely determine.  The closer global environmental disaster looms, the more obvious the threat becomes, but the more quickly it will have to be prevented.  And you can eliminate the threat a person is creating a lot faster by killing them than you can be teaching them.  So as you can see, if we wait for this problem to solve itself, it isn’t going to solve anything.

Violence is always an option for common revolutionaries, but not when you’re taking over the world as a practical joke.  Violence will always be an obvious way to eliminate threats, and neither I nor anyone else can prevent other people from considering it.  Violence is also to the most cold-hearted teacher.   55 million people had to die in World War II before everyone else learned what they could’ve learned at the end of World War I.  And my goal is to prevent World War III.  Any moron could prevent World War V.

As I showed you at the end of the last book, the belief that our current political and economic systems can be anything but self-destructive contradicts the most fundamental physical law of the universe.  Endless economic growth would depend on an infinite supply of energy, and it isn’t physically possible for an infinite supply of energy to exist.  But instead of adapting our economy accordingly, we are making ourselves ever more dependent on the hope of finding an infinite supply of energy.  That economic strategy can only lead to poverty, oppression, war, and everything that goes with those things.  That’s what the global revolutionaries are revolting against.

The very, very, very, very, very, very most optimistic explanation for why our political and business leaders could be considering this economic strategy to be a good idea is that our politicians and business leaders have made such strong emotional attachments to the idea that Capitalism is the best possible economic system that when you show them all the scientific evidence that indicates that it’s an economic system based on inequality, that maintaining that inequality depends on institutionalized fear, and that a competitive economy is diametrically opposed to a global equilibrium economy that can survive within the physical limitations of the world, these people are subconsciously dumping all that information into an anti-information package and it never registers in their consciousness.  If our politicians and business leaders are physically incapable of wrapping their minds around the fact that our economic system is inseparable from oppression, war, and global environmental suicide, then when you add two and two together, it means that the most politically powerful people in America are all criminally insane!

The only alternative is that they’re doing all this on purpose.

The global civilization joke that we’re currently telling keeps getting less and less funny all the time…

As I’ve said, these books are a new story of the world that’s being written by scientists, artists, philosophers, religious leaders, and activists. There are lots of people in the world who have figured out part of the global revolution puzzle.  They’re in the minority, but they have the bulk of scientific reality on their side.  So now in this book you get to hear what the evolutionarily equal humans who make up the radical opposition to everything the American mainstream takes for granted have to say for themselves.

(That is, unless you are one of those people.  Then you get to hear what you have to say for yourselves.  Not in terms that are your or anyone else’s opinion about anything, but in terms that are evidence admissible in court.  And public schools.  And political races.)

I ended the first book by showing you how the Theory of Evolution could be used to eliminate a lot of conflict from the world by building a socially-egalitarian society in which everyone would truly be recognized as having been created equal—as opposed to recognizing that everyone was created equal but most people just aren’t smart enough to act like wealthy White heterosexual Christian men, which is what we have in America right now.  Then I ended the second book by showing you how that socially egalitarian society could be built within the physical limitations of the world.

Both of those proposals I made sounded like good ideas but were so far removed from what we have now that they seem completely impossible. But in the longer term, the political and economic systems we have now are even more impossible.  The political and economic systems I laid out at least are capable of surviving within the physical limitations of the world.  So the real question is not, “How could this transition ever be made?” but, “How badly do we want to avert World War III?”

So here’s where this book begins. Just about every single thing I’ve proposed to this point is already being undertaken by someone.  The big question facing the people who are approaching it from the environmental direction is the same question that plagued the Club of Rome:  Why the hell aren’t you people listening to us?  That’s where the Club of Budapest came in, to try to figure out how people think, in order to make doing what it takes to solve global problems seem like a good idea to people.  The problem they’re faced with is in putting their great ideas into action.  But there are a lot of other people out there who are trying to put the Club of Budapest’s ideas into action, without even knowing about the Club of Budapest or their discoveries.  These people have figured this stuff out by piecing together information on their own, and by a lot of trial and error.  Some of the things these activists have been trying don’t work and won’t work, even though they seem like they should.  But along the way they have developed a lot of strategies and tactics that do work, and that could work a lot better if they were separated from the ones that don’t work.  So taken together, somewhere in the world someone knows every part of what needs to be done, and someone knows how to do every part of what needs to be done.

I’ve already told you that I’m King of the World.  Now you get to meet the rest of my kingdom.
In my kingdom, there is no government.  There is cooperation, organization, administration, and agreements that people make among themselves for their mutual protection from people who threaten them.

In my kingdom, the only laws that are recognized as absolute are scientific laws.  The only man-made laws that are recognized as valid are those that apply scientific laws to society effectively.  If you aren’t an expert at scientific laws, you have no business writing man-made laws.
In my kingdom, there are no masters and no servants.  There are only leaders and followers who cooperate with each other.  Leaders and followers recognize each other as equals, and recognize that they occupy different levels of the social hierarchy only because of their differences in levels of skills and abilities as they relate to the situation.

The military of my kingdom is completely invisible.  In fact, I’m not even sure if we have a military.  Violence and aggression are usually counterproductive in the long run, which is why I’ve gone to such great lengths to found my kingdom on the principle of making them unnecessary.  But everyone has the natural instinct to fight in self-defense, so I don’t need to write laws to make that happen, and for me to try to write laws to prevent it from happening would be impractical at best.  So the law of my kingdom regarding our military is:  If you choose to threaten us, don’t be surprised if some of us choose to fight back.  And as I said in the last book, an environmentally self-destructive economic and political system is a threat to everyone, so anything anyone does to fight back against it can be considered self-defense.  Furthermore, if I outline a political and economic system whose long term survival are physically possible, and you choose to threaten it, then you choose to accept the risk that someone might be willing to eliminate your threat in whatever way seems to them to offer them the best chances of winning.

The political stability of the economically competitive world is maintained by the people who operate the political apparatus making statistical predictions about how hard other people would be willing to fight back and how effectively they would be able to fight back given the resources available to them.  Then those competitively minded people figure out how to get as much as they can for themselves while staying inside the safety margin.

Well if your goal in life is to play the statistical inevitability game to get as much as you possibly can from everyone else, and I go to all the trouble of laying out a plan for a environmentally, economically, politically, socially, and culturally sustainable global civilization, and you’re dumb enough to threaten it, don’t be surprised if someone out there decides that my kingdom is worth fighting to defend.  If you want to take your chances on using statistical inevitabilities to oppress people, and I take my chances on using statistical inevitabilities to liberate people, and a statistically meaningful number of people are willing to fight against your political system to defend mine, all I can say to that is:  What the f*ck did you expect????

The military of my kingdom is completely invisible because I didn’t put any effort into creating it.    As Albert Einstein once said, “If the only tool you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail.”  So I don’t even know if we have a military.  Maybe we don’t.  That sure would go a long way toward explaining why they’re so invisible.  If we do have one, I have no idea who they are.  If you want to find out the hard way, I guess that’s up to you.

Anyway…

In my kingdom, everyone is king or queen.  Some people assume that in an egalitarian society everyone would be a peasant.  But who the hell aspires to being a peasant?  This is a cooperative greatness economy after all, not a cooperative mediocrity economy.  Some peasants aspire to forcing everyone else to be a peasant just so they can feel equal to everyone else, but if you try to force anyone to do anything, you don’t have a cooperative economy at all.  If you want forced mediocrity, go join an emotional communist economy.

I call myself King of the World because I’m the one who figured out how to make all this happen.  I didn’t get here by telling everyone else what to do; I got here by listening to what everyone else was trying to say.

A lot of people assume that world conquest means one person being king and everyone else being peasants.  That approach to world conquest has been done to death.  Forget about the fact that it has never worked for anyone in the long run.  I told you my life was my art, and I told you that art, by definition, is creative.  Being King of the World for the sake of telling everyone else what to do isn’t worth the hassle to me if for no other reason than because it’s such a f*cking cliché.

In the last book I told you how I conquered the world when I was 23 by proclaiming that everything I saw existed because I willed it to exist the way it was, instead of my going to the trouble of trying to force it to exist in any other way.  Did you think that only applied to the physical world?

The trick with applying that to people is that people are usually trying to be something else, and usually they try to get what they want from other people.  That means that if I simply willed everyone in my kingdom to be the way they are, I’d be willing a lot of people to be unhappy, and I’d be king of a kingdom that was trapped in a mire of internal conflict.  So why the hell would I want a kingdom like that?  If, on the other hand, I willed everyone to be able to get what they wanted within the physical limitations of the world, then I would have a kingdom where everyone could be happy and everyone could accomplish something productive in life instead of everyone trying to make lives for themselves by undoing what everyone else was trying to do.

That was the real trick.  I had to write the first book to define what everyone was trying to do, and I had to write the second book to define the physical limitations of the world and how they affect people.  Now in this book, you get to see how the people who make up the rest of my political system are building my kingdom even as we speak.

And with that, finally I can say that I’m king of a kingdom that’s worth being king of.

The Back Story of this Project, Version 3:

Once you accept that the global environment is one giant chemical reaction, you accept that humans are a part of that giant chemical reaction.  Once you accept that human consciousness is a part of humanity, you accept that human consciousness is a part of the giant chemical reaction of the global environment.

Now a lot of things are starting to go wrong with the giant chemical reaction of the global environment.  A lot of people are studying it to try to figure out how to fix the problem.  But unless, and until, human consciousness is broken down to a chemical reaction, the giant chemical reaction of the global environment can’t be completely understood, and therefore humanity’s interaction with the global environment can’t be completely understood, and therefore, the effect that we are having on the global environment can’t be completely undone.  We can’t live without having some sort of effect on the global environment, but currently, the effect that we’re having on the global environment is going to kill billions of people in this century.  It is the goal of every human being to survive and reproduce, and on our present course, we are all rolling the dice on whether our descendants are going to be able to survive and reproduce or not.

Lots of people have figured out ways that people could live that wouldn’t be self-destructive.  Lots more people have figured out ways we could live that would solve some of the problems humanity is faced with, and if you put enough of those together, we could solve all of our problems.  But not nearly enough people are listening to those people.  And some solutions people are thinking of won’t work in the long run.  As a result, the people who are trying the hardest to save the world can’t agree on how to work together and don’t seem to stand enough chance of winning to attract much popular support.  They’re trying to be a global Civil Rights Movement, but instead they’re just a handful of people talking about ideas they have.

Before we can alter our course away from self-destruction, we have to figure out how we got on a self-destructive course in the first place.  To do that it is vital that human consciousness be understood as a part of the giant chemical reaction of the global environment, because until that happens, we don’t understand the complete chemical reaction of the global environment.  As long as we’re missing one piece of the puzzle, we can’t see how all the pieces fit together.  Without seeing how all the pieces fit together now, we can’t see any other way they could be fit together to create anything else.

A lot of the people who are trying to save the world are deathly allergic to the idea that anyone could reduce human consciousness to a chemical reaction, and with good reason.  A lot of people have tried to do that throughout history, and they all failed.  But even though they failed, they tried to build political systems on their so-called discoveries anyway.  Hitler, Stalin, and Mao are three names that always come up whenever I talk about using science to understand people and then build a political system on that understanding.  But then these people make the mistake of assuming that just because some people have tried doing what I’m doing and no one has succeeded yet proves that what I’m trying to do is impossible.  All I can say that is:  Lots of people tried to build airplanes before the Wright brothers succeeded, and that doesn’t prove that airplanes are impossible to build, does it?

A lot of people assume that no one should ever figure out human consciousness as a chemical reaction because that would make the person feel more important that everyone else and feel like they had the right to tell other people what to do.  Those people are making the mistake that just because some people would feel that way, everyone who tries to do what I do would feel that way.  There are two things I have to say to that.  First of all, figuring out how stuff works is what scientists do.  Second, scientists are doing this, and they would continue to do it whether I was involved in it or not.  Those scientists aren’t trying to turn their science into a political system, but that’s an even worse mistake that the one people who try to discourage me are trying to prevent.  All this science is ending up in the hands of people who don’t fully understand how the science works, who then try to build political systems on it anyway.  If a person who has a firm grasp of science doesn’t figure out a way to found a new political system on evolutionary psychology and environmental science, some stupid politician is guaranteed to try to use it to make himself the next Chairman Mao.

So at this point, the choice you have comes down to:  Do you want the people who do understand human consciousness as a chemical reaction to build a political system on it, or do you want people who don’t understand human consciousness as a chemical reaction to try to build a political system on it?  I’ll give you a hint:  one of those choices is already being made, and it isn’t working.

Even if it was possible for progressive activists to discourage every scientist from working on the human consciousness chemical equation, that could only lead to one thing.  The global environment is still a giant chemical reaction, and human consciousness is still a part of that chemical reaction.  That chemical reaction is still working in a way that’s going to kill billions of people in this century, and “we” (and by that I mean you) are still missing one piece of that chemical reaction.   If you don’t have all the pieces to work with, you can’t see how they could be rearranged to create something else.
Personal empowerment depends on informed decision-making.  Informed decision-making depends on people having accurate information.  The discovery of accurate information is the whole point of science.  If you call yourself a progressive activist, but you consider people discovering accurate information to be a threat to your political ideology, then you’re a so-called progressive activist who sees personal empowerment as a threat to your political ideology.  So what the f*ck are you, exactly?

The interaction between human consciousness and the rest of the chemical reaction of the global environment is going to kill billions of people within some number of decades from now, and no one (but me and maybe a few other people) knows how to stop it.  If the success of your political ideology depends on preventing people from accessing certain information and then making decisions based on that information, then the success of your political ideology depends on billions of people dying. You call yourselves progressive activists, but really all you are are conservatives with different hairstyles.  Your feelings of political success still depend on genocide. It’s just a lot easier for you to pretend that isn’t true because your victims haven’t been born yet.

Ha!  And you accuse me of trying to be Chairman Mao!

But enough about you, let’s talk about me now.

1968 was a pivotal year in my life.  That was the year the Club of Rome met, developed their systems theory for the global environment, started studying trends in humanity’s interaction with it, and first predicted global environmental catastrophe in the 21st century.  That was also the year Dr. King was assassinated.  My dad could’ve been one of the scientists who met in Rome easily enough, but he realized that meaningful social change depends on a majority of people learning about why the old way of doing things doesn’t work anymore, how things are going to have to be done differently, and how it’s going to benefit everyone.  Or to put it another way, he realized that social revolutions happen in the streets.

So instead of being an ivory-tower academic like the official scientists who’d met in Rome, he set out on a life of adventure.  He and my mom raised my brother and me accordingly.  He kept up on scientific discoveries over the years, and taught my brother and me about all the same things the ivory-tower academics knew, but he did it by relating it to real-life things that real-life people actually do.  He introduced me to aerodynamics when I was about 5 by showing me how to build a paper airplane.  He taught me about angular momentum by putting a tennis ball in the end of an old sock, twirling the sock around, and letting it go.  (That’s called a schmerltz, by the way, and it makes for a really cool game of catch.  Try it and see what happens.)  He introduced me to architecture when I was about 4, by showing me how to build really tall buildings with my blocks that wouldn’t fall over.  One day when I was about 3, I came running around a corner into the kitchen, crashed face-first into his leg as he was walking the other way, and landed flat on my back.  After my mother picked me up and made sure I was all right, my dad told me, “You’ve just discovered an important scientific principle:  Two objects can’t occupy the same space at the same time.”

Every single thing you’ve ever seen in your life has been studied scientifically by somebody.  Lots of things interact with each other to make other things happen.  That means that every single thing in the entire world has a scientific law or theory behind it, and they all fit together into a giant systems theory.  All of biology is chemistry, all of chemistry is physics, all of physics is mathematics, and all of mathematics is logic.  Understanding everything in the entire world is really just a matter of understanding how all the variables that affect something interact to produce that result, and then knowing how to build up or break down from there to see how that piece of the puzzle fits with the other pieces, in units that are a manageable size.  I don’t know everything there is to know about biology, chemistry, physics, or mathematics, but I know there are people who do, so I leave those specializations up to them, and then I take their discoveries and fit them all together.  I understand enough about each field that if I need to learn more about it I can, and I can figure out what questions to ask.  Since I was raised from the time I first learned to talk being shown how pieces of the puzzle fit together, in everyday terms and in manageable units, I never bothered to write down everything I knew about life until I started the first volume of this book.  Honestly, I thought it would only be a three-page essay, so why bother?

Almost 20 years went by and the discoveries of the Club of Rome were virtually ignored.  So in 1987, Dr. Ervin Laszlo convened the meeting of the next group of scientists in Budapest, because he realized that human consciousness was the critical piece of the global environment chemical reaction they were still missing.  This happened during the final years of the Cold War, and it was intended as the peace movement equivalent of the Manhattan Project.

Unfortunately, the Club of Budapest was made up entirely of ivory-tower academics, so they had no idea how to make their discoveries understandable to the general public.     Human evolution is the most controversial topic in the history of the world, so most people who heard about it assumed it was just some ideas some scientists had about something, and all the people who were threatened by it—because their idea of political success depended on war and oppression, I guess—found it really easy to get the public to ignore it.  On one side were the 77% of Americans who don’t even believe in evolution, and on the other side were all the people who were rebelling against those people by saying that humans are mysterious, magical creatures who can’t be understood scientifically, and you can’t just tell people what to think.

The scientists who were studying the chemical reaction of human consciousness were attempting to maintain political neutrality and their academic reputations.  But that necessarily meant reporting their discoveries in academic terms, which rendered them incomprehensible to the vast majority of our species.  These scientists were studying a universal brain structure of humanity, but then they were leaving their discoveries in the hands of a few politically-minded people, who mistakenly believed themselves to know what was best for everyone, and who the scientists mistakenly trusted to put to beneficial use on behalf of everyone.  But the scientists’ own science indicates that all human behavior is the product of the attempt by the individual to preserve the survival of his or her DNA by the most effective means perceivable to him or her, which says nothing about the preservation of anyone else’s DNA.  So what else did these politically-minded people do but f*ck up everything the scientists had tried to start, and use their new understanding of the universal brain structure of humanity to help them win elections and sell cigarettes and sh*t?   What started as the Manhattan Project of the peace movement quickly turned into the Manhattan Project for psychological manipulation and oppression.

Then one day I found out about the human evolution movement and the Club of Budapest.
So there I was, one of the greatest scientific minds in the world (within the top couple of tenths of one percent, anyway), who’d grown up listening to the Sex PistoLs and who had negligible respect for authority, having found out about the Manhattan Project of the 21st century, which was either going to be a formula for saving the world or for destroying it once and for all.

So to answer the big question of how to turn the chemical reaction of human consciousness into a viable political system without the next Josef Stalin f*cking it all up, you democratize it.  If everyone gets the same information, then everyone gets the choice of how to put that information to use.  If 10% of people in the world choose to measure the value of everyone else’s lives in terms of how much money they can make from those people, that can only work as long as the other 90% of people don’t figure out how to join together to stop you.  As long as they remain divided into a lot of different groups of a few people each, talking about ideas they have, then you win.  But if those 90% of people do figure out a political ideology to unite them, and figure out how to turn that ideology into a political strategy to use to get what they want—namely, build a global civilization whose survival is actually physically possible—then that changes everything.  And a lot of those people were already trying to figure out how to do that before I came along.

So if you’re one of the people out there who believe that controlling more material resources than 90% of people in the world makes you more important than them, and you want to use your expensive education and the peace movement’s Manhattan Project to build ever-more-effective psychological weapons to control and oppress people, that’s fine.  Cuz I’ll settle for the other 90% of people in the world any day.  If you choose to try to build a global so-called civilization by trying to build the biggest psychological weapon ever, and you choose to make 90% of the human brains in the world your enemies, you obviously don’t understand the first f*cking thing about psychological weapons or global domination.

You know, back in the days of the original Manhattan Project, people thought the atom bomb would be the ultimate weapon for ending wars of imperialism, because if two opposing sides had them, no one would dare to use them.  But on the contrary, the ultimate weapon for ending wars of imperialism turned out to be the AK47.  Millions of peasant rice farmers who were willing to fight as long and as hard as it took to win succeeded where dozens of the world’s greatest scientists failed.

So I guess this makes me the Ho Chi Mihn of the peace movement, eh?

Chapter 32: The Volunteers of America / The Biggest Chess Game Ever:

If you’re insane enough—oops, I mean, smart enough—to try reading a third volume of my book, you must be serious about wanting to save the world.

Evolution is ruled by probabilities.  I’ll tell you more about this in the Atheism chapter, but here’s simple example for now.  If an animal is born with a genetic variation that makes it 1% more successful at surviving and reproducing within its living conditions than another member of its species, and it passes that 1% advantage on to all of its descendants, and those living conditions endure for 2,000 generations, that 1% advantage compounded 2,000 times will spread that genetic variation to all the members of the species in the area.  Now that genetic variation has become a characteristic that defines the species.  That means that the members of the species in the area, who live in certain living conditions and who have spread a new genetic variation that suits those living conditions well around to all the members of the species in the area, have now diverged from the rest of their species and become a sub-species or a new species, because they’ve evolved a new adaptation to their environment.  That’s exactly what Charles Darwin discovered on the Galapagos Islands, among numerous species of animals.

In the Introduction to the first book I told you about cultural adaptation to available resources.  At the moment people evolved human consciousness they gained the ability to wonder how the universe worked and to imagine that answering the question was important.  So every group of people in the world figured out a way to give their lives a sense of meaning within their living conditions.

In the Instinctive Learning chapter I told you how childhood development creates cultural backgrounds.  Then in the Civilization chapter in the second book I told you about the molecular history of the 20th century, in which people developed different brain-molecule patterns according to their life experiences, and then passed them around to each other, depending on which brain-molecule patterns were the best suited to people’s living conditions.

All of that adds up to social evolution.  Individuals aren’t being born with genetic variations and then passing new genes around to each other according to which are best suited to their living conditions, but they are developing new brain-molecule patterns according to their life experiences, and then passing those around according to whichever are the best suited to the people’s living conditions.  (Or at least, seem to be best suited to their living conditions, as far as the people can tell.)

Now President Bush is trying to conquer the world with military power and political strategies and economic initiatives and environmental policies.  What a moron.  If you take the time to learn how the world actually works before you embark on your campaign of world conquest, you learn how constants and variables fit together, how different components of the world interact, and how probabilities and changing conditions create social developments, then world conquest becomes just a gigantic game of chess.

I spent the first two books setting up the board.

Now it’s time to play the game.

A New (and Old) Definition of Patriotism:

Once upon a time, a bunch of patriots fought the Revolutionary War and won our independence from Britain.  Now that our country has been threatened once again, patriots are supposedly people who fight to protect America once again.  So why is it that the Patriot Act so badly undermines the First Amendment and so many of our other Constitutional rights that the original patriots fought so hard to establish in the first place?  Could this be yet another example of powerful people attempting to twist public opinion to their own advantage by attaching words that most people interpret a certain way to a set of rules that accomplish exactly the opposite of what that word stands for?

In George Orwell’s book Nineteen-Eighty-Four, the government of the empire of Oceana divides up its functions among four ministries:  The Ministry of Truth, the Ministry of Peace, the Ministry of Love, and the Ministry of Plenty, which basically meant the “Ministry of Brainwashing People”, the “Ministry of Waging War”, the “Ministry of Stomping People Down”, and the “Ministry of Keeping Everyone Poor”.  Of course, Nineteen-Eighty-Four  is a work of fiction, so what does that have to do with real life, right?  I mean, obviously, George Orwell possessed some kind of magical powers that enabled him to write books that people are still reading 60 years later, even though nobody has the slightest clue what the f*ck he’s talking about, right?

The problem with trying to defend America by undermining the most important principles it’s founded upon is that George W. Bush may be good at political aikido on a small scale, but Osama bin Ladin is good at it on a much larger scale.  (Or at least, let’s pretend that’s true for the moment.)  President Bush is trying to play checkers while Osama bin Ladin is playing chess.  Osama bin Ladin has posed a threat to America, and has forced President Bush to react to it.  If President Bush uses the existing apparatus of our political system to try to keep America safe in the short term, he’s going to destroy America in the long term—which is exactly what Osama bin Ladin wants.  In America, our political, legal, and economic systems function a certain way, and a lot of people have a problem with it, because those things are constructed to serve the needs of humanity according to an obsolete understanding of humanity.  (I’m sure Osama didn’t figure all this out in terms of all this “evolution” heresy, but however he did it, he figured out enough about humanity to be able to do this, just like Mohammed figured out enough about humanity to build a religion that 1/4 of the world’s population are still following 1500 years later.)

In America, the people in power benefit a lot from the way things are set up.  The people who have a problem with the way things work are people who aren’t in power.  The people in power figure out how to use the resources they have available to benefit themselves, just like people have done throughout our evolution.  The people who aren’t in power also use the resources they have available to benefit themselves as well as they can, even though they don’t have as many resources as the people in power.  One of the resources the people who aren’t in power have is the First Amendment.  If we undermine the First Amendment with the so-called “Patriot” Act, we change the resources each group has available:  The powerful people who have lots of resources already gain even more resources, and the people who are doing the best they can with the few resources they have available, lose resources.   Specifically, if we undermine the First Amendment with the so-called “Patriot” Act, the people who are trying to change  America to make it serve humanity better—and who consequently threaten what the people in power have—lose their ability to find peaceful, constructive ways to make America function better.  If we give the people in power even more resources to use against the people who threaten their power, don’t you think they’re going to use them?  That’s not what the “Patriot” Act was intended for, but it’s an evolutionarily mathematical inevitability that it’s going to be used that way.  Osama doesn’t need to destroy America; he only needs to push on Americans just right to make them destroy America themselves.

I think Teddy Roosevelt said it best when he said, “Patriotism means standing by the country.  It does not mean standing by the president.”

A Definition of the Struggle:

The first thing you need in a struggle for world domination is an enemy.  Why?  Because if you don’t have an enemy it isn’t a struggle for world domination.

Traditionally, in struggles for world domination, the enemy is the people who don’t want to be dominated.  But that just won’t work in our case because (duh) we are those people.

Our goal for world domination is preemptive domination.  Since there are a bunch of people out there who are trying to dominate the world, if we don’t want to be dominated and we don’t want to spend the rest of our lives trying to keep those people from dominating us, we have to dominate with anti-domination first.

A lot of bleeding-heart liberals I meet tell me a domination of anti-domination isn’t possible, because that would still be domination.  This is just one more way I’ve found that people fight so hard for open mindedness that they’re not even willing to believe that open-mindedness is the necessarily the right answer, and they respect everyone’s differences so much that they’re even willing to respect people’s needs to feel like they can tell other people what to do.  And all I can say to that is:  If you can’t even figure out what you’re struggling for, there’s probably a good reason you’re not winning!

A domination of anti-domination means a bunch of people who agree not to tell each other what to do, and agree to work together to prevent anyone else from telling anyone else what to do.  In order for the anti-domination domination to be able to work together, first they have to agree on how the world works, because if they can’t, they’re going to come into conflict when they all try to use the same resources and prevent each other from using them as a result.  If they can’t agree on how the world works, then the only way they could solve that problem would be by someone telling someone else what to do.  Either that, or to fight each other.  Either way, the anti-domination domination has ended before it even began.

I’ve spent two books telling you how the world works already—and more importantly, how other people have figured it out, and how you could figure it out too if you want—so lets just say I’ve got that part covered by now.

The next things we need in our struggle for anti-domination domination are to define why our enemies are our enemies and how we’re going to struggle against them.  We are all members of the Homo sapiens species, so what makes our enemies different from us?  Then, knowing why they are different from us, how are we going to turn that into strategies and tactics for defeating them?

Our enemies are imperialists.  They are our enemies because they are imperialists.  Why are they imperialists?

I think it’s safe to say that every imperialistic culture in the world today can trace its origins back to either Mesopotamian or Chinese agriculture.  The other three confirmed original centers of agriculture were in the Americas, three of the possible original centers of agriculture were in Africa, and the other possible original center was on the island of Borneo, and those seven places have all been conquered by people who were using either Mesopotamian or Chinese agriculture.
The difference between our enemies and us are the information packages we’re each using.  For some reason or another, the benefits-to-effort ratio that makes up their perception of the most effective means of preserving the survival of their DNA makes telling us what to do seem worth the effort to them.  So why do they believe that?

There is one big reason imperialistic people, and especially Americans, believe that world conquest is a good idea.  Thanks to our cultural ancestors stumbling into the most favorable combination of material resources 10,000 years ago, here in America we’ve enjoyed a 10,000-year winning streak.  Americans as a group don’t know how to be anything other than imperialistic because world conquest has always worked for us.  “We” are imperialists because we’ve never needed to learn how to do anything else!

From there, we can break that one big reason down into four smaller components.  We can make a number of telling distinctions here.   Imperialists can believe that imperialism is the best idea for purely Earthly reasons, or for religious reasons.  They can believe that consciously or subconsciously.  They can be telling us what to do for purely selfish reasons, or they can believe they are benefiting us by telling us what to do.  And they can act upon their beliefs actively or passively.  Those four pairs of possible combinations create a total of 16 variations, assuming that each person was affected by one or the other of each pair and not both to some degree or in different ways.  So I’ll just talk about those four pairs individually, and you can see for yourself how different combinations apply to people.  Regardless of how each of these applies to each individual, the end result is a whole bunch of people working together because they believe they have the right to tell everyone else what to do.

I don’t know how many versions of the history of the world I’ve told you by now to illustrate how different things affected it.  Well now that you understand how each of those things contributed to the course of history, here’s all of those stories put together now, to illustrate the origins of imperialistic culture:

10,000 years ago, the Mesopotamians had the most favorable living conditions in the world, and the Chinese had a close second, in terms of enabling people to survive and reproduce effectively.  As a result, they built up the two biggest population centers.  As a result of that, they built up the two most physically powerful civilizations.  They also developed the highest technological levels in their areas, they developed the most complex forms of government, they organized the largest political systems, they developed the most specialized labor, and they attracted the biggest trade routes to themselves (including some that connected them to each other, although they didn’t realize that at the time).  The Mesopotamians developed writing eventually, and the Chinese either developed it also, or learned about it from the Mesopotamians through their trade routes and copied the idea.  Each group also developed organized religion to help them maintain social stability.

People can’t live without having an impact on their environment.  That means the two largest civilizations in the world necessarily had the biggest impacts on their environment.  The physical economic system of the environment is governed by the Laws of Thermodynamics, which states that matter and energy always move from areas of high concentration to areas of low concentration, and thereby become more evenly distributed throughout the world.  The psychological economic system of humanity is governed by the Theory of Evolution, which states that all human behavior is the product of the attempt by the individual to preserve the survival of his or her DNA by the most effective means perceivable to him or her, and personal energy efficiency is the most effective perceivable means for a person to preserve the survival of their DNA.  The Laws of Thermodynamics and their effects on the physical economy of the world are completely counterintuitive to people, because life depends on high concentrations of matter and energy, which naturally makes us perceive high concentrations of energy to be good, but the physical world works exactly the opposite from that.  For us to concentrate matter and energy in certain places always requires us to move more matter and energy around in the process.  The net result of that process is always a greater amount of matter and energy being dissipated than being concentrated.

The two biggest examples of people of those two centers of agriculture defying the Laws of Thermodynamics and paying the price were the Mesopotamians’ over hunting of the local gazelle herds, and then over farming their land some thousands of years later.  In both cases, atoms and energy were moving through the natural cycles of their environment in ways that were critical to maintaining those cycles.  But the Mesopotamians didn’t realize that.  In both cases they attempted to preserve the survival of their DNA by the most effective means perceivable to them by producing as much food as possible and having as many children as possible.  But that removed so many atoms from the natural cycles of their environments that those natural cycles broke down.  In both cases, the end result was the environment producing less food for the people than it had before.

Now the Mesopotamians (and the Chinese, who would’ve been affected by the Laws of Thermodynamics in the same basic way) had a lot of people, the most physically powerful civilization, and not enough food to go around.  Now the easiest way to get food was to conquer other people.  Due to all the advantages they had built up as a result of their agriculture, conquering their neighbors was easy.  That became their cultural background, that created their cultural values, and those things were etched permanently into the developing brains of their children.

Since then, imperialistic conquest has continued to be the most effective means for the descendants of those two cultures to preserve the survival of their DNA.  That has been particularly true for the Mesopotamians, which is why their cultural descendants, the Europeans, have spread all over northern Africa, central Asia, North and South America, Australia, and various other places.  The fact that all six habitable continents now have large populations of ancestral Europeans who have the highest material standards of living proves that they have indeed been the most successful at preserving the survival of their DNA.

Imperialism has been the most effective means for the imperialists to preserve the survival of their DNA for the past 10,000 years, and it has never been otherwise.  They have never taught their children anything else because they have never had any reason to need to teach their children anything else.  Individual people could make that choice, and some (including my own parents) have, but as a culture, social evolution beyond imperialism has never been necessary for them to preserve the survival of their DNA.  Imperialism continues to be effective for them, so when they each do what they feel to be right, the majority of them continue to practice imperialism, and their culture continues to be imperialistic.  Those feelings are a product of their natural instincts combined with their learned instincts.  Their learned instincts are a product of their interpreting sensory input in the simplest way for their universal human brain structures to interpret it, which reinforces their natural perceptions of the world, as I explained in the molecular history of the 20th century.

Again, parents could choose to teach their children different cultural values, and some do, but that requires extra effort.  For that additional expenditure of personal energy to seem worthwhile, the parents would have to perceive it to offer them some additional advantage to the preservation of their DNA.   When you live in a culture that has had a 10,000 year winning streak for its imperialism, where no majority of people have ever needed to stop acting imperialistically in order to preserve the survival of their DNA more effectively than continuing to act imperialistically, you now have a culture where each individual has to act imperialistically in order to make a life for themselves among the other imperialistic people of that culture.  So for that reason alone, no majority of people is ever going to teach their children otherwise.

For all intents and purposes the imperialistic cultures that the anti-imperialists are fighting against are gigantic evolutionary steamrollers that continue to flatten everything in their path.  No amount of free will on anyone’s part makes a difference, because the majority of people of those cultures continue to use their free will within the parameters that created those evolutionary steamrollers in the first place.  It is possible for individual people to think their ways out of those parameters, but as long as the other people keep winning, no majority of imperialistic people are ever going to abandon imperialism voluntarily, because no majority of imperialistic people will ever need to abandon imperialism voluntarily.  As long as imperialism continues to benefit imperialists, no majority of imperialists will choose to abandon imperialism—simply because that choice would not benefit them.

If the imperialists are to be stopped, they are going to be stopped because someone is going to figure out how to do what no one has ever succeeded in doing in the past 10,000 years, which is to assemble a political force that is more powerful than the imperialists and that does whatever it takes to stop them.

Now for the four pairs of conditions that create imperialists’ perspectives.  From this point on I will focus on imperialists that are descended from the Mesopotamians, since I live in a country that’s descended from Mesopotamian imperialism.

First, the imperialists can be imperialistic for Earthly reasons, or for religious reasons.  These two are tightly woven.  As I showed you in the last book, religion is more personally meaningful than science, and religion exists in every culture in the world.  That makes religion an inescapable component of any cultural background.  As with anything else that affects cultures, individual people can choose to reject religion absolutely, but no majority of people can be expected to reject religion absolutely.  That means that the beliefs of that religion will form the cultural background of that culture, even for people who learn those religious cultural values but believe themselves to practice them in a secular manner.  And as with anything else that affects cultures, when the majority of people act in a certain way, learning to act in that way becomes advantageous to people of that culture simply for the sake of carrying on their day-to-day lives.

Imperialism for Earthly reasons is the reason imperialism continues to be beneficial, and possible, in the present.  An economic system is a system by which people combine energy and material resources to turn things that aren’t useful to people into things that are useful to people.  Whoever combines the most energy with the most material resources can turn the most things that aren’t useful to people into things that are useful to people, and thereby, make the most things happen in the world.  That necessarily means making the most things happen that they perceive to preserve the survival of their DNA as effectively as possible.  That’s how the Mesopotamians built the most physically powerful civilization and conquered their neighbors, and that’s how the Europeans followed in their footsteps and spread to every habitable continent in the world.  By making more things happen in the physical world than anyone else could, they got what they wanted.

(Hence the reason politics is a product of economics.  Making stuff happen depends on controlling the energy and resources you need to make it happen.  “Making stuff happen” is also known as “politics”, and “controlling energy and resources” is also known as “economics”.)

In addition to these two reasons for imperialism being tightly woven because of religious values forming people’s cultural background whether they realize it or not, they are also tightly woven in another way.  Religious imperialism is only possible through physical economics.  A group of people who believed themselves to be the rightful rulers of the world but who lacked the physical economic base to conquer the world would just be some group of people who had strong opinions about something—all bark and no bite, as the saying goes.

Therefore, religious imperialism and economic imperialism can’t be separated from each other neatly.  However, they can be separated from each other in the sense that some people’s goals for imperialism are religious while other people’s are economic.  Religious imperialists also need to be successful economic imperialists, and economic imperialists as a culture, if not as individuals, are motivated by religious values, whether they realize it or not.

That brings me to the difference between conscious and subconscious motivations for imperialism.  These can be divided neatly.  Conscious motivation for imperialism leads to the person consciously choosing to be imperialistic, and to take action accordingly.   Subconscious motivation for imperialism leads people to feel, for whatever reason, that their imperialistic actions are right.  Subconsciously motivated imperialists can be consciously aware of the imperialism of others, but feel like acting in ways that support it, without realizing it.  Or they can feel like acting in ways that support imperialism without being aware of the imperialism of others.  Subconsciously motivated imperialists may depend on imperialism to define their sense of success in life, or they may not.  Subconsciously motivated imperialists may be supporting imperialism by accident.  If given the choice, they may or may not change their behavior.

The way that religious values shape people’s cultural background is a big example of subconscious motivation for imperialism.  The United States was founded by Christians, and the majority of Americans are Christians.  It’s pretty hard to grow up in America without learning some cultural values that originated from Christianity.  It’s pretty hard to live in America as an adult without continuing to practice those values.  If you’ve ever said “bless you” to someone when they sneeze, you’re practicing a Christian value.  If you’ve ever voted for president, you’ve supported Christian values, because the United States has never had a president who wasn’t a Christian.

Even if you don’t consider yourself a Christian but you define your economic success by your ability to “go forth and tame the world”—or to pay someone else to do it for you—you’re being affected by a Christian value.  No one can live without having an affect on the world, but Christians reinforced that fact of life as a religious value more than anyone else.  Christianity originated in Mesopotamia where the living conditions were the most favorable in the world, so the sensory input people got from their surroundings was most easily interpreted by their universal brain structure to support having an effect on the environment, and ever since that has proven to be the most effective means for them to preserve the survival of their DNA.  Which is why their original religious values continue to be passed on independently of the religion now.
(I must say though, a lot of what people generally consider to be Christian values are actually corruptions of Pagan values.  Pagans invented Christmas trees, Yule logs, and Yuletide caroling.  In fact, Pagans invented Christmas itself—although we call it Yule and celebrate it on the Winter Solstice in observation of the birth of the new year and the victory of light over darkness.  When the Christians came along and tried to convert us, one thing they did was to tell us they had a holiday just like ours that they celebrated at almost the same time of the year, to observe—what else—a new birth and the victory of light over darkness.  For that matter, Groundhog Day, Easter, May Day, and Halloween all began as Pagan holidays too.  But our versions are cooler.)

Next, people can act imperialistically for selfish reasons or because they mistakenly believe themselves to know what’s best for other people.  Imperialism for selfish reasons is not hard to recognize or to understand.  Those imperialistic people are preserving the survival of their DNA by the most effective means perceivable to them by engaging you in a competition they have high chances of winning.  When they win, you lose.

Imperialism by people who think they’re benefiting those they conquer is a much trickier mess to unravel.  There are two basic ways this can happen, and the two can overlap. First, consciously or subconsciously, or both, and for religious reasons or economic reasons, or both, they believe themselves to be superior to the other people, and assume that the fact that the other people aren’t like them proves that the other people just aren’t smart enough to act like them.  As I said way back in the Introduction to the first book, cultural adaptation to available resources is a lot harder to recognize than material resources.  So for economic imperialists, the fact that other people have fewer material resources seems to indicate that they are inferior.  For religious imperialists the fact that they act strangely seems to indicate that they’re heathens or sinners or barbarians or savages or whatever, and their souls need to be saved.  People can then act upon these beliefs intentionally, or simply by doing what they feel to be right.

The other basic way imperialists can believe they are benefiting the people they conquer is through their lack of understanding of environmental science.  If they have something the other people want and arrange a trade that seems to be mutually beneficial to both parties, it can easily result in material resources—meaning matter and energy—being extracted from the other people’s environment and then not being replaced, with the inevitable result that the cycles of their environment break down.  The imperialists might be completely unaware of this.  Or they might be aware of it and wrongly assume that the other people are aware of it.  Or they might be aware of it, realize the other people aren’t aware of it, proceed with the transaction anyway, let the other people learn their lesson the hard way, and call that a free trade agreement.

An environmentally unsustainable economy depends on imperialism to support it, because  additional resources have to be fed into it from somewhere continuously.  If you consider how much imperialism is committed by people who come from Christian cultural backgrounds and subconsciously practice those cultural values, or consciously practice them in secular ways, or both, who believe themselves to be superior to the other people, and who believe the Earth’s resources to be infinite, or at least, are completely unaware of the effects the Laws of Thermodynamics have on the physical economy of the world, they can honestly believe themselves to be benefiting the other people by paying them a certain number of dollars to cut down part of the Amazon rain forest or whatever they’re doing.  Remember what I said in the last book about the worst kind of supervillain being a superhero whose perception of the world was completely misguided and who believed himself to be using his powers for good?  A person who possesses the economic foundation to make imperialism possible can engage someone else in what seem to both parties to be mutually beneficial trade agreements, with the full intent of carrying out a mutually beneficial transaction, which turns out to be economically imperialistic, because all of these other factors are taking place outside his realm of his consciousness.  Some of this information he’s acting upon subconsciously, and some of the information does not exist within his brain.

As for telling other people what to do, for whatever reason people do it, a person who doesn’t live in a certain area or environment can’t possibly know more about that area or environment than the people who do live there.  They might know some things that the people who live there don’t know, but the people who live there know a lot of things that the people who don’t live there don’t know.  I talked about this in the Inefficiency of Capitalism section of the Economics chapter, about what happens when administrators try to make decisions on behalf of workers—the worker knows things about his project that the administrator doesn’t, so when the administrator tries to make decisions about the project all on his own, inevitably he makes mistakes.  Furthermore, people who don’t live in an area or environment aren’t affected by the decisions they make that affect that area or environment.  I talked about that in the last book also, about how people who have to drink from the river that’s downhill from a copper mine (and its arsenic-laced debris) have a vested interest in mining the copper safely, but to someone who doesn’t have to drink from that river, not mining the copper safely makes it cheaper.

(For the record, I can get away with telling people what to do because I know how to do it. I don’t tell people what to do by making decisions for them, I tell people what to do by studying how the world works in universal terms, many of which are hard to recognize, so I can tell everyone that no matter where they live or what they’re trying to do, these are things that will affect them.  Once I’ve done that, I have contributed everything to the situation I can, so at that point I leave it up to the other people to take what I have said and apply it to their situation, whatever it is.)

Finally, supporting imperialism actively or passively.  I think I’ve pretty well covered this by now.  If your goal is world conquest, you are actively imperialistic.  If you simply live in an imperialistic culture, you have to lead an imperialistic lifestyle just to get along in that culture.  You might willingly participate in that imperialistic culture, in which case you’re actively supporting it, or you might not (which is the case for me), in which case you’re just getting by as best you can until a better opportunity comes along (or you can create one, which is the case for me).  In between supporting imperialism completely actively or completely passively, there are a virtually infinite number of combinations of supporting it for economic or religious reasons, supporting it consciously or subconsciously, and supporting it out of selfishness or out of misplaced benevolence.

Now, having shown you why the imperialists are imperialists, I need to show you why the anti-imperialists are anti-imperialists.  There are two basic reasons.

First, there’s me and people like me.  We are the ones who have realized that we live in an imperialistic culture, we identified the parameters that create that imperialism, and we have chosen to live outside them.  But if it wasn’t for the other group of anti-imperialists, we would just be a group of people who had a different opinion from most about how people should live.
Before I can tell you how the main body of the anti-imperialists got to be the way they are, I have to take a detour.  Now that I’ve shown you all the pieces of the puzzle that created the imperialist culture, I can show you how the same pieces fit together differently to create the anti-imperialism cultures.

Evolution is the adaptation to environmental pressure.  In the first book I talked about cultural adaptation to available resources.  In the second book I showed you the molecular history of the 20th century.   Between the two you can see the process of social evolution playing out, as people rearrange their brain molecules into different patterns to deal with their changing situation, and whichever new brain molecule patterns work best in the new situations get passed around to the most people.  Whatever brain molecule pattern people are using in a situation creates the sociological force that propels the society.  As I showed you a little while ago, as long as living they way they’ve been living keeps proving beneficial to the majority of people in a society, the majority of people don’t choose to live differently, because that wouldn’t benefit them.

A religion is a political system, because it’s a system of ideas and values that brings people together and that leads them to act consistently, predictably, and as a unified group.  Since a religion is a belief system, people who follow that religion are separated from people who don’t share their beliefs.  Then when everyone acts upon their beliefs, the people who share beliefs as a result of their following the same religion will act in certain ways and not in other ways.  That will distinguish them from the people who don’t follow their religion, don’t share their beliefs, and then act differently when they act upon their own beliefs.  (I had to spell all that out for all the Pagans out there.  I think it’s pretty obvious how Christianity functions as a political system.)
A religion is a political system, politics are a product of economics, and economics are a product of the environment.  Do a lot of things seem to be coming together all of a sudden?  Religion also creates cultural values.

Religions, political systems, economic systems, and cultural values are all social evolutions.  They are all ways that people have found to act in certain situations that work the best.  So why would imperialists and anti-imperialists act differently?  Because they live in different conditions, and the social institutions that form their cultural backgrounds evolved in different conditions.
If you compare imperialistic cultures to anti-imperialistic cultures, the first thing you notice is that their economies are different.  The imperialists had enough of an economic base to conquer other people, and the anti-imperialists didn’t.  Or at the very least, the anti-imperialists don’t have an economic base that lets them conquer other people now.  A lot of the Mexican immigrants we get here in the desert are descended from the Maya and the Aztecs.  Their ancestors built great empires and conquered lots of people.  And what the f*ck are these people now, but landscapers and housekeepers working here illegally for less than minimum wage?

At the opposite end of the anti-imperialist spectrum, you have people like the Yurok.  You’ve probably never heard of the Yurok.  There’s a reason for that:  they just minded their own business.  Two of my Native American cousins teach at a charter school for Native Americans, where they teach a Yurok version of history—you know, a version of history that’s actually personally meaningful to the kids who go to the school.  The economic system the Yurok practiced consisted of everyone spreading out over the land so that their natural resource base would support them.  I mean, duh.   California is one of the most fertile areas of the world, which is why the Yurok lived among the tallest trees in the world, but unlike the Mesopotamians, they didn’t burn out their topsoil and turn the Redwood forest into a desert.

So imperialists and anti-imperialists started with different economies, and then they developed different perceptions of how economies were supposed to work.  How did their differences in economies make that happen?

The Mesopotamians and the Chinese lived in the best growing conditions in the world.  That let their populations grow the biggest.  That means they grew the fastest.  You remember what I said in the last book about The Limits to Growth, how as population sizes increase at an exponential rate, the collective effect the people have on their environment increases at an exponential rate?   If the Mesopotamians’ and Chinese population sizes increased the most, that means they increased at the biggest exponential rate.  The fact that the Mesopotamians over hunted their gazelle herds and then over farmed their land indicates that their population grew so fast that they f*cked up their environment before they could figure out what was going wrong or what to do about it.  So just like the dumb thugs who lived across the river from Achmed the Great Mathematician and Theoretical Physicist, when their environmental resources were gone, the easiest way for them to get the things they needed was to conquer their neighbors.  They succeeded at conquering their neighbors, so that course of action proved to be the most effective means of preserving the survival of their DNA.  And a cultural background was born.

The Yurok had the same universal human brain structure the Mesopotamians did.  They wanted resources just as much as the Mesopotamians did, but they didn’t have the same combination of resources the Mesopotamians did.  So they developed a different economic system as a social evolution caused by adapting to a different environmental pressure.  In this case, their population didn’t expand so fast that they burned out their environment before they realized what was happening, so they figured out how to spread out over the landscape so they wouldn’t burn out their environment.

Politics is a product of economics.  People always act in whatever way they need to act to get the things they need.  The fact that the imperialists and anti-imperialists have different economic systems means they have different political systems.  Since their economic systems are incompatible, their political systems are also incompatible.

You remember what I said in the last book, about political systems being developed by people who had good working understandings of human behavior writing man-made laws that enough people felt like cooperating with to make the society function, but without realizing their understanding of human behavior was limited to the conditions under which they were founding their political systems?  As the living conditions changed, the relationship between human behavior and the living conditions also changed, but they hadn’t anticipated that when they wrote their laws, so their political system wasn’t able to adapt.  The closest thing they could do was to try to enforce their man-made laws more and more, to try to force human behavior to comply with the man-made laws now.  And that never works, because either you end up with a fascist police state or a revolution.

Well that discrepancy between a working understanding of human behavior under certain living conditions and a universal understanding of human behavior is pivotal in the imperialist versus anti-imperialist struggle.  Take the most innocuous motivation for imperialism of all—the subconscious, religious, passive, misguidedly beneficial motivation.  Those imperialistic people still practice a different economic system from the anti-imperialists, so they practice a different political system also.  They belong to a more physically powerful civilization, so they can make the most things happen in the world, and make them happen for their benefit.  As a result, one way or another, they end up writing the laws the anti-imperialists have to live by.  But the anti-imperialists practice a different economic system, so they practice a different political system.  And the imperialists didn’t foresee that.  So the imperialists’ political system ends up being incompatible with the anti-imperialists’ economic system.  So when the anti-imperialists do what they have to do to get the things they need, they end up breaking the imperialists’ laws.  And that only makes them look like criminals and savages, which just reinforces the imperialists’ beliefs that either the anti-imperialists are better off having the imperialists there to tell them what to do or that they deserve to be conquered.

For the Yurok and a lot of other Native American nations—like, all of them—the Colonial Americans destroyed their political systems by destroying their economic systems.  The Yuroks’ economic system depended on everyone being spread out over the land so their natural resources would support them all.  When the Colonial Americans forced the Yurok onto reservations, they packed them into communities where their populations were so dense that they couldn’t support themselves.  So now they depended on the Colonial Americans to bring them the food they needed.   The Colonial Americans also required each section of land to be owned by a specific person, instead of all the land belonging to the tribe, which was how it used to be.  So now that the Yurok were being prevented from getting enough to live, a lot of them got the idea to try to make money by selling their individual pieces of land to the Colonial Americans—which was exactly what the Colonial Americans wanted all along.  But by going though the motions of setting up reservations for them and then sneakily creating dismal economic conditions for them, they made it look like they were trying to help and it was really the stupid Indians’ fault that they didn’t have any land left.  And now that individual Yuroks were selling their land off, it created conflict within their tribe by pitting them against each other and ultimately leaving each of them to fend for themselves, unable to trust or anticipate what the others were going to do.  That destroyed their political system, and that prevented the anti-imperialists from being able to fight back effectively against the imperialists.

Obviously, there was a lot of active, conscious, selfish, economic imperialism devoted to setting up that economic ambush, but because it was perpetrated by Colonial Americans against Native Americans and done under the guise of trying to help them, people who practiced imperialism only religiously, subconsciously, passively, and out of misguided benevolence saw exactly what the active, conscious, selfish, economic imperialists wanted them to see—a bunch of Native people complaining about all their land being taken away but not even being smart enough to hang onto the land they still had.   If the Natives were really that dumb, then the religious, subconscious, passive, misguided-benevolence imperialists could rest easy, knowing that the Natives had been conquered for their own good.

So this brings me to the main body of the anti-imperialists.  I call them the main body of the anti-imperialists because they’re the ones who either haven’t been conquered yet or else are trying to break free.  As a result of their social evolutions, those people’s communities are still composed of complete anti-imperialist sociological forces.   The imperialists have more powerful imperialist sociological forces at work in their own communities, thanks to their more powerful economic foundations, which is why they’re conquering the anti-imperialists.  But the existence of those complete anti-imperialist communities is the proof that it is possible for people to live differently from the imperialists, which is what keeps people like me who have consciously chosen to live outside the imperialistic parameters of our communities from being just a bunch of people who think we know a better way to live than the imperialists do.

The anti-imperialist cultures live the way they do because they adapted to different living conditions than the imperialist cultures.  Now they have complete anti-imperialist cultures to show for it.  That gives anti-imperialists like me who live in imperialist cultures the opportunity to compare imperialist cultures to anti-imperialist cultures, as opposed to having the opinion that people could and should live differently and then trying to invent an anti-imperialist culture completely from scratch, without having any way of proving whether or not our ideas are going to work.  Now that we understand why our own cultures are imperialistic and other people’s aren’t, we have the choice to stop being imperialistic, instead of just doing whatever feels right to us, which is what most people of our cultures are doing.  We also have the choice to use what we know to help the other anti-imperialists defend themselves—which is what I’m doing.

Now to complete the definition of how the anti-imperialists are different from the imperialists: We have a different economic system.  It begins with a different perception of humanity’s proper relationship to the environment, and it leads to a different definition of “rightful ownership”.  That leads to a different political system, different cultural values, and different religious and spiritual beliefs.

And all of them are incompatible with the imperialists’ versions of those things.

The economic system of the anti-imperialists can be best referred to as the Use-Value economic system.  Use-Value economics have been used differently by different groups of people, but what all anti-imperialist cultures have in common is that they measure the value of goods and services according to how useful  those things are.   I’ve told you about a tribal economic system, in which the most fundamental law is “do whatever it takes to make your community function”.

Communism was an attempt at a Use-Value economic system that would re-create that basic tribal economic system.  It didn’t work for a number of reasons, beginning with the fact that the Russians who tried to put it in place had been living under a monarchy for centuries and didn’t realize they didn’t have a sufficient cultural background to make the transition easily.  Then they tried to make the transition in about 10 years and expected it to work, and couldn’t figure out why it didn’t.  Human behavior was not complying with their man-made laws as well as they thought it was supposed to, so they kept trying harder and harder to force human behavior to comply with the man-made laws.  And we all know where that leads…

Capitalism is fundamentally different from Use-Value economics because Capitalism measures the value of goods and services according to their value to the highest bidder.  Alternately, Capitalists can set their prices and try to maximize their profits by mass-producing their products and trying to optimize the laws of supply and demand.  But if you go the department store to buy a pair of shoes for $50, what else do you suppose that is but a personal auction where a dozen identical pairs of shoes are each being sold to the first person to bid $50?

Capitalism can’t produce a Use-Value economic system for a number of reasons.  For one, it rewards deception.  If you can distort a person’s perception of the situation, you can make them demand something more than they would otherwise, which creates a profit for you.  I talked about a number of ways that’s done in The Inefficiency of Capitalism section.

For another, demand can only be adequately represented in a financial economic system if everyone gets the same amount of money.  Otherwise, people who demand something but don’t have money to pay for it can’t have it—no matter how badly they need it.  Socialism is a form of a Use-Value economic system, because under a Socialist economic system success is measured in the harmoniousness of the society.

Taken together, that makes Capitalism reward greed and promote inequality.  Whoever can get the most from other people can make their demands most strongly felt.  If, for instance, you demand a bunch of prime-time TV advertizment slots for your favorite political candidate and you have $100,000,000 to pay for it, you get what you want.  If you demand a bunch of prime-time TV advertizement slots for your favorite political candidate, but you don’t  have $100,000,000 to pay for it, too f*cking bad.  Politics is a product of economics.  If you control a disproportionally large amount of the economic system, you control a disproportionally large amount of the political system, because you can use your economic resources to control people’s actions in any number of ways—which I talked about in the last book.

Finally, how many dollars is the environment worth?   It’s a thing that already exists, it exists independently of us, we all depend on it, but it’s indirectly useful to all of us without being directly useful to any of us.   Under a Capitalist economy, the value of the environment can only be measured through its exploitation.   Under a Use-Value economic system, the fact that the environment is useful just the way it is renders it valuable by definition.

The Use-Value economic system has some things in common with Capitalism.  Money can be used in a Use-Value economic system.  A Use-Value economic system rewards hard work—but doesn’t necessarily reward it in the form of money. Finally, a Use-Value economic system can’t be equitable because of people’s inescapable differences in abilities, skills, and available resources—but inequality isn’t the goal of the Use-Value economic system.

The economic system I outlined for Crusoe Island was a Use-Value economic system word for word.  And that brings me to the differences in environmental pressures that differentiate Capitalism from Use-Value. The goal of the Capitalist economic system is to control more capital than anyone else, competitively.  The most effective way to compete is to get more resources from wherever you can get them most easily.  That means extracting resources from the environment and turning them into new capital.  Granted, everyone has to do that no matter what economic system they use, but Capitalism reinforces it more than any other economic system.  Why?

Because for the imperialistic people who began it, when sensory input reached their brains and combined with their universal human brain structure, the new brain-molecule pattern it created was the one that was the most similar to the brain-molecule pattern that already existed there.  And that brain-molecule pattern was a product of those people’s monarchic cultural background.  That was a product of the people falling into the sensory illusion of believing the kings who were descended from chiefs were still doing the jobs of chiefs.  And that was a product of the sensory input that reached their universal human brain structures creating a new pattern that was most similar to the pattern that already existed.  And that pattern was the tribal pattern they’d inherited from the monkeys and that had been developing ever since along with human intellect.
The goal of a Use-Value economic system is for the community to do the best they can with what they have, cooperatively. The inhabitants of Crusoe Island realized they were already stretching their environmental resources as thinly as they could, so they couldn’t afford to extract resources from their environment.  In order to make the cycles of the environment continue to function, they had to leave the resources in the cycles and use them as part of the cycles.

Well, you remember what I said in The Limits to Growth section, about how we are stretching the environmental resources of the planet to their limits?  A new environmental pressure is immanent.  Our learning to live within the physical limitations of the planet—which we will do, whether we want to or not—will result in a fundamental change to our economic system, and therefore a fundamental change to our political system.  Now that we can no longer afford to extract resources from the environment, we will have to learn to get along as best we can with the resources we have left.  That means a Use-Value economic system, and that means a new political system along with it.

Heh, heh, heh…

Now that you can see all the things that have created the imperialists’ and the anti-imperialists’ information packages, you can see why their goals in life are so mutually exclusive.  The imperialists have developed a perspective of the world that has worked so well for them for the past 10,000 years that they’ve made strong emotional connections to the idea that it works better than anyone else’s economic system, political system, religious beliefs, cultural background, or perception of humanity’s proper relationship to the environment, that they’re dumping all the scientific discoveries that conflict with those beliefs into anti-information packages.  All that information either doesn’t resister in their consciousness at all, or it conflicts so much with everything they’ve believed all their lives that it has some little impact on them but the rest of the information in their information packages blots it out, so they don’t fathom the full meaning for it.

So how do you fight against imperialists whose most powerful weapon is weaponized ignorance?  Well President Bush said it himself:  This is a war of ideas.  And then that stupid f*cking moron sent our military out to wage a war of ideas with bullets.  I swear, if he wasn’t the president of the United States it would be beneath my dignity to engage him in a war of ideas.  But he is, so oh well, here goes…

The revolution against weaponized ignorance will be fought with militarized education.  And that’s what the rest of this book is about.

You know all those bumper stickers you see that say, “Imagine what the world could be like if schools got all the money they needed and the military had to hold a bake-sale whenever they wanted to buy a bomber”?   Well you should’ve paid attention while you had the chance…
Education is the highest form of government because people always act upon whatever they believe to be true.  And I give people the highest form of education there is.  Which is why I’m King of the World.  But you already knew that.

An Immanent Collision of Probability Tidal Waves:

There are two gigantic economic forces at work in the world right now.  Politics are a product of economics.  So each of these economic forces is creating a lot of possibilities, depending on how people act upon them.  These two probability waves are going to crash into each other.  And we’re caught right in between them.

The first is globalization.  Tom Friedman, the author of The Lexus and the Olive Tree, has a new book out now, called The World is Flat.  Globalization has shifted to a new stage.  The first stage of globalization—Globalization 1.0, as he calls it—was the European colonization of the world, in which countries were competing against other countries.  Globalization 2.0 was the topic for The Lexus and the Olive Tree, in which businesses were competing against other businesses.  Now, in just a few short years, we’ve moved on the Globalization 3.0, in which individuals are competing against individuals.  He calls his new book The World is Flat because, in a way at least, the internet is democratizing the global economy.

Basically, if it’s possible for someone to do your job over the internet, there’s someone in India who’s willing to do it for 1/5 the price.  Even things that seem so simple they shouldn’t need to be done over the internet are being done over the internet anyway.  In his book, Mr. Friedman gives an example of some McDonald’s restaurants that had outsourced their drive-though ordering to a call center in another state.  Seriously, when you drive up to the drive-through menu at a McDonald’s in Pennsylvania and the person says, “can I take your order please?” you’re talking through a phone line to someone in New Jersey or something.  Then when you tell them your order, they e-mail it to the kitchen at the McDonald’s you’re at.  Of course, this call center is handling the drive-through orders of a lot of other McDonald’s too.  And since they specialize at what they’re doing and they’re set up for it specifically, and the person taking your order isn’t getting distracted by all the kitchen staff running around doing what they do, these remote drive-through operators have cut the mistakes that are made in people’s orders by like 2/3 or something.  This is only being done at a few restaurants now, but it’s paying off well, so you can be sure it’s going to spread.

India is a third-world country with over 1 billion people in it now.  And they all speak English.  So if you find that the people who take your orders at McDonald’s drive throughs always speak with foreign accents now (or sometime in the near future) there’s a reason for it.  It means that the part-time high school student who was getting paid minimum wage to take your order last month got his job shipped overseas.

So you just might say that we’re in the midst of a worldwide economic earthquake.  But that doesn’t mean this is a disaster for American workers, it just means that it’s a new way of doing things.  This is creating a lot of new opportunities too.  If your job can be done over the internet, you don’t have to live in the same country as your employer either.  You can also collaborate with people who live in other countries.  That means you could set up your own business, bring in jobs from anywhere in the world, get Indians to handle all the menial labor involved, add your specialty to it to turn it into the product your customers came to you for, and everyone benefits.  You get to run your own business cheaply, you only have to pay your workers $3 each an hour, that $3 an hour in their local economy is a fortune, and your customer gets what they wanted cheaply.

This is how I run my own publishing company.  When you come to my website and order a book, I never see the copy of the book you get.  Café Press handles all the menial labor involved in printing the books, packaging them, shipping them, and collecting your money.  All I do is upload the text of the book to their website, along with the cover art, and you can order a copy of the book the very next instant.  They’ll print you any number of books you want, and they’ll be in the mail within two days.

If I was to run my own publishing company the traditional way, I’d have to pay about $10,000 up front to print a whole bunch of books at the same time, and then every time someone ordered one, I’d have to collect the money myself and then go to the post office and mail the books myself.  All that time I’d have to spend doing things anyone could do is time I wouldn’t be able to spend writing the next book.

If I was to try to get my books published the conventional way, that would take for f*cking ever, and I’m sure I wouldn’t be happy with the results.  First I would have to find an editor, and pay them $5,000 or something, which I don’t have.  It would probably take them a year or two to edit the book.  And considering that I’m a genius, I’m helping to pioneer the most complicated and most controversial field of science ever, and I’m simultaneously using it to do something that’s never been done before within the realm of human experience, how much of that do think an editor could comprehend?  To them, it would look like just a bunch of words someone wrote down about some ideas he had, which would make it look like every other book anyone had ever written.  Then they’d tell me that my presentation style wasn’t good enough, and they’d tell me how I was supposed to fix it, as if I was supposed to understand what they were talking about, and then they’d talk to me like I was stupid because I don’t speak English-major snob dialect, and then they’d tell me that if I wanted them to show me how to fix everything I’d have to give them credit for helping me write the book, or if I wanted to learn about what they were talking about I should take an English course at my local college, which would take four more months and which I can’t afford, and then in the end, after waiting two and a half years and paying so many thousands of dollars, the result I would get would be some watered-down bullsh*t that they would tell me would make the book palatable to all the sophisto English-major a**holes out there who read books, because if I don’t make it palatable to them it won’t be marketable.  Well the whole problem with that is that if I tried to make my work palatable to the people with the most money, the words that I would be able to say would no longer adequately convey all the ideas I was trying to get across.  How do you make a book about how Capitalist pigs are f*cking up the entire world palatable to the Capitalist pigs who have all the money?  The world is already full of books about abstract ideas about how we should be doing things differently that everyone says are nice to think about but never accomplish anything.  I didn’t go to all the trouble of writing these books just so I could fall into that trap along with everyone else.  I wrote these books for the sake of making those Capitalist pigs understand that their college degrees and their proper f*cking English don’t make them special and don’t give them the right to f*ck up the entire world, and if they don’t wrap their minds around that simple concept real quick and start leading environmentally sustainable lifestyles I’m going to lead a global Green-Anarcho-Socialist revolution, march through their cities, and teach them their places in the world once and for all.  But how do you make a book like that palatable to the people who have the most money?  So f*ck professional editing.  Ultimately, a thousand people who understand what I’m talking about is worth a hell of a lot more than a million people who don’t.

But lets just suppose I got a professional editor anyway.  The next step would be to get a literary agent.  That would mean sending them a cover letter and a sample of my book, and then waiting six months.  On the average, literary agents accept 2% of the proposals they get.  And they don’t like for people to submit their work to multiple agents simultaneously.  It would take me 3 more years to get up to a 12% chance of acceptance.  And that’s assuming I could find 6 agents who could appreciate my work and who would know the right publishers to submit it to.

So now about 6 or 7 years have passed since I finished writing the book.  Then it takes at least another year for a publisher to get a book into print.  Since I relate so much of evolutionary science to current events, who the f*ck is going to want to publish a book about current events 8 years after they’ve happened?

This is why I’ve never gotten any books published before now.  I’ve written two novels.   But there’s not enough market for occult punk science fiction for anyone to want to publish them.  So literary agents don’t want to waste their time on them.  At best, they tell me to get a professional editor and resubmit my work.  But even if I could afford a professional editor, by the time I got my manuscript back it would be garbage.  Because if you dare to try to write a novel about punks using a punk narration style, all the middle class English major literary snob douchebags out there are gonna whine and whimper about my fuckin’ writin’ style hurtin’ their fuckin’ eyes.  So if ya ain’t willin’ to pander to the emotional weakness of the middle class and fuckin’ spoon-feed your fuckin’ ideas to them in language that ain’t gonna fuckin’ hurt their fuckin’ feelings or challenge their fuckin’ perspectives on life, it doesn’t matter if you’re a lower class genius with somethin’ important to say.  If ya ain’t willin’ to play their game, you’re nobody, and your whole life amounts to nothin’.

My point is, the only reason it’s physically possible for me to move atoms and energy around in the world in a way that results in my books getting published is because of the internet.  The same internet Indian workers are going to use to take your order at McDonald’s.

Now, as an anti-Capitalist revolutionary, may I remind you that economics is the process by which people combine matter and energy to turn things that aren’t useful to people into things that are useful to people.  That says nothing about money moving from one place to another.  That means that anything people do to provide for their needs is economically valuable.  Meeting up with people from foreign countries and learning what life is like over there is economically valuable.  Meeting up with people from foreign countries and learning why people there hate Americans so much is economically valuable.  Meeting up with like-minded people who live in your area so you can get together in person and hang out is economically valuable.  Whatever.

This is why I post my audio books on the internet for free.  This way, potentially, I get to talk to everyone in the world.  I don’t make any money that way, but it’s still economically valuable.
So now that our economy is starting to work differently than it did before, people are acting differently than they did before in order to get the things they need.  That means our political system is changing along with it.  If corporate executives set up multi-national corporations, who are they going to be most loyal to?  To their home countries?  Or to the workers they depend on to make their businesses function and the other business people they deal with to get their raw materials and parts, and then transport their products all around the world?  The people these international business people depend on most for their livelihoods don’t all live in the same country.  They’re a few people from each of many different countries.

This means that as long as Globalization 3.0 endures, no industrialized country is ever going to fight a war against another industrialized country.  Because somebody somewhere depends on people in both countries to keep their businesses functioning.  A lot more people depend on people in at least one of the countries to keep their businesses functioning.  A lot of people in each country depend on foreigners keeping their business operations there.  If that country gets into a big war, a lot of foreign business people are going to move their businesses out of that country just as fast as they can.  That means that a war in your country is going to result in a lot of people being unemployed, and a lot less money coming into your country.  So if getting into a war wasn’t a bad enough idea in the old days, now it’s even worse.

You know how the Indians and Pakistanis keep arguing over who owns Kashmir Province?  And you know how both countries have nuclear weapons?  And you know how India also has a billion English-speaking people who can do American jobs for 1/5 the price?  Given the choice between making a lot of money or getting into a nuclear war, which do you think they’re going to pick?
But this brings me to that other economic probability tidal wave…

That’s the Laws of Thermodynamics.  Globalization 3.0 depends on an industrialized economy to make it work, so we already know that the Laws of Thermodynamics are going to win in the end.  These two gigantic probability waves are on a collision course because they’re each trying to move the world in opposite directions.  Each of them creates a lot of opportunities, depending on what people decide to do now.  But if we aren’t prepared for both of them, when they crash into each other, each is going to negate a lot of what the other was making possible.  The Laws of Thermodynamics will win in the end, but the big question is:  What’s going to happen between now and then?   How is it going to affect you and me and everyone else?

Capitalists are collaborating across international borders, which is helping to break down the borders and bring us all together into a global community.  That’s the Globalization 3.0 wave.  But their industrialized economy depends on non-renewable energy, and the endless growth of their Capitalist economy depends on an infinite supply of energy.  On their present course, their long-term success isn’t physically possible, and they are doing nothing to try to alter their course.  So what’s going to happen?

As the energy supplies they depend on start to run out, following the global Hubbert’s peak of energy production, and energy is produced ever-less-efficiently, the Capitalists are still going to depend on ever-increasing supplies of energy to make their economy function.  So where are they going to get that energy?

They are going to get their resources from the same places they’ve always gotten their resources:  From wherever it’s easiest to get them.  That means extracting them from the natural cycles of the environment and making environmental economies break down; using up supplies they’re already accessing (like oil fields) and thereby taking those resources from people who could’ve used them and can’t protest because they haven’t been born yet; offering what seem like free-trade agreements to people who are economically desperate by offering them short-term economic incentives (like money) in exchange for inflicting long-lasting environmental damage on their local economies; and ultimately, by taking resources by force from the people who are least able to defend themselves.

All of that means that as the Capitalists band together worldwide for the sake of their mutual business interests, while knowingly or unknowingly continuing to practice an environmentally suicidal economic system, they will be able to cooperate with each other ever more effectively at oppressing their workers.

Globalization 3.0 makes wars between industrialized nations obsolete.  But the impending collision between Globalization 3.0 and the Laws of Thermodynamics makes a worldwide civil war inevitable instead, as the workers are forced  to band together to protect themselves because their oppressors have already  banded together.  The workers are going to band together using the same internet the Capitalists are using.  And then the inevitable worldwide showdown between Labor and Capital is on.

And this is exactly what the global anti-Capitalist revolution is already doing.  The one thing they’re lacking is a unifying ideology to let them work together as an effective political force.
But you know, the cool thing about developing a functional understanding of the entire chemical reaction of the world is that it isn’t some measly ideology, because it isn’t made up of mere ideas.  It is the compilation of all the observable evidence, which creates the single most effective system of cause and effect anyone has for predicting the results of people’s actions.  And that’s what this book is about.

So the Capitalists and the workers both have access to the same information.  But the Capitalists have made strong emotional connections to the idea that their competitive, financially driven, expansionist economy is the right one.  It has seemed like the right one to this point because when all the sensory input they’ve gotten has combined with their universal human brain structure, it naturally creates new brain-molecule patterns that are most compatible with their original brain structure.  Then the Capitalists reinforce their perceptions with religious and philosophical belief systems that supposedly prove they’re right, and some have been doing this for 10,000 years.
So now, for one reason or another, the Capitalists are rejecting the evidence that conflicts with their pre-determined beliefs about how the world works.  If they are rejecting the evidence consciously, it means they’re trying to oppress the workers intentionally.  If they’re rejecting the evidence subconsciously, it means they’re criminally insane—because they’re acting upon beliefs that contradict observable evidence and harming other people as a result.

Regardless of what the Capitalists believe or why they believe it, it doesn’t change the fact that the workers have scientific reality on their side.

Now here we are, caught between these two probability tidal waves on a collision course.

Surf’s up!

Tom Friedman’s Systems Theory of Globalization Economics:

Now for a lengthy tour behind enemy lines, to show how the globalization economy is working right now and why it seems like such a good idea to a lot of people, even though exponential growth and thermodynamics make it completely f*cking suicidal.

I really liked The World is Flat, because Mr. Friedman does what I do in his own way:  He focuses on how different forces in the world are interacting to create trends and patterns of events, and on the root causes of those forces; he doesn’t get bogged down focusing on intermediate causes and the effects of the interactions.  In effect, his book is a giant systems theory of the current stage of globalization, in which he shows how we got here, how it works now, where it’s leading us, and where else it could lead us if we act differently.

He starts by outlining ten things that came together to start the current stage of globalization.  This is going to sound a lot like Dr. Diamond’s outline of the characteristics that all the original centers of agriculture had in common and that distinguished them from the rest of the world, and the additional characteristics of Mesopotamia that set it ahead of the other original centers of agriculture.  As usual, if you want to learn more about this, go read his book.

First was the destruction of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War.  Before, the people of the world were divided up between two major factions.  When that ended, people all over the world perceived that the most effective means of preserving the survival of their DNA was to start trading goods and services with each other instead of preparing for a huge war against each other.  Imagine that!  He talked about that a lot in The Lexus and the Olive Tree, and I talked about it a lot in the first book.

Second was telephone networks, fax machines, personal computers, the Windows 3.0 operating system, and the internet all reaching critical masses and coming together, as people searched for and found more efficient ways to communicate with each other.  The more you can communicate with other people, the more ways you can perceive of preserving the survival of your DNA and the more you can cooperate with other people to your mutual benefit.  In the Soviet Union the Communists tried to prevent people from communicating with each other and instead tried telling everyone what to do, supposedly for their own good.  But that highly centralized hierarchal political structure wasn’t very efficient for making decisions that fit people’s individual situations well.  People resisted that, the Communists tried to make their political system function by forcing people to cooperate with it, and that just made everyone cooperate with it as little as they could get away with.

Netscape was the final stage of this process, because it was the first internet browser that was written for Windows, which made it really easy to use.   That brought all the individual forms of communication together and started merging them into one.

This started the dot-com boom.  People started setting up web-based businesses, and other people started investing in them.  There seemed to be no end of possibility here, so people assumed there was no end to the investment opportunity.  But we all know what happens when people who only have a partial understanding of how the physical world works assume they’ve found an infinite supply of something, don’t we?  They over-invested in it.

The mistake the investors made (or at least, one of the big mistakes they made) was in assuming that fiber optic cable worked the same way as copper wire.  They saw a huge demand for sending e-mail, photos, music, and videos over the internet, searching for things on Google, ordering things on E-Bay and Amazon, etc., etc., so they assumed that never-ending demand for digital transmission would bring with it a never-ending demand for fiber optic cable.  So everyone raced around in a frenzy, trying to lay cable everywhere they could.  The more cable they laid, the more business people did.  The more business people did, the more cable they laid.  This was an autocatalytic process, like the one that began with the Mesopotamians developing a food supply that let them support people who could invent more things that made their food production even more efficient, support even more non-food-producing people and invent even more new things.
The limiting factor on how much information you can send through a copper wire is the amount of electricity you can move through the wire, which is a product of the electrical conductivity of the copper.  The limiting factor on how much information you can send through a fiber optic cable is the efficiency of the optical transmitters and receivers at the ends of the cable.  The fiber optic cable itself carries beams of light from one place to another.  The optical transmitters encode the information in the beams of light and transmit that down the cable.  That meant that as the optical transmitters and receivers became more and more efficient, the entire communications infrastructure became more and more efficient, because the cable itself carries information at the speed of light. That meant that thanks to all the investment that had been made in laying the fiber optic cable, plus the increasing efficiency of the optical transmitters that nobody had counted on, there was way the hell more cable in place than anyone knew what to do with.  Since they laid a huge amount of fiber optic cable and set up a huge network at first, now the huge network kept getting huger and huger without anyone needing to lay any more cable.  That also meant the people in each company had invested their money in laying more cable than anyone really needed, so nobody was paying any money back on their investments, because they weren’t using the cable.  So to try to attract more customers, the people at the communications companies tried lowering their prices.  That led to a bidding war, and eventually a lot of companies went bankrupt.

Third was all the web-based applications that were developed during the dot-com boom.  Mr. Friedman gives the example of an animated TV show that people from all over the world work on, by each doing their part of the job and then e-mailing the results to the next person in the process.  In America, artists could live wherever they wanted and work from home, in India, technicians could work in telecom centers doing the manual labor involved in the cartoons, and only a few people have to live in the actual cities where the TV show is broadcast.

To this point, lots of different people had been developing lots of different software for their own companies, and even for their own departments within companies.  Now that people all over the world had the opportunity to work together thanks to all the fiber-optic cable strung everywhere, people began developing and using software that was compatible with other people’s software, so they could work together.

These first three stages of development let a lot of different people from a lot of different places communicate and work with each other in a lot of different ways, so naturally, they found lots of different ways to work together, including a lot that nobody expected going into the process.  A lot of uses people came up with for the combination of resources they had now started pushing the globalized economy forward even faster.

The fourth step was open sourcing.  Open-source software is software that people develop and then post on the internet for free.   Computer programmers do this a lot.  If you have an idea for a computer program, you write it, and then you post it on the internet for free.  Then if another computer programmer downloads it, likes it, but thinks of something else to add to it, he gets into the programming, makes his alteration, and then posts the new version on the internet for free.  Then you can download his version, see what he did to it, and use the new version.  And of course you can add something else to it too.  And so can any other computer programmer.  You can also review each other’s work, so if someone made an addition that didn’t work because they made some mistake, someone else can fix it.

What you end up with are computer programs that just keep growing and growing all the time.  Linux is an operating system that works this way, and every application you can buy for a PC or a Macintosh has a Linux counterpart that you can download for free.  The Wikipedia encyclopedia works this way too, except that instead of being written by an invisible collective of computer programmers, it’s written by an invisible collective of people who know lots of stuff about different things.

Mr. Friedman seemed to have trouble understanding how a non-financial economic system like this could work.  He seemed to think it was all made up of weird people who like writing computer programs and encyclopedia entries so much that they were willing to do it for free.  But on the contrary, it’s a process by which people combine matter and energy to turn things that aren’t useful to people into things that are useful to people.  It works just like any other economic system; it’s just that there isn’t any money involved.

If you’re a computer programmer and you want a new computer program, you have the choice between paying a bunch of money for one, or downloading one for free.  The one you download for free might not work exactly the way you want it to, but if it doesn’t, you can change it yourself.  Alternately, you might be able to download a base program and then choose whichever additions people have written for it that you want to add on.  If you don’t like what you find there, you can write your own add-on and then post it with the others.   You might find a program or an add-on that does what you want it to do, but doesn’t work quite the way you wished it did.  But if using it as-is is easier than writing your own, that’s what you do.  In other words, you perceive that using the existing program is a more effective means of preserving the survival of your DNA than going to the trouble of writing your own, slightly better version.

Most of the computer programmers I know are involved in the open-source community.
This economic system seems completely alien to Mr. Friedman because it’s non-Capitalistic.  It’s not an economic system based on anyone’s control of the capital; it’s an economic system based on no one controlling the capital.  It is a Use-Value economic system, in which value is measured by how useful the thing is—not by how badly you can make people want whatever it is that you have.  This is also an evolutionary economic system—indeed, an evolutionary process itself.  It is adaptation to an environmental pressure.  The economic system is governed not by individual people but by the collective will of the group.  Everyone involved either wants the same thing, or else slightly different variations of the same basic thing.  So when each person exerts their effort toward getting what they want, they all end up exerting their efforts in the same direction.
If you want a computer program, and find that someone else has already written one that’s pretty close to what you want, you can start with that and then add your efforts to their efforts, as opposed to everyone who wants a computer program having to write it from scratch themselves.  Then when you post your addition on the net, the person who wrote the original program can also add your efforts to their efforts.  The result is a cooperative economic system rather than a competitive one—which is why it seems completely alien to Capitalists.

The fifth stage was outsourcing.  This was jump-started by Y2K.  For those of you who aren’t old enough to remember Y2K, everyone who had been building PC computers had only been using two digits for the year date.  That meant that on December 31st of 1999, about 90% of computers in America were going to switch to January 1, 1900.  Then all the elevators in America would stop, air traffic control would shut down, all the electrical power stations in America were going to shut down, all the new cars with onboard computers were going to lock up and crash into each other, turning our interstate system into a killing field of mayhem and carnage, all the nuclear power plants in America were going to melt down, and hundreds of millions of people were going to die horrible screaming bloody deaths… or some crap like that.  I remember an awful lot of Christian fundamentalists were holding their breaths waiting for the Y2K glitch to herald the end of the world and their immanent salvation.

But as a friend of mine pointed out to me, “Do you have any idea how much money people would lose in a total global apocalypse?  There’s no way they’re ever going to let that happen.”  And sure enough, at the stroke of midnight on Decemeber 31st, the world failed to end.

While all those Christian fundamentalists were jerking off in preparation for an orgasmic ecstasy of slaughter and destruction, the Capitalists were busy hiring and training a bunch of people in India to fix the problem.  Thanks to all that fiber optic cable that had been strung all over the world in the dot-com boom, it was easy to set up telecom centers in India where they could train and equip Indians to fix all of our computers for 1/5 the cost of paying Americans to do it.
Well, on January 2nd, 2000, a lot of American business owners had telecom centers operating in India, with trained people working in them for a lot less money than Americans would work for (or could afford to work for), and the Indians had proved they could do the job.
And the internet economy was changed forever.

Sixth was off shoring.  That was basically the manufacturing equivalent of outsourcing.  We’ve been importing cheap stuff from China for decades.  Now, with all the fiber optic cable strung between the U.S. and China, all the compatible software, and everything else, it’s gotten easier and easier for Americans to set up factories in China—or any other country—and produce their goods there.  It’s also gotten easier for Chinese to set up their own factories and produce stuff to sell to Americans.  It’s gotten easier to keep track of who in the world wants or needs what, so you can find someone who needs what you’re selling, and you can find someone who’s selling what you need.  All of that means that there’s a lot more money to be made building factories in countries with huge labor pools and low costs of living—regardless of who builds the factories.
“Made in China” used to mean that the cheap thing you were buying was a piece of junk.  But that’s changing.  Now that Americans and Chinese can communicate with each other so effectively, companies that need high-quality products can set up factories in China and train workers to manufacture their parts just as easily.  Alternately, Chinese workers can manufacture parts partway, and then ship the parts to America for the highly trained and highly experienced workers who live there and who already know how to do the job to do the really complicated parts of the job.

Now that all these factories are getting built in China, and Chinese are learning how to manufacture so many things, the Chinese can also manufacture stuff for themselves, and for everyone  else in the world.  Over time, they’re going to learn how to do all the parts of the manufacturing process, including inventing new things in the first place.  They don’t want to be our servants forever, they’re just working for us while they accumulate the skills and the resources they need to do all the things we do.  And since the population of China is about 4 times the population of the U.S., and fully 1/6 of the world’s population lives in China, this is a gigantic labor market that’s being connected to an even more gigantic worldwide sales market.
You remember what I said in the first book about the parallel developments of European and Chinese agricultural civilization?  The Mesopotamians got a 1,000-year head start at agriculture.  Then the Chinese pulled ahead early on because their two large rivers made political unification easy for them.  But then the Chinese became the dominant power of their part of the world by far and got lazy (you might say), so as the Europeans kept competing against each other, they pulled ahead of the Chinese again in the process.  Well now we’re ahead of them, they’re competing against us, and they’ve got four times as many people as we do.  That means four times as big of a labor market and four times as big of a sales market.  The wheel never stops turning, does it?
Seventh was Wal-Mart.  No, I’m serious.  You remember what happened when all those Europeans competed against each other trying to colonize the world back in Globalization 1.0?  The Wal-Mart superpower originated in Bentonville, Arkansas, which is basically nowhere.  The founders of Wal-Mart were at a disadvantage to all the other major retail chains because they were starting out in an economic backwater, which meant the combination of abilities, skills, and resources available to them weren’t as favorable as the combinations their competitors had.  They couldn’t compete against their rivals by brute force, so they had to outsmart their rivals and find every possible way they could to cut expenses from their business operations.  Basically, they were the North Vietnam of the business world.

The founders of Wal-Mart started out by building their own warehouses and distribution network, to save themselves having to depend on anyone else’s warehouses or distribution networks.  That means they can save money by buying directly from manufacturers instead of having to buy from wholesalers.  They sell their products more cheaply by literally cutting out the middleman.  That means cutting out his profit margin also.  They still have to charge some of the profit he would’ve made to cover their additional overhead, but that’s only the part of the profit the middleman would’ve charged to cover his own overhead instead.  All the profit he would’ve charged on top of that is gone from the economic transaction.

Also, once a product enters the Wal-Mart system, it’s theirs, and they never have to wonder where it is or when it will arrive ever again.  Combined with all that fiber optic cable, computer software, and those Chinese factories that can manufacture anything, that’s given them another opportunity.  Now when anyone buys anything at Wal-Mart, anywhere in the world, and the cashier runs the laser over the bar code, the computer sends a signal to the manufacturer to tell him to manufacture another one of those things.

This is called supply chaining.  It basically means smoothing out the whole progression from manufacturing to shipping to warehousing to retail as much as possible, automating as much of it as possible, and eliminating as many steps from the process as possible.  Now that the people at Wal-Mart have been so successful at it, business people all over the world are copying them.  But the people at Wal-Mart started the process, which means it’s their biggest advantage and their specialty.  So they keep investing in refining their supply chain further and further and keep leading the world forward in supply chaining.

The people at Wal-Mart have gotten so good at keeping track of what they have in the stores and where everything is in their supply chains that their computers can plan ahead for even the slightest variations in market demand.  If the calendar says that the Superbowl is coming up, a week ahead of it the computers start ordering lots more beer and chips for their stores.  If the weather report says that there’s a huge hurricane approaching Florida, their computers start ordering lots more bottled water for the stores in the affected area prior to the hurricane and then order lots more beer to arrive at their stores right after the hurricane.  Whatever.

It’s worth mentioning here that India is a country with a population over a billion people, and they have basically no material resources.  So they’re basically Wal-Mart, four times the size of the United States.  Currently, they can’t compete against us by brute force because they don’t have the material resources available to let them do it.  So they’re outsmarting us instead.  That starts with building a better education system than we have.  If they figure out how to compete against us effectively, they’re going to do it by figuring out how to do things we haven’t figured out how to do, and by finding new ways to do things that work better than the way we’re doing them.  And if they ever reach an economic level that’s comparable to our own, they’ll have the same advantage over us as the Wal-Mart people have over their competitors:  A specialty at figuring out how to do things more efficiently than anyone else.  And they’ll still have a population that’s four times bigger than ours.  That means they’ll be to internet business what China is to manufacturing.

Eighth is UPS.  Yeah, those people who drive the big brown trucks everywhere.  They figured out a trick called in sourcing.  They’re basically the Wal-Mart of the transportation industry.  They’ve devoted a whole lot of thought into making people’s supply chains work as smoothly as possible.  And of course, now a lot of other people are copying them, and now the UPS people are putting their new specialty to use and are continuing to develop ever more ways to make people’s supply chains function smoothly.

However much you thought it was possible for the UPS people to smooth out other people’s supply chains, you don’t even know the half of it.  For one example, once upon a time a lot of people who had to send their Toshiba laptop computers back to Toshiba for repairs complained about how long it was taking for them to get their computers back.  So the Toshiba people asked the UPS people if there was any way they could speed up the turn-around time.  So you know the UPS people did?  They hired a bunch of computer repair techs and got them trained and certified to work on Toshiba computers.  So now when you call up the people at Toshiba and they tell you to send your computer back and you take it to the UPS store to send it to them, the computer never actually reaches the Toshiba factory, because UPS employees repair it themselves!

Now UPS coordinates the delivery of supplies to Papa John’s pizza restaurants, and the drivers of the trucks all work for UPS.  UPS manages the Nike warehouse where you order Nike shoes online, and the Jockey Wearhouse where you order Jockey underwear.  The field service techs who go to people’s houses to repair HP printers work for UPS now.  UPS employees design their own packaging now, in case your shipment is really exotic, like shipping tropical fish from Florida to Canada.  And any time you sell anything from E-Bay, the UPS people e-mail you a shipping barcode and they e-mail the barcode to your customer too, so he can find out where in the world his shipment is at any time.

Now UPS also has its own meteorology department to route its shipments around bad weather.  Now it has its own strategic threat analysis department to route its shipments around wars and political upheavals.  Now it has its own financing department and consultancy department to help business owners build their own supply chains and ship their products to customers all over the world.

Ninth was Google, and web-search engines in general.  Thanks to Google, anyone in the world who has access to a computer and an internet link can find out anything.  This is called in-forming, and it basically means building your own information supply chain.  The more you can find out about things that interest you, the more you can perceive about effective means of preserving the survival of your DNA.  Or more simply put, the more information you have to work with, the more empowered you are.  That ranges from things as simple as finding songs you want to listen to, to finding long-lost friends or relatives, meeting up with people who share your interests, getting degrees from online colleges, and even meeting the man or woman of your dreams.    And if you Google search for my books, you can download the audio versions for free and help spread them through the world like a personal enlightenment virus.
Tenth was digital, mobile, personal, and virtual—that is, ever-easier ways to do all these things and customize them to your needs.

Computing on any scale depends on three things:  computation, memory, and input/output speed.  All of these things have been growing at exponential rates.  You remember five years ago when we didn’t have cheap I-Pods that could store thousands of songs and we didn’t have camera phones that could keep track of all your phone numbers and appointments, and couldn’t send text-messages and e-mail?  See what I mean?  For $100 a month, anyone in America can practically fit an entire office in their pocket.

Can you imagine what all this is going to mean in five more years from now?  Or ten?  Or twenty?  Or fifty?  Combine this with open sourcing, out-sourcing, off shoring, supply chaining, in sourcing, and in-forming, and now pretty much anyone in the industrialized world can get in touch with anyone they want and do anything they want.  People can communicate and collaborate with each other, you can access your computer over the phone, your computer can send you information over the phone, your computer can call someone else’s computer, that person’s computer can call send them information over the phone… and so on.

Taken together, this is the reason Mr. Friedman called his book The World Is Flat, because all of these things are leveling the field among people all over the world, breaking down hierarchies, and replacing them with horizontally constructed social networks.  Now that everyone in the industrialized world has access to all the free software they want, they can have anything manufactured cheaply, they can get pretty much any information service they need cheaply, they can supply themselves with anything they want, they can specialize any skill they’re good at, and they can find out anything they want to know.

This makes concentrations of material wealth a lot less important now than they used to be.  In a digitized economy, making things happen in that economy depends you moving a lot less matter and energy around directly, which, in effect, makes everyone more materially wealthy.
What Mr. Friedman doesn’t point out in his book is that it also makes the people who are already materially wealthy more materially wealthy.  They started out with an advantage in material resources, and they used those material resources to manipulate other people, to hire people with the highest abilities, and to develop their own skills to enable them to manipulate other people ever more effectively.  If you have to work at a full-time job to support yourself, you don’t have as much time to spend going to college as someone who doesn’t have to work at a full time job.  Period.  You can take classes online, but so can someone who has an additional 40 hours per week to devote to their education.

To use myself for an example, I possess abilities that are far in excess of those of most people in the world.  And what do I have to show for it?  I have to work 40 hours a week to support myself.  Writing these books and trying to get people to buy them are each full-time occupations also.  I don’t have time to do all three, and I can’t afford to quit my job.  So I have to make the choice between writing books or trying to sell them.  After the first book came out I spent a year and a half trying to figure out how to get people to buy enough copies of it to let me quit my job, and that’s a year and a half of my life that’s gone forever.  As I type these words I haven’t sold a book in over a year.  All these advantages of Globalization 3.0 that have the effect of making me more materially wealthy are making all the people I’m competing against more materially wealthy also.  You can order as many copies of my books from the internet you want, but you can also download as many Brittney Spears videos from the internet you want.  The Capitalists who spread Brittney Spears videos all over the internet have more money to start with than I do, which means they pay for more advertizements, they can hire more people to help them, they can hire people who have specialized skills at getting people to come to their websites, they can hire people who have exceptional innate abilities at marketing, and they can pay for fancy special effects for their videos.  I could produce videos too, but they wouldn’t look as good, and I would have to do all the work myself, and I simply don’t have the time.  So here I am, a part-time intellectual militia of one trying to compete against the entire Capitalist economy all by myself.  They have more material resources on their side, so they can attract more people to their side, and those people have more skills and more abilities.  I have some people on my side indirectly at least, but pound for pound they don’t possess as much scientific ability or skill as the people on the Capitalists’ side.  That means that the Capitalists can devote more man-hours to getting what they want, they can equip themselves with bigger tools to use in each of those man-hours so they can move more matter and energy around in the world in each man-hour, and each person knows more about how to move matter and energy around in the world so for each man-hour they can move energy and matter around more effectively.  What do I have on my side?  A handful of rebels who feel like the world shouldn’t work this way, who think science is evil because it’s the root of all the world’s problems, and who cling so desperately to ancient superstitions to give them the feeling of personal empowerment that they can’t agree on how to work together to make things actually happen, because they’re each clinging to different superstitions.  So they’re each waiting around for different imaginary forces to come save the day.  And in the meantime, their enemies go right on using their functional understanding of how the world actually works to keep on moving matter and energy around in the way they want it to move, getting what they want, and paving over everything in sight.

That’s the bad news…

The good news is that the anti-Capitalist revolutionaries still have the Laws of Thermodynamics on their side.  With the exception of the fall of the Berlin Wall making it possible for people all over the world to come together, everything that has made Globalization 3.0 happen depends on an industrialized technological level to make it work.  That will not last forever, no matter how much the Capitalists wish it would.  The anti-Capitalist revolutionaries, on the other hand, are at least trying to build a global civilization whose survival is physically possible.

So we have a window of opportunity here.  Capitalism depends on inequality and on keeping people divided.  The more capital you control, the more successful that makes you in the Capitalist economy.  That necessarily means that the more capital other people control, the less successful you are in the Capitalist economy.  If 90% of people in the world hate you because your idea of economic success means hoarding all the material wealth for yourself instead of using it for the benefit of your society, and they want to overthrow you so they can redistribute your material wealth, your ability to maintain this economic system depends on your keeping the people divided.  If you can prevent them from figuring out how to unite and pool their resources, then you can prevent them from building a more physically powerful economic unit that you have.  That means you can continue making matter and energy move around in the world in the way you want them to, and prevent the other people from making matter and energy move in the way they want them to.  That means that the path of least resistance that you’ve created for your workers is for them to keep competing against each other, because without being united, competing against each other instead of competing against you is the competition they have the best chance of winning.

On the other hand, if 90% of people in the world hate you and want to overthrow you, and they do figure out how to unite, you’re f*cked.  Game on!

Oh, and here’s one other thing I guess I ought to point out.  77% of Americans believe that evolution is bullsh*t, and we have 51 different state (and district) boards of education in charge of our public education.  People clinging desperately to ancient superstitions and obsolete political traditions cuts both ways.

In China, they have not only a secular government, but an Atheistic government.  And all their government officials are scientists.  That means that at the moment they get hold of my books, they could pretty much snap their fingers and put everything I’m talking about here into effect.  Whether or not all of my work should be taught in every school in China comes down to the decision of a small group of scientists.  And with that, a sixth of the human race will start applying an up-to-date understanding of how the physical world actually works to their political system, and they will start educating their children accordingly.  Within three generations, all of China will be a province of my empire.  And Americans are still going to be clinging to their religious superstitions and wondering why their political system isn’t working anymore.  If the future of the world unfolds this way, the Chinese are just going to buy America on my behalf.

Anyway, back to Mr. Friedman’s systems theory of globalization…

Speaking of ways Americans are burying their heads in the sand and are about to get run over by Globalization 3.0, Mr. Friedman outlines three pitfalls Americans are falling into right now.
First, you remember what I said in the Black Ops section of the Civilization chapter, about what happens if the political system people want isn’t capable of making the economy they want function?  You have to start cutting corners and making a lot of political decisions in secret.  Well what happens if the people in your country don’t know enough to make their economy function?
Back in the 20th century, the answer was to import talent from other countries.  If you’ve ever spent much time around the science or engineering departments of American universities, you probably noticed a hell of a lot of Asians walking around.  Back in the days when there wasn’t fiber optic cable strung all over the world, bright students who were born in third-world countries pretty much had only one choice in how to get educations and careers that would let them put their abilities to use.  That was:  move to America.  The alternative was to be a peasant farmer or something, because lacking an industrialized economy, your country didn’t have the technological level that was necessary to support enough non-food-producing people to open up many other job opportunities, it didn’t have the technology you needed to do any other job anyway, and you ended up with an education system to match that economy.  So you ended up like me, being left to fend for yourself working at a menial job and watching your whole life go to waste.  So if you could get out of your country and into America, that’s what you did.

Now that we do have all that fiber optic cable, those people don’t have to come to America anymore.   Now they can all stay at home with their families and work at American jobs anyway.  So the education systems of their countries are being adapted accordingly.

That means that a lot of the scientists and engineers we depend on importing from other countries to make our economic system function are no longer coming to our country.  Instead they’re staying in their own countries and making their own economic systems function.
Second, the education system in America isn’t keeping up with the changing world.  We have grown so accustomed to being the economic superpower of the world that we’ve fallen into the same trap the Chinese did back in the days when their agricultural economy and political unification made them the dominant superpower of their part of the world.  We’ve gotten so used to the idea that our education system is good enough that we haven’t bothered to keep it advancing as much as it could be.  So now the Chinese, the Indians, the Russians, the east Europeans, and the Latin Americans are all rushing up behind us and we don’t see them coming.  But their goal is not to be as good as we are; their goal is to be better than we are.   So they’re adapting their education systems to meet the changing world, and we aren’t.

Third, you remember what I said in the first book about how the only way you can raise heroic children is by leading a heroic life while you’re raising them?  If you’re satisfied with your life and all you ever do anymore is sit around drinking beer and watching TV, that’s fine if you don’t have kids.  But if you do have kids, that’s the example you’re going to set for them.  They’re going to grow up watching their primary role model drink beer and watch TV.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the world, those 2 billion Indian and Chinese peasants all grew up watching their primary role models work on farms and in factories, working as hard as they could to make lives for themselves even though they never got very far in life.  Now those 2 billion people are being offered a new economic system.  The jobs are different, but the people who are doing the jobs learned how to work just as hard as their parents worked.  And now their hard work will get them about a hundred times further in life than it got their parents, so who’s going to say no to that?

A lot of Americans think this isn’t fair.  But that’s because they’ve made such strong emotional connections to the idea that America is supposed to be an economic superpower that they think it’s fair—and that it’s even possible—for them to write some kind of laws or something that say Asians shouldn’t be allowed to work hard.  These American are trying to limit the number of Asians that are admitted to American universities in order to protect their right to be lazy.  But the only reason they can afford to be lazy is because of all the scientists and engineers who make our economy function.

So as you can see, these three pitfalls are all closely intertwined.

Mr. Friedman outlines some basic problems that the people of a lot of third-world countries are facing in breaking themselves out of poverty, which are very insightful because they have nothing to do with technological levels, but with social developments.

The first is pretty straightforward.  It’s the stereotypical Capitalist solution to economic growth:  Open the markets to competition.  Remove government control of the market.  Privatize a lot of the country’s industries.  Encourage people to take the initiative in advancing their businesses.  This was a big landmark that China and the Soviet Union have passed on the road to economic development and their participation in Globalization 3.0.  India had a socialistic economy for about 50 years also, and they passed this landmark recently too.

The second obstacle to third-world countries lifting themselves out of poverty is specific localized obstacles to economic growth.  That is, the people of each country looking at how their economy works, how they want it to work, and what they’re going to have to do differently within their own country from however they’re doing things now to get from here to there.  These localized obstacles break down into four basic categories:  infrastructure, regulatory institutions, education, and culture.   I’ve talked a lot about the importance of infrastructure and education already.
The people at the World Bank’s International Finance Commission have studied a lot of this problem.  According to their reports, economic development depends on people’s abilities to: start businesses in terms of licenses, regulations, and fees; hire and fire workers; enforce contracts; get credit; and close businesses that go bankrupt.  If any one of those five things is difficult for people in your country to do, you have a big obstacle for people setting up their own businesses and then contributing their energy and creativity to your country’s economy.  And sure enough, a lot third-world countries have barriers in one or more of these five areas.

Cultural values affect countries’ economic development in Globalization 3.0 according to how well the people of the country can adapt to their changing situations, how well they can integrate new ideas that work well for other people, and (ironically) how much sense of community they have.    Mr. Friedman and I agree that these things are critical to economic and social development.  The difference between us is our definition of an economy.  Mr. Friedman defines an economy as a financial economy, which these other things are necessary to support.  I define an economy as the entire realm of human endeavor, and the continued health of the environment we depend on for our livelihoods, of which the financial economy is just a small part.

You can see a lot of examples of how cultural values affect economic development right here in America between the red states and the blue states.  If your people aren’t very well connected to the rest of the world and don’t get the opportunity to learn from other people, or are so caught up in believing their way of doing everything is right and everyone else’s way of doing things is wrong that they refuse to adopt ideas that work well for other people, their cultural values are going to prevent them from advancing economically—regardless of whether you define economics in strictly financial terms or in social terms.

For instance, if women in your community are discouraged or prevented from working outside the home, you’ve just cut your potential labor pool in half.  If you believe that thinking about certain things will make you burn in hell forever and ever and ever and ever, you’ve walled yourself off from participating in certain areas of human endeavor that other people haven’t.  If we talk about the differences between America and Iran or between California and Texas, what do you notice?  Wherever ideas flow the most freely, people make the most money and have more cultural diversity.  Weird people have money too, and they have to work for a living one way or another just like you do.  If you accept people who are different from you and accept their ideas and perspectives, you can learn from them, trade with them, sell things to them, and buy things from them.  If you try to chase the weird people out of town with torches and pitchforks, you can’t do any of those things.

A lot of people talk about how conservative Muslims are, and why that’s made the Middle East such a f*cked up place.  But on the contrary, India, Spain, and some other countries have large Muslim populations too, and the Muslims there don’t have trouble keeping up in the world economically or socially.  So obviously, the problem isn’t caused by Islam itself, the problem is caused by the people who practice Islam—just like problems that are caused by anyone doing anything aren’t caused by the thing itself but by the people who are doing it.  Guns don’t kill people, marijuana doesn’t kill people, Capitalism doesn’t kill people, Communism doesn’t kill people, Christianity doesn’t kill people, and Islam doesn’t kill people—people kill people.  I’ll talk more about what Mr. Friedman had to say about Islam in the Religious Left chapter.
As for sense of community, that’s pretty much the value of community I’ve been talking about all along.  The less energy people in your group devote to fighting each other—meaning undoing what each other are trying to do—the more energy they’ll have to devote to accomplishing whatever they’re trying to accomplish.  Monarchy didn’t create a cultural background for economic advancement, because even if the people in the country weren’t literally struggling against each other, the king (or the czar or whoever) was hoarding all the material wealth to himself and preventing anyone from using it for anything, or being able to apply any creative thought to how else it could be used.  The legal institutions were in place to make this economic system possible, which created problems I’ve talked about already.  But the additional problem was that the monarchs didn’t feel like there was anything wrong with that, so they didn’t do anything to change the situation.  I’ve talked a lot about how monarchies were overthrown in America and Russia, and the economic results of that.  Some countries in the world still use monarchies to this day.  Some of them are in the Middle East where the countries have so much oil income that they can afford to be socially inefficient, because they can make up the difference in economic brute force.  Other countries that compete against them, which don’t have as much material wealth, have to become more efficient to compete, just like the people in Wal-Mart and India had to become so much more efficient than their competitors.  But nobody has gotten efficient enough yet to be able to compete against oil monarchies, so no environmental pressure has yet materialized to force the oil monarchs to adapt.  They make so much money that the old way of doing things still works, so they can still get away with not figuring out new ways of doing things.

Another obstacle to third-world countries lifting themselves out of poverty is the poverty itself.  If the country is so impoverished—or the people of an area are so impoverished—that they can barely even keep themselves alive from one day to the next, they sure as hell can’t devote any of their energy or resources toward moving their economy forward.  That was exactly the problem that Dr. Sachs encountered in the remote African villages where AIDS had wiped out all the working age adults.  So I’ve already told you all about that problem.

Another obstacle to third-world countries lifting themselves out of poverty and into Globalization 3.0 is that a lot of people live close enough to the results of Globalization 3.0 to see that a few people are benefiting from it, and that most people aren’t.  Peasant farmers generally aren’t experts at global economics, so if 5% of people in their country start making a lot of money and the other 95% don’t, that looks like a lot of inequality.  The simplest solution to that problem seems to be to elect whoever promises to take all the money from those 5% of people and spread it around to everyone else.  And as we here in America have learned the hard way over the past 8 years, as long as a majority of people are willing to vote for you, it doesn’t matter whether you know what the f*ck you’re doing or not.

If 5% of people in a country have made a lot of money on Globalization 3.0 and the other 95% haven’t, odds are that it’s because that 5% of people haven’t yet gotten the chance to invest any of that money in their communities.  As I’ve said, it’s not the goal of Indians to be the servants of Americans and process fast food orders for the rest of their lives.  They, like everyone else, want to be the masters of their own destinies, and that means working for themselves, doing things that are going to benefit them.  And when they’ve made enough money processing McDonald’s orders (or whatever they do) to set up their own businesses, who do you think they’re going to hire to work for them?  Expensive Americans?  Or people from their own country where the cost of living is a hell of a lot cheaper?

Mr. Friedman outlines five things that Americans will need to do differently to keep from getting trampled by the Chinese, the Indians, and all the rest of the 3 billion people who are suddenly rushing up behind us.

First of all, leadership.  President Bush isn’t worth sh*t for this, but with any luck, the next president will be.  But I doubt it.

President Bush is trying to meet the threat of terrorism by waging a war that nobody knows how to win.  That worked for a little while, but now everybody realizes what a mistake it was.  And on top of that, the War on Terror isn’t helping us produce anything that will help us move forward.  Quite the contrary.  You know all those Asians we depend on coming to America to go to our universities and then work as the scientists and engineers we depend on to keep our economy functioning?  And you know all those foreigners we’re trying to keep out of America now?  And you know all those foreigners we’re trying to keep from learning how to do highly skilled jobs, like flying airplanes?  And you know all those foreigners who don’t need to come to America anymore to go to our universities anyway, and can work at high-demand American jobs right there in their own countries?  Does anyone see a problem here?

The Soviet Union was a readily understandable threat to the United States, so it wasn’t all that hard for President Kennedy to focus Americans’ efforts on meeting that threat.  But he was more tactful about it.  He used the space race as a symbol of Americans’ competition with the Soviets.  Well the real competition between the Americans and the Soviets was an economic competition, which meant a science and engineering competition, which meant an educational competition.  So President Kennedy said he was determined to be the first to put a man on the moon, and a bunch of Americans joined the cause.  And what did we get out of the deal but a whole bunch of American scientists and engineers?

President Bush could be using the energy crisis and the greenhouse effect as the next big obstacle to be overcome.  He could be offering to join together with the Chinese to develop an energy strategy that would make America energy self sufficient, and would make China energy self-sufficient, and would cut everyone’s greenhouse gas emissions, but he isn’t doing it.  But a lot of politicians are talking about it now, so hopefully it will be a big debate in the 2008 elections.  That hypothetical new energy strategy won’t work, or at least, not as well as politicians would like everyone to believe it will, because it isn’t a return to an organic agricultural economy.  But my point is, even out of all the easy choices President Bush could be making, he isn’t making them.
The problem with our democratic government being practiced in a country with a Hollywood entertainment industry is that we don’t end up with political leaders; we end up with political leadership infrastructures, of which the politicians are simply the figureheads.  You remember what I said about how in Globalization 3.0 every single job that can be done by someone else will be done by someone else?  And you remember what I said in the last book about how survival in the middle and upper classes depends on developing an image that creates the most favorable emotional response among the people you meet, rather than on your actually accomplishing anything in life?  Well, the president of the United States has his cabinet so he doesn’t have to be an expert on everything himself.  But that means that every single job the president has to do that involves thinking about anything can be done by someone else now.  Then you add in speechwriters, wardrobe advisors, hair stylists, make up artists, and debate coaches.  That would leave the president free to do the one thing that no one else can do for him, which is to wrap all of those things up into a single package and present them in the way that will evoke the most favorable emotional response possible from a majority of voters.   So what do we end up with but cartoon characters running for president?  In the 2008 election, Bugs Bunny might as well run against Mickey Mouse.

Second and third, streamlining our economic structure to make it fit the economy we actually live in.  That means getting rid of everything that doesn’t contribute to the new economy, and improving upon all the things that do.

Economic success or failure begins with education or a lack of education.  I already talked about lazy American kids who grew up watching their dads sit around drinking beer and who never learned the value of hard work, and how people like that now want to pass a bunch of laws to prevent Asians from getting good educations or good jobs just so the lazy Americans can stay on the top of the economic hill.  But that’s completely impossible, because making an economy like that work would depend on supporting a lot of non-food producing people to enforce all of those laws.  But our economy depends on foreign scientists and engineers to make it work.  So building an economy that was capable of supporting enough police to prevent Asians from getting good educations would depend on Asians to make it work.  That’s even more absurd than my completely hypothetical example of the Midnight Peace Symbol Revolution where the fascist dictatorship had to try to convince the people that their own revolution deserved to be defeated, in order to convince them to pay enough taxes to hire enough police to defeat it.

So Mr. Friedman’s advice here was pretty simple:  Find all the counterproductive laws and social structures like that and get rid of them.

What we need instead is lifetime education opportunities—not unlike the education industrial complex I talked about in the first book.  Since we can’t be sure what the future of our economy is going to hold, except that it’s going to be a constant state of change, we can’t guarantee anyone that the university education they got right out of high school is still going to be useful for anything in 20 years.  No matter how promising your job looks now, within 20 years from now, your job, or some part of your job, could be exported to India and you could be left high and dry.  So in order for the Globalization 3.0 economy to work for Americans, we’re going to have to know that no matter what happens, we will remain employable.  And when old jobs are disappearing and new jobs are being created all the time, that means knowing that we’ll be able to get the training we need to do the new jobs.

For myself, I don’t waste my time learning any more about how computers work than I absolutely have to.  That puts me at a disadvantage a lot of the time because I have no way of designing my own website, or posting my audio recordings on my website, or designing illustrations for my books, or designing slide shows for presentations, or designing posters or fliers that have pictures on them that get people’s attention, or anything like that.  But in the long run, what’s the point?  In two or three years from now people are going to be using all new programs, so all the time and effort I devoted to trying to learn how the current ones work will be wasted.  I don’t learn very well from staring at a computer screen and trying to figure out what all the icons are supposed to mean, and it takes me forever to figure out the right questions to ask on the help menus.  If I could go to a class and talk to an instructor and say, “What does this do? What does that let you do?  How does the next item on the menu work?” I could pick it up no problem.  But I have no way of doing that.  So instead I devote my time and effort to learning skills that I know are going to retain their value.  Then when it comes to computers I just have to do the best I can and hope something works out.  I’m sure there must be a few other people out there somewhere who are in the same predicament.

I meet up with lots of people who use the alternative approach and constantly try to keep up with the new way of doing things.  Those are bright people, and being bright people who know the most about the newest and fastest ways to do things lets them earn a lot of money.  But at no point do these bright, well-paid people who are so good at doing things the newest and fastest ways ever have time to realize that the industrialized economic system they depend on is environmentally unsustainable, nor do they have time to comprehend the full meaning of environmental unsustainability, nor to they have time to figure out how to solve that fundamental problem with their economic system.  So considering my alternative, I have to say that doing things my way is the best.

So it’s a simple fact of life that in order for your economy to keep moving at an ever-increasing rate, you have to devote some part of that economy to giving your people what they need to keep up in that economy.  Because who else makes your economy move besides your people?
President Kennedy’s vision was to put a man on the moon. Mr. Friedman’s vision is to put every American man and woman on a college campus.

Health care, retirement, and paid time off are all important benefits that act to keep workers shackled to their jobs.  And shackling workers to their jobs is the complete opposite of what you need to participate in Globalization 3.0.  Capitalism works (to the extent that can be said about it) by giving everyone  the opportunity to work at whatever job suits them best.  Capitalists love to say that the competition that Capitalism inspires drives innovation, which is what makes the economy ever more efficient and therefore, ever more productive.  But what about those of us who sell our labor?  Our needs for health care, retirement benefits, and paid time off currently are met by things that we build up over time working at each job individually.  If you have a sh*tty work environment, but you have workers who can’t afford to quit their jobs and lose the benefits they’ve built up there, then you don’t have to improve your sh*tty work environment.  But if all your employees could afford to quit and go work somewhere else, then you would have to innovate to make your business more efficient and more productive.

So Mr. Friedman’s solution to this is pretty damn ingenious.  All you have to do is to socialize all workers’ benefits.  If they could each pay into a system that was completely independent of any employer, then they could earn their health care, retirement, and paid time off benefits over time, no matter what job they worked at.

Of course, this would be the foundation of one giant workers’ union.  If workers didn’t have to spend all their time fending for themselves, they’d be able to band together a lot better.  If you wanted to continue to operate your business with sh*tty working conditions, the only thing you would have to keep all your workers from quitting would be their job prospects elsewhere.  And that would mean that all your competitors would be competing for who could offer their workers the best job prospects.

As I talked about a lot in the Economics chapter, Capitalism is a competitive economic system that creates a lot of choices in the marketplace.  But the goal of competition is not to create choices, the goal of competition is to win the competition, eliminate your competitors so you can make as much money for yourself as possible, and eliminate the choices your competitors were offering people in the process.  So if people who pursue their goals succeed at their goals and eliminate the competition you thought Capitalism was supposed to create, what else did you expect?

So what about Capitalism creating choices in the workplace?   Capitalism is still a competitive economic system, and the goal is still victory in that competition and the consequent elimination of the choices your competitors were offering.  If we had a socialized workers’ pool that would carry workers’ benefits from one job to the next, that would give all your workers choices, and then suddenly 10 times more people would be able compete in the Capitalist economy, or whatever number.  So if our current version of Capitalism works so well by driving employers to compete against each other, just imagine how much better Capitalism would work if all the workers could compete against you effectively too.  If you’re opposed to that, then that can only mean that your goal is not to build as efficient an economy as possible, but to win the competition by eliminating your workers’ choices and keeping them loyal to you and the private benefits you’re offering them.  And that can only mean that you’re exactly the Capitalist aristocrats everyone’s accusing you of being.  So if you Capitalists don’t like the idea of adding socialized benefits for workers to the competition, what’s the problem?  Are you afraid we’re going to win?

Oh, and by the way, this socialized workers’ benefits program has already been proven to work here in America.  You know why?  All of our elected government officials already have it.
Fourth is social activism.  I’ve written almost a million words on the topic so far, so I think I’ve got this one covered.

Mr. Friedman’s version of social activism, naturally, is social activism within a Capitalist economy.  Specifically, since multinational corporations, by definition, span international borders, their success depends on their ability to span international borders.  Their ability to span international borders necessarily breaks down the political divisions that those international borders originally created.  That shifts the balance of power in favor of the corporations, because the more international corporations are capable of doing, by definition, the less national governments are capable to stopping them from doing.  I’ve talked about this already.
So if multinational corporations are going to keep getting more and more powerful, that means they’re going to have to start bearing more and more responsibility for their actions.  Some are doing this already by saying they won’t buy products produced in sweatshops or natural resources that weren’t harvested according to certain environmental regulations.

Mr. Friedman gives some examples in his book, but I can give you a personal example myself.  The model of helicopters I trained in was the Robinson R22.  Frank Robinson, the owner of the company and the designer of the helicopters, didn’t like the FAA standards of helicopter pilot certification.  So he wrote his own.  There’s a clause in the FAA regulations on pilot certification that state that a manufacturer of aircraft can add his own pilot certification standards if he designs an aircraft that requires pilots to have special skills. So Mr. Robinson wrote a long list of special certifications.   The R22 does require special skills to fly because Mr. Robinson designed it with the most sensitive controls of any helicopter, so that once people learned to fly the R22 they’d be able to fly anything.  Also, since it’s so lightweight, the air affects it differently, like in an engine failure the main rotor slows down faster than in a bigger helicopter.  But the additional certification requirements Mr. Robinson wrote for his helicopters went way beyond that.  He did that so that he could be sure that pilots who flew his helicopters would be even safer than the government was trying to keep them.  Of course, he benefited from keeping pilots extra-safe too, because fewer accidents meant fewer people who were going to try to sue him.

So take that basic idea and apply it elsewhere.  If the owners of a multinational corporation enforce their own labor and environmental regulations, they benefit their workers and their workers’ countries, and they benefit themselves by keeping people in their workers’ countries from rising up in armed revolution.

Mr. Friedman’s idea works great on paper, and it’s worked well for Frank Robinson.  But Mr. Friedman seems to have overlooked the fact that the motivational forces that power corporations are fundamentally different from the motivational forces that power national governments.  A national government is an agreement among all the people of the country to work together to keep themselves safe from individuals, other governments, or any other forces that wield more power than any of the individual citizens of the country.  Here in America we call that “United we stand, divided we fall.”  That means that a federal government is the foundation of a socialized economy.
A corporation, on the other hand, is motivated by the pursuit of profit.  That necessarily means the pursuit of profit in whatever way the owners of the corporation are best able to make profits.  That also means profit in whatever way the owners of the corporation define profit.  But the decisions the owners of the corporation make are never going to governed by the will of their workers, because last I knew, workers don’t vote for the president of their corporation, or anyone else.  It could be argued that the corporation is a tribe, in which the chiefs watch out for the interests of their people by knowing the interests of their people without their people needing to vote for anything.  And once again that works great on paper.  But we are still talking about decisions made by Homo sapiens here, who make their every decision according to their perception of the most effective means of preserving the survival of their DNA, and whose natural perceptions of the world don’t include the physical limitations of the Earth.  If you consider yourself to be the chief of a tribe, but you don’t have to drink from the same river as your tribal members, you’ve eliminated a huge environmental pressure that contributed to the evolution of traditional tribes, and you haven’t replaced it with anything else.  That alone makes it inevitable that you aren’t going to be able to adequately provide for the needs of your people.  And even if you can personally, the statistical majority of people who make the decisions in your corporation—meaning all the people who land in the middle of this particular bell curve, and create all the sociological forces that statistical majorities of people and bell curves always create—aren’t going to be able to adequately provide for the needs of their tribal members.

A federal government, as a decision-making entity, defines its success according to the will of its people.  That refers to the making of profit in whatever sense the people of that country measure profit.  Traditionally, people have defined economic success according to ever-greater mastery of the physical world, because greater mastery of the physical world is a more effective means for people to preserve the survival of their DNA than lesser mastery.  That makes corporations and federal governments seem compatible to each other, because to this point the collective will of the people who make the decisions that affect them has been identical.  Furthermore, as long as the population of a country continues to grow, its people basically have no choice but to generate greater and greater profit to provide for greater and greater numbers of people.

However, if the people of a national government changed their minds and began defining their economic success differently, their federal government would continue to serve their collective will.    The success of the government would be defined differently now, simply by the people of the country changing their minds about what success means.  Their government could survive this transition, and the people could adapt it in whatever way it needed to be adapted to meet their needs in the new situation.

A corporation, on the other hand, is an independent entity that exists for the sake of making profits.  Its bureaucratic apparatus is constructed accordingly.  If a corporation ceases to make a profit, it ceases to fulfill its function.  If it ceases to make a profit for long enough, it ceases to exist altogether.  It would be possible to construct a social structure that was similar to a corporation that was capable of serving all of the needs of its people, regardless of what they were, but that thing would no longer be a corporation.  It would be a new form of government.  You could set something like that up if you could set up a corporation that was capable of providing all the services a government provides, from health insurance to law enforcement to mail delivery, and then you could set up a universal workers’ union for everyone who didn’t wield any decision-making power within the structure of the corporation itself.  My point is, if you want to talk about a corporation whose success could be redefined by its people to meet the changing needs of the world, we are no longer talking about corporations as they exist today.

That means that when corporations are faced with the physical limitations of the Earth and the Laws of Thermodynamics and the Hubbert’s peak of world energy production, it will no longer be physically possible for them to generate financial profit, because that absence of energy can only result in people being able to make fewer things happen in the world, instead of making more things happen.  If you make fewer things happen now than you were before, your economy is in recession, by definition.  A recession means loss, not profits, and loss is the opposite of corporate success.

That means that the people who operate the bureaucratic machinery of the corporations, and who depend on continuing to operate that bureaucratic machinery for their livelihoods—meaning the effective preservation of their DNA—are going to have to do whatever it takes to continue to operate that machinery for the sake of making profits.  Now the corporations have basically become killing machines—implements of oppression and environmental destruction.  True, anyone who operates a corporation will have the choice of disbanding the corporation when it’s no longer physically possible for it to continue making a profit in any way that can be considered humane, but that depends on those individual people to make that decision.  Some of them are sure to make that decision, but it’s virtually guaranteed that all of them won’t make it.  They are all going to attempt to preserve the survival of their DNA by the most effective means perceivable to them, and they are all going to be controlling bureaucratic machinery that can be used to rob the pillars of our planet-sized coalmine.  The results are inevitable.

Fifth is parenting.  I talked about this in the first book, and Mr. Friedman agrees with me.  Here in America there are two big pitfalls parents are falling into in raising children who are prepared to cope with the future economy.

First is the middle and upper-class pitfall, in which parents work so hard to eliminate all meaningful conflict from their children’s lives that their children never learn how to face meaningful conflict.  If your children grow up taking their standard of living for granted, you aren’t teaching them the values you needed to learn to be able to earn that standard of living in the first place.  You reached this standard of living by learning to face meaningful conflict and to move forward.  Without learning how to face meaningful conflict, your children aren’t learning how to move forward, only how to stay right where they are.  And they can’t stay right where they are, because they have 3 billion people to compete against that you didn’t.

(When you put all the pieces together, Mr. Friedman’s version of working hard justifies and continues to propagate an inequitable economic system.  There are a number of problems with that, beginning with the Laws of Thermodynamics and the physical limitations of the Earth.  He and I agree that adequate parenting means preparing your children for the world they’re going to live in.  The difference between his version of adequate parenting and mine is that I don’t define “moving forward” as “maintaining or increasing your current material economic standard of living”.)

Mr. Friedman isn’t quite the expert on human behavior that I am, so his solution to teaching your children to work hard by taking away their Game Boys and telling them to do their homework isn’t going to work, because the problem isn’t quite that simple.  My parents were aware of this problem and started thinking about how to solve it back when I was young, but as luck would have it, they never needed to.  They both realized what an advantage in life they had gotten in the long run by growing up in families and cultural background without a lot of material wealth, and once upon a time they worried about how they could raise my brother and me with the same values if they ever made a lot of money.  The easiest solution they found was even easier than they thought it was going to be:  don’t make a lot of money.

The Theory of Evolutionary Relativity comes in handy here.  If your kids grow up seeing a lot of material wealth around them, it’s going to make electricity flow through their brains differently than the sight of all that material wealth is going to make electricity flow through your brain.  Your children are seeing that material wealth at a different time in their lives than you are.  Their brains are still developing, and yours isn’t, which means the presence of that material wealth is going to get built into their neural physiology.  You, on the other hand, know what it’s like not to have that much material wealth.

You could keep all your material wealth for yourself and tell your kids if they wanted any material wealth they’d have to go out and earn it for themselves.  But that would create a fundamentally unnatural parent-child relationship.  Your evolutionary role as their parent is to do all you can to help them grow up.  Which is exactly what you’re trying to do.  Your children are born expecting you to do all you can to help them grow up, but they don’t share the life experience you have, which taught you the value of hard work.  As far as your children would be able to tell, based on what they were able to perceive of the situation, you wouldn’t be doing all you could to help them grow up.  As far as your children would be able to tell, you would be hoarding resources for yourself.  They will react emotionally to that, and they will grow up accordingly.  As far as they’re concerned, that’s not education, that’s forced poverty.  The Communists tried to use forced poverty to teach their people cultural values, and where did it get them?  They ended up with a country full of hard-working people who hated their government.  And then the people worked hard to overthrow their government the first chance they got.  Why do you think your family would turn out any differently?

Alternately, you could be selectively  wealthy, and only spend money on things you cared about and knew were important.  But the result isn’t much different, because your children still don’t have the life experience to know why those things are important and other things aren’t.  So they grow up reacting emotionally to their perception that you just have a lot of really weird opinions about stuff.

Where I come from we have a name for people like that:  trust-fund hippies.  Their parents make a lot of money and then set up a trust fund at the bank, with specific conditions on which the bank is allowed to release the money to their children.  So these kids end up with expensive educations and gigantic houses and no f*cking clue how the world works.  A lot of them end up squandering all their money and then going back to their parents begging for more, because no one ever taught them how to earn that much money for themselves—or how to live with any less.  In the end it doesn’t matter whether you’re a rebellious hippy or an unrepentant imperialist, if you raise your children in a sheltered environment, sheltered children is what you end up with.

And if all you do is to take away your kids’ Game Boys and tell them they should study more, all they’re going to perceive is that you nag them all the time.  They still don’t have the life experience to see why studying is important—and you aren’t creating that life-experience for them either.
Regardless of what your material economic standard of living is or isn’t, whether you live in a mansion or a trailer park, if you want to teach your kids the value of hard work, practice what you preach.   And practice what you preach where they can see it, in a way they can understand  it.  Don’t just tell them what to do, set good examples for them.  If you’re content with your life as it is but you have children, your job isn’t done yet.  Find something you want that you don’t have yet, and get back to work!  And since this project is going to have to take place at home where your kids can see it, getting a promotion at your job so you can earn more money and buy more stuff isn’t a solution to the problem.  You could do what my dad and his dad did, and spend 25 years building or remodeling your house, and thereby do a lot of work that your kids could see and produce results that your kids could see—and end up with a lot nicer house than you started with, without having to pay someone else for the labor.  Or you could paint pictures, sculpt, build models, fix cars, fix appliances, or whatever.  As long as you have hands and intelligence you have the ability to turn materials into a finished product.  Alternately, you could work on projects with other people in your community.  You might not end up with anything to take home with you this way, but you do meet other people this way.  As long as you expend your effort in a way that’s tangible to your kids, to produce results that are tangible to your kids, you can teach them the values of hard work.  By doing work that your kids can see, you give them the opportunity to help you, you can require them to help you, and you give yourself the opportunity to teach them how to do whatever you’re doing.  Most importantly perhaps, regardless of their level of involvement, they will see that you worked on something and produced something as a result, so if they learn nothing else from that, they’ll learn that people who work produce results, and they can too.

The other pitfall Mr. Friedman talks about is the lower class pitfall.  Bill Cosby has been working on this problem a lot lately.  If you’re materially poor and all you ever do about it is to sit around hating the world, you’re not going to teach your kids the value of hard work that way, all you’re going to teach them is to hate the world.  As I’ve said, the first step toward not being able to do something is believing that you can’t.  If you teach your kids that they can’t get anywhere in life, don’t be surprised if they never get anywhere in life.

When people criticized Dr. Cosby for criticizing the African-American community for not setting good examples for their children, Reverend Jesse Jackson defended him, saying, “Bill’s right, let’s fight the right fight.  Let’s level the playing field.  Drunk people can’t do that.  Illiterate people can’t do that.”

If you can’t seem to get anywhere in life no matter how hard you work, there’s probably a reason for it.  So find that reason and work hard against that.  I’ve got a lot more to say about this in the Operation Native American Freedom chapter, but a big reason Whites have such an advantage over everyone else in America is because they used their advantages in material resources to set up living conditions for other people where the path of least resistance in the short run would create bigger problems for them in the long run.  I told you how the Colonial Americans destroyed the Yuroks’ political system by destroying their economic base, and thereby turned them against each other by destroying the ability of their community to provide for their people.  The same thing was done to the O’Odham here in the desert.  It worked so well, what do you think the odds are that it was done all over America?  And what do you think the odds are that Whites do it to a lot more people besides Native Americans?

The economics of oppression are a lot more complicated than Mr. Friedman seems to believe.  Individuals can get jobs, work hard, and make lots of money, but that isn’t an end to oppression, that’s cultural assimilation.  If the people of your culture decide how your economy is going to work, then the only way for anyone to succeed in your economy is to adopt your cultural values.  A few people who decide how economies are going to work do it intentionally, and most people just support them without realizing it.  Some oppressed people who work to get ahead in their oppressors’ economy abandon their own cultural background intentionally, and some only do it unintentionally.  Many hang on to as much of their culture as they can, but many of them don’t hang onto their culture as much as they could because they don’t realize how much of their culture it’s possible for them to hang onto.

For the Yurok and the O’Odham, and every other Native American nation I’ve ever heard of, based on the bits and pieces of the same stories I’ve heard from all of them, the Colonial Americans don’t have to oppress Native Americans anymore because they’ve built an evolutionary perpetual motion machine to oppress Native Americans for them.  I’ve already told you a little about how they did if for the Yurok, and I’ll have more to say about it in the Operation Native American Freedom chapter, but the idea behind it is pretty simple. If you make people feel bad inside, they’ll do whatever they can to try to make the feeling go away.  If their children grow up feeling bad inside, that bad feeling will get built into their developing brains, and they’ll feel bad inside for the rest of their lives.  If they feel like their lives are missing something, they’ll try to take what they need to make their lives feel complete from the people around them.  And by that I don’t mean they’re just going to try to get what they need from the people around them.  If they already feel like they don’t have enough to make their lives complete, they aren’t going to feel like they can afford to give anything in return for what other people have.  And if everyone in the group feels like they don’t have enough to make their lives complete and keeps trying to take what they need from other people, what do you end up with but a group of people who devote so much energy to conflicts within the group that they never have much energy to devote to moving forward from wherever they are?  Whether you call it a reservation or an inner city, either way you end up with a community full of crime, violence, drug and alcohol addiction, domestic abuse, depression, mental illness, teenage pregnancies, suicides, etc., etc..  And then just like in the African village Dr. Sachs visited, where all the working-age adults were dead and nobody had the muscle power to irrigate their farmland, now you have a community in America where everybody’s energy gets wasted on things that aren’t going to do anyone any good in the long run, and their economy goes nowhere.

The only difference is that here we’re talking about the spiritual muscle power people need to irrigate their spiritual farmland—and thereby grow spiritually and make their bad feelings go away.  Spiritual muscle power and spiritual farmland are invisible to the naked eye though, so it’s really easy to pretend they don’t exist, and that you’re not responsible for oppressing these people.

Ayn Rand’s evil genius in The Fountainhead figured out how to set up an invincible Soviet socialist state by teaching everyone to pursue altruism at the expense of their personal interests. That would make everyone’s lives feel incomplete, and thereby he would trick everyone into trying to get what they needed to make their lives feel complete by helping each other.  But they would be helping each other in ways that weren’t going to do anyone any good in the long run because everyone else felt like their lives were incomplete too.  So to the naked eye it would look like a community where everyone helped everyone else, but in reality it would be just another version of the African village where no one had the muscle power to irrigate their fields.  By tricking everyone into wasting all their energy on things that weren’t going to do anyone any good in the long run, the evil genius was going to trap everyone right where they were and call that an altruistic society.

Of course, The Fountainhead  is a work of fiction.  Things like that don’t really happen in real life, do they?  Well just to prove things like that don’t really happen in real life, let’s back up and start over and try changing one word…

If you make a group of people feel bad inside and trick them into trying to get what they need to make their lives feel complete under a competitive economic system, then to the naked eye they are perfectly justified in competing against each other.  But if everyone in the group feels like they don’t have enough to make their lives complete, then no one will feel like they can afford to part with what they have, so everyone will keep trying to take what other people have.  That creates a competitive economic system, and a competitive economic system is supposed to be the best kind, because it drives innovation and leads to more efficient and more productive ways of doing things.  And the fact that a competitive economy isn’t doing these people any good must prove that they deserve to be lower class, and deserve to be your servants.  But on the contrary, a competitive economy has led to innovation on reservations and especially in the inner cities.  Kids in the inner cities used to compete against each other to get the things they needed to make their lives feel complete by bare-knuckle brawling.  Then they moved on to brass knuckles and lead pipes.  Then broken bottles and switchblades.  Then nine-millimeter pistols.  Then double-barrel shotguns.  Then Uzis.  Then AK47s.  And they used to sell each other weed.  Then they started selling coke.  Then crack.  Then crystal meth.  Just look at all that innovation their competitive economy has led to, and look at all those more efficient, more productive ways they’ve found of doing things.  If you make people feel like their lives are incomplete and they have to compete against each other to get the things they need, now you’ve built an indestructible Capitalist economy instead of Ayn Rand’s fictional indestructible socialist economy.

And I haven’t even mentioned how creating a class of lower-class savages makes them seem like a threat to the middle and upper class people, which makes those people compete against them and makes them more willing to pay more taxes to hire more police and build more prisons, etc., etc..  And that leads to whole bunch of innovation in better guns and better body armor for the police, better police cars, better security cameras, better prisons, etc., etc..  Now how much spiritual muscle power is being devoted to things that aren’t going to do anyone any good in the long run?  But this is a Capitalist economy, where the more people compete the better, right?

Since spiritual muscle power and spiritual farmland are invisible to the naked eye, it lets you build an evolutionary perpetual motion machine of oppression that’s invisible to the naked eye.  If you can destroy people’s spiritual muscle power you can prevent them from irrigating their spiritual farmland.  Then when people who all feel bad inside keep competing against each other and their economy goes nowhere, to the naked eye you’re no longer responsible for that.  You no longer have to oppress the people directly, because now you’ve tricked them into oppressing themselves.  In fact, now you can offer to help the people out by offering to help them solve the symptoms of their problems.  But if you don’t solve the causes of the problems, it doesn’t matter how much you help them solve their symptoms, because their problems are never going to go away.  So now you make it look like no matter how much you try to help the people solve their problems, their problems never get solved.  And to the naked eye, that makes it look like those people just aren’t smart enough to figure out how to make their communities function no matter how much you help them, and that makes it look like you did them a favor by conquering them.

There’s a saying among Native Americans:  Before you can decolonize your land, you have to decolonize your mind.  And that’s exactly what they’re talking about.

Oh but anyway, back to the Capitalists’ side of the story…

Mr. Friedman shows four ways individual Americans can prepare themselves for the changing economy.

First, you can anchor yourself.  You can learn how to do a job that depends on your physically being in a certain place in order to do the job.  If you’re a waitress in Boise, Idaho, or a plumber in Topeka, Kansas, you only have to compete for jobs against people from the Boise or Topeka areas, because Indians can’t wait tables or fix leaky pipes over the internet, no matter how cheaply they’re willing to work.

Second, you can be special.  You can be so good at doing something that you’re irreplaceable.  Bill Gates, Tom Cruise, and Paul McCartney will never have to worry about their jobs being exported overseas.  Of course, not everyone can get a job like this.

Third, you can specialize.  You can learn a job skill or combination of job skills that make you irreplaceable to a company.  That way, when all the easy jobs get exported overseas, your employer will keep you around to do some really complicated stuff that’s virtually impossible for him to find someone over the internet to do.  Of course, if you’re specialized you could also work for yourself.

Fourth, you can be adaptable.  You can learn a general background of skills that have lots of different applications, so that when one type of job gets exported overseas, you still have plenty left to choose from.  Then you just have to learn a few new skills specific to the new job.  And the wider the variety of skills you learn, the more ways you can combine your skills to do new jobs.  To use myself for an example, I have dual associates’ degrees in Building Construction and Automotive Technology, and between the two, I know at least something about how to work on every single thing ever invented by humankind—with the exception of computers.

Mr. Friedman also gives a list of seven things business owners can do to prepare for the Globalization 3.0 economy.  Anyone who works in any kind of a group can apply these things to whatever they do.

First, adapt to the changing environment; don’t try to fight off Globalization 3.0.  If you try to stop Globalization 3.0 from happening, you’re going to lose.  There are so many people who are joining in Globalization 3.0 that no individual or small group of people can hold them back.  That large group of people control an ever-increasing amount of material resources, and they have the same goals, so that huge amount of people is using their huge amount of resources to make the things they want to happen, happen.  And what they want is Globalization 3.0.

Instead of trying to fight off Globalization 3.0, figure out what you have that you can use to compete against everyone else.  It worked for the owners of Wal-Mart, and it’s worked for all those people in India.  They all faced stiff competition, but instead of sitting around feeling sorry for themselves they figured out how to do something no one else had figured out how to do yet.

Second, thanks to open sourcing, out sourcing, off shoring, supply chaining, in sourcing, and in-forming, a small business owner can do all the same basic things a large business owner can do.  A large business owner can do more of them, and can do them bigger, simply because they have more material resources on their side, but however they’re doing what they’re doing, they’re doing it by assembling all the same basic pieces of the puzzle that you have to work with.

Third, thanks to open sourcing, out sourcing, off shoring, supply chaining, in sourcing, and in-forming, a large business owner can do all the same basic things a small business owner can do.  Traditionally, an advantage a small business owner has had on his side is his ability to offer personalized, customized service.  But now that people all over the world can get hold of the same software and cheap labor, large business owners can get hold of all the same basic things a small business owner uses to do what he does.

Fourth, the most successful business people are those who are best at collaborating with others.  Know what your specialties are.  Whatever you need done that isn’t your specialty, it’s pretty well guaranteed to be somebody else’s specialty.  If it isn’t a specialized skill, someone in India can do it for you cheaper than you can do it yourself.  So as a business owner, your goal is not to create a product anymore, so much as it is to create the network that’s capable of creating the product.

Fifth, self-evaluate frequently.  Figure out where your strengths and your weaknesses lie, and then keep track of them.  Keep your strengths strong, and keep an eye out for additional strengths you can develop easily with the combination of strengths you already have.  Then sell that to your customers.

Sixth, the goal of outsourcing is to grow, not to shrink.  If you can hire someone in China or India to do the job of an American worker for 1/5 the price, that means you can either hire 5 people and get 5 times the work done, or you can hire one worker and save 80% of his cost, and then invest it back in your business.  Investing more money to build up your business will create more jobs, with the end result that you end up employing more people, not less.

Seventh, outsourcing doesn’t make you a traitor to your country.  Since you can’t stay in business by limiting yourself to only doing what Indians know how to do, expanding your business means doing more of something they can’t do yet.  That means finding people who can do those jobs to do them, and that means your own people.  Workers in your country knew enough about how to do the job in the first place that the Indians copied them, so that means they have more experience that they can build upon now to learn how to do something the Indians haven’t learned yet.

Based on everything I’ve said so far and everything you’ve seen in your own life, I’m sure you can see how all this is playing out in America.  So for a new perspective, here’s some examples Mr. Friedman gives of how these things are playing out in India:

Some American camera manufacturers found out about a little village in India that had a photo processing shop that wasn’t very reliable.  People needed photos for their identification cards, but whenever they got their photos taken, about 50% of the time their orders would get f*cked up.  These people would walk into town from wherever they lived only to find their photos hadn’t been developed yet or had been lost or something.

So these camera manufacturers invented a portable photo studio.  It was a digital camera with a solar-powered printer mounted in a backpack.  They gave these to five women in the village to see what would happen.  What happened was the women doubled their family incomes.  Because just like I said in the Introduction to the first volume of this book, everyone has the same natural attraction to material resources.  Now that photos were readily available in town, lots of people started getting photos taken.  About half the work the women got was the old identification photos.  The other half was people getting photos of themselves or their families or their children’s birthday parties or whatever.  Because Indians like photos for the same reasons Americans like photos.

I’ve talked a lot about how a billion Indians are rushing up behind us, trying to get the same things we have.  But so far, the total number of Indians working in the Globalization 3.0 economy either in factory or computer jobs is only 2% of their population.  The other 98% are still farmers.  That’s caused some turbulence in their adaptation to the Globalization 3.0 economy, because when 98% of people in the country seem to be getting the short end of the deal, it’s really easy for a politician to trick a majority of voters into voting for him by promising to solve the problem, even though he has no idea what the f*ck is going on.

In India’s 2004 elections, they just turned over control of the government from one party to another, pretty much like we did in America in 2006.  But evidently, the Indians have some people in their government who do know what the f*ck is going on, because the reason for the big turnover in India was because the voters wanted a better Globalization 3.0 strategy than what they had before.  They have a lot of corrupt local governments there, and that’s been a big obstacle to their local economies moving forward.  So the voters voted for the party that offered to do the most to fix the problem so they all can get more of Globalization 3.0.

(Meanwhile, what the f*ck did we get in the 2006 elections but a president who lied to start a war and a Democrat majority in congress who’s too chickensh*t to do anything about it?)

But consider this:  If you get on the internet and Google search for the impact that America is having on the global environment, you won’t have to look far to find one of many studies that show the Earth couldn’t physically support a second United States.  But if China, India, and Russia all build up to our material standard of living, there will be ten United States in the world.
A big question a lot of people in China are asking right now is:  Western Europe and the United States didn’t give a f*ck about the environment when they were building up to industrialized economies, so why should they?

Globalization 3.0 has had a big neutralizing effect on global politics because people everywhere would rather make money than fight wars.  But what would happen if the next president of China decided he wanted to build up to an American material standard of living and realized there was only room at the top for one, so he decided to fight us for what was left of the world’s oil supply?  Right now the Chinese are importing a lot of oil from Iran, and Americans are threatening to invade Iran.  There are a lot different ways this could turn out badly.

Earlier I talked about how Capitalists banding together to propagate their environmentally suicidal economic system could only lead to World War III in the form of a global civil war between Labor and Capital.  On the other hand, if Capitalists get so desperate to try to prop up their environmentally suicidal economy that they turn on each other, what’s that going to change?  Well the biggest thing it would change is: who would fight the war?  Capitalists don’t fight wars, they just start them.  The people who actually fight the wars are the same people who’ve always fought wars:  Labor.  The workers.   So this is yet another example of why the Capitalists must be stopped before we—specifically, the workers—get dragged into a war none of us can win.

Finally, on the bright side, Mr. Friedman tells a story in the last chapter of his book about an Indian who decided to go out to the countryside and build a school for “untouchable” children.  In India they have a caste system, which is some cultural tradition religious superstition bullsh*t that says that the fact that some people are born into the bottom-most level of their social hierarchy proves that they were bad people in their former lives, and now they have to pay for their sins.  Basically, it’s the American traditions of Manifest Destiny and slavery all rolled into one and committed upon their own people.  In America slavery was racialized, so it was really easy to tell who was supposed to be a slave and who wasn’t.  In India they use family names instead.  People who have certain family names belong to the Untouchables caste, and anyone who doesn’t have those names doesn’t belong to that caste.

So this guy moved to a village where Untouchable people lived, and set up a school for them.  And guess what:  They’re Homo sapiens  just like everybody else.  And now that they have an opportunity for a better life, they’re jumping at it.  If they can get enough education, they can get jobs in foreign countries and get out of India.  And once they do that, nobody they meet out there will have any idea what their family name is supposed to mean.  So they get to start with a clean f*cking slate.

India has the second largest population of Muslims in the world.  And you know how many Indian Muslims have been caught fighting for Al Queda?  None.  Not one.  We of the United States can’t even say that about ourselves.

And you know why that is?  Because people who have a lot of hope for the future don’t volunteer for suicide missions!  The Untouchables caste in India could be turned into someone’s revolutionary army easily enough, because traditionally they’ve been condemned to lifetimes of poverty and oppression from the moments of their births.  But now this guy was giving them educations and a chance for better lives.  So when Mr. Friedman visited the school and asked the kids what they wanted to be when they grew up, they all said things like, “a doctor”, “an astronaut”, “a poet”, whatever.  Not one of them said, “a terrorist”.

If it wasn’t for the Laws of Thermodynamics, the physical limitations of the Earth, or the effects of exponential growth being counterintuitive to our natural perception of the world (like, if you could fold a page of this book in half 51 times it would span 3/4 of the diameter of the Earth’s orbit around the sun, as I showed you in the last book), this solution for countries breaking themselves out of poverty would work perfectly.  But nowhere in his book does Mr. Friedman say anything about anyone doing anything to stop the global population explosion or moving to a cooperative organic agricultural economy.  Quite the contrary, in fact.  At one point in his book, he points to the fact that 150 years ago 90% of Americans worked in agriculture or related fields (no pun intended—okay, I’m lying, you know me better than that by now), compared to only 3 or 4 percent of Americans working in agriculture and related occupations now, and he calls that a sign of economic progress.  Nowhere in his book does he indicate that people are becoming less dependent on environmental energy as a result of Globalization 3.0, or that anyone intends Globalization 3.0 to be a stepping stone on the path to a global organic agricultural economy, or that anyone is taking any decisive action to educate the public to any of these problems.  No, every time he refers to people moving away from agrarian economies and into industrialized economies, he refers to it as an unconditional victory.

This is why I think Mr. Friedman makes such a good spokesperson for the Capitalists.  He means well, but he’s made such strong emotional attachments the to the idea that his economic system has prevailed over all others to this point proves that it’s the best economic system possible, that he’s diving head-first into the biggest sensory illusion in the world.  And then he assumes that anyone who doesn’t want to accompany him must not be as smart as he is.  So he continues to support his economic system, he continues to encourage everyone else to support it, and he continues to discourage anyone from opposing it.  He’s not doing this out of greed or malice, but out of blissful ignorance.  And in so doing, he’s creating a public image and cultural values that Capitalists who do act out of greed or malice can hide behind—just like greedy Capitalists took advantage of President Lincoln’s good intentions and supported liberating the slaves not because they cared about human rights but because they cared about getting 40% more labor out of the slaves.  Just like greedy Capitalists always take advantage of every opportunity that ever comes their way.

And that’s exactly what everyone in the anti-corporate, anti-Capitalist, anti-globalization movement has been saying all along.

Mr. Friedman’s Message to the Anti-Globalization Movement:

In The Lexus and the Olive Tree, Mr. Friedman devoted two chapters to the anti-globalization movement.  In The World Is Flat we only got five pages.   But he is trying to tell us something directly, so here it is:

“Let’s pause for a minute here and trace how the anti-globalization movement lost touch with the true aspirations of the world’s poor.  The anti-globalization movement emerged at the World Trade Organization conference in Seattle in 1999 and then spread around the world in subsequent years, usually gathering to attack meetings of the World Bank, the IMF, and the G-8 industrialized nations.  From its origins, the movement that emerged in Settle was a primarily Western-driven phenomenon, which was why you saw so few people of color in the crowds.  It was driven by five disparate forces.  One was upper-middle-class American liberal guilt at the incredible wealth and power that America had amassed in the wake of the fall of the Berlin Wall and the dot-com boom.  At the peak of the stock market boom, lots of pampered American college kids, wearing their branded clothing, began to get interested in sweatshops as a way of expiating their guilt.  The second force driving it was a rear-guard push by the Old Left—Socialists, Anarchists, and Trotskyites—in alliance with protectionist trade unions.  Their strategy was to piggyback on rising concerns about globalization to bring back some form of socialism, even though these ideas had been rejected as bankrupt by the very people in the former Soviet Empire and China who had lived under them longest.  (Now you know why there was no antiglobalization movement to speak of in Russia, China, or Eastern Europe.)  These Old Left forces wanted to spark a debate about whether we globalize.  They claimed to speak in the name of the Third World poor, but the bankrupt economic policies they advocated made them, in my view, the Coalition to Keep Poor People Poor.  The third force was a more amorphous group.  It was made up of many people who gave passive support to the antiglobalization movement from many countries, because they saw in it some kind of protest against the speed at which the old world was disappearing and becoming flat.

“The fourth force driving the movement, which was particularly strong in Europe and the Islamic world, was anti-Americanism.  The disparity between American economic and political power and everybody else’s had grown so wide after the fall of the Soviet Empire that America began to—or was perceived to—touch people’s lives around the planet, directly or indirectly, more than their own governments did.  As people around the world began to intuit this, a movement emerged, which Seattle both reflected and helped to catalyze, whereby people said, in effect, “If America is now touching my life, then I want to have a vote in America’s power.”  At the time of Seattle, the “touching” that people were most concerned with was from American economic and cultural power, and therefore the demand for a vote tended to focus around economic rule-making institutions like the World Trade Organization.  America in the 1990s, under President Clinton, was perceived as a big dumb dragon, pushing people around in the economic and cultural spheres, knowingly and unknowingly.  We were Puff the Magic Dragon, and people wanted a vote in what we were puffing.

“Then came 9/11.  And America transformed itself from Puff the Magic Dragon, touching people around the world economically and culturally, into Godzilla with an arrow in his shoulder, spitting fire and tossing his tail wildly, touching people’s lives in military and security terms, not just economic and cultural ones.  As that happened, people in the world began to say, “Now we really want a vote in how America wields its power”—and in many ways the whole Iraq war debate was a surrogate debate about that.

“Finally, the fifth force in this movement was a coalition of very serious, well-meaning, and constructive groups—from environmentalists to trade activists to NGOs concerned with governance—who became part of the populist antiglobalization movement in the 1990s in the hopes that they could catalyze a debate about how we globalize.  I had a lot of respect and sympathy for this latter group.  But in the end they got drowned out by the whether-we-globalize crowd, which began to turn the movement more violent at the July 2001 Genoa G-8 summit, when an antiglobalization protestor was killed while attacking an Italian police jeep with a fire extinguisher.

“[A combination of factors, including] the violence at Genoa, 9/11, and tighter security measures fractured the antiglobalization movement.  The more serious how-we-globalize groups did not want to be in the same trench with Anarchists out to provoke a public clash with police, and after 9/11, many American labor groups did not want to be associated with a movement that appeared to be taken over by anti-American elements.  This became even more pronounced when in late September 2001, three weeks after 9/11, antiglobalization leaders attempted a rerun of Genoa in the streets of Washington, to protest the IMF and World Bank meetings there.  After 9/11 though, the IMF and World Bank cancelled their meetings, and many American protestors shied away.  Those who did turn up in the streets of Washington turned the event into a march against the imminent American invasion of Afghanistan to remove Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda.  At the same time, with… the Chinese, Indians, and East Europeans [becoming] some of the biggest beneficiaries of globalization, it was no longer possible to claim that this phenomenon was devastating the world’s poor.  Just the opposite:  Millions of Chinese and Indians were entering the world’s middle class thanks to the flattening of the world and globalization.

“So as the how-we-globalize forces drifted away, and as the number of Third World people benefiting from globalization began to grow, and as America under the Bush administration began to exercise more unilateral military power, the anti-American element in the antiglobalization movement began to assume a much louder voice and role.  As a result, the movement itself became both more anti-American and more unable and unwilling to play any constructive role in shaping the global debate on how we globalize, precisely when such a role has become even more important as the world has gotten flatter.  As Hebrew University political theorist Yaron Ezrahi so aptly noted, “The important task of enlisting the people’s power to influence globalism—making it more compassionate, fair, and compatible with human dignity—is way too important to be wasted on crass anti-Americanism or left in the hands of only anti-Americans.

“There is a huge political vacuum now waiting to be filled.  There is a real role today for a movement that could advance the agenda of how we globalize—not whether we globalize.  The best place such a movement could start is rural India.

“ ‘Both the Congress [Party] and its left allies would be risking India’s future if they draw the wrong conclusions from this [2004] election,’ Pratap Bhanu Mehta, who heads the Center for Policy Research in Delhi, wrote in The Hindu newspaper.   ‘This is not a revolt against the market, it is a protest against the state; this is not resentment at the gains of liberalization, but a call for the state to put its house in order through even more reform… The revolt against holders of power is not a revolt of the poor against the rich:  ordinary people are far less prone to resent other people’s success than intellectuals suppose.  It is rather an expression of the fact that the reform of the state has not gone far enough.’

“This is why the most important forces fighting poverty in India today, in my view, are those NGOs fighting for better local governance, using the internet and other modern tools of the flat world to put a spotlight on corruption, mismanagement, and tax avoidance.  The most important, effective, and meaningful populists in the world today are not those handing out money.  They are those with an agenda to drive [local] reform in their countries—to make it easier for the little man or woman to register his or her land, even if they are squatters; to start a business, no matter how small; and to get minimal justice from the legal system.  Modern populism, to be effective and meaningful, should be about [local] reform—making globalization workable, sustainable, and fair for more people by improving their local governance, so that the money that has already been earmarked for the poor actually gets to them and so that their natural entrepreneurship can get unlocked.  It is through local government that people plug into the system and get to enjoy the benefits of the flattening world rather than just observe them.  The average Indian villagers cannot be like the Indian high-tech companies and just circumvent the government by supplying their own electricity, their own water resources, their own security, their own bus system, and their own satellite dishes.  They need the state for that.  The market cannot be counted on to make up for the failure of the state to deliver decent governance.  The state has to get better.  Precisely because the Indian state opted for a globalization strategy in 1991 and abandoned fifty years of socialism—which had brought its foreign reserves to near zero—New Delhi had reserves in 2004 of $100 billion, giving it the resources to help more of its people into the flat arena.

“Ramesh Ramanthan, an Indian-born former Citibank executive who returned to India to lead an NGO called Janaagraha, dedicated to improving local governance, is precisely the kind of new populist I have in mind.  ‘In India,’ he said, ‘clients of public educations are sending a signal about the quality of service delivery: Whoever can afford to opt out does so.  The same goes for health care.  Given the escalating costs of health care, if we had a solid public health-care system, most citizens would opt to use it, not just the poor.  Ditto for roads, highways, water supply, sanitation, registration of births and deaths, crematoria, drivers’ licenses, and so on.  Whenever the government provides these services, it [should be] for the benefit of all citizens.  [But] in fact, in some of these, like water supply and sanitation, the poor are actually not even getting the same basic service as the middle class and the rich.  The challenge here is universal access.’  Getting NGOs that can collaborate on the local level to ensure that the poor get the infrastructure and budgets to which they are entitled could have a major impact on poverty alleviation.

“So although this may sound odd coming from me, it is totally consistent with this whole book:  What the world doesn’t need now is for the antiglobalization movement to go away.  We just need it to grow up.  This movement had a lot of energy and a lot of mobilizing capacity.  What it lacked was a coherent agenda for assisting the poor by collaborating with them in a way that could actually help them.  The activist groups that are helping alleviate poverty the most are those working at the local village level in places like rural India, Africa, and China to spotlight and fight corruption and to promote accountability, transparency, education, and property rights.  You don’t help the world’s poor by dressing up in a turtle outfit and throwing a stone through a McDonald’s window.  You help them by getting them the tools and institutions to help themselves.  It may not be as sexy as protesting against world leaders in the streets of Washington and Genoa, and getting lots of attention on CNN, but it is a lot more important.  Just ask any Indian villager.”

Now I’ve just got a few things to say in response to all of that…

Mr. Friedman means well.  He wrote his book in an effort to help things turn out as well as possible for everyone.  He’s a great journalist.  But he’s no physicist…

I found his book very revealing in a number of ways.  First was its showing how the current stage of globalization is affecting people and why it works the way it does—which was what he intended.  But in many ways it was also a guided tour behind enemy lines.  For the most part, Capitalists mean well in their own way.  They’re just blissfully ignorant of the physical limitations of the Earth and the way the Laws of Thermodynamics affect the physical economy of the world.  They seem compelled to follow along with the herd like a bunch of livestock, because they seem to lack the creativity or the emotional fortitude to think of any better of an economic system than this.  But then, lacking an understanding of the basic laws of physics they’re trying to defy, they have no reason to suspect that their economic system doesn’t work in the way they thought it did.

As I’ve said, the worst kind of supervillain is a superhero who misunderstands how the world works and thinks he’s using his powers for good.  Mr. Friedman makes a good spokesperson for the Capitalists because he’s one of the religious, subconscious, passive, misguidedly benevolent Capitalists.  He means well, but throughout his book he consistently looks down upon everyone who has a problem with globalization, as though they’re just not smart enough to know any better.  He suggests that everyone stop fighting against globalization and instead accept it and adapt to it, because it’s unstoppable.  (As far as he can tell, anyway.)   He assumes that belonging to the most physically powerful civilization in the world means he knows what’s best for everyone.  And whenever he talks about any non-Capitalistic economic idea, he talks about it as though it’s just some weird little thing some teenagers thought they’d try, or some archaic cultural value some people have.  He obviously doesn’t fathom that people who are diametrically opposed to his way of life could have valid reasons for thinking the things they do—or in this case, better reasons for thinking the things they do.

(See?  This is what happens when you market your books to the people who have the most money!)

The other valuable insight Mr. Friedman’s book offers is just how strong of a sensory illusion defining economic success by personal energy efficiency is.  People all over India, China, and the rest of the world are flocking to Capitalism and Globalization 3.0.  Everyone has the same natural attraction to material resources, so if you make material resources available to people, suddenly everyone wants them.  What did you expect?  But with Globalization 3.0, between India and China alone, we’re adding over 2 billion more people to our environmentally suicidal economy. They’re all running head first into an environmental graveyard spiral, because they, like everyone else in the world, are attempting to preserve the survival of their DNA by the most effective means perceivable to them.  They perceive the value of personal energy efficiency, and they don’t perceive the Laws of Thermodynamics.  A powerful sensory illusion is exactly what you get when you pit the most fundamental law of biology against the most fundamental law of physics.

Then there’s that new antiglobalization movement Mr. Friedman is hoping will develop in rural India.  The interaction between human consciousness and the physical limitations of the Earth is the most complicated, most controversial field of study ever undertaken by humankind.  Some of the greatest scientific minds in the world have been studying it for 40 years.  I am one of the greatest scientific minds in the world, and I’ve devoted over half my life to this project.  So I can’t help but wonder:  exactly which illiterate peasant rice farmer was Mr. Friedman counting on to have enough scientific background to figure all this out?

I agree with Mr. Friedman that the current antiglobalization movement doesn’t amount to a goddamned thing.  That’s why I have to devote this entire book to whipping it into shape.

If you’ve read the first two volumes of this book and then you go read The World Is Flat, you’ll probably be as intrigued as I was to find that you’re actually reading two books simultaneously.  The first is the Capitalist’s field manual to globalization that Mr. Friedman intended it to be.  The second is a case study in what Dr. R.D. Laing said, about how much of your perception of the world is created by what you fail to notice.  If you decide, consciously or subconsciously, that a piece of information isn’t important, then when that piece of information reaches your sensory input, subconsciously you discard it before it reaches your consciousness.

Considering that the first World Social Forum drew 10,000 people and the sixth World Social Forum drew 100,000 people, I think Mr. Friedman might be confusing an absence of an antiglobalization movement with an absence of mainstream media coverage of it.  And this takes on a whole new weight when you consider that Mr. Friedman is the editor in chief of the Foreign Affairs department for the New York Times.

Mr. Friedman presents a strong case for Globalization 3.0 by interviewing lots of different people who are being affected by it in lots of different ways from lots of different directions.  His goals for writing the book are very humanitarian; he’s doing all he can to try to make sure Globalization 3.0 turns out favorably for everyone.

But now here’s where we get to the part about the worst kind of supervillain being a superhero who misunderstands how the world works…

Mr. Friedman believes that the fact that his economic system has been so successful proves that it’s the best kind there is.  This belief is reinforced by the fact that so many people want to use it now that they have the choice.  98% of Indians don’t seem to be benefiting from Globalization 3.0, but they vote to keep at it anyway, because Capitalism and globalization is how they get photos of their children’s birthday parties.  And as his visit to the school indicated, a lot of good can come of leveling the playing field between the world’s materially wealthy and its materially poor.

But in spite of what appears at first glance to be a very thoroughly researched book, he never actually interviewed a single Anarchist who’s opposing globalization to see what they had to say for themselves.  Like I’ve said, even your worst enemy knows something important about life…

The fact that 3 billion people are jumping at the opportunity to build globalized Capitalist economies in their countries only proves just how big a sensory illusion the contradiction between the survival instinct and the Laws of Thermodynamics really are.  The fact that 3 billion people want to join globalized Capitalist economies only proves that’s the most effective means 3 billion people can perceive of preserving the survival of their DNA.  Earning more money lets them use more technology, either directly or indirectly, and that lets each individual use their personal energy more efficiently for survival and reproduction by supplementing it with the use of environmental energy.  But that does nothing to change the fact that the industrialized economy that Globalization 3.0 depends upon functions by making energy leave the Gigantic Chemical Reaction of the global environment faster than new energy is replacing it.  If people all over the world grow ever more dependent on our finite supply of environmental energy to help them survive and reproduce, it’s a mathematical inevitability that they’re going to overextend themselves.

You know, there’s a Sesame Street sketch I’ve seen, which starts with Bert looking at his five cookies sitting on a plate.  Then he leaves the room and Ernie walks in.  Ernie sees the five cookies on the plate and decides that there are so many cookies he can eat one and Bert will never notice.  So he does.

Then Bert comes back and announces that he’s ready to eat his five cookies.  But then he looks at his plate and only sees four cookies.  So he asks Ernie where his other cookie went.  Ernie says, “Well, gee, Bert, I’m sure it must be there somewhere.”  So he tries rearranging the cookies on the plate in a lot of different ways.  But no matter how he does it, every time Bert counts the cookies, there are only four cookies on the plate.

Now we live in a world full of weapons, with a population that’s increasing at an exponential rate, and a supply of material resources that’s diminishing at an exponential rate, and in which pollution is being generated at an exponential rate.  And instead of moving away from depending on environmental energy to make our economy function, we’re making our economy depend on environmental energy more and more.  If people all over the world believe that the energy needed to make their economy function exists, and they plan on it existing, and then it turns out it doesn’t exist, people’s economies break down without anyone expecting it or knowing why or what to do about it.  Despite how strong of emotional attachments anyone has made to the idea that Capitalism is a good idea, the mathematics don’t work any other way.

So this is yet another example of how the anti-globalization revolutionaries paid attention to Sesame Street and the people who are trying to globalize the American Dream didn’t.  Anarchists aren’t stupid.  They aren’t as smart as they think they are, but at least they can understand pre-school-level mathematics, which is more than the Capitalists can say for themselves.
The goal of the anti-globalization revolution is not to oppose globalization itself.  It’s to build a global community within the physical limitations of the Earth.  Globalization 3.0 is moving the world in the exact opposite direction from that.  That means that before a global community can be built within the physical limitations of the Earth, globalization in its current manifestation must be defeated.

But then, when you’re a small number of people who understand that 2 + 2 = 4 and you’re surrounded by a world full of people who have been taught to believe that 2 + 2 = 5, brute force won’t solve the problem.  That means it’s aikido time.  It’s time to identify your enemy’s weaknesses and attack.

I think it’s very illuminating here to note that in George Orwell’s 1984, government officials had ordered that 2 + 2 = 5 be painted everywhere, like, on the walls in the hallway in the main character’s apartment building.  They did this to teach people that they will believe whatever the government tells them to believe.  George Orwell realized, and as a lot more scientific evidence will attest today, if the first thing you see when you leave your apartment in the morning is a mathematical falsehood, you grow accustomed to seeing mathematical falsehoods and then carrying on with your life anyway.  So the government was training the hero of the story, and everyone else in the country, not to notice mathematical falsehoods.

Then, some number of decades after George Orwell published 1984, Jim Henson decided to direct a sketch in which Ernie learns the hard way, through direct observation of the evidence, that 2 plus 2 never equals five, no matter how you look at it.  I can’t help but wonder if Jim Henson intended that as an echo of 1984 (whether he did it consciously or subconsciously and seriously or jokingly) and was preemptively teaching kids that 2 plus 2 always equals 4.

So what do all the numbers mean now?  Has the anti-globalization revolution versus Globalization 3.0 really come down to a duel between Sesame Street and 1984?   If so, I’d rather be on the side of Bert and Ernie, Kermit the Frog, Big Bird, and Cookie Monster any day, even if everyone’s bright, colorful Muppet friends do turn out to be Anarchists, and they do start drawing a circle around the a in Ses@me Street.

Now as for the anti-globalization movement serving as the conscience of Globalization 3.0, and the balance of power that keeps globalization fair for everyone…

We of the anti-globalization revolution are not just another resource for you Capitalist pigs to exploit!  Think about it.  Suppose we were all to sit in a room together to work out our differences, and you said, “So, you feel the need to make the chemical reaction of the global environment work in a way that can keep everyone alive.  Well I feel the need to make as much money as possible.  So let’s see how we can work out a compromise.”   What the f*ck would you expect to get out of a conversation like that besides a broken bottle in your f*cking face????

If your primary goal is to make as much money as possible—also known as controlling as much capital as possible—and making the global environment work in a way that can keep everyone alive is secondary  to that, then there’s nothing to discuss.  We of the anti-globalization revolution do not compromise on mass murder!

The struggle between globalization and anti-globalization is not going to be conducted on the Capitalists’ terms, no matter how the Capitalists feel about that.  This is the same political struggle that has endured throughout the history of agrarian civilization, and probably longer.  Those who control the most material resources write the rules.  And they always write the rules to make sure that their side is going to win.  As long as you try to resist your opponents while staying inside the boundaries of the rules your opponents have written, you aren’t resisting your opponents, by definition.  You’re doing what you’re opponents want you to do.  Whatever amount of resistance you’re going to be able to put up from inside the boundaries of your opponents’ rules is not going to be sufficient to stop them.  Your opponents know that.  That’s why they wrote the rules that way.

If you try to oppose your enemies by cooperating with your enemies’ rules, all you’re doing is validating their political system.  If you choose to obey their rules of protest, you choose to allow them to defeat you.  If you allow your revolution to be defeated, you make it appear to the public that you didn’t know how to win, that you don’t know what you’re doing, and that your enemies’ political system works better than yours.  By waging a revolution according to your enemies’ rules, you attract a lot of support for your enemies’ political system.  And a lot of support for their political system is exactly what your enemies wanted all along!

You know, back in the days of the American Revolution, the British and some other Europeans decided that sniping at your enemy’s officers was an unfair tactic.  Then the British army came over here and tried to kill a bunch of Americans.  And you know what the Americans did?  They started sniping at British officers.  They did what people have always done, which was to fight in whatever way seemed to them to offer them the best chances of winning.  And in the end, the British thinking the Americans didn’t fight fair because the Americans violated some arbitrary British rule that favored the British didn’t make a bit of difference.  Because the Americans won.
Furthermore, if the success of Globalization 3.0 depends on a lot of Capitalists making money and a lot of unpaid activists doing whatever it takes to keep the Capitalists honest, what the fuck do you Capitalist assholes call that besides globalizing slave labor?  Look at what I just said.  You depend on other people’s unpaid work to make your economic system function so you can make a lot of profits from it.  May I remind you that making profits from other people’s work without paying them for it was outlawed here in America in 1865.  If we of the anti-globalization movement were to agree to be your slave labor, we would be your slave labor forever, because you will never have any motivation to learn on your own to start taking responsibility for your own actions.  So if a global movement of political activists think your economic system deserves to be ground into dust, it’s not by coincidence.

So on behalf of the anti-globalization revolution, here’s my counter-offer to the Capitalists. We are prepared to accept your unconditional surrender at any time.  Until then, if you dare to push people to the point that they’re willing to fight with machetes to defend themselves against you, and we get the chance to put guns in those people’s hands, we’ll do it.  I won’t do it personally, and most people who call themselves progressive activists won’t do it either, simply because advocating violence wouldn’t help move society forward, and by definition, would not be progressive.  On the contrary, advocating violence would make us stay-right-where-we-are activists—also known as conservative activists.  But there are some people who consider themselves progressive activists who do see violence as a piece of the puzzle.

Pretty much all progressive activists agree that people have the right to fight in self-defense.  If some peasant farmers with simple farming tools and rusty old pickup trucks get into a battle with soldiers with machineguns and helicopters and tanks and artillery, it’s not hard to figure out who started the fight.  And that raises the question:  What was the government trying to do to the farmers that made them feel so badly threatened that they were willing to fight against odds like that?  So that’s when we start probing your defenses, we identify your weaknesses, and we attack.  I fight with weaponized education, but I can’t speak for everyone.

And by the way, some people are already fighting with machetes to defend themselves against Globalization 3.0.  If you don’t believe me, Google search for Chiapas and Indymedia, and see what you find. You can read dozens of articles by journalists embedded on the revolutionaries’ side.  And then try adding “Brad Will” to your search.  Brad was an Indymedia journalist from New York City who was covering the Chiapas rebellion when he was shot in the stomach intentionally by Mexican government forces.  He died of his wound.

Capitalism is driven by competition.  Violence is competition.  If you don’t like our version of competition, you’d better think of something else.

We are not here to serve as the conscience of globalization.  If you Capitalist pigs don’t have brains enough to act conscientiously on your own, that’s your own goddamned problem.  Don’t expect us to carry your share of the weight.

Meet Globalization 4.0.

Another World is Possible, after The Fourth World War:

A pivotal book to the anti-globalization movement is called Another World is Possible, by Dr. David McNally.  A good movie about the anti-globalization revolution turning violent is called The Fourth World War.

Tom Friedman is a great journalist, and used his journalistic abilities and skills to research his book.  Dr. McNally is a professor of political science and studied globalization from an economic direction by looking up some actual numbers to see what was going on.  And what do you think he found?

I won’t bother going into his numbers here, because that would just give people something to try to disprove.  He discovered the shadows of Entropy and The Limits to Growth.  Namely, that endless economic expansion in a world with a finite supply of resources is not physically possible.

Dr. McNally takes the very sensible approach to predicting the future of globalized Capitalism by backing up to the beginning, studying where Capitalism originated, and seeing how it had progressed from there to the present day.

I’ve already shown you a basic outline of how chiefs became kings and kings became aristocrats by being the continuing line of people everyone else looked up to due to their superior control of energy and material resources.  Chiefs had simple genetic advantages that made them alpha males throughout the course of our evolution, but as people developed more complex economies, the people who started out with slight advantages kept multiplying their advantages generations by generation by leaving inheritances to their children, educating their children, and using the political power their economic power gave them to write laws in their favor.  All this time, by controlling the most energy and material resources like the evolutionary chiefs, they’ve been maintaining a sensory illusion among most people, most of the time, that their economic success is proof of their superiority and their benevolence.  Or if nothing else, their economic and political advantages made a lot of people decide to cooperate with them to try to get them to be benevolent.

The transition from feudal aristocracy to Capitalist aristocracy began in England about 350 years ago.  Under feudal aristocracy, peasant farmers lived and worked on their land and paid taxes.  Then some aristocrats discovered that they could make more profit on the peasants’ work by commodifying time.  Peasants who farmed their own land could farm their land however they wanted.  As long as they paid their taxes, they were free to produce as much or as little beyond that as they wanted.

The way peasants were farming their land was the same way they had always farmed their land.  Each of their houses were built on their own private land, and other land in their villages was set aside as communal land, which might be wheat fields, sheep pastures, forests, rivers, or whatever.  The communal land was for everyone to use, and since everyone lived in the same village with everyone else, the people in each village developed a sense of how the communal land needed  to be used—how many sheep each person could graze in communal pastures, how the work was going to be divided in growing the wheat, how much each person could hunt in the forests, how much wood they could chop, and how many fish they could catch from the river.  They measured their economic success in terms of everyone getting enough to eat.  As you may have noticed, that means English peasants lived more or less the same way the Yurok did.  Or the O’Odham.  Or people all over most of the world.

The first Capitalists realized that the peasants using communal land prevented them from controlling how hard each peasant worked.  Peasants with land controlled their own livelihoods.  So the first Capitalists began enacting what became known as the Enclosure Laws, and also began evicting peasants from their lands.  The aristocrats took ownership of the land, and then started charging the peasants rent on individual plots.

Now that the peasants didn’t work their own land, they were no longer in control of their livelihoods.  Now the only way they make their livings was by selling their labor.  That made them dependent on people who did own land, and that let the people who owned the land control how hard the peasants worked—which inevitably meant they made them work as hard as they could.
What the first Capitalists had discovered was that the peasants needed two things to make their livings: their land and their labor.  If the Capitalists took control of the land, they took control of the peasants who depended on it.  Also, now that they claimed ownership of half of the land-and-labor equation, they could claim ownership of half of the product of the peasants’ labor.  (That’s the basic idea, anyway, regardless of how much rent the Capitalists actually charged the peasants.)

Out of all the skills and abilities people in England had at the time, a few turned out to be far more powerful than the rest.  These were certain abilities and skills for mathematics and social interactions.  People who had also accumulated a lot of material resources—namely, aristocrats—were well positioned to put their combination of abilities and skills to use.  So these people used their social abilities and skills to negotiate certain laws into existence, and then used their mathematical abilities and skills to use the laws to channel more material goods—money, or anything they could sell for money—into their hands.

The laws were simply agreements made among people about how they would interact with each other.  These first Capitalists figured out how to persuade people to make agreements that would favor them.  The other people might’ve realized how much the agreements they were making would benefit the Capitalists, or they might not have.  Once the agreements were made, each individual involved believed that every other individual involved intended to uphold the agreement and to help hold everyone else responsible for upholding the agreement.  The basic result was that it was a lot easier for the first Capitalists to persuade groups of people to make agreements than it was for any individual in the group to un-make the agreement afterwards.
Now let’s fast forward 350 years and see how these patterns have developed.

By now, most people in the industrialized world don’t own productive land.  Most people in the industrialized world can’t combine their labor with land to provide for themselves.  A lot of people own other things they can combine with their labor to provide for themselves, but most don’t.  That means that most people are still making their livings by selling their labor—and depend  on selling their labor to make their livings.  Whatever kind of a job you have, when you go to work, you use certain things that your employer owns to perform your work.  You employer owns half of the labor-and-land equation you need to make your living, so he claims 50% of the product of your work (or some percentage, but that’s the idea).  You are now paying rent on the tools, or truck, or photocopy machine, or whatever you use in the form of producing something that your employer can sell, some fraction of which he then pays you for your wage.

Whatever kind of a job you have, you use certain skills and abilities to perform your work.  Regardless of what kind of a job it is, you will notice that there are two things that are crucial to the survival of your employer’s company.  One is customer service, the other is accounting.  That is, the ability to negotiate, and the ability to accumulate resources.  Or, a certain type of social ability and skill, and a certain type of mathematical ability and skill.  The people who have these abilities and skills use them to channel material resources into your employer’s hands.  Which is why he makes more money than you do.

The other thing we can look at is how Capitalists are using their social and mathematical abilities and skills to write enclosure laws in the modern world.  That is, how they’re making social agreements that cause more material resources to flow into their hands.

First of all, there’s the North American Free Trade Agreement.  With the NAFTA, for the first time in history, representatives of corporations gained the ability to sue national governments directly.  That is, our government leaders who write the laws agreed  to let corporate representatives sue them.

By granting corporate leaders the ability to compete directly against national governments, the government leaders who wrote the laws elevated corporations to the status of political units equivalent  to national governments.

There are more corporations in the world than there are national governments.  Their leaders were not elected by citizens.  Their leaders’ goals are to channel material resources into their own hands.  Many of these corporations control more material resources than federal governments.  As of 1999, the people at Microsoft controlled assets worth the gross domestic product of Spain; the people at General Electric assets worth the GDP of Thailand; the people at Wal-Mart assets worth the GDP of Argentina; the people at Cisco Systems assets worth the GDP of Iran; the people at Lucent Technologies assets worth the GDP of South Africa; the people at IBM assets worth the GDP of Columbia.  In 2000, 51 of the 100 largest economies in the world were corporations; only 49 were nation-states.

It could be argued that the concentration of material wealth in the hands of a few people who had great ingenuity for investing it into new inventions is what made our technological level possible.  Most people’s livelihoods depend on their selling their labor now, but in return they get cell phones and fresh fruit in the winter and planes to ride in to go visit their mothers a thousand miles away.  That is true.  But at what cost?

Mr. Friedman believes that it’s possible for nobly minded people to struggle against Globalization 3.0—or with it, or alongside it, or whatever he prefers to call it—to create a humane form of Capitalism.  But obviously he completely misunderstands the fundamental problem the Globalization 4.0 revolutionaries are struggling against.  If we struggle against the people who are making Globalization 3.0 happen, we’ll be struggling forever, and we’ll have to devote our entire lives to fighting for the privilege to be safe from people who want to drive us off our farms so they can make more money from the land by charging us rent.  The struggle of the Globalization 4.0 revolutionaries is the struggle against the laws and other social institutions that make Capitalist oppression  possible in the first place.  Laws that let Capitalists do things like:

The people at Coca Cola buying the rights to an entire water shed in India, and banning everyone in the area from drawing water from wells on their own land;

The people at Monsanto and various other biotech companies taking out patents on genes found in plants, some of which were domesticated by indigenous people, who have been growing them for 2,000 years, and now charging people for the rights to grow their traditional plants;

The people at Myriad Genetic taking out patents on two human genes they discovered that indicate a susceptibility to breast cancer, blocking women from finding out if they have these genes, suing the Canadian government for ignoring their patents and testing women for these genes, winning the case, forcing Canadian doctors to send the women to get tested at Myriad’s labs for three times the price, which the Canadian government couldn’t afford, and thereby preventing these women from finding out if they’re susceptible to breast cancer;

The people at Pfizer charging AIDS patients in Africa 25 times their annual income for two months worth of AIDS treatment—or trying to charge them that much, anyway.

The problem with allowing corporations to compete against federal governments directly is that federal governments exist to protect their people (supposedly, anyway).  A federal government is (supposed to be) an agreement among all the people of a country to work together to keep themselves safe from individuals amongst them who would threaten other group members, and to keep themselves safe, as much as possible, from external forces, including other groups of people. Our primate ancestors figured out how to do that about 20 million years ago, and with the stroke of a pen the Capitalist pigs outlawed it.

What Mr. Friedman doesn’t seem to understand is that by the time we of the Globalization 4.0 revolution destroy all of the laws that make economic oppression like this possible, we will no longer have a Capitalist economy at all.

Another product of Capitalism is institutionalized racism.  As Malcolm X once said, “You can’t have Capitalism without racism.”

In the first book I told you about the evolutionary origins of racism—skin color being (or at least, seeming to be) an easy way to recognize whether a person belongs to your tribe or not.  Well if you’re the kind of people who try to charge people 25 years’ worth of their income for 2 months worth of medicine, how do you get people to put up with an economic system like that?  There are a lot more of them than there are of you.

How else, but by teaching all those people to hate each other, just like Rex did with the kids on his playground?  Dr. McNally devotes a large chapter of his book to the economic origins of racism.  He starts by looking at the laws that affected laborers in the Americas back when the Americas were first being colonized, and traces them from there.  In the beginning, there weren’t many laws, and laborers were all equal to each other.  Then Whites started being granted more rights and Blacks’ rights were taken away, and so were the rights of other individual groups of people.  Soon enough, Blacks and Whites were two completely separate classes of laborers.  By this point, all the Blacks were slaves and none of the Whites were slaves.  So the Blacks hated the Whites and the White laborers distrusted the Blacks.  Then their White leaders taught the White laborers to believe the Blacks were sub-human.  And as a society we still bear the scars of that to this day.

And then they did the same basic things to divide all other races from each other.

And then they did the same basic things to divide ethnicities from each other.

And then they did the same basic things to divide religions from each other.

And then they did the same basic things to divide women from men.

Capitalists passed a lot of laws about who was allowed to immigrate to countries, who was allowed to own property, who was allowed to go to school, who was allowed to vote, who was allowed to have what jobs, who was allowed to testify against who in court, who was allowed in which public parks or schools or stores or restaurants, who was allowed to live in which neighborhoods, who were allowed to own guns, who was allowed to use physical violence on who, who was allowed to marry who… etc., etc..  We don’t have laws like that anymore, now we just have a society full of people who grew up with laws like that, who assumed those laws existed because certain groups of people were better at certain things, or certain groups of people were more dangerous than others.  Or maybe those people’s children, who learned their attitudes from their parents.  These people never figured out how all the pieces of the puzzle fit together, so when they saw one group of poor, illiterate people working at filthy menial jobs, and another group of well-to-do, well-educated people working at clean supervisory jobs, they assumed that proved those people were best suited for each of those jobs, not that there were a bunch of invisible laws forcing one group down into one category and leaving the other category wide open for the other people.
War is one of many results of racism, because wars depends on the public being taught to feel like a certain group of people deserves to be killed, injured, maimed, driven from their homes, and subjugated.  Dr. McNally devotes some of his book to showing how much of warfare since the origins of Capitalism has been fuelled by the pursuit of profit—and usually a huge amount of profit for a few people.

I’ve heard a lot of people argue, as Dr. McNally does, that all of war is a conspiratorial economic system for the materially wealthy.   That obviously can’t be true, because coalitional violence is a universal constant of humanity.  Tribes of nomadic hunter-gatherers who don’t have classes of materially wealthy people fight wars against each other.  Two people out of a tribe of 50 who get killed in a war against another tribe deep in the jungles of Brazil doesn’t make the evening news here in America for a couple of obvious reasons, but that doesn’t change the fact that those people just lost 4% of their population, which would be the equivalent of 12,000,000 Americans being killed.  That 4% of the population of 50 were just as critical to their political and economic systems as 4% of the population of 300,000,000—they performed vital jobs, they had vital skills and abilities, they were parts of people’s families, and so on.

To say that all of war is a conspiratorial economic system of materially wealthy people now is not only misleading, but also dangerous.  That leads people to believe things about the world that simply aren’t true, and then to take action on those faulty beliefs.  I’ve written two huge books so far and now a third about how much believing in things that aren’t true gets people into trouble.  To say that all of war is an economic conspiracy of the materially wealthy now would require the intervention of some invisible force that intervened at some point in history and made war stop being one thing and start being the other.  Our inability to observe that force doesn’t prove it doesn’t exist, but in situations like this you need to consider the possibility that the person who believes that force needs to exist to explain the evidence is simply mistaken, and the progression of events can be explained using observable evidence, but the person just hasn’t figured out how.
At one end of the history of our species we have Cro-Magnons with their brand new multi-piece tools.  At the other end we have the Iraq war.  Wars are always, and have always been, won by whichever side manages to combine energy and matter to direct force against their enemies most effectively.  So here we arrive at the origins of war as an economic system:  Fighting a war requires material resources.

Hence the reason the Mesopotamians with their advantages in material resources conquered their neighbors, and their cultural descendants eventually conquered most of the world.  Along the way, people with certain abilities and skills were able to acquire more material resources than the other members of their groups, and they used their material resources to affect the group’s decision-making more than other members of the group did.  Everyone involved was attempting to preserve the survival of their DNA by the most effective means perceivable to them.  The materially wealthy people—who had good negotiation and mathematical abilities and skills in the first place—were good at using their abilities, skills, and resources to persuade a large number of people that the benefits of fighting the war were worth the effort.  In other words, the same combination of abilities and skills they had used to accumulate their material wealth could now be combined with the material wealth they had accumulated to alter a lot of people’s perceptions of the most effective means of preserving the survival of their DNA.   Meanwhile, the materially wealthy people also perceived an opportunity to preserve the survival of their own DNA more effectively by making profits on the war, so they used their abilities and skills for persuasion and mathematics to figure out how to make the most profit possible.  So the economic divisions that critical combination of abilities and skills began keeps growing wider and wider.

Then you get the initial sentiments for the American Revolution, where some colonists wanted to stop being the subjects of Britain, being amplified by materially wealthy people who realize that American independence would mean no more taxes to pay to the king.

Then you get the initial sentiments of the Civil War, where a lot of slaves wanted to be free and the president wanted to free them, being amplified by materially wealthy people who realized that paying the slaves would make them much more productive workers.

Then you get the initial sentiments of World War I, in which people of the major European powers perceived each other as threats, amplified by materially wealthy people who were making profits from foreign colonies, and who realized that their economic competitors in most of the other major powers in Europe had foreign colonies too.

Then you get World War II, which began with the sentiments of a lot of people of the winning countries of World War I wanting to get even with the losing countries, amplified by materially wealthy people crushing Germany as an economic power; and then materially wealthy people supporting Hitler in his rise to power by crushing the German labor unions and keeping the Germans from adopting Communism; and which ended with materially wealthy Americans who had vast supplies of material resources and the only large industrialized economy that survived the war unscathed, taking the opportunity to economically colonize Europe by offering to help them rebuild in exchange for favorable trade relations.

Then you get the Korean War and the Vietnam War, where two different groups of people were rebuilding their countries after the Japanese were driven out and were setting up Communist governments, combined with a fear of Communism among Americans, which materially wealthy people amplified to help them prevent the spread of Communism—which really blurred the lines between U.S. economic foreign policy and political foreign policy, since Communism made economics directly political;

Then you get the Cold War, where public fear of Communism was amplified by materially wealthy people who made sh*tloads of money on the military industrial complex;

Now we have the Iraq War, which began with a public fear of Arabs, Muslims, terrorists, and weapons of mass destruction, which materially wealthy people—including our own president—amplified to control access to the world’s second largest oil field;

And along the way you get dozens, if not hundreds, of smaller-scale versions of the same pattern.

After losing the Vietnam War, the Capitalists discovered a new weapon:  weaponized debt.  Hence the reason Dr. Sachs said that the International Monetary Fund and World Bank needed to be fixed.  Remember what I said about people with good social and mathematical skills and abilities being good at tricking people into making agreements that were a lot easier to get into than to get back out of?  The idea of a world bank and an international monetary fund that can loan money to help impoverished nations solve their economic problems sounds like a good idea.  That is, until you consider that the Capitalists only loan the money to the people who need it on two conditions:  that these impoverished people pay interest  on the loan, and that they restructure their country’s economic system the way the Capitalists want it.  That includes privatizing basic services that are socialized in a lot of countries, like railroads, electricity, phone service, and water; cuts in governmental spending on medicine, education, and food subsidies; the resulting pay cuts and layoffs for public employees; the removal of barriers to foreign trade and investment; and the devaluation of the local currency, which makes their exports worth less and their imports cost more.  Basically, these Capitalists are telling these impoverished foreigners to set up an American economy in their country so they’ll have all the problems we have in America, in addition to being impoverished and owing interest on their loans.  And I’m sure you remember from the last book how the unsustainable use of resources makes economic inflation inevitable, because the same amount of currency remains in circulation while the supply of material resources left to spend it on diminishes. So these Capitalists offer to help these foreigners in the short term, and knowingly push them into economic graveyard spirals to colonize them economically.

There are 190 federal governments in the world, and so far, about 100 of them have been “given” “loans” from the IMF and World Bank.  In 1970 the combined third-world debt in the world was about 70 billion dollars.  By 2000 it was over 2.5 trillion dollars—which means it multiplied about 35 times in 30 years.

You know what that means.  Lots of people being pushed into poverty, and then hunger, malnutrition, starvation, famines, and plagues.  You remember my example of the hope economy from the last book, where I talked about a loaf of bread being worth a pound of hope, and my raising the prices of bread forced you to trade more and more hope for your daily bread?   The Capitalists “gave” the Peruvians a “loan” in 1990, and within a year bread was 10 times more expensive, fuel was 30 times more expensive, average real wages had dropped by 85% from their 1974 levels, and 83% of the country’s population couldn’t meet their daily calorie or protein requirements.  You remember what I said about spending the year after I graduated high school living in Ecuador?  When I heard the story about the economic collapse in Peru it really got my attention, because the city where I lived when I was there was about 100 miles from the Peruvian border.  What Dr. McNally doesn’t mention in his version of the story is that the population of Peru at the time was nearly 3 times the size of the population of Ecuador, and two years after the Peruvians were “given” their  “loan” their economic situation had grown so desperate they were poised on the brink of invading Ecuador.  They backed down in the end, but let’s just say that was a stressful time for a lot of people I knew.

Oh, and by the way, you remember those million people who got hacked to death with machetes in Rwanda two years later?  Guess who loaned their government officials the money that paid for those machetes?  That’s not to say that the entire genocide was masterminded by Capitalists.
But you remember those Capitalists who won’t sell AIDS medicine at prices AIDS patients can afford, and who hold women hostage with their own breast cancer genes?   I think it’s worth mentioning here that the people at the IMF and World Bank are forcing the survivors of the Rwanda genocide to repay the loans for the machetes that killed their own families.

Now that brings me to the War on Terror.  A lot of people have been talking about a “war without end”.  Why won’t the War on Terror ever end?   Because the terrorists could be hiding anywhere, they can attack from anywhere, and they’re never going to surrender.  They’ll fight with small, localized attacks of various types, like the insurgents are using in Iraq and Afghanistan right now, but all over the world. To fight against that, we’ll need a highly mobile military that can go into a hostile area, strike, destroy the target, and move on to the next area.  The global war of terror is going to Vietnam all over the world, with no clearly defined locations, or targets, or enemies, or objective, or strategies.

Now you remember all those people who are so good at using their abilities and skills at negotiation, persuasion, and mathematics to keep profits flowing into their hands?  Their idea of economic success depends on sealing off wells to prevent people from drawing water on their own land, forcing indigenous farmers to pay them for the right to plant the crops their own ancestors domesticated, letting people die of AIDS, and letting governments collapse.  Do you think some starving Third World peasants might try to fight back against people like that?  And how are they’re going to do it?  Maybe with…  oh, gee, let me think about this… maybe, say, small, localized attacks of various types, like the insurgents are using Iraq and Afghanistan right now, but all over the world? To fight against which, the Capitalists will need a highly mobile military that can go into a hostile area, strike, destroy the target, and move on to the next area?   Which would make the global war against Capitalism Vietnam all over the world, with no clearly defined locations, or targets, or enemies, or objective, or strategies?

Do you notice a few things starting to fall into place here yet?

That brings me to The Fourth World War.  The Fourth World War is a documentary movie made about anti-Capitalist movements all over the world that have already turned violent.  It starts out peacefully, with peaceful demonstrations—that don’t accomplish much.  Then people start using peaceful demonstrations more directly—called direct action—and start doing things like driving the army out of an encampment in Mexico by walking up to the camp, cutting through the barbed wire, walking in, and occupying the camp.  Just like a restaurant sit-in back in the days of the Civil Rights Movement, only this time at a military base surrounded by scores of soldiers holding assault rifles.  Then people keep marching in the streets, but then they start getting beaten down and arrested by police.  So they start fighting back; then the police start shooting tear gas; then the protestors start throwing rocks.  Then it keeps escalating.  The next time the protestors march, some of them come ready for a fight, because they already know it’s going to happen.  The police are there waiting for them, in riot gear and armored personnel carriers.  Then they use the protestors who showed up wearing masks, and carrying clubs and homemade shields and bricks, as an excuse to start beating people down and shooting tear gas at them again.  The protestors who came ready to fight take on the police, and some of the other protestors back them up.  Meanwhile other protestors break into banks or corporate offices or whatever they’re there to protest—meaning Capitalism in general—and destroy everything in sight.  It started in places like Mexico, South Africa, Argentina, South Korea; then it started spreading to Seattle and Genoa and Melbourne and anywhere else the G8 or World Trade Organizations tried to meet.  Then the rioters start breaking through the police lines and destroy one of the police riot tanks.  Someone spray paints WE ARE WINNING on the side of the riot tank.  Then the police start shooting people, like Carlo Giuliani the Anarchist who attacked the Italian police jeep with a fire extinguisher and got shot twice in the face by the cop in Genoa, or Brad Will, the American reporter who got shot in the stomach by the paramilitary thug in Mexico, or countless other people whose names have never made the news.  Then the rioters start throwing Molotov cocktails.  Then people get hold of rifles and flee to the countryside to wage guerilla wars against the government, like the Zapatista Army of National Liberation did down in Mexico back in ’94 and up to the present.  There’s a different version of this story unfolding in different parts of the world, but that’s the general progression of events that’s happening everywhere.  The movie ends with a scene of about 20 Palestinian boys, probably between 6 and 10 years old, throwing rocks, a couple using slingshots, and one or two using actual slings, David-and-Goliath style.  Then suddenly an Israeli army tank comes barreling through their midsts, 55 tons of steel with machineguns and a three-inch cannon, and sends the boys scattering.  But only far enough to get out of its way and pick up more rocks to throw at it.

It’s peaceful demonstration turned to rioting turned to organized rioting, just like I told you was going to happen in the last book.

The movie was titled The Fourth World War as a multiple-entendre.  What we consider Third-World countries generally refers to counties that don’t have Western (First-World) or Communist (Second-World) economies for any of a number of reasons.  You could call countries that are being actively enslaved by Capitalists Fourth-World countries, which is a term I thought of years ago.

But the term The Fourth World War came most directly from something Albert Einstein said after the nuclear arms race began:  “I have no idea what they’ll fight the Third World War with, but I do know what they’ll fight the Fourth World War with—sticks and stones.”

It could be argued that the Third World War was fought with nuclear weapons, just not nuclear weapons that were ever used in combat.   You could say that the Third World War—more commonly known as the Cold War—was an economic war fought with nuclear weapons, with both sides racing to build them until the Soviet Union went bankrupt.  And that’s when globalization began…

With so many movements around the world that have broken down into violence to some degree or another, you can just imagine how many there are that haven’t yet broken down into violence.  Dr. McNally talks about a lot of movements like these that are happening in various places.  You can find out more about them in his book.  I’m devoting this book to showing how a peaceful revolution could be waged anywhere people have free speech—and how the Capitalists are probably going to turn it violent anyway by refusing to admit they’ve lost and driving people to desperation.

Mr. Spock, the Revolutionary:

A lot of progressive activists I meet wrinkle their noses and gag and get sick to their stomachs whenever I start talking about how science and logic can—and must—be applied to humanity.  But considering that I’m trying to agree with you and help you succeed at your own goals, I can’t help but think that maybe you don’t understand what the words science and logic actually mean, or why the things they refer to are relevant to your goals.

The word logic was probably introduced to our collective vocabulary by Mr. Spock more than by anything else.  He would say things like, “Captain, logic dictates that you should exercise caution when making out with green alien women,” and “Captain, arming our photon torpedoes while surrounded by five Klingon battle cruisers would be highly illogical.”

So based on the way Mr. Spock used the word logic, what does it mean?

If you didn’t already know the definition, but you were logically minded enough, you could deduce that out of all the possible meanings it had each time he used the word, there was one meaning that was always a constant.  But most people aren’t that logically minded.

You’re trying to figure out what a word means based on how a person is using it.  And remember, 80% of interpersonal communication is conducted emotionally.  It seems awfully ironic that I should say that 80% of interpersonal communication is conducted emotionally when I’m talking about a Vulcan who has learned to control his emotions and act upon logic exclusively, doesn’t it?  Well there’s the catch…

The fact that 80% of interpersonal communication is conducted emotionally means that 80% of interpersonal communication would have no effect on Vulcans.  But Vulcans can’t possibly talk without talking in a certain tone of voice.  Since 80% of interpersonal communication is conducted emotionally, you naturally interpret 80% of interpersonal communication emotionally, even when it’s a Vulcan talking.

So now the question is:  How did you perceive Mr. Spock to be communicating emotionally whenever he used the world logic?   Whenever he was talking about logic, he was always talking about something that was very important to him, and he always talked about it in a calm, steady voice that made it seem that this thing he was talking about made the world make sense to him.

Everything Mr. Spock ever said he said in a calm steady voice as though the whole world made sense to him.  That is, except maybe when the ship was under attack and half the bridge was blowing up and he had to yell to make himself heard over the noise.  Well he always talked as though the whole world made sense because he always perceived the world in terms of logic. He was the perfect scientist.  He always knew what he knew about the situation, and he knew the limits to his knowledge of the situation.  He always talked as though the whole world made sense to him because the whole world did make sense to him.  That includes knowing that there were some things he didn’t know, so he couldn’t explain or anticipate them.

When he talked about logic in the way he talked about it, based on your emotional interpretation of the way he talked, it seemed to mean that the word logic meant “whatever makes sense to Mr. Spock.”  Then if you heard anyone else use the word logic, it would seem to mean that the person was talking like Mr. Spock to try to make you think they were Mr. Spock—or at least, to try to get you to react to them as though they were Mr. Spock.  Of course, you could tell that they were not Mr. Spock, so that reduced your interpretation of the word to “whatever seems to make sense to this person”.  Then parents of Star Trek fans would try to use the word on their kids in order to try to make themselves sound intelligent and sound like role models their kids would look up to, and say things like, “But having a messy room isn’t logical,” or whatever.  So now your interpretation of the word has been corrupted to the point that you think it means “someone’s opinion about something”.  Hence the argument I hear all the time about “Well evolution seems logical to you…”

A jigsaw puzzle is a logic puzzle. If a piece fits in one place, then it doesn’t fit in any other place.  If a piece fits in one place, then no other piece fits in that place.  If a piece has a certain color on it, then it could fit in some parts of the puzzle but not in other parts.  If the piece has a second color on it, then it can only fit into a part of the puzzle that has both of those colors in it.  If the piece is a certain shape it can attach to some pieces but not to other pieces.  And so on.
The whole world is a giant puzzle, in which all the pieces fit together in some way or another.  If A then B.  If B then C.  If C and D then E.  If E but not F then G.  If G and H but not I then J.  And so on.

Logic is the study of systems of cause and effect.  If you have some of the pieces to work with, then you can try to figure out what the other pieces are and how they fit together.  If you use what you know about a system to develop an understanding of that system, then you necessarily develop your own predictions of what results that chain of cause and effect will produce.  The proof of whether you were right or not will be whether the effects you predicted come about.  If they do, that supports the possibility that you were right.  If they don’t, that proves that you were wrong.

Science is the application of logic to the physical universe.  The universe works in a certain way, and all the pieces of the universe fit together in a certain way.  The universe works in the way that it does because of the way the pieces of the universe interact with each other.  So just as with any other logic puzzle, if you can find some of the pieces, you can try to fit them together to figure out what the other pieces are and how they fit together.  Then the proof of whether you were right or not will be whether or not the effects that you predicted come about.  If they don’t, then your logic is proven to be faulty.  If they do, then your logic is supported.  It isn’t guaranteed, because you might’ve made a mistake but got lucky and came up with an effect that happened anyway, although not for the reason you thought it would.  But if your logic continues to yield accurate predictions consistently over numerous tests, then that proves that your logic is correct.  (Or at least, it does in layman’s terms.  In science, technically there are no truths, only discoveries that haven’t been disproven yet.)

So now the big question people always ask is:  But why is it necessary to make accurate predictions about other people?  Why can’t we just deal with each other and see what happens and let everyone figure it out on their own?

Well to answer the second question first, we can’t just deal with each other and see what happens and let everyone figure it out on their own because the world is not governed by political correctness, the world is governed by survival of the fittest.  Making accurate predictions about what other people are going to do is not only necessary it is so critical that you do it all the time without even realizing it.  Every single time you see another person, subconsciously you ask:  Based on everything you know about that person, are they going to try to kill you?

Once upon a time, some people didn’t ask that question, and now they’re all dead.  We aren’t descended from those people; we’re descended from the other people.

Familiarity breeds amicability.  You can see this happening whenever you see the same people on a regular basis, even if you never interact with each other.  The more times you see each other without interacting, the better you feel like you know them and the more you feel like you can trust them anyway.  If either one of you started talking to the other one day, the two of you would feel like you knew each other in a way, even though you’d never talked to each other before and knew virtually nothing about each other.

I ride the same bus to my job at the same time every morning.  On my bus there’s the kid in the red sweatshirt who listens to his headphones all the time, there’s the university chick who reads books about herbology, and there’s the guy with the facial piercings who works in the laundry room of the hospital.  After 20 or 30 or 50 or 100 times or whatever of riding the same bus, those all seem like people I know, even though I don’t know them.

When I was about to move out of my last apartment and didn’t think I’d be riding that bus anymore, one morning I said to the guy with the facial piercings, “I’m curious—you dress like you work at a hospital, but what kind of a job do they let you have at a hospital with all those facial piercings?”  He said he worked in the laundry room.

As it turns out, I still take that same bus partway to work in the morning.  Now whenever I see the guy with the facial piercings, we say hi to each other.  But the familiarity in our voices is noticeably greater than what you would expect it to be after our having had one four-sentence conversation or whatever it was.  The difference is that we had also seen each other about a hundred times before that or something, and not once did either of us try to kill the other—or mug each other, or beat each other up, or anything of the sort.  That’s a pretty important thing to know about each other.  Hence the increased familiarity with which we greet each other now.

This phenomenon was studied officially by psychologists sometime after World War II.  Out in those fake countryside Disneyland suburbs, a cheap way to the make the houses look different from each other is to use identical blueprints but reverse them from one house to the next, so that each house is a mirror image of the house beside it.  (That’s how the house I grew up in in Maine was built—and so were the three houses around it.)  The result is the driveway of one house is adjacent to the driveway of the house beside it, and so are the side doors of the houses.  As a result of that, people with adjacent driveways would see each other a lot more often than either of them would see their next-door neighbors to the other sides.  The result of that was that people with adjacent driveways would talk to each other more, be friends with each other more often, watch football and drink beer together more often, borrow each other’s drills and lawnmowers more often, help each other rake their leaves more often, or even just feel like they knew each other better even if all they did was wave to each other when they both came out of the house to go to work at the same time every morning.  People could’ve been doing all of those things with their neighbors who lived to the other side of them, but they weren’t doing those things nearly as much.  So why would the simple act of seeing each other more often lead to all of that?

Simply put, if you’ve seen a person 100 times and all 100 of those encounters passed by without the other person doing anything harmful to you, that’s a much bigger, much more important, and much more useful piece of information that you have to work with than if you had only seen the person 20 times, 5 times, once, or never.  If you’ve seen one stranger 100 times before and another stranger you’ve never seen before, you have a lot more information about the first to use to predict what he might do this time around than you have for the other person.

The next question people always ask is:  But why does it have to be a mathematical prediction?  Why can’t we just feel it intuitively or something?

All predictions are mathematical predictions. The only difference is that I’m consciously aware of that and you’re not.  Any attempt by you to figure out what the other person is going to do is a mathematical prediction because you are attempting to predict the effect that person’s presence is going to have on your ability to preserve the survival of your DNA by the most effective  means perceivable.   If the presence of the other person reduces the number of your children that are going to grow up to have children of their own, that’s something really important that you need to know.  And so it goes for every other evolutionary motivation and the effects it will have on the survival of your DNA.

All of evolution is governed by statistics.  Every single one of your ancestors, and mine, and every single ancestor of everyone else in the world, for the past 7,000,000 years, had the brain power to make enough accurate predictions to have at least one child who grew up to have children of their own.   And no amount of touchy-feely political correctness on your part is going to change that.
All of evolution, and all of life, is a gamble.  We are all alive right now because all of our ancestors played the odds, placed their bets, and won.

Then there’s the argument about, “But all reality is subjective.  Why do you believe you can make mathematical predictions about other people’s behavior?”

Science, as logic applied to the universe, depends on five basic things:  observability, universality, self-consistency, reproducibility, and debatability.

A lot of bleeding heart liberals have a real problem with this idea, but science is an extreme form of democracy.  Science is a process by which people figure out how the universe works through observation and rational discussion. The progress of science depends on people having access to information and education, and on their being allowed to talk to each other, ask questions, find answers, and disagree with each other.

It is true that everyone’s perceptions of reality are subjective, but if you with your amateur perspective on science know that, why do you believe that people who devote their careers to science haven’t thought of that too, and figured out a way around the problem?  Pure conceit on your part, perhaps?

By requiring that scientific discoveries be observable, universal, self-consistent, reproducible, and debatable, scientists have established a process of triangulating from their subjective perceptions to see if they all perceive the same things.

Observability means that any scientific discovery begins with evidence that can be seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched by anyone.  The only thing direct observation proves is whatever was directly observed.  If you start reading meaning into the things you observe, you’re no longer talking about observability.

Universality means that any pattern of cause and effect that you identify must always happen under all conditions.  If you identify a pattern of cause and effect that only happens under some conditions, you’ve only identified part of a pattern of cause and effect.  You still haven’t identified why it doesn’t happen under some circumstances.  Evolution is a universal pattern because evolution is always the adaptation to environmental pressures.  Thermodynamics is a universal pattern because matter and energy always move from areas of high concentration to areas of low concentration more than they move from areas of low concentration to areas of high concentration.  The Periodic Table of the Elements is a universal pattern that relates the number of protons atoms have to their chemical properties.  Friction always produces heat.  Gravity always attracts matter to other matter.  Electricity is always caused by the flow of electrons.  And so on.

Self-consistency means that all the related evidence has to fit together into a pattern of cause and effect.  If making your pattern of cause and effect work depends on ignoring some of the evidence, your discovery isn’t science.  You’re just making stuff up.

Reproducibility means that other people have to be able to use your pattern of cause and effect to produce accurate results.  If you discover a pattern of cause and effect that only works when you use it, again you’re just making stuff up.

Debatability means other people being allowed to look at the evidence, ask questions, find answers, and try different patterns of cause and effect.  If your discovery depends on preventing anyone from doing any of those things, your discovery isn’t science, it’s dogma.

A lot of bleeding heart liberals believe that controlling the way people are allowed to think isn’t democracy.  But that isn’t true.  We all live in the same universe, and this process of triangulation among subjective perceptions to discover objective patterns of cause and effect for how the universe works has proven to be a successful strategy for outmaneuvering our subjectivity.  It doesn’t work that way because anyone decided it works that way; it works that way because that has proven to be an effective strategy for outsmarting the discrepancy between objectivity and subjectivity.

The alternative is for people to respect each other’s beliefs, like bleeding heart liberals always say people have to do.  But that is the real antithesis of democracy.  When you say that people have to respect other people’s beliefs, you’re attempting to force them to do what you want them to do.  And once you force people to respect other people’s beliefs, what happens then?  Respecting someone else’s beliefs means not telling someone else that they’re wrong.  But once you do that, you’ve imposed limits on how much people are allowed to debate.  But conditional free speech is not free speech.  If you believe that people have to respect each other’s beliefs, and you believe that anyone who disagrees with you is evil, you don’t believe in free speech, and therefore, you don’t believe in democracy.  You believe in mental Communism, because you’re trying to maintain social stability by forcing everyone to live at equally low intellectual levels.

It is true that people who are not scientists are capable of making objective discoveries.  It is also true that people who do make new objective discoveries always face an uphill battle for acceptance of their discoveries among scientists.  The Niesen approach to science is the most controversial of all, because working from the bottom up has been done to death.  Instead, we learn non-scientific systems of thought well enough to recognize patterns of cause and effect that are observable, universal, self-consistent, reproducible, and debatable.  That doesn’t prove that the people discovered what they thought they discovered, but it does prove that they’d discovered something.  Then all there is left to do is to figure out what they did discover.  Then we put all those discoveries together, and we end up discovering things that traditional scientists assumed were completely impossible to discover.  I call that folk-science.  It hasn’t exactly gained a whole lot of acceptance among the scientific community, for a number of reasons.  One is that basically nobody possesses the skills and abilities necessary to replicate my work.  Another is because a lot of professional scientists with big-time academic credentials would have to admit that a stupid college drop-out figured out a new approach to science that they didn’t and that I made a lot of important discoveries with it that they assumed were impossible.

Anyway…