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Cosmic Disclosure: UBUNTU – Ubuntu contributionism system which sounds like utopia is not practical / Determination of maximum wage and reform of financial system
I have a negative thought about basic
income as it is at the moment. The biggest reason is that discussion about
financial source has not been held. And furthermore, I feel that earthlings’ awareness
for work is still immature. As a matter of fact, this article made me more
strongly think so.
I have picked up this article once. I quote
more sentences from the original article than before. I really understand Mr.
Michael Tellinger’s explanation about Ubuntu contributionism in a conversation
with Mr. David Wilcock. However, my opinion is that given the awareness of
earthlings, what he tries to do sounds like Utopia and it is not practical.
In the conversation, Mr. David Wilcock asks
questions about what he naturally has doubt. Regrettably, however, Mr.
Tellinger does not give any proper answers to any questions.
The world described in a famous song “Imagine”
by John Lennon could be realized if there were no bad people on earth. Reading
Mr. Tellinger’s answers, I felt the same way as he does.
Let me take an example. Mr. Wilcock askes: “What
if some guy goes around raping women at knifepoint? In response to the
question, Mr. Tellinger just says: “Communities govern themselves.” The real
issue is how to deal with brutal crimes committed by outsiders. Is there any
political organization in a village? In a society where everything necessary is
provide with only a few hours’ work, I wonder who would be willing to achieve
such a dangerous task as a policeman.
In the latter half of the article, Mr.
Tellinger says: “If our political party advocating Ubuntu contributionism wins in the local
municipal election in Africa, we will immediately implement the Ubuntu system,
shut down the capitalist system and liberate all of us.” In my opinion, if one
local community without intelligence agency or army should achieve success, spy
elements would infiltrate the community and assassinate all leaders, and the
Darkness would completely took over the community. There are many people on
earth who try to put themselves above an organization to control others.
Libya was destroyed in no time. It is so
easy for the Dark forces to destroy a local community. I wonder what kind of
countermeasure against such sabotage they are going to take. Would it be all
right if people who maintain public order in the village are in the same
position of mere volunteers as ordinary citizens are? Is it possible to
maintain security by forming a vigilance committee whose members go on patrol
for two hours a day? It seems to me that such an issue has not been realistically
discussed. In a word, they just talk about Utopia.
I think that if there is the most realistic
means to reform the society, it is to determine the maximum wage. Secondly, it
is necessary to reform the financial system radically. I think that people need
to change their awareness of work through making such changes.
February
15, 2017
Masatoshi
Takeshita
Note:
Shanti-phula has indicated some parts of
the following text in black boldface type or in red letters.
Excerpt from Sphere-Being Alliance –
March 4, 2016 –
Cosmic
Disclosure: UBUNTU AND THE BLUE AVIANS’ MESSAGE Part 2 Season 3, Episode 9
Source:
DW: <snip> The
interesting thing now is with this special edition episode, we've also brought in Michael Tellinger, who was
specifically named by the Space Program Alliance because his Ubuntu contributionism system, they said, is a blueprint
for an entirely new way of living on Earth that will be in much greater harmony,
where the goods and services that we need can come about in a loving,
co-creative fashion rather than in one that involves destructive competition. <snip>
But people believe it,
that if you don't have a competitive, capitalist system,
that the need for money, the need to earn money and to procure money or else you will starve, is the only thing that lances the boil of human
selfishness and greed that would otherwise make people want to live off
of others and not contribute to the system. How do you address that?
MT: Well, once again, that statement comes from within a capitalist system.
The moment you don't have money, where that doesn't even enter the equation. <snip> When you start working in a structure of collaboration
and cooperation, and not in competition-- <snip> Democracy is part of the
problem. <snip> Capitalism, democracy, competition, the money system--
<snip>. Until we get rid of that, we can't level the playing field and create a united community that actually works towards a
benefit of all. <snip>
DW: Oh, Michael.
Hang on a second. People are going to be sitting
around with their phones. They're not even going to look you in the eye.
They're not going to want to do any work.
They're going to just be sitting there twiddling their thumbs. This doesn't sound practical.
CG: There's going to have to be a
transitional period. And a-- what's the opposite of indoctrinating a person?
MT: Liberating a person.
CG: Liberating people's minds. <snip>
There's going to have to be a catalyzing event
<snip> , a
global economic collapse. People are going to be very upset. They're going to realize this has been a giant Ponzi scheme
run by criminals. And all of these people that are supposedly in the
democratic system that they voted for have been in the pockets of these people
the whole time. It's just been a big scam. When the sleeping masses realize this, that's
going to be a catalyst for them to want to know more. And
then this is when a lot of document dumps are going to happen. A lot
more information is going to come out. And don't you
think that's going to stimulate people to be open to new ideas? <snip>
MT: <snip> Pretty much everyone alive
on this planet knows that something is wrong. <snip> Are you happy with your life? <snip>
The answer is 100% no, guaranteed. 100%.
DW: Absolutely.
MT: <snip> So clearly, something is dramatically wrong. <snip>
And now we just got to present a new system. <snip>
DW: I'm hearing a lot of beads and sandals,
feel-good platitudes. I'm not hearing practical things, though. I'm just
hearing a lot of philosophy right now.
MT: <snip> I believe that the
way to do this is to go into the small towns and small villages where
you can reach all the people.
<snip> You <snip> and then become
the model for this new way of thinking and the new way of acting and the new way of creating abundance for themselves, thriving.
How do you do this? Well, you can do this by bringing a
lot of money into a small town. The other important thing is to say,
we're going to have to use money to free ourselves from the money. <snip>
So people that are
out there and saying, oh, Tellinger, you're a fraud. <snip>
We are creating a new reality for
ourselves. <snip> the whole Ubuntu
contributionism system is based on establishing a
number of diverse community projects within small communities that
benefit that town. <snip> And each
one of those community projects is then worked. Everybody works for a few hours
a week on one of those community projects.
<snip> We are not creating self-sustaining communities. <snip> We create so much of what we do that we can
make it available to everyone around us, either by selling it or making it
available for free.
DW: If the Space
Program releases technology where you can create any material item or good or
food that you want-- you just hit the button and you got it-- how would
that factor in? <snip>
MT: That's a really good question. It's
something I've thought about quite extensively. And this
is where individual humanness actually comes in. While I might want to
use the replicator to make me a pot of whatever, I actually enjoy the art of
cooking. I enjoy making a wooden cabinet.
<snip> And we are each born with very specific and unique talents.
<snip> So you can choose to
use a replicator to make you a pair of pants. But
I think you're getting a lot more joy by talking
to your mother or your granny or the tailor to
make a beautiful new sets of clothes for you.
<snip>
So we create
a political party that actually says something completely different. <snip> We're
going to shut down the Federal Reserve System and
create a People's Bank as an interim that issues money for the people, tax free and interest free. <snip> So it
actually starts serving the people to put into place, in the interim phase, all
the community projects and the public works that we need so that you can
release the people from their prisons in their metropolitan areas.
DW: Doesn't it seem like things are already
kind of leading this way? Look at the number of people who will make their own
YouTube videos. They know they're never going to make money on it. <snip> Why are they doing it? Because
they want to be seen as socially valuable. <snip>
MT: Absolutely. Really, what you just said
there, David, is critical. <snip>
-- when you wake up in the morning, and you know,
as Corey said, everything you need is provided for.
<snip> There's too much food, too
much technology, too much fabric, too much anything. <snip> All you
have to do is contribute a few hours a week towards the community projects, and
the rest of the time is yours. <snip> How that will evolve, I don't
know yet. But the communities will decide how that's going to evolve. But what
it results in, that most of the time you have in the week is your own. And you
can then express your own talents, whether you're a painter or a sculptor or a
musician or a horse breeder or an engineer or a scientist. It doesn't matter
what you do. <snip>
CG: What a world.
MT: So when you
wake up in the morning with a smile on your face because you know you don't
have to get up, get dressed in a suit and a tie, and sit on a train or a
bus or ride a bicycle in the rain or the cold or the wind to go to a stinking job. <snip> You get everything for free.
DW: What if some
guy goes around raping women at knifepoint? What are you going to do with him?
MT: Well, that's one of the frequently
asked questions. <snip> the Ubuntu model,
is to move away from a centralized government. Communities
govern themselves. <snip>
They'll set up a new legal system, guidelines as to the behavior. <snip>
CG: So you're not talking about, like, a
centralized government ideological system in that aspect. Different regions
that have their own moral compasses and—
MT: <snip> And there's a lot to
discuss, obviously. <snip> The community will elect its own council of elders
that will then be the guides for the community. And they'll
decide daily and hourly and minute-by-minute what
is best for the community, not what's best for me. <snip> I call
this a minority-run system. <snip>
There are an infinite number of minorities. There are those that look
after butterflies and those that care about peach trees and the soil and the
clouds and whatever. <snip> Every minority will get all the tools, all
the technology, all the support, all the labs, all the research, everything you
need to do what you're supposed to be doing for your community. That's why you
can call this a minority-driven system.
<snip>
DW: So the cesspool gets clogged up, right?
The sewers are clogged. Nobody
wants to go into the sewer. What do you do then?
MT: Great. I love it. It's just beautiful,
where it's just one of the frequently asked questions. <snip>
when I do the workshops and I bring up this as a
question, guess what happens? There are always
two or three people that put up their hands. I'll shovel the crap. <snip> But it goes a lot further than
that. <snip> So whoever is on duty for that week to look after the sewers
will go and unclog the sewers.
<snip> So the amazing thing
is that for every crazy Michelangelo or Leonardo da Vinci, there are 1,000
crazy young chemical engineers who are passionate about solving the sewage
problem. And they will come up with systems to solve the sewage problem.
DW: When I was in high school, there was
probably about 20 jocks who were always on the morning announcements. <snip> Everybody else, <snip> all marginalized.
Never got any recognition, never got their name on the announcements. How do
you avoid cliques and good ol' boy clubs, where <snip> just a few names
are getting all the attention?
MT: <snip> Laziness is not human
nature. <snip> Human nature is to
create. <snip> -- the talent that you're born with. And that gets
beaten out of us in the school system. <snip> your schooling system-- which
obviously we're going to have to do completely. <snip> So when you grow up in a united community,
where everything is available to everyone all the time, you're not worried
about who-- you love those people around you.
<snip> It's about what you do as an
individual that drives you, that you'll be respected and loved for by
your community. <snip> And this is
where it gets really interesting, when you start understanding the impact of
who we become in our communities.
DW: When I came over here from the airport,
there was a lady driving the shuttle bus named Teresa for Alamo. She's got two
jobs. She works at Delta, she works at Alamo. She's working 16 hours a day. <snip>
if she does the overnight shift, and she's sleeping from 2 o'clock to 4
o'clock in the morning.
MT: That's disgusting.
DW: <snip> But when I talked to
Teresa, it turns out that she went to Haiti. <snip> And if she could afford it, she wants to go
back to Haiti and create something like a business for all-terrain vehicles
where people can drive around, enjoy themselves, do something that contributes
to the common good. Anytime you find somebody in one of these dead-end jobs, if
you to them about their dream, they got a dream. <snip>
CG: I'm sorry--is this something that
people can begin to practically implement in whatever country they are right
now on a small scale? And is there a place where they can learn more about it <snip> these social experiments and show others? <snip>
MT: Proof of concept is critical. But this
brings me back to what happens in community projects. First of all, to set up a community project costs money. <snip>. But then to manage them and actually let them become successful
so they bring an income, so that they start bringing
abundance into the town, first with money, and then that money keeps upgrading and improving. That is where it normally falls down because as an individual
like myself, I end up running out of money every time we start to get out of
the starting blocks. So this is why I need to bring it back to the political
platform. <snip> So we basically now are going-- in 2016, we
have the South African local municipal elections. And I'm using this as the
catalyst, the spearhead for the global Ubuntu movement. Now, we've got members in more than 200 countries. <snip> So we need to raise enough funds
to contest successfully the local municipal election. <snip>
if we win
one municipality and the four or five towns who make up that municipality, we will shut down the capitalist system and implement this
Ubuntu system, contributionism system, virtually overnight. <snip>
One little town can bring down the whole banking and money control
system of humanity and free us all.
<snip> And our main promise to the people for this election is free
electricity for all. <snip>
Everybody gets free electricity in return for
giving three hours a week to one of the community projects. <snip> You don't
have to give up your job. <snip>
What we did in Australia just recently, in Byron Bay, there was a
statistician there. And he did a calculation. And this is what he said. <snip>
as an example. 5,000 people, three hours a week, it's 15,000 hours of labor a
week. Right? <snip> He did the numbers, and he said one year of
people contributing three hours a week in this system, one year of this is
equivalent to 31 years of people working eight hours a day as slaves in the
current system. One year to 31 years. Those are the ratios. So within a very short space of time, we'll turn out community into a community of unimaginable
abundance. We'll have so much food. And then you
decide how this unfolds. <snip>
DW: Well in America, something like this
happened after the Depression, <snip> where these large social causes
mobilized the public, and they got involved in public works projects. And
people were really inspired. And that was the last time that America really had
a manufacturing boom. And then when we expect everybody else to do all the work
for us and we're going to import everything, it crumbles from the inside.
MT: What it does to
our town and our community, instantly turns into an attraction for anyone who
wants to create, invent, and use their skills to serve themselves and
the rest of the people. <snip> All you have to do is
make your business <snip> And you retain one third of whatever we produce and sell.
<snip> it works on all levels--
with farmers, with industrialists, manufacturing, anything.
CG: Well, I can tell you, everything you've
said pretty much interweaves with what the Alliance has been saying, what the
Blue Avians said in their message. And what they've said is that this is the
wave of the future. <snip>
MT: Well, thanks, Corey. <snip>
The transition from where we are now to living
in this world of abundance is so simple. It is so much simpler than most
of us could have ever imagined. But most of us keep tripping ourselves up <snip>
Things are difficult. You've got to work
hard. No. Put that out of your mind. We're going to rid
ourselves of the money. We're going to create a
beautiful future of abundance for ourselves.
(The rest is omitted)