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Humanizing the Economy – Co-operatives in the Age of Capital

In a masterful historical analysis, John Restakis first reveals how the prevailing economic ideologies have left us with autonomous market doctrines which, in comparative isolation from the more humane social and collectivist models, have effectively denied us access and insight into new and potentially fulfilling ways to organize human life.

He examines the great paradox of our age, namely the social and spiritual impoverishment to be found in the midst of material abundance – the pervasive sense of unhappiness and longing that is now a defining feature of modern industrial civilization.

This impoverishment is shown to be sustained by an almost pathological inflation of individualism, virtually glorified and institutionalized here in North America and borne, by extension, as the psychic cost of the technological wealth now delivered throughout western culture.

Restakis reveals how the dominant viewpoints put forward over the last two hundred years, as isolated free-market theories, have had their impact on the humanist values naturally inherent in social interaction of all kinds; those values that sustain empathy, co-operation and humanity’s common dreams of peaceful coexistence.

In the face of corporate capitalism’s current failure to provide the most basic needs for billions of people on all the continents, this book explores the rich history of the co-operative movement, and today’s 800 million members, examining its position to create a more equitable, just and humane future for civil society.

To read more or purchase this important title, click here.

– Peter Oldfield

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Crash Course: Trust Yourself and Take Responsibility for Your Future

I just watched this important easy to understand and practical video on the economy (debt and credit), energy (peak oil) and the environment (resource depletion). This is a short version of Chris Martenson’s full Crash Course offered on You Tube.

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The Ethics of Gold

By Ron Robins, Founder & Analyst - Investing for the Soul

The rising price of gold stands as the ethical barometer of the mismanagement of our fiscal, monetary, and currency systems. Gold is in the early stages of re-asserting its historic role of helping to bring order to monetary and currency chaos. Its price has risen more than fourfold over the past ten years as a result of investors anticipating the predictable financial and currency chaos we have today—and what is likely yet to come.

The central banks and government treasuries, particularly those of the US, Europe, and Japan, have been weakened and our trust in them eroded. For decades they assured us that only they and their paper currencies and fractional reserve banking systems can keep our economies growing forever. They are now failing for all to see. And before the ships of state sink and economies further submerge they bail out their banking friends.

The monetary and currency systems and organisations responsible for them are deteriorating because they essentially lack an ethical standard. That is not to say that most individuals in these organisations are unethical. It is that as organizations they implemented policies over the past several decades that knowingly—or they should have known—would eventually lead to great financial and economic hardship.

One such policy was the encouragement of debt creation way beyond income or economic growth. When this policy failed, it led to tens of millions of people losing their jobs globally, millions losing their homes, and retirees in developed countries losing their savings as interest rates were reduced to near zero. It is in this sense that these organizations were, and are, without an ethical standard.

To rise to the top among many of these banking and financial organizations, requires not only brilliance, but usually subservience to base instinctual values of status and greed.

According to Dr Paul Ray’s research on Americans’ values, close to half the American population’s primary values include those of status and greed. It could be argued that even Timothy Geithner, the US Secretary of the Treasury, exhibited these values. Before his appointment it was divulged that he owed taxes that went back several years. He then hurriedly paid them to smooth his appointment to head the US treasury, the most powerful treasury on earth. About those taxes—he says he just ‘forgot’ to pay them.

When many in the financial, banking and political elites are motivated primarily by greed, unethical financial behaviour asserts itself. ‘Moral hazard’ is the term economists give to this condition. Until we as a species are able to have an inner compass that is driven by higher ethics and consciousness, then some form of firm control in regard to credit and debt creation has to be enabled. Gold is ideally suited to act in this controlling capacity.

However, anyone who studied economics at Western universities and colleges since World War II, left with the understanding of gold as a ‘barbaric relic.’ This is how John Maynard Keynes, the ‘guru’ of today’s economists, famously referred to gold. It is perceived wisdom today that we are capable of managing our monetary and currency affairs more wisely than having them subjected to the hard discipline of a gold standard, or some system where gold acts to control the issuance of currency or credit availability.

What modern economists choose to forget is that during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries while the world was on a gold standard, global economic growth was unprecedented.

As is now obvious, the perceived wisdom of modern monetary and currency management is shown to be false. Monetary conditions are increasingly calling for the kind of control that only gold can offer. However, it is unlikely that we would go back to a traditional gold standard—where everything is linked to gold. What is more probable is the tying of gold to a new international currency or to some form of monetary or credit measure. It is known that because of the vexing issues with all the four major global currencies—the dollar, euro, yen and pound—that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is developing proposals for a new international currency.

Countries such as Brazil, Russia, India and China (the ‘BRIC’ nations) as well as Western countries like France are demanding the establishment of a new world currency as well. Soon it will be realized that all paper currencies have the same historical deficiencies: their administering agencies and human governors lack the necessary restraints on credit creation unless they are tied in some way to a commodity standard. And that is best fulfilled by gold.

Jim Sinclair, one of the world’s greatest experts on gold, believes the US will eventually be forced to anchor the dollar to gold. He says the tie will be the gold held by the US Federal Reserve and Treasury versus a measure of international liquidity (ie money and or credit).

Already some central bankers are acknowledging the inadequacies of the present system and beginning to resort to gold.

After more than two decades of mostly gold dishoarding, central banks are again becoming net buyers of the metal. They include China, India and Russia. A Bloomberg story reported in June on a UBS survey of central bank reserve managers and other financiers, found that 30 per cent of them cited gold as being the best performing asset they could own for the balance of this year. That was the highest percentage for any asset class.

We are in the midst of major currency and monetary upheavals the like of which we have not seen since World War II. Deep, fundamental fissures have been exposed. Most notably: the lack of an ethical compass by institutions managing our monetary and currency systems, the policies of our monetary authorities who see the only way forward as the promotion of excessive debt, and the increasing moral hazard among bankers and financiers.

Investors and the global public are viewing these developments with alarm. Gold’s rising price represents an ethical barometer of their views. Gold is in the early stages of re-asserting its historic role as an anchor to our monetary and currency systems. It may well yet save the floundering ships of state.

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A Fresh Look at Reality: More on Visionary Professor Gunter Pauli

If you enjoyed yesterday’s Gunter Pauli video, you may find this interview in Italy a great short overview of his work that you can pass along to those who may be pessimistic about our future.

I just discovered that Gunter will be presenting at an extraordinary gathering, the World Congress on Zero Emissions Initiatives, September 13-17 in Honolulu. I will posting a June review of Gunter’s new book, The Blue Economy that outlines Professor Pauli’s plan for 100 innovations producing 100 million new jobs in 10 years! Here is a link to more information on Gunter and the book. And finally the link to his ZERI site in case you missed it yesterday.

I believe The Blue Economy is the most positive practical vision of the future that exists. Let us hope world leaders will adopt his evolutionary plan. It has the potential to create the sustainable world we have dreamed of and halt the ecocide generated by poor product and process design without thinking about consequences. This is the answer Einstein had in mind when he suggested that problems cannot be solved at the same level they were created at and Buckminster Fuller had in mind when he described a world that works for everyone with as little harm to the environment as possible. We are on the verge of an historic breakthrough. I’ll be providing continued updates on this exciting emerging trend as it unfolds. Welcome to the future present. A fresh look at reality.

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GAME OVER: How You Can Prosper in a Shattered Economy

I just finished reading this excellent and insightful book that I believe is critical reading for everyone whether you are presently an active investor or just someone interested in what the next ten years may look like. I have had my doubts about the economy for some time and finally found an economist who agrees and has provided useful insights on what to do to make sure I have something left once inflation kicks in assuming his scenario plays out.

Stephen Leeb is an economist who expertly explores what’s currently happening, where we are headed and what to do about it. His overall premise is that we are heading into a time when Peak Energy and Peak Resources will insure a very high inflation rate, increasing prices, lowering profits and reducing the services local, state and National governments now provide. Quite simply, there are not enough commodities to fulfill the needs of the ever increasing growth of China and India’s populations who all want what most Americans take for granted.

His suggestions range from dramatically accelerating the development program for alternative energy and purchasing gold and zero coupon bonds with many specific stock recommendations that should do well in the uncertain times we live in and in the immediate future.

I suggest you read this book as soon as possible. It is a highly useful guide that can help investors preserve and increase their savings in our resource dependent world. He concludes that after we go through what will be an economic tsunami, we may live far simpler lives that would be a good thing. Getting there is the real challenge and I have read no other book that so clearly lays out the picture in easy to understand language.

To read his current thinking, you can subscribe to his award winning newsletter, The Complete Investor that with his other newsletters have a combined readership of 300,000.

www.completeinvestor.com

p.s. His assumptions do not include the wild card of free energy which would be a game changer making unlimited energy available at very low cost worldwide.

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