mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-30 09:46:18 -05:00
250 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
250 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
1
|
|
|
|
Little Free Press
|
|
|
|
2714 1st Avenue S., Minneapolis, MN 55408 USA
|
|
#52 Reprinting Permissible "food for thought since 1969"
|
|
F R E E
|
|
|
|
|
|
UTOPIA NOW POSSIBLE
|
|
|
|
A revolutionary breakthrough in employee motivation may be
|
|
forthcoming by making jobs so attractive, interesting and enjoyable
|
|
that employees will work without pay. These volunteers will be
|
|
attracted by good working conditions, the latest in fine tools,
|
|
machines and technology, such as; robots, computers and satellite
|
|
communication systems. Volunteerism would eliminate the "monetary
|
|
cost" of production which in turn would permit all products and
|
|
services to be distributed free of charge, thus allowing people to
|
|
work without pay and enabling industry to provide the marvelous
|
|
technologies and tools. Work would then become a privilege instead of
|
|
a duty.
|
|
This Priceless Economic System would cause the following
|
|
departments to become unnecessary:
|
|
1. Payroll
|
|
2. Sales
|
|
3. Advertising
|
|
4. Credit
|
|
5. Banking
|
|
6. Insurance
|
|
7. Legal & Tax
|
|
8. Much Accounting
|
|
9. Much Administration
|
|
This would make tremendous savings in resources and energy and
|
|
free more than 16 million people for useful work.
|
|
People leaving these unnecessary jobs could volunteer for any
|
|
jobs they liked and receive free on-the-job training and begin to
|
|
learn and produce immediately.
|
|
Volunteers take more responsibility to do better work and create
|
|
better working environments for themselves. Instead of working
|
|
because one "had to" and hating it, people would work because they
|
|
desired to. Then employees could enjoy their work in creative ways
|
|
without pressure to make profits.
|
|
People who own the raw materials would then have no need for
|
|
money because everything would be free for everyone. Their employees
|
|
would be distributing their raw materials free of charge as would all
|
|
employees in industry and on farms.
|
|
Stockholders would have no need for money nor any reason for
|
|
worries about inflation, depression or stockmarket-ulcers.
|
|
Because everything would be free there would be no reason to
|
|
steal. 94% of the people in prison and jails1 are there for
|
|
stealing. Priceless economics would end 94% of the need for:
|
|
1. 4,052 jails and prisons
|
|
2. 630,000 lawyers and judges
|
|
3. 1,267,000 guards and police
|
|
4. 412,000 prisoners
|
|
Thus giving us 2,170,460 more people to help with the essential
|
|
____________________
|
|
1 Statistical Abstract of the US. 1985; American Prisons & Jails,
|
|
1980, Vol.3; Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1983, Dept of Labor.
|
|
|
|
|
|
2
|
|
work.
|
|
There would no longer be a reason to starve or revolt when
|
|
everything is free. Malnutrition would become a thing of the past
|
|
when land is used to feed people instead of for "cash crops."
|
|
Because there would no longer be a "profit" in starting wars,
|
|
there wouldn't be a need for defense or military, thus releasing:
|
|
1. 223.3 billion dollars worth of resources each year.
|
|
2. 4.1 million active military personnel, direct-hire civilians and
|
|
defense related workers.
|
|
When the unnecessary departments are discontinued we could stop
|
|
producing the supplies these departments had been consuming, i.e.,
|
|
this would lower the demand for:
|
|
1. office buildings
|
|
2. office machines
|
|
3. supplies
|
|
4. furniture
|
|
5. fixtures
|
|
6. electricity
|
|
7. fuel, etc.
|
|
This would save millions of human work-hours and billions of tons
|
|
of raw materials.
|
|
Savings in check-out clerks, cashiers and cash registers alone
|
|
would be fantastic.
|
|
With no monetary cost for labor, rent, energy and machines, all
|
|
factory waste materials could be reclaimed, processed and recycled --
|
|
instead of polluting the environment. With free labor, the farmers
|
|
would all be able to practice organic farming methods and produce more
|
|
nutritious food and halt their pollution.
|
|
There would be no inducement to rush new products into the
|
|
market. They could be thoroughly tested to get all the bugs out and
|
|
be sure they were safe and that their wastes could be reclaimed.
|
|
With priceless economics there wouldn't be a reason for special
|
|
interest groups to suppress cheaper energy sources, more efficient
|
|
production and distribution methods and machines which used less or
|
|
cheaper fuels.
|
|
With priceless economics there wouldn't be a profit in designing
|
|
planned obsolescence and planned deterioration into products. Instead
|
|
products would be designed for utility, long life, efficiency, beauty,
|
|
safety and be trouble-free and easy to repair with universal parts.
|
|
Work would take on a new meaning. It would become an art and
|
|
employees would all become artists doing creative things to make their
|
|
products or services better and the process more enjoyable.
|
|
People would no longer resist automation and robots because these
|
|
machines would be employed to do the dangerous and boring work. This
|
|
would further reduce human working hours.
|
|
We may discover the fact that we have very little or no need for
|
|
government, thereby saving most of the nearly trillion dollar budget
|
|
and freeing 14.8 million more people for essential work. The few
|
|
useful services which government now performs are:
|
|
1. postal service
|
|
2. fire departments
|
|
3. sewer and water
|
|
4. highways
|
|
5. forestry
|
|
6. parks, etc.
|
|
These departments could function more efficiently without
|
|
bureaucratic and political interference and without budget
|
|
limitations.
|
|
People would no longer have:
|
|
1. money worries
|
|
|
|
3
|
|
2. credit problems
|
|
3. rent or mortgage payments
|
|
4. unemployment
|
|
5. taxes
|
|
6. recessions
|
|
There would be no need for TV commercials and war fear-mongering.
|
|
This will reduce stress and restore hope and confidence. There would
|
|
be an abundance of good food for everyone and much more free time to
|
|
enjoy ones family and friends. Happy people get along better. People
|
|
could then cooperate instead of compete and create a synergy which
|
|
would yield more health, creativity, efficiency and happiness.
|
|
There would no longer be a reason to create make-work projects.
|
|
There is plenty of important work which needs to be done.
|
|
Without the stresses of the Profit System people could enjoy
|
|
working with the neat fantastic tools, machines and computers which
|
|
industry provides. Work would then become a place that people could
|
|
go to enjoy themselves, to gain satisfaction in creating beautiful
|
|
products or services and enjoy the camaraderie that would be shared.
|
|
Work could become our most treasured recreation.
|
|
We have what it takes to produce abundance:
|
|
1. resources2
|
|
2. labor
|
|
3. skills
|
|
4. machines
|
|
5. factories
|
|
6. land3
|
|
With an abundance of top quality products which were free, there
|
|
would be no reason to take too much. Too much, is a burden and free
|
|
things are not status symbols.
|
|
Competing companies could then cooperate to produce the best
|
|
products they could mutually design -- cooperation being more
|
|
efficient than competition.
|
|
The "Law of Supply and Demand" would function more efficiently
|
|
when we work to fill the demand, rather than attempt to create the
|
|
demand.
|
|
This Motivation Revolution would work best on a world-wide scale
|
|
because ALL the world's people would be far better off with this new
|
|
system. Underdeveloped nations could then develop as quickly as they
|
|
desired, with free guidance from advanced nations if they wished it.
|
|
If we are able to increase the life of durable goods (cars for
|
|
example) to only twice their present useful life, that alone would
|
|
reduce the consumption of resources for durable goods by 50% and
|
|
reduce working hours for their production by half.
|
|
When the 38 million people now engaged in the above mentioned
|
|
non-essential jobs; enter essential employment they will greatly
|
|
reduce the working hours for everyone -- or, they will greatly expand
|
|
certain fields, such as; research and development, reclamation of
|
|
factory waste products, cleaning up the environment, working on
|
|
organic farms, the space program and/or -- they may prefer to slow
|
|
down the pace of all work to have more time to enjoy the journey
|
|
through life.
|
|
Priceless economics would create an almost Utopian atmosphere by
|
|
eliminating 7 of the world`s greatest problems:
|
|
1. war
|
|
2. pollution
|
|
____________________
|
|
2 Buckminister Fuller's "World Game" findings.
|
|
3 There are 7.28 acres of food-growable land per person in the world.
|
|
FAO Production Yearbook, 1981, Vol. 35, By Food and Agriculture
|
|
Organization of the United Nations.
|
|
|
|
4
|
|
3. starvation
|
|
4. stealing
|
|
5. taxes
|
|
6. money worries
|
|
7. government
|
|
"Giving" produces better feelings than "selling." Getting
|
|
something for "free" produces better feelings than parting with money.
|
|
(Who can resist a Giver?) Being part of the work force which creates
|
|
this near Utopia would be an Honor. Thus, we would pass something on
|
|
to our children and grandchildren that future generations would be
|
|
grateful for and remember us by, instead of the wars, pollution and
|
|
starvation that our parents left for us. Some say that people don't
|
|
deserve Utopia, but if people create it -- they will deserve it!
|
|
|
|
TO END WARS & POLLUTION AND BEGIN UTOPIA:
|
|
First--I think our job right now is to get the word out and get
|
|
everyone talking and arguing about the Priceless Economic System.
|
|
Second--I think after everyone understands Priceless Economics
|
|
they can set a date to all stop taking pay and begin giving all
|
|
products and services free of charge.
|
|
|
|
"Progress is a matter of trying new ideas. For example, try --
|
|
not beating your head against a brick wall, for a change. See how you
|
|
like that."
|
|
|
|
7/20/85 Ernest Mann
|
|
|
|
Statement of Purpose:
|
|
The Little Free Press is dedicated to the idea that we solve
|
|
problems by first finding the primary cause of the problem and then
|
|
focus on making changes in their area of "cause", instead of fiddling
|
|
with layer upon layer of laws aimed at slowing-down the destruction
|
|
(symptoms) i.e., finding and replacing the destructive motive with a
|
|
life supportive motive.
|
|
To encourage the discovery and use of one's individual POWER
|
|
rather than giving it to a leader.
|
|
Perhaps the essence of the LFP focus is in the area of total
|
|
freedom and access to abundance for each individual.
|
|
We might call this UTOPIA. "What the mind can conceive, it can
|
|
create."
|
|
|
|
SUBSCRIPTIONS
|
|
The LFP is FREE, except please enclose 25 cents for postage in
|
|
the U.S. for each issue you desire. Little Free Press, 2714 1st
|
|
Avenue S., Minneapolis, MN 55408
|
|
|
|
NO COPYRIGHT
|
|
If you can relate to these ideas, please make copies of this
|
|
issue and pass them around.
|
|
|
|
About the author:
|
|
The author was in business in Minneapolis for 22 years. He
|
|
gained enough knowledge in economics to retire at the age of 42 in
|
|
1969. Since then he has had the space to observe economics from a
|
|
different perspective and the time to travel, read, observe, discuss,
|
|
think, evaluate and form his own conclusions about the economic
|
|
system, life and individual freedom which he presents in his
|
|
newsletter, the Little Free Press. He distributes this free of charge
|
|
(except for postage).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|