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  • Not trend-projections, which make things cataclysmic, but the knowledge we have now. [Applause]

  • But this isn't just a fanciful notion of, say "Oh, we can have more free time"; there's

  • also a social imperative here. It's a very critical thing to point out, that historically

  • speaking, the more that we have moved to automation, or what's called "mechanization", in any industry,

  • the greater the productivity. In fact, productivity is now inverse to employment in many sectors

  • studied, which means it is socially irresponsible not to automate as much as possible, for it

  • allows for greater abundance and efficiency. Here's a chart of the G7 advanced industrialized

  • countries, showing how employment in manufacturing has been dropping, while manufacturing output

  • has risen substantially. And this particular trend is happening across the board, and why

  • wouldn't it? These machines don't need to take lunch breaks, they don't need vacations,

  • they don't need insurance. It makes perfect sense. And as a very quick point, what you're

  • gonna tend to find is that the inexpense of machines- machines are becoming so inexpensive

  • now, technology is exponentially growing at such a rate. In your cell phone you have a

  • little microchip that's more powerful than the greatest super-computer that existed 50

  • years ago. And it's really cheap now; the first great super-computer costed millions

  • and millions of dollars. People aren't gonna be affordable anymore to most corporations.

  • They are gonna automate because they can't figure out a way to reconcile keeping human

  • labor anymore, except for ideological things, of course. And fifth, we have to move from

  • a system of materialism and property to a system of universal access. Now, before this

  • point is dismissed as communist propaganda, let's consider the train of thought. In a

  • resource-based economy, where production is streamlined to maximize quality and minimize

  • waste and duplication, the idea of property becomes obsolete and, in fact, detrimental.

  • People do not need to hoard and protect anything. They simply need access to what they need

  • at the time they need it. The best example is the automobile. We've been finding in science

  • now, there have been tests done of cars that can drive themselves. It's been tested- satellite-driven

  • automobiles that can navigate very well. And Jacque talked about this years ago as well,

  • using Doppler radar, so cars simply cannot hit another car. These things are coming to

  • fruition. So in the future if you need to go somewhere, you call up the car that you

  • need, it comes to you, you utilize it, and then, when you are at your location, it goes

  • back and helps somebody else. As opposed to sitting in some parking lot, wasting time

  • and space for likely 80% of the automobile's life. This is what we do. We waste so much

  • space and resources... [Applause] We waste so much space and resources with this primitive

  • concept of personal ownership. It is environmentally detrimental and socially inefficient. And

  • by the way, property isn't an American or capitalist idea. It's really a primitive mental

  • perspective generated from generations of scarcity. People claimed legal ownership because

  • it was simply a form of protection. It's also controlled restriction, in fact. You know,

  • no longer would someone need to live in one place. One could travel the world constantly,

  • getting what they need, as they move along. Anything needed is obtained without restriction.

  • There's no reason to even "steal" something, and this is an extremely important point.

  • How could you steal something that no one owns? You certainly couldn't resell it 'cause

  • there's no money. Right there, you have 95% of all crime gone. [Applause] In conclusion,

  • as paradoxical as it may seem, the more efficient and conservative we become, the more streamlined

  • we become, the higher the level of abundance we can generate for all of us. Today around

  • the world many people often say, "I wish we could live like Americans." I know you've

  • heard this before. Well... no. The contrived, ostentatious orientation and conspicious consumption

  • patterns of the American culture should be despised by all other countries on this planet.

  • We have 5% of the population... [Applause] We have 5% of the population and we consume

  • 30% of the world's resources. It's insane. In a resource-based economy where we base

  • our production distribution on physical referents starting with the carrying capacity of the

  • Earth; where we streamline our labor expression towards things that have a long-term social

  • return; where we get rid of the cancer known as the financial system and start to share

  • our resources in a diligent way, working together, avoiding the false values of materialism and

  • consumption pushed upon our culture, we find that we can provide a high quality of life

  • for everyone on this planet, while eliminating all of the central reasons for war, poverty,

  • destitution, violence, criminal behavior, neurosis. It would be the dawn of a world

  • we could actually label a civilization. And if that isn't a goal worth working towards,

  • I don't know what is. Thank you.

Not trend-projections, which make things cataclysmic, but the knowledge we have now. [Applause]

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