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This is a chapter from the book, Economic Democracy; The Political Struggle for the 21st Century. Visit that link for more information about the book.

Detailed Table of Contents

Foreword

Introduction

  • Subtle-Monopolization is a Remnant of Feudal Property Rights
  • Never did a Nation Develop under Adam Smith
  • The Legal Structure assuring the Imperial Centers access to the World’s Resources
  • The World Bank says it is moving toward these Suggestions

Section A: Part I: External Trade: Security for Powerful Nations Entails Insecurity for Weak Nations

1. The Secret of Free Enterprise Capital Accumulation

  • Wealth Accumulation Expands or Contracts Exponentially with the Differential in Pay
  • Equal Pay for Equal Work is the Answer to World Poverty
  • Underpay through unequal Currency Values
  • Purchasing Power Parity, a Strategy of Deception
  • Periphery of Empire Finances the Imperial Centers
  • Trumpeting Partial Rights as Full Rights
  • Former Colonies do not have Economic Freedom
  • Summary

2. The Violent Accumulation of Capital is Rooted in History

  • The Evolution of City-States and Plunder-by-Trade
  • Evolving from Imperial Cities to Nascent Imperial Nations
  • The Advantage of Cheap Water Transportation
  • The British Empire and Control of Trade

3. The Unwitting Hand Their Wealth to the Cunning

  • America’s Freedom is based on Economic Freedom
  • Friedrich List Wrote His Classic observing America’s Industrialization
  • America Allies with the Old Imperial Nations
  • Successful Protection of the “Free” World Validates Friedrich List
  • Secondary Industrial Powers are at Greatest Risk
  • The Dilemma of the Old Imperial-Centers-of-Capital

4. The Historical Struggle for Dominance in World Trade

  • India: Her Vast Wealth siphoned to Britain
  • Controlling China was a much more Difficult Problem

5. World Wars, Trade Wars: Battles over Who Decides the Rules of Unequal Trade

  • Germany and World War II
  • Japan’s Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere and World War II
  • America Protects the Imperial Centers

6. Suppressing Freedom of Thought in a Democracy

  • The CIA’s Mighty Wurlitzer Inoculated the World against Philosophies of Full and Equal Rights
  • Controlling Nations on the Periphery of Empire
  • The Cold War required a Master Plan
  • Impositions of Beliefs through Corporate-Funded Think-Tanks
  • The Residual Effects of McCarthyism
  • The News Media Trapped Themselves
  • Destabilizing Internal Political Groups
  • Writing History to Protect Wealth and Power
  • The Untold Secrets of “National Security” and the “National Interest”
  • Professors and Intellectuals are Conscientious and Sincere
  • Providing a Beacon for Intellectuals throughout the World
  • Who are the Powerful?
  • Who are the Violent and Powerful?
  • Damage Control

7. The World Breaking Free Frightened the Security Councils of Every Western Nation

  • A Crisis of Overproduction had to be averted
  • National Security Council Directive 68
  • The Korean War, a Strategy-of-Tension Building a “Framework of Orientation”
  • Fabricating Incidents to Start Wars
  • Peace in Korea could not be permitted
  • The First Efforts to Contain the Soviet Federation
  • World War II’s Huge Costs for the Soviet Federation
  • Fictional Missile Gaps were Strategies-of-Tension Building a “Framework of Orientation”
  • The Massive Resources of the Soviet Federation and the More Massive and Cheaper Resources of the West
  • Errors in Soviet Planning
  • Containing the Soviet Federation through forcing it to Waste its Industrial Production
  • Destabilizing Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union
  • Now it was Yugoslavia’s Turn to be Destabilized
  • Now it was Bosnia-Herzegovina’s Turn.
  • Then it was Kosovo’s Turn
  • Making a deal with the Corrupt of Russia
  • The First Destabilization of Afghanistan was aimed at the Soviet Federation
  • The Decision to restructure to a Market Economy was made by Soviet Intellectuals
  • Could the Soviet Union have avoided the Cold War?
  • Imperial Democracies, Representative Democracies, Participatory Democracies
  • Propaganda Building a “Framework of Orientation” was the Essence of the Cold War
  • Conceptually Reversing the Process
  • Keeping the World in Chains

8. Suppressing the World’s Break for Economic Freedom

  • America as an Empire predates the Cold War
  • Iran Breaks Free
  • Containing Iraq
  • Economic Freedom for Indonesia was a Big Threat
  • Nigeria tried but did not break Free
  • Vietnam Gained Political but not Economic Freedom
  • Guatemala Broke Free Briefly
  • Chile Broke Free Very Briefly
  • El Salvador did not gain even its Political Freedom
  • Nicaragua never attained Economic Freedom
  • Southern Africa’s Frontline States
  • The Libyan Threat
  • Cuba: almost Free and may yet Succeed
  • Orchestration of Death Squads and Writing History
  • Future Leaders of Nations Picked and Trained
  • Erasing the Records is Writing History to Maintain a “Framework of Orientation”
  • The Battle for Trade Supremacy Continues

9. “Frameworks of Orientation”: Creating Enemies for the Masses

  • The Inquisitions of the Middle Ages
  • The Spanish Inquisition
  • The Inquisitorial Suppression of the Templars
  • Winding Down the Inquisitions of the Middle Ages
  • The Inquisitorial Suppression of the Illuminati
  • Czarist Secret Police Demonize the Jews
  • The World starts Breaking Free from Imperial Centers

Part II. External Trade: Capital Destroying Capital

10. The Enforcers of Unequal Trades

  • The Greatest Peacetime Transfer of Wealth in History
  • The purpose of IMF/World Bank Loans to the Periphery of Empire
  • Friedrich List Supports for the Developed World, Adam Smith Structural Adjustments for the Developing World
  • The Privatization of the Commons of other Societies

11. Emerging Corporate Imperialism

  • The Legal Structure for Corporate Imperialism
  • Thinking in terms of Units of Production

12. Impoverishing Labor and eventually Capital

  • Meltdown on the Periphery of Empire as the Center Holds
  • Bond and Currency Markets lowering Living standards for the Politically Weak
  • Corporate Welfare

13. Unequal Trades in Agriculture

  • Hunger is determined by Who Controls the Land
  • The Market Economy Guides the World’s Production to Imperial-Centers-of-Capital
  • Stevia: Sweeter Than Sugar
  • Beef: “A Protein Factory in Reverse”
  • Conceptually Reversing the Process of Free Food
  • The Periphery of Empire is a Huge Plantation Providing Food and Resources to the Imperial Center

14. Developing World Loans, Capital Flight, Debt Traps, and Unjust Debt

  • Controlling Puppets of the Imperial Centers
  • Economic Warfare and Financial Warfare
  • The World’s Poor are subsidizing the Rich
  • Building the Infrastructure to transfer Natural Wealth to the Imperial Centers
  • Debt Traps: Loaning Excess Accumulations of Capital back to the Producers of that Wealth
  • Peonage has only changed its Name
  • Lending responsibly, a Well-Recognized Tenet of Law
  • Canceling Unjustly Incurred Debts

15. The Economic Multiplier, Accumulating Capital through Capitalizing Values of Externally Produced Wealth

  • Friedrich List’s Fundamental Thesis
  • Gaining Wealth through the Vertical Building of Industrial Capital and the Horizontal Flow of Money
  • Accumulation of Capital through Creation of Scarcity
  • Residual-Feudal Exclusive Property Titles: A monopoly on what nature produced
  • Capitalizing Values through Underpaying the Weak on the Periphery of Empire
  • Accumulating Capital through Capitalized Values of Internally Produced Wealth

16. Japan’s Post-World War II Defensive, Mercantilist, Economic Warfare Plan

  • The American/Japanese Debt/Equity Embrace
  • Care for Another’s Economy Is Only Between Allies
  • Much Japanese Industry Is Being Forced Offshore
  • It Is Far From Free Trade Wherever One Looks

17. Southeast Asian Development: An Accident of History

  • Will Developing Nations Oppose, or Ally With, the Imperial-Centers?

18. Capital Destroying Capital

  • Failure to Expand Buying Power to keep Factories running is Economic Insanity
  • Industries can be built quickly but Markets only Slowly
  • Expanding Buying Power in Step with Increased Industrial Capacity
  • The Monopoly Hold on Technology and Markets Is Weakening
  • Democratic-Cooperative-(Superefficient)-Capitalism will lower Prices and raise Living Standards

19. A New Hope for the World

  • Four Powerful Economic Weapons available for Developing World use
  • Developing World Regional Trading Blocs to Attain Equal Negotiating Power

Part III. External Trade: Sharing Technology with the World: Democratic-Cooperative Capitalism Birthing Superefficient Capitalism

20. The Earth’s Capacity to Sustain Developed Economies

  • Primary Concerns of World Industrialization
  • Civilizations Collapse when Soil Fertility Collapses
  • Restoring the World’s Soils and Ecosphere

21. The Political Structure of Sustainable World Development

  • Adequate Resources and Markets for Efficient Economies
  • A Political Framework for Democratic-Cooperative-(Superefficient)-Capitalism
  • Human Rights and Equality of Rights
  • Security through Equality and Interdependence
  • Integrating Diverse Nationalities, Races, and Cultures

22. Equal Free Trade as Opposed to Unequal Free Trade

  • Regional and Local Self-sufficiency
  • Developing Regions should be trading with Each Other
  • Regional Trading Currencies
  • The Imperial Centers Understand Well the Importance of Equally-Paid Labor
  • Invisible Borders between the Imperial Center and the Periphery of Empire Disappear
  • Returning Title to Natural Wealth to its Rightful Owners
  • Tariffs to Equalize Equally-Productive but Unequally-Paid Labor
  • Pricing Commodities relative to the Cost of Mining and Harvesting the World’s Poorer Soils
  • Equalizing Managed-Trade
  • Conserving Hydrocarbon Fuels
  • Build them Industries Instead of giving them money

23. A Grand Strategy for World Peace and Prosperity

  • Compounding Sustainable Industrial Development
  • The World can be developed to a Sustainable Level and Poverty eliminated in Forty-Five Years
  • Society is a Social Machine producing its Needs
  • Once Industrialized, Industrial Production can be cut back
  • The Tragedy of the Commons

Section B: Internal Trade: Economic Rights for all People

24. Adjusting Residual-Feudal Exclusive Property Rights, as per Henry George, Produces a Modern Land Commons

  • Land is Social Wealth
  • Pride in Ownership must be maintained
  • The Feudal Origins of Land Titles
  • Private Ownership of Social Wealth moves to America
  • Saleable Land Titles permitted the Mobilization of Capital
  • Profound Thinkers Who Believed in Society Collecting the Landrent
  • Commercial Land
  • Farm Land
  • Home Sites
  • If Society Collected the Landrent, all other Taxes could be eliminated
  • An Opportunity to Restructure With Society Collecting the Landrent
  • Instant Restructuring to Social Collection of Landrent through Bonds

25. Restructuring Residual-Feudal Exclusive Patent Laws Produces a Modern Technology Commons

  • Labor should employ Capital
  • Efficient Socially-Owned Capital
  • Efficient Privately-Owned Capital
  • Fictitious Capital
  • Invention, a Social Process
  • Capitalizing Actual and Fictitious Values
  • Royalties originated from Royalty conferring Monopoly Trading Rights
  • The Foundation of Law is Military Power
  • A Nation’s Wealth is Measured by, and Siphoned to Titleholders through, Capitalized Values
  • The Financial Structure to Harvest the Profits of Subtly-Monopolized Patents
  • Market Bubbles and Crashes
  • Options, Futures, and other Derivatives are Gambling Chips in a Worldwide Casino
  • Bringing the World’s Markets under Control
  • Restructuring Patent Laws
  • Full Rights to use any Technology is more efficient and Pays Inventors Better
  • Competitive Monopolies, Developmentally Mature Technology, and Standardization

26. A Modern Money Commons

  • From Barter to Commodity Money
  • From Commodity Money to Coins of Precious Metal
  • From Gold, to Gold-Backed Paper Money, to Paper Money
  • From Paper Money, to Checkbook Money, to Money as a Blip on a Computer Screen
  • Credit or Trust Money
  • The Different Meanings of Money
  • Money is a Contract against another Person’s Labor
  • Money Productively Contracting Labor
  • Money Unproductively Contracting Labor
  • There must be Money before Wealth
  • Learning the Secret of Bank-Created Money
  • Primary-Created Money and Circulation-Created Money
  • The Fed’s Open Market Operations hide the Simplicity of Money Creation
  • A Money Commons structured to protect the Rights of All
  • Inflation, Deflation, and Constant Value: Creating Honest Money
  • Accumulation of Capital through Democratic-Cooperative-(Superefficient)-Capitalism
  • Negative Interest
  • The Simplicity of Paying Taxes through Taxing the Circulation of Money
  • Money: A Measure of Productive Labor Value

27. A Modern Information Commons

  • Efficient, cheap, Communications may Eliminate Monopolization
  • Communication eliminates Intermediaries and reduces Trading Costs
  • Big-ticket, Infrequently-Purchased Items
  • Inexpensive, Small, Frequently-Traded Items
  • Shopping as a Social Event entails a Cost
  • A Modern Communications Commons Doubling Distribution Efficiency
  • Trades should still pay for “Free” TV
  • Reserving TV Time for New Products
  • Music, Sports, Movies, and Game Shows
  • Investment and Job Opportunities
  • Education
  • Inspired Teachers for every Student
  • Parents interacting closely with their Children’s Education
  • Better Institutions for Socialization
  • Maintaining Curiosity, Creativity, and Love of Learning
  • Once Borderline Teachable Graduating at the Top of Their Class
  • Culture and Recreational Learning
  • Minority Cultures
  • Foreign Cultures
  • Local Television
  • Elections
  • Homes as Low-Budget TV Stations

28. Wi-Fi Empowering the Powerless

  • Some Frauds of History
  • Restructuring the Media to cover the Full Political Spectrum
  • Subtle, But Explosive, one-liners would alert the Masses
  • The Developing World can Leapfrog Decades in the Development Process
  • Politicians speaking to, and listening to, the People
  • Turning Weapons into Consumer Products
  • An Offer the Impoverished World cannot refuse
  • The World Can, and Will, Disarm
  • Powerful Nations will not willingly give up Their Superior Rights

Conclusion: Guidelines for World Development

  • Our Cures for the World’s Problems Follow Henry George’s Principles of Conditional Titles to Nature’s Resources
  • These are Historic Moments

Appendix 1: Expansion and Contraction of Cultures

Appendix 2: A Practical Approach for Developing Poor Nations and Regions

Bibliography

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Chapters for “Economic Democracy; The Political Struggle for the 21st Century

This is a chapter from the book, Economic Democracy; The Political Struggle for the 21st Century. Visit that link for more information about the book.