
Future by Design is a non-profit 501(C)(3) educational
think tank operating out of a 25-acre Research Center
located in Venus, Florida.
When one considers the enormity of the challenges facing
society today, we can safely conclude that the time is
long overdue for us to reexamine our values, and to reflect
upon and evaluate some of the underlying issues and assumptions
we have as a society. This self-analysis calls into question
the very nature of what it means to be human, what it
means to be a member of a "civilization," and what choices
we can make today to ensure a prosperous future for all
the world's people.
At present we are left with very few alternatives. The
answers of yesterday are no longer relevant. Either we
continue as we have been with our outmoded social customs
and habits of thought, in which case our future will be
threatened, or we can apply a more appropriate set of
values that are relevant to an emergent society.
Experience tells us that human behavior can be modified,
either toward constructive or destructive activity. This
is what Future by Design is all about - directing our
technology and resources toward the positive, for the
maximum benefit of people and planet and seeking out new
ways of thinking and living that emphasize and celebrate
the vast potential of the human spirit.
We have the tools at hand to design - and build - a future
that is worthy of the human potential. Future By Design
presents a bold, new direction for humanity that entails
nothing less than the total redesign of our culture.
What follows is not an attempt to predict what will be
done - only what could be done. The responsibility for
our future is in our hands, and depends on the decisions
that we make today. The greatest resource that is available
today is our own ingenuity.
While social reformers and think tanks formulate strategies
that treat only superficial symptoms, without touching
the basic social operation, Future By Design approaches
these problems somewhat differently. We feel we cannot
eliminate these problems within the framework of the present
political and monetary establishment. It would take too
many years to accomplish any significant change. Most
likely they would be watered down and thinned out to such
an extent that the changes would be indistinguishable
Future By Design advocates an alternative vision for a
sustainable new world civilization unlike any social system
that has gone before. Although this description is highly
condensed, it is based upon years of study and experimental
research by many, many people from many scientific disciplines.
Future By Design proposes a fresh approach--one that is
dedicated to human and environmental concerns. It is an
attainable vision of a bright and better future, one that
is appropriate to the times in which we live, and both
practical and feasible for a positive future for all the
world's people.
Future By Design calls for a straightforward approach
to the redesign of a culture, in which the age-old inadequacies
of war, poverty, hunger, debt, environmental degradation
and unnecessary human suffering are viewed not only as
avoidable, but totally unacceptable.
One of the basic premises of Future By Design is that
we work towards having all of the Earth's resources as
the common heritage of all the world's people. Anything
less will simply result in a continuation of the same
catalog of problems inherent in the present system.
Throughout history, change has been slow. Successive groups
of incompetent leaders have replaced those that preceded
them, but the underlying social and economic problems
remain because the basic value systems have gone unaltered.
The problems we are faced with today cannot be solved
politically or financially because they are highly technical
in nature. There may not even be enough money available
to pay for the required changes, but there are more than
enough resources. This is why Future By Design advocates
the transition from a monetary-based society to the eventual
realization of a resource-based global economy.
We realize to make the transition from our present culture,
which is politically incompetent, scarcity-oriented and
obsolete, to this new, more humane society will require
a quantum leap in both thought and action.
An Obsolete Monetary System
The money-based system evolved centuries ago. All of the
world's economic systems - socialism, communism, fascism,
and even the vaunted free enterprise system - perpetuate
social stratification, elitism, nationalism, and racism,
primarily based on economic disparity. As long as a social
system uses money or barter, people and nations will seek
to maintain the economic competitive edge or, if they
cannot do so by means of commerce they will by military
intervention. We still utilize these same outmoded methods.
Our current monetary system is not capable of providing
a high standard of living for everyone, nor can it ensure
the protection of the environment because the major motive
is profit. Strategies such as downsizing and toxic dumping
increase the profit margin. With the advent of automation,
cybernation, artificial intelligence and out sourcing,
there will be an ever-increasing replacement of people
by machines. As a result, fewer people will be able to
purchase goods and services even though our capability
to produce an abundance will continue to exist.
Our present, outmoded political and economic systems are
unable to apply the real benefits of today's innovative
technology to achieve the greatest good for all people,
and to overcome the inequities imposed upon so many. Our
technology is racing forward yet our social designs have
remained relatively static. In other words cultural change
has not kept pace with technological change. We now have
the means to produce goods and services in abundance for
everyone.
Unfortunately, today science and technology have been
diverted from achieving the greatest good for reasons
of self-interest and monetary gain through planned obsolescence
sometimes referred to as the conscious withdrawal of efficiency.
For example, the U. S. Department of Agriculture, whose
function is presumed to be conducting research into ways
of achieving higher crop yields per acre, actually pays
farmers not to produce at full-capacity. The monetary
system tends to hold back the application of these methods
that we know would best serve the interests of people
and the environment.
In a monetary system purchasing power is not related to
our capacity to produce goods and services. For example,
during a depression, there are computers and DVD's on
store shelves and automobiles in car lots, but most people
do not have the purchasing power to buy them. The earth
is still the same place; it is just the rules of the game
that are obsolete and create strife, deprivation and unnecessary
human suffering.
A monetary system developed years ago as a device to control
human behavior in an environment with limited resources.
Today money is used to regulate the economy not for
the benefit of the general populace, but for those who
control the financial wealth of nations.
Resource-Based Economy
All social systems, regardless of political philosophy,
religious beliefs, or social customs, ultimately depend
upon natural resources, i.e. clean air and water, arable
land and the necessary technology and personnel to maintain
a high standard of living.
Simply stated, a resource-based economy utilizes existing
resources rather than money and provides an equitable
method of distributing these resources in the most efficient
manner for the entire population. It is a system in which
all goods and services are available without the use of
money, credits, barter, or any other form of debt or servitude.
Earth is abundant with plentiful resources; today our
practice of rationing resources through monetary methods
is irrelevant and counter productive to our survival.
Modern society has access to highly advanced technologies
and can make available food, clothing, housing, medical
care, a relevant educational system, and develop a limitless
supply of renewable, non-contaminating energy such as
geothermal, solar, wind, tidal, etc. It is now possible
to have everyone enjoy a very high standard of living
with all of the amenities that a prosperous civilization
can provide. This can be accomplished through the intelligent
and humane application of science and technology.
A resource-based economy would make it possible to use
technology to overcome scarce resources by applying renewable
sources of energy, computerizing and automating manufacturing
and inventory, designing safe energy-efficient cities
and advanced transportation systems, providing universal
health care and more relevant education, and most of all
by generating a new incentive system based on human and
environmental concern.
Many people believe that there is too much technology
in the world today, and that technology is the major cause
of our environmental pollution. This is not the case.
It is the abuse and misuse of technology that should be
our major concern. In a more humane civilization, instead
of machines displacing people they would shorten the workday,
increase the availability of goods and services, and lengthen
vacation time. If we utilize new technology to raise the
standard of living for all people, then the infusion of
machine technology would no longer be a threat.
To better understand the meaning of a resource based economy
consider this: if all the money in the world were destroyed,
as long as topsoil, factories, and other resources were
left intact, we could build anything we choose to build
and fulfill any human need. It is not money that people
need; rather, it is free access to the necessities of
life. In a resource-based economy, money would be
irrelevant. All that would be required are the resources
and the manufacturing and distribution of the products.
When education and resources are made available to all
people without a price tag, there would be no limit to
the human potential. Although this is difficult to imagine,
even the wealthiest person today would be far better off
in a resource based society as proposed by Future By Design.
Today the middle classes live better than kings of times
past. In a resource based economy everyone would live
better than the wealthiest of today.
In such a society, the measure of success would be based
on the fulfillment of one's individual pursuits rather
than the acquisition of wealth, property and power.
The Choice Is Ours To Make
Human behavior is subject to the same laws as any other
natural phenomenon. Our customs, behaviors, and values
are byproducts of our culture. No one is born with greed,
prejudice, bigotry, patriotism and hatred; these are all
learned behavior patterns. If the environment is unaltered,
similar behavior will reoccur.
Today, much of the technology needed to bring about a
global resource-based economy exists. If we choose to
conform to the limitations of our present monetary-based
economy, then it is likely that we will continue to live
with its inevitable results: war, poverty, hunger, deprivation,
crime, ignorance, stress, fear, and inequity. On the other
hand, if we embrace the concept of a global resource-based
economy, learn more about it, and share our understanding
with our friends, this will help humanity evolve out of
its present state.
The only limitations are those we impose upon ourselves.
Future By Design is neither utopian nor Orwellian, nor
does it reflect the dreams of impractical idealists. Instead,
it presents attainable goals requiring only the intelligent
application of what we already know
Your help is needed to bring the concept of a resource-based
economy to world attention. What can you do?
1. Donate to Future By Design, and support this effort
generously. Dedicate your efforts to build the Research
Center Circular City needed to bring a resource-based
economy to world attention. Donations are tax deductible.
2. Purchase a copy of The Best That Money Can't Buy: Beyond
Politics, Poverty & War by Jacque Fresco. Purchase additional
books for your family your friends, your schools, and
libraries.
3. Purchase one or more Videos and share them with your
friends. Show the videos at civic clubs and schools in
your town.
4. Arrange speaking engagements at local libraries, radio
stations, colleges and universities for Future By Design
speakers.
Designs by Jacque Fresco.
Model, Rendering, and Photos by Jacque Fresco &
Roxanne Meadows
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FUTURE BY DESIGN