Subject: Re: Space Travel And The Wonders Of Our Universe Are For Everyone
From: John Ayres
Date: 11/02/2010, 11:22
Newsgroups: alt.alien.research,alt.ufo.reports,alt.paranet.ufo,alt.alien.visitors

On Wed, 10 Feb 2010 07:03:27 -0500, "Kiyo" <darlaperenosp@maol.com>
wrote:


"John Ayres" <jon.john@aol_dot_com.au> wrote in message 
news:g06km5t10c18stahqeqllef3il5c04rljv@4ax.com...
<...>
John Ayres

May I ask you, what government type would you hope this centralized system 
would utilize?

Socialism/social welfare would be my suggestion for a type of
government, that is, a socialized system for the fair and good welfare
of the people.

In the overall running of the government, you can think of it as a
boat, for example, an air craft carrier, where every one has a job,
and every one carries out their job, dutifully. The people in
government would all know what their job is / jobs are just as every
soldier or officer on an air craft carrier would be expected to know
his or her job(s).

As for profit seeking in the economic sphere, limits will have to be
put into place perhaps through taxation, and social welfare will have
to be given more weight than the rights of the individual to profit
from his or her labor.

Those who find it to their liking that they rise in importance in
society from their disciplined and correct actions for the sake of the
system and for the benefit of human kind, will excel in business.

A merit sytem could be put into place, and persons who accumulate
merits can earn free time off from work, and holidays in nice places,
and so on.

The public order, welfare, and the system is of more importance than
any one individual, so people will just have to learn and adapt.

As for underdeveloped nations where herding goats, hunting for seals,
and generally primitive life styles are still part of every day
society, education will play an important role in the lives of those
people. For example, one idea might be, people in out lying districts
who are living below certain standards of living will be eligible for
gaining merits merely by attending academic institutions to gain an
education.

One interesting question is what do we do for the labor required for
harvesting food such as picking grapes for our wines, picking melons
for our breakfast tables, working in the orchards, or harvesting
vegetables, as examples, and for menial tasks of all kinds we assign
to foreign or domestic "cheap"  labor forces? Again, a merit system
would apply and participants / workers would all get a chance to
compete and excel.

As I said earlier, this is really a matter for think tanks to tackle
and come up with the answers for. Or, if we were lucky enough to make
contact with a civilization that has the blueprints for this kind of
project, global unification, we would have it all spelled out for us.
In any event, it is something worthwhile for say a think tank to
grapple with and come up with the solutions for if they had the
funding for it.

John Ayres