I'm sure most of us agree that addictions are a thing we'd want to avoid and get out of, but is human society addicted to money? Isn't money the system basic to organizing society and keeping it from chaos? So it makes sense why it becomes a main essential feature we depend on in order to actual belong to civilization. That also makes sense why it can become a burden as much as a supporter.
This addiction is logical, yes. But is it useful? Is it moving us forward or holding us back? What if we're too addicted, too dependent on it that the end of it will not dawn a new, more advanced civilization, but instead takes us back to anarcho primitivism, certain people working certain jobs will have a helping hand in this. Everything we gather is on the shelves. Money loses its value completely and eventually the shelves will be wiped of resources, then what? We're so distant from our hunter-gather state because of money and structure that is inevitable to crash; whether it be from error, or if we advance so highly that our devices will be more valuable than the system itself. What will we do then?
I'm not supporting anarcho-primitivism, nor a lack of the market. Heck, far from it. I'm just not supporting keeping a similar structure for too long, in fear that it might stretch out and break when we least expect it, turning us into something like Mad Max, and even later, something like Castaway. I'm supporting a prevention of those things, I support the idea that we need to revolutionize everything, the entire culture and structure of our world. We are so advanced in knowledge of the recorded past that we should have enough history to cover our tracks when we build a Near-Perfect System, learning from the mistakes of the past rather than looking at the resources we've got and plan about the future simply by science without history (the Advanced Analogous System).
We can already see the facts supporting: The value of the dollar lowering, the public craving of job creation (which would sure be nice if you look at it one way, but looking at it from another you can see it would have no help in getting us out of dependence), and, unless it's not obvious, the increasing dependency and neediness from our system, ungratefulness.
Summary: Money is going to eventually become infallible, but by that time we will know nothing beyond that system, we wouldn't be prepared and would have a very short amount of time (spent in anarchy) to decide what to do with the remainders before we have to start from scratch again. We need to revolutionize everything; money, culture, law, business...
This addiction is logical, yes. But is it useful? Is it moving us forward or holding us back? What if we're too addicted, too dependent on it that the end of it will not dawn a new, more advanced civilization, but instead takes us back to anarcho primitivism, certain people working certain jobs will have a helping hand in this. Everything we gather is on the shelves. Money loses its value completely and eventually the shelves will be wiped of resources, then what? We're so distant from our hunter-gather state because of money and structure that is inevitable to crash; whether it be from error, or if we advance so highly that our devices will be more valuable than the system itself. What will we do then?
I'm not supporting anarcho-primitivism, nor a lack of the market. Heck, far from it. I'm just not supporting keeping a similar structure for too long, in fear that it might stretch out and break when we least expect it, turning us into something like Mad Max, and even later, something like Castaway. I'm supporting a prevention of those things, I support the idea that we need to revolutionize everything, the entire culture and structure of our world. We are so advanced in knowledge of the recorded past that we should have enough history to cover our tracks when we build a Near-Perfect System, learning from the mistakes of the past rather than looking at the resources we've got and plan about the future simply by science without history (the Advanced Analogous System).
We can already see the facts supporting: The value of the dollar lowering, the public craving of job creation (which would sure be nice if you look at it one way, but looking at it from another you can see it would have no help in getting us out of dependence), and, unless it's not obvious, the increasing dependency and neediness from our system, ungratefulness.
Summary: Money is going to eventually become infallible, but by that time we will know nothing beyond that system, we wouldn't be prepared and would have a very short amount of time (spent in anarchy) to decide what to do with the remainders before we have to start from scratch again. We need to revolutionize everything; money, culture, law, business...