quarta-feira, 29 de março de 2023

Against the commodification and financialization of everything

Ordinary citizens must master the structural concepts of capitalist ideology to deconstruct the myths, dogmas and narratives presented as immutable and ineffable truths by the PR propaganda campaigns commissioned by the capitalist class.

Money is an omnipresent worry in our minds. Money comes between us and everything we need; even the most simple goods, products and services have been/are being commodified.

However, most citizens know little to nothing about the functioning of the banking, monetary and financial systems at national and international levels. Most of us take the system for granted and consider conventional wisdom sufficient. We need to be more skeptical and ask tough questions such as: Who can issue money and why? What is the role of the FIRE sector? How does the financialization of the economy works and cui bono? Why does the economy have to grow indefinitely? And so forth and so on…

We are continuously under a propaganda barrage with the aim to manipulate perception to manufacture consent and colonize our minds with the necessary illusions, for example: never giving up on the dream that capitalist paradise is attainable.

All organized religions/dogmas recognize how crucial it is to manage expectations. Accepting the terrestrial socioeconomic hell, designed and managed by the capitalist class and its acolytes so that they can satisfy their whims and enjoy luxurious terrestrial paradises built by those who must believe that if they are diligent entrepreneurs, they can also succeed.

The capitalist heavenly garden is within reach of those willing to make sacrifices in the present so their dreams can come true in the future! It is so comforting to know that the capitalist paradise is just a matter of free will!

sábado, 25 de março de 2023

Neoliberalism, free markets and other neoclassical Econ-LIES

The main assumptions of neoclassical economics are that consumers make rational decisions, acting independently based on all relevant information to maximize utility, companies aim to maximize profits, and markets self-regulate in response to the law of supply and demand.

Neoclassical economics ideology is based on faulty assumptions about the human condition and the real economy. The supposition that consumers behave rationally when making choices ignores the influence of (subliminal advertising, psycho-emotional factors, academic knowledge, peer pressure, available economic income, incorrect or incomplete information, and random conjunctural factors that can interfere with the decision-making process.

Profit maximization is neither the only nor the best way to assess how markets work. Profit maximization exacerbates inequality, exploits workers, encourages the ostensive consumption of superfluous goods and services, generates unnecessary waste and irreversible environmental destruction. Profit maximization dehumanizes people and commodifies social relationships.

The economy must be structured to supply essential needs, not to stimulate artificial consumption habits and addictions in order to increase profits.

Neoclassical economics assumes that the quantity of goods and services consumed is an indicator of social well-being, forgetting to mention that the more unequal the society, the more the indicators distort reality, accounting for goods and services that only upper classes can access, does not contribute at all to the well-being of the majority of the population that has to work hard to satisfy basic needs.

Enjoying access to public health and education services, improving life expectancy, social equality, economic stability and the right to leisure for all without distinction seems to me more reasonable than producing products, goods and services for the "free market.” Who can ultimately enjoy and benefit from the free market? Free for whom and to what?

Neoclassical economics assumes that the market is self-regulating based on the idea that competition and supply and demand determine the rational and efficient allocation of resources.

If we ignore reality, the law of supply and demand as the basis of the “free market” in which the consumer makes informed choices and takes rational decisions generates a self-regulating dynamic equilibrium seems coherent.

Neoclassical economics also foresees the non-existence of a maximum profit ceiling for investors, entrepreneurs, and owners, paving the way to hollow democracy from the inside.

The exempt "free market" must determine the value of a product, good, service, or property based on the consumer's perception. We all know that’s how free markets work, exemptions for whom?

The financialization of the economy and the deregulation of the financial markets with the abolition of the Glass-Steagall Act https://www.federalreservehistory.org/essays/glass-steagall-act repealed in November 1999 by then-President Bill Clinton was one of the determining factors for the financial crisis of 2008.

The free market is not directly synonymous with capitalism, but, as a rule, the country’s most enthusiastic about free markets are capitalist and defend proprietary rights above any other right.

The rentier class thrives in capitalist countries where financial markets are completely deregulated.

When the capitalist class refers to the "free market," it refers to capital markets and financial instruments trade, most of which relate to the FIRE sector's parallel world. The true concept of a free market is a public place/square where producers and traders display their goods on certain days of the week, month, or year and where consumers go for fun and to shop. People get to know each other, talk to each other, and get informed about the products displayed. Trade is done according to the law of supply and demand.

Chains of stores and supermarkets, even when they follow the rules of supply and demand, can always find ways to make agreements with competitors to fix prices, resorting to cartelization.

Free markets don`t become unfree because of being regulated.

The most important thing is that the rules are fair and balanced; the same principle applies to taxes and interest rates.

The main question is: Cui bono with deregulation? Follow the money to get to know the truth. If political choices and the laws of the country do not benefit ordinary people, then our duty is to investigate why? If we come to the conclusion that the problem is systemic and structural, then it's time to change. Still, it is not possible to implement meaningful change without a well-defined political project.

In practice, the "free market" benefits a tiny minority because the system is set up to facilitate those with the most. The capitalist system is designed to defend the interests of capital; the more economic and financial power, the greater the margin for negotiation and the ability to exert influence within and outside legal limits; special interests dictate the rules when money becomes the law.

The unregulated "free market" excludes externalities, technological asymmetries, academic and income disparities. In short, the “free market” is free to purge anything that conflicts with easy profits and rentier monopolies.

The more deregulated the market, the more exposed to fraud and mismanagement, which means that the State will be forced to intervene to cover the losses to stabilize the economy whenever the bubble bursts.

Society as a whole is obliged to pay the ransom of the economy and suffer the consequences of economic crises. Apparently, because the system is untouchable, it is unthinkable to nationalize the FIRE sector and extirpate the malignant financial tumor. We cannot interfere with the core “freedoms” of the plutocratic class.

Financial speculation in the real estate market provides an "excellent" service to society because it generates the illusion of a constant increase in the value of properties.

The prices are completely unrealistic and the rental market becomes inaccessible to working-class families. When the bubble bursts, many middle-class families lose their homes and society as a whole suffers, with the exception of those causing the problem. The government saves the corrupted institutions and a new cycle can begin.

With the concession of public services to private entities, profits are prioritized to distribute dividends to shareholders. In contrast, the quality of services deteriorates and the infrastructure and equipment do not receive the necessary maintenance and renovation, with hazard risks for the public while postponing the bill for future generations.

Lobbying and the revolving doors are used by big businesses to influence political decisions, and campaign financing helps the "right" people to have the maximum chance of being elected.

The truth is that capitalists hate free markets and competition. Capitalists love monopolies, neocolonialist control, financial enslavement and rent-seeking.

Free trade requires rules and regulations to defend the public interest and national sovereignty.

Deregulation only favors unscrupulous opportunists. Whenever sociopaths and psychopaths are allowed to control society, they create a legal system to protect proprietary rights above anything else and a moral code to glorify the wealthy.

The accumulated financial capital is transformed into political capital and society becomes controlled by the capitalist sociopathic class.

Only a democratic society can control capital accumulation and set a maximum wealth ceiling. Those who belong to the working class and believe that enrichment should have no limits defend a society where capital will always be placed above any other value. Proprietary rights will always be placed above human rights ​​and environmental protection, without exception and if you believe that green capitalism is different, you are being duped again.

Nobody denies that capitalism encourages entrepreneurship and individual initiative.

Assets and property are privately controlled, and earning a living requires submitting to the will of a boss in order to survive on a meager salary because the capitalist system is based on the right to exploit.

For people who value independence and do not easily submit to the will of others, the solution is to become entrepreneurs and try to find their niche, a small business, or self-employment regardless of the real utility for society; what matters is that the activity is profitable, even when the profit is barely enough to survive. There are many “entrepreneurs” who also belong to the exploited class, but the title might make them feel a little better.

Capitalist culture is normalized at a planetary level, whether in the pursuit of profit or in the idea of ​​unlimited access to goods, products and services. The desire to own private property is deeply rooted that even people aware of the flaws, contradictions, and destructive power of capitalist culture remain attached to the system's structural values and cannot organize themselves to demand a real system change.

Individual initiative is good for society; nobody wants a society deprived of this good. But society is a system for serving and protecting the collective good that public institutions and services must guarantee.

Limits, restrictions and prohibitions are part of life in society.

A government should be as large as the country's citizens democratically decide to be appropriate.

Democratic freedoms need to be regulated against abuses and to defend the diversity of which society is composed.

Absolute freedom does not exist and anyone who believes in the right to enjoy absolute freedom must experience living completely outside the supportive network provided by society.

Anarcho-capitalists advocate the “free market” style where money is "earned" from speculative operations, financial instruments trade, and other financial market schemes.

How should we label a society that empowers a tiny elite to accumulate synthetic wealth obtained in the virtual reality of financial markets that can be converted into real-world properties, goods, products and services?

It is a pertinent question that we all must ask, including citizens who believe in productivist capitalism in which wealth is obtained through activities useful to society, which is not the case with financial capitalism.

Financial capitalism is the pinnacle of fraud; we should engage in getting rid of it, the sooner, the better; it is harmful to society, causes immense suffering and destruction and is driving Western society towards techno-feudalism.

Over the past five decades, financial capitalism has been the lever of economic growth in the United States and the United Kingdom.

Neoliberalism is responsible for the destruction of the social fabric in the Western world, most notably in the US and the UK.

A financial system based on virtual enrichment resorting to all kinds of financial instruments schemes allowed in the deregulated free market. The free market is a comprehensive system used and abused by restricted individuals, groups, institutions, organizations and corporations with knowledge, connections and power. It allows them to accumulate unlimited virtual wealth that can later be legally converted into material goods and properties. This is equivalent to using Monopoly money to buy real property! This is the pitiful state of decay to which the globalized capitalist class has brought western society.

Society is ruled and controlled by an elite enriching themselves through the accumulation of virtual wealth produced in the free markets parallel universe of monopoly capitalism, while ordinary citizens have to survive and compete for crumbs in the real economy.

10% of the population benefits or can benefit from this fraud. Still, most of the population would be better off if the existing banking and financial order were simply dismantled and replaced by public banking. Keeping ourselves convinced this is impossible neutralizes the imperative need to make it happen.

Mental decolonization is the first step; we should not be afraid to ask difficult questions; we must question the entrenched beliefs and ideologies shaping our perception of the sociocultural order and political economic system.

This reality is the height of fraud and we should focus our attention on it because this crime against humanity and against nature is far more perverse than any of us ever imagined.

We have to stop being naive and believe in the illusion that it's just a game of luck and chance and that the critics just don't know what they're talking about. The plutocratic rentier class wants us to believe in the necessity of preserving the scheme indefinitely because the day we realize that it is nothing more than a rent-seeking parasitic system, utterly useless, we will be forced to demand its end.

A financial instrument is a real or virtual document representing a legal agreement involving monetary value. Financial instruments are divided into two types: cash instruments and derivative instruments, which can also be divided according to the asset class, debt-based or equity-based.

It dismays me that most people make little to no effort to comprehend the perception manipulation mechanisms that elites use to manufacture consent. Understanding how money is used as a tool of social and class control is essential to change how we perceive profit and value, wealth and property, meritocracy and privilege and so many misconceptions about the meaning of earning a living.

The elementary principle is to direct people’s attention to convenient ideas, issues and narratives instead of making people feel the need to ask hard questions. Who benefits from manipulating public perception and why?

What are the reasons why certain issues are relevant while others are relegated to oblivion? In a class-based society dominated by capital, where everything is literally commodified, including human relations, most of the problems that affect the existence of the common citizenry have a common denominator, capital.

Capital is “money (or another asset) used to generate more money”.

In the business world, capital means anything a company owns that contributes to the production of value.

Capital sources include financial assets that can be settled as cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities.

Tangible assets include machinery and facilities used to manufacture a product.

Money is a form of capital only when invested to generate more money.

Liabilities is a form of money that a company owes and that must be paid back.

Equity is money investors put into the company in exchange for ownership and never needs to be returned.

Those who control the mechanisms and instruments used to reinforce the concentration of capital have the power to shape society.

The capitalist class has developed a skillful scheme for managing the hope factor, nurturing necessary illusions of potential achievements located somewhere in the future sufficient to encourage supporters and even convert them into tribalized fanatics, just like it happens in religion and sports.   

What is Money?

Money can be anything that can serve as:

- store of value, which means people can store it to use it later

- unit of account, i.e. provide a common basis for prices

- medium of exchange, something people can use to buy and sell

Of the three characteristics of money

1 Means of Payment

2 Unit of Account

3 Store of Value

The means of Payment is by far the most important. If money is accepted by the general population as an unconditional means of payment, then money is valuable to society. Money enables citizens to work together for the common good.

Definitions of money

1 Money is a creature of the law.

2 Money is not tangible wealth in itself, but a power to obtain wealth.

3 Money is a symbol, worthless in itself, but symbolizing wealth.

4 Money is an abstract social power based on law.

5 Cash is whatever the government accepts for tax payments.

6 Money is a legally enforced medium of exchange by the government.

7 Money is a medium of exchange accepted by the people.

8 Money has value as a medium of exchange only because it is accepted by the People and is legally applied by the Government acting on behalf of the People.

Stephen Zarlenga's definition of money is:

Money’s essence (apart from whatever is used to signify it) is an abstract social power embodied in law, as an unconditional means of payment.

James McCumiskey’s definition of money is:

Money is an unconditional means of payment, a token for wealth, worthless of itself, but symbolizing wealth because it is enshrined in law; and administered by Government as a public resource, for and on behalf of the People.

The Nature of Money

Money is a common resource, which should be created by the Government for the benefit of the People.

“Money exists not by nature but by law” Aristotle, Greek Philosopher

Clearly in the 4th century BC, almost 2,500 years ago, Aristotle understood the nature of money. Money is not a commodity that is to be mined like gold or silver. Money is not a commodity to be farmed like wheat or barley. Money is not an animal like a cow or a goat. The nature of money is that it is a legal invention. Money is a creature of the law. The Greek name for money is ‘nomisma’, which is derived from ‘nomos’ meaning law or binding custom. Aristotle defined money as an abstract legal power, publicly controlled for the common good.

The Fourth Branch of Government

Political scientists refer to three branches of government:

1 Executive

2 Legislature

3 Judiciary

Stephen Zarlenga in ‘The Lost Science of Money’ argues persuasively and cogently that there is a fourth branch of government, (whether we realise it or not), called The Money Power. The Money Power is the power to issue money in any given country. Martin Van Buren (8th US President, 1782 – 1862) coined this phrase, and it will remain capitalised in this book in honour of this truly great insight into the nature and ownership of the money-creation process.

This ability to create a country’s money supply should be the most important function of Government. Because private banks now create over 97% of the money supply, they are in control of the most important branch of Government – The Money Power – which has effectively usurped the system of checks and balances enshrined in these other three branches of Government in our Western democracies.

Stephen Zarlenga has made the greatest contribution to monetary reform in explicitly stating that The Money Power is by far the greatest of all the branches of Government. The fact that this is not so currently recognised, has led to a marked distortion and corruption of society.

The constitutional imperative to define Money

The Money Power is so important that it should be officially recognised in law. Once society gains control of the issue of money, it cannot let the bankers issue money ever again.

Interestingly the US constitution states in Article 1, Section 8, Clause 5 that congress has the power to “coin Money, regulate the Value thereof”.

One could interpret this as being the constitutional mandate for Congress to issue money and spend it into circulation. One could argue that Congress has the power to reclaim the right to issue the nation’s money from the privately owned Federal Reserve System.

However what Clause 5 in Article 1, Section 8 says in full is: –

To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures;

One could interpret from this clause that only Congress has the authority to coin money, that is, to produce just the coins used in the United States. Coins are produced by the US Mint, a bureau of the US Treasury, and form about 1/1000 of the US money supply. Coins form the only part of the US money supply, which directly benefits the Government and People.

Given the importance of money to our society, I believe a clear definition should be inserted into every constitution, (or otherwise enshrined in law), defining money, and stating its supreme importance in the running of society.

Money – servant not master

The entire money supply should be created by Government for and on behalf of the People. Money should become Man’s servant rather than his master.

Source: https://positivemoney.org/2011/05/what-is-money/

Most people believe that money is created through the trade of goods, products and services produced in the real economy and the wages paid to workers. Profit as a process of wealth creation would also be the means of monetary creation.

We all understand the power that money gives, but we attribute it to wealth accumulation and never to the process of money creation and how it is allocated. "Let me issue and control a nation's money and I don't care who writes the laws." Mayer Amschel Rothschild (1744-1812), founder of the House of Rothschild.

Wages paid for work done do not add value to money; it defines a value assigned by society for performing roles, functions, tasks and occupations, in short, for all activities that presuppose a monetary reward.

All forms of struggle for a more egalitarian and just society are valuable, but they can only be effective and lasting if we get to the root of the problem: the capitalist system and class society.

If we keep pretending or denying the centrality of this problem, we will never define the ideological and political strategies that could bring irreversible structural changes.

The powerful don't mind resorting to violent repression to prevent radical systemic change; only a broad, organized movement with clear ideas of the model of society intended to be built allows the development of effective strategies to overthrow the established powers.

Liberal "democracies" are paving the way for techno-feudalism. The so-called moderate parties differ in identity politics and cultural issues but follow the neoliberal agenda with more or less fervor. The democratic socialist parties are either infiltrated by neoliberals or can`t implement socialist policies because countries have lost their financial sovereignty.

Economic, financial, monetary and geopolitical governance are obliged to impose neoliberal policies independently of the outcome of national elections. In most western liberal democracies, national governance must follow the dictates of international financial governance. Central banks are obliged to follow the governance dictated by the BIS and the IMF and World Bank impose neoliberal shock therapy as default economic-financial governance. International regulatory organizations ensure that governments comply with the established rules or risk sanctions and fines.

Under current conditions, whoever wins elections has little room to break with the established order because many of the contracts are armored, so if future governments intend to break them, the State is obliged to pay huge financial reparations. This is the state we have reached; democracy is totally subservient to the interests of international financial capital and the globalized rentier class. As long as this situation continues, we will not have political democracy, much less economic democracy.

The governments of Western liberal democracies are elected to enforce the globalized financial markets rules. Their main role is to implement austerity policies and protect the managerial bourgeois class, fearful of losing acquired privileges and ready to pass on the sacrifices to the lower-middle working class.

The current system is neither responsive to democracy nor national interests because those who pull the strings of monetary and financial policy owe allegiance to the globalized financial elite.

The perversity of class society is present in the normalization of the habit of belittling people based on professional occupation and social position. We spend our lives trying to climb the social ladder as if it were the only way to have a productive and useful existence. We cling to privileges like limpets to rocks and take for granted that lower-class citizens should be available to serve us. This is called the normalization of humiliation, and it serves to justify the exploitation of people who are just like us. Class societies assume that the upper class is helping the lower classes whenever poor, “unskilled” people replace them in performing unpleasant, dangerous and/or monotonous tasks because it is their duty.

Monetary reward in a class-based society is crucial to confine people where they are supposed to belong. People do not live above their means, people are deprived of the means to live, and income is how to keep people in a permanent state of need. Some people are poor because of mismanagement, personality disorders, lack of social skills, etc… but poverty is a structural requirement of every class-based society.

We can fantasize or pretend to belong to the upper-middle class by putting on a deceptive facade, but sooner or later, the money factor will make the mask fall and expose the true social class to which we belong. We should never feel ashamed or guilty about being poor. The way to strengthen this idea is by developing awareness about the role of class consciousness in understanding a class-based society to realize that poverty is a systemic problem, not a human defect. Poverty is not solved by increasing the number of billionaires but with a political economy for economic justice and social equality. The financialization of the economy creates billionaires while deepening social inequality because the wealth accumulated at the top of the social pyramid was "produced" by the FIRE sector, which does not create anything useful for society, but misery.

Monetary and financial policy is to political economy what the circulatory system is to the living organism. The issuance and allocation of financial resources must be in the public domain. Money is a legal agreement and a virtual social good. When we agree to use raw material as money, the value of that raw material as money has nothing to do with its value as a material asset useful to society. Money is a virtual entity protected by law and guaranteed by a state.

The reward system based on monetary or other forms of remuneration can be used to build a just and egalitarian society, or it can be used to generate inequality and deprivation, as it happens in capitalist societies with deregulated markets and open economies. The idea of ​​an open economy sounds good; it is appealing, but it is intended to lift the protective barriers of the national economies and allow neocolonialist monopoly interests to plunder the country's natural resources and raw materials.

The further down the social ladder, the more it is assumed that people can be humiliated, exploited and even mistreated. The essence of class society is the absence of rights at the bottom and the gradual increase of privileges and rights that make people insensitive to the suffering of others because the belief in entitlement transforms the way we see others; it's easy to believe that others exist to serve us because it's the natural order of social reality.

Most of the money in the economy is created not by printing presses at the central bank but by banks when they provide loans.

How does it work?

Money is more than banknotes and coins. If you have a bank account, you can use what’s in it to buy things, typically with a debit card. Because you can buy things with your bank account, we think of this as money even though it’s not cash.

Therefore, if you borrow £100 from the bank, and it credits your account with the amount, ‘new money’ has been created. It didn’t exist until it was credited to your account.

This also means as you pay off the loan, the electronic money your bank created is ‘deleted’ – it no longer exists. You haven’t got richer or poorer. You might have less money in your bank account but your debts have gone down too. So essentially, banks create money, not wealth.

Banks create around 80% of money in the economy as electronic deposits in this way. In comparison, banknotes and coins only make up 3%. Finally, most banks have accounts with us at the Bank of England, allowing them to transfer money back and forth. This is called electronic central bank money, or reserves.

Can banks create as much money as they like?

No, they can’t.

Regulation limits how much money banks can create. For example, they have to hold a certain amount of financial resources, called capital, in case people default on their loans. These limits have become stricter since the financial crisis.

Banks also risk going bust if they lend out money left, right and centre. For instance, people borrowing money will probably spend it. If they make payments to people who have accounts at other banks, their bank will need to transfer the money to that other bank by sending it some of its electronic central bank money. So if one bank lends out too much money, at some point it will not have enough electronic money in its account with us to pay the other banks.

https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/explainers/how-is-money-created

Outright lies, incorrect and incomplete information, conceptual distortion and perception manipulation to convey false ideas about how the economy really works.

The function of the cognitive-affective system, cognition + qualitative attribute, is to identify patterns, memorize them and remix and reorganize them whenever necessary to better help us navigate the environment where we live. Living organisms must respond adequately to real-time challenges and opportunities and manage probabilities of future events.

The information stored in the form of implicit memories represents the somatic, psychosomatic, cognitive, affective, conceptual and virtual mapping of the experiences lived by an organism. Implicit memories are "stored" in a living neurological system and serve to interpret, identify, and compare patterns to respond adequately to each new situation or problem that the organism needs to solve. When implicit memories are formed from incorrect, erroneous, or intentionally falsified information, the interpretation of the problems will be distorted and the perception of reality incorrect; the behavioral responses are functional, but the reality is falsified.

Human beings are social animals living in an artificial environment. Human society is a cultural creation that depends on structuring institutions based on narratives that shape identity and give meaning and unity to a social system.

Culture is constituted by narratives based on ideas that allow us to communicate and give meaning to a communal existence. Society is an artificial environment that allows its members to solve problems and satisfy essential needs based on mutual aid, cooperation and reciprocity within the broader context of the biosphere.

The human imagination seeks to give meaning and assign purpose based on the accessible interpretation of the available information and the experience accumulated within a specific socio-cultural context. The creative power of human imagination does not exist to create fiction, produce art, discover scientific facts, or develop amazing technologies; imagination exists to help explain, understand, make sense of and solve problems. Imagination can help us to discern facts, but the truth is not crucial for us to function in society, which allows society to be hijacked and manipulated by special interests that put society's structural institutions to work on their behalf by developing a legal system that authorizes it and a cultural-ideological system that glorifies it.

We can live decades or even centuries under the rule of lies and obscurantism because we are endowed with the psychocognitive adaptative plasticity that allows us to be educated, indoctrinated and domesticated to adapt to practically any type of sociocultural environment.

We can live in an ideological-cultural environment based on erroneous knowledge that emerged from the attempt to attribute meaning to reality and was not manipulated by particular interests but the result of erroneous interpretations of natural phenomena and unfounded correlations. But in a class society where the maintenance of power and the concentration of wealth and proprietary rights are at stake, errors and lies are intentionally planted to disseminate ideologies controlled by elites to deceive the public with structural narratives that justify, normalize and legalize social relations based on abuse, exploitation, repression, privilege, superiority, etc... this reality is not the result of chance, it is tailor-made.

The dominant ideological-cultural narratives are thought to shape society based on a path previously chosen by the ruling elites. Although it is impossible to control all variables, it is perfectly feasible to plant trends and create a cultural-ideological climate conducive to accepting unpopular measures, resorting to the most effective PR methodologies to manipulate, condition, influence and divide public opinion and thus manufacture consent.

This issue worries me because I realize that most people do not give it the importance it deserves. Society is continually being shaped by the special interests that control it and the perception is manipulated in order to convey an idea of ​ a society that corresponds to the way the dominant classes want us to interpret it.

The ideological inspiration conveyed by the dominant narratives comprises some facts and a lot of fiction because the idea is not to help the public better discern but to manage the necessary illusions that shape personal preferences and tastes and ideological and political identification.

Today's public relations and advertising industry have the scientific knowledge and technological means that have transformed the production of necessary illusions into the most important activity at the service of the dictatorship of information to manufacture consent.

Language manipulation and semiotics have reached a level of refinement in the manufacture of consent that the PR industry founders Edward Bernays and Ivy Lee could never have imagined.

It means that we live in a fictitious reality in which the perception of it is more real than factual reality. What gives meaning, organizes and allows us to understand reality is perception and perception takes shape from the existing ideas in the sociocultural environment in which we live. We are primarily attracted by ideas that arouse our curiosity and motivate us to find answers to real problems or to clarify existential doubts.

The ideas that influence and shape the perception of reality go far beyond conscious reasoning. What we believe to be an accurate version of reality is based on the unsound information floating in the social environment influencing how we perceive reality. Most information shaping public perception is manipulated to give a fictional idea about how society works.

This is the core of the problem; deeply rooted beliefs guide us on vital issues for our individual and collective existence, yet they are often incorrect, completely wrong, or simply intentionally distorted.

Ideas, ideologies, dogmas, assertions and narratives often give us distorted views of how an economic, political, financial, military, or other system works... The force of arguments or, more frequently the argument of force transforms ideas into systems of authority. Lies can easily be transformed into views supported by institutions and entities representing authority in whatever form. Propaganda is highly effective, creating a cultural-ideological atmosphere that prepares citizens to accept the unacceptable by rationalizing the absurd.

We should take seriously what we believe because what we believe is what we become.

Art does not command life; beliefs do. Ultimately, the ideas conveyed in the web of cultural-ideological narratives shape the perception of reality, organize and command how we live.

A mixture of facts and assumptions constitutes the perception of reality. The fundamental question to be answered is: who designs and controls the dominant narratives from which the beliefs that function as landmarks helping us to navigate through life?

Earning trust is the easiest way to deceive, use and abuse our fellow citizens; when we are not careful about the narratives we pick to trust, society will become owned by untrustworthy unscrupulous people.

Whenever the majority of citizens realize that they are being deceived, the scheme fails to work and the curtain falls; even in dictatorships, it is essential to maintain the necessary illusions for the idea of ​​systemic justice to prevail because when propaganda stops working, not even violent repression can contain popular rebellion.

Throughout human history, bonds of mutual trust were the standard default pattern of social inter-dependency and reciprocity behind the ability of the human species to survive until the present.

The sedentarization process changed interpersonal relationships by introducing social division in castes and classes and attributing roles, tasks and specialized occupations associated with a system of rewards and privileges.

The class system normalized, rationalized, justified and institutionalized inequality, exploitation, repression, exclusion and ostracism that has prevailed up to the present.

Over time the ruling classes create a legal, ideological and political system to protect their interests and a cultural and moral system to glorify the importance of their role in society.

We know how easy it is to use the power of the creative imagination to frame narratives that rationalize and justify the subjugation of inferior citizens and people considered subhuman. And when these narratives crystallize in the form of norms, rules, traditions and customs, they become the bio-sociocultural identity of a given community, society, country, or empire and are assumed as if they were immutable truths. The danger of cultural-ideological manipulation and colonization is always lurking and many of the "facts" we take for granted were ideas planted by special interests, frequently at the expense of the common good.

Over time we are conditioned to trust the messages conveyed by authorities.

Public figures, experts, celebrities, in short, people regarded as authorities: intellectuals, academics, media personalities, entertainers, sports heroes, and artists,… being famous makes people gain extra credibility and followers trust their opinions without questioning the foundation of what they state. This reveals how the class-based society scheme is set up; the relevance of the role has nothing to do with the person's real value and usefulness to society.

Apparently, anonymous citizens cannot be better informed, smarter, or more honest than well-known experts, celebrities, etc...

In the current sociopolitical context, the barrage of propaganda is crucial to maintaining social order. The capitalist economic system and the financial markets controlled by Wall Street and the City of London have reached such a level of corruption and degeneracy that if the factual truth could be widely exposed and the public had the opportunity to digest it to connect the dots and grasp what the so-called free markets are about and how the financial instruments and everything involving the process of financialization of the economy destroys the fabric of society would be impossible to avoid social upheaval.

Class society is organized to serve the interests of the ruling classes. The further down the social ladder one descends, the less worthy of respect the citizen becomes. The majority of the population conforms to this reality, including the despised.

The more polarizing an issue is, the more people tend to tribalize. Unfortunately, common sense is not always compatible with legitimate anger.

The ideological identification associated with the group's response generates irrational behavior.

The more controversial the topic, the more it divides people and prevents an enlightening and constructive dialogue.

Economic, political, financial and military elites have techno-scientific resources at their disposal to exploit controversial issues to divide society and thus defend the interests and agendas of the dominant classes.

Structural problems that affect the lives of ordinary people are neglected and dissent is neutralized.

The gatekeepers of liberal democracy use every tool in the toolbox to prevent dissident groups and radical movements from developing and growing because they understand that the people will embrace the right ideas when the time is ripe.

If the law does not guarantee social equality, then the law most likely protects special interests.

Special interests emerge when groups, organizations, institutions and corporations acquire the power to influence the legislative, executive and judicial powers. Over time, they transform society structurally and functionally to favor them while keeping the liberal democratic facade.

Elections become a mere formality when elected politicians can indiscriminately disregard the electoral program on the basis they were elected. The electoral program is the political document that defines the principles of representative democracy on which the voter bases the conscious choice to give a vote of confidence to a political project that seems the most adequate to achieve the desired objectives.

It is evident that the total disregard for electoral programs is incompatible with exercising democracy. If a government, after being elected, discards the basic document on which it was elected and implements agendas that go against what was in the electoral program, we do not live in a democracy.

First, we must debunk the myth that there are no alternatives TINA because it's not true and only proves that propaganda is working; that's what we must fight.

The essence of democracy is having political agency; either you have it, or you don't, and when the majority of citizens don't have it and believe it's not important, then we live in a simulacrum of democracy.

Capitalist economies and class-based societies can never be democratic. When the pursuit of profit and proprietary rights are placed above people and nature, the system in place is incompatible with democracy. When political democracy is reduced to theater, ignoring economic, social and environmental democracy, we have technofeudalism with a liberal facade.

sábado, 4 de março de 2023

A steady-state economy for an ecosocialist society

The ecosocialist political economy must be oriented towards a steady state economy. The objective of the economy is to satisfy the social needs within the biosphere's limits. Unfortunately, the capitalist system's law of supply and demand, instead of prioritizing providing for the basic needs of society, encourages conspicuous consumption of superfluous goods, products, and services, resorting to advertising and aggressive marketing strategies while inducing unnecessary indebtedness.

The profit-driven consumerist society is divided between those who can access goods and services they don't need and those who don't have enough to survive. In the middle are those who acquire what they don't need with the money they don't have. The capitalist society knows how to exploit the feelings of guilt and shame and distorts what is truly important for us to be accepted and respected in the community replacing it with hollow destructive goals.

A steady-state economy must be oriented never to exceed ecological limits. Producing goods, products, and services based on prior market research and promoting them through sophisticated, ubiquitous, and misleading advertising campaigns to create artificial needs is the perfect recipe for social and ecological disaster and moral failure.

The primary objective of the economy is to satisfy essential social needs within ecological limits. When a society reaches a certain level of well-being and comfort, it has to stop growing and be guided by the principles of the steady-state economy. This cannot happen within the capitalist economic system because, without economic growth, the economy stagnates, which will be preceded by a social crisis.

A steady-state economy is nothing more than adopting the principles and values ​​that have guided humanity for thousands of years without significant change. We can be much happier when we learn to live with less; it does not mean a life of deprivation, but the development of awareness that living within certain limits does not necessarily have to be wrong; actually, it is not. The self"imposed" limits by being conscious of them is much healthier than those imposed by austerity and social exclusion measures.

We are psychologically conditioned to make well-being dependent on acquiring unnecessary goods, products, and services. As a result, social relations are increasingly commodified, a perversion introduced by the capitalist economy that transforms each of us into a profit seeker. At the base level of society, this means competing for crumbs or even trying to steal some crumbs from other people's mouths.

For the capitalist rentier class, gratuity is a sin, and greed is a virtue. This sick mentality must be fought and replaced by a culture where gratuity and free access are the norms, not the exception.

The principles of ecosocialist political economy must be oriented toward a steady-state economy to respect the biosphere's limits.

Economic stability is a social necessity; boom & bust cycles to which society is exposed generate unnecessary suffering and worsens social inequality and ecological destruction.

Economic stability is a social good, while uncertainty and social atomization are sources of anxiety, social isolation, helplessness, and alienation.

The steady-state economy is based on the equilibrium of keeping the economic activity to satisfy social needs within the confines of the biosphere. We are trained to become callous, unscrupulous, narcissistic sociopaths to succeed in the harsh economic, socio-cultural and politico-ideological environment of the capitalist, profit-driven, class-based system. In the same way, we can be trained to become something different, change the circumstances and, even better, change the societal paradigm, and humanity will change. We are not condemned to become vicious exploiters, greedy rent seekers, and firm devotees in TINA; we can do better, behave better, and live and feel better about our existence.  

The engine of capitalism is economic growth through debt. Therefore, capitalism has to be imperialist and colonialist because the capitalist economy cannot stop growing, which means the never-ending need to seek new markets and gain control of resources and raw materials whenever they happen to exist.

Globalized financial capitalism controls who have, and under what conditions, access to finance. Therefore, globalized neoliberal capitalism is an imperialist neocolonialist enterprise, and the leading international financial institutions are gates keepers. Economic growth is an imperative necessity of the capitalist system, not a condition of the economy. We must understand the difference, the economy survives without capitalism, but humanity might not survive capitalism. Capitalism can be painted green, ROYGBIV, or made invisible, but the relentless destructive process associated with it will persist.

A political economy system capable of stopping the perverse and destructive dynamics of unlimited growth has to go to the roots of the problem that created the current age of Capitalocene.

Capitalism not only stimulates and rewards the negative characteristics of the human condition, such as greed, the desire for ownership, control, and immediate satisfaction. It also depends on limitless growth to survive; growth is not the consequence but an imperative need of the capitalist system. Capitalism is unsustainable, regardless of the method and/or tool used to assess it. One can excuse it but cannot deny it.

The ecosocialist political economy must be oriented neither toward growth nor degrowth but toward a steady-state economy compatible with ecological boundaries.

There is a deep need to reflect on the model of society we wish to have. What should the objectives of the economy be? What is the purpose of society? Are we doomed to serve people who are our equals in every respect but because we live in a class-based society that granted them the privilege to subjugate their fellow citizens? No, we are not.

The economy will have to grow in areas and sectors where growth is justified, and it will have to decrease in areas and sectors identified as socially and environmentally harmful. Decisions have to be grounded in sound data and taken by participatory democracy. And whenever justified, they can be reassessed, revoked, and/or replaced.

Decisions on production and consumption priorities will have to be democratically approved. The national government manages projects at the national level but in dialogue with local authorities and communities to consider specific challenges.

The capitalist market economy distorts the purpose of ​​the economy. The production of low-quality disposable goods that require a continuous flow of resources and energy is responsible directly and/or indirectly for producing large amounts of waste for no other purpose but to make money.

For example, the fashion, cosmetics/beauty, and related industries have long stopped working to satisfy people's needs. Instead, the R&D laboratories and marketing teams create new desires and artificial needs by diversifying the offer of supposedly innovative products to increase sales and grow profits.

Why do we need new fashion lines each season besides compelling consumers to buy what they don't need, often with money they don't have? The same happens with the cosmetics industry, where nanotechnology is the buzzword to convince consumers to buy innovative products. As a result, everything is allowed to increase sales.

Most people believe in consumerism fiction, unaware or in denial that the current path is wrong; the consumption habits and the need to satisfy small whims override the will to fight for the greater ideal, a more equal society, a balanced economy, and a healthier environment.

In the ecosocialist political economy model, survival and social well-being are not linked to economic growth. The problems that distress society and destroy the environment to continue producing superfluous, useless, and harmful goods, products, and services, as in the case of the mentioned industries, are entirely suppressed.

People will have more freedom to decide in conscience and focus on what is imperative, such as the stability of the production of essential goods, products, and services to satisfy society's needs within the boundaries of the biosphere.

The capitalist cancer scattered metastases throughout the human society and earth's ecosystems; the ideological-cultural metastases are the most difficult to eradicate because they shape the individual and collective biosociocultural identity. We perceive reality and believe what we believe because capitalist imperialism's ideological and cultural metastases have colonized our psychocognitive system as intrinsic structural memories.

That's why having an honest and constructive discussion is so difficult. The cultural-ideological environment is for us what water is for the fish. The sociocultural environment is filled with necessary illusions to manufacture consent which is why breaking the propaganda chains is so challenging; concerns about immediate survival keep most of us away from deep analysis and comprehensive reflections about the processes and systems underlying our dysfunctional society.

The first step to finding solutions to a problem is to identify and dissect it. Unfortunately, the current societal paradigm makes people dismiss the issues when they are unaffected. People live in their bubbles and become oblivious to political issues; not even the black clouds mounting on the horizon are enough to change their minds.

Ignoring the symptoms and hoping they will disappear will not solve the problem. Avoiding the truth will not protect us from being annihilated.

We are exposed to a panoply of ideological-cultural narratives that shape our biosociocultural identity and how we perceive reality and adapt to it.

If we see only resources to transform into commodities wherever we look, and our social relations gravitate around profit, we can be sure we are devotees to the capitalist doctrine.

How to change the dominant ideological-cultural paradigm while we are constrained to live under its influence? We are hammered 24/7 by propaganda that aims to turn us into obedient servants who can be discarded once no longer helpful.

To free ourselves from the influence of deceptive narratives and fake values ​​that sustain the capitalist system oppressing us requires developing counter-cultural narratives presenting ideological views sustained on intellectual honesty; the truth can erode lies even when they appear rock solid.

The capitalist economic system is a criminal order based on the subjugation, exploitation, and enslavement of people while plundering everything that can be transformed into commodities. A system dependent on imperialistic expansionism to survive while destroying the biosphere.

The capitalist system reached the perversion point where the production of goods to satisfy the needs of society is no longer the main objective of the economy; the growth of financial wealth through financial engineering and the manipulation of financial instruments in fraudulent markets is the driving force of the “economy.”

The real economy ceased to matter because the growth of wealth is in the FIRE sector; producing "normal" goods and products to supply society is a sub-system of the financialized economy.

It is essential to expose the lies we are forced to swallow daily so that the hypnotic numbness remains at adequate levels. The harsh reality of lies that sustain a criminal system is not easy to dismantle. The cultural and ideological decolonization process needs to overcome the denialism barrier. But as the awareness that we live in a profoundly dysfunctional system grows more robust, we begin to realize how imperative it is to build another political, economic, social, and cultural reality.

The capitalist system turns us into opportunistic cynics, but there are always those who fight for what is right without being assured that they will win. We may be unable to stop the transhumanist technofeudalist advance because the influence of the dominant ideological-cultural narratives is omnipotent and omnipresent. Still, we must not give up the fight.

The spell loses its effect when we realize it has no power over us. Propaganda warfare keeps us attached to the belief that there is no alternative to the neoliberal economic model, but that is a lie. TINA is not inevitable; we can overcome it with political awareness, but we must acknowledge that ideas have consequences and politics matters.

Ensuring the well-being and the equitable distribution of produced goods does not require economic growth but rather a radical change in how the economy and society are structured and managed.

It is necessary to rethink what wealth means radically. The real economy produces wealth in the form of essential goods, products, and services to satisfy the population's needs. The financialized economy parasites the real economy and destroys the fabric of society to serve the interests of the plutocratic rentier class.

A significant decrease in producing and consuming superfluous and useless goods, products, and services is an ecological imperative.

The phase-out of fossil fuels is only viable in the long term and under an international geopolitical favorable context. Hence, diplomatic cooperation between states committed to designing an international order outside the sphere of influence of green capitalism. Instead of being the means to "save" humanity from extinction and nature from ecocide, green growth is the continuation of imperialist capitalist expansionism to achieve global domination through the financialization of nature.

Green growth corresponds to compounding the problem by adding more layers of complexity to financialized capitalism, this time with the financialization of ecosystem services. The correct way to interpret the agenda of green capitalism is to follow the trail of the last decades of imperialist neoliberal globalization with the objective of absolute domination.

Green growth is yet another capitalist fallacy to continue the neocolonial expansionism for the extractive industry with the consequent ecological destruction and expropriation of native land.

The so-called green transition from the energy paradigm based on fossil fuels must be progressive and responsible. On the one hand, it has to worry about not disrupting the real economy that supplies essential goods and products. On the other hand, it has to respect ecological boundaries and be accompanied by degrowth in economic activities with harmful impacts, especially of non-essential goods, products, and services. An ecosocialist political economy is centered on meeting people's needs and effectively reducing environmental impact, unlike a capitalist economy focused on profit growth, capital accumulation, and concentration of power, which, over time, will be transformed into uncountable political control.

"Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” Green capitalism is a continuation of the doctrine of full-spectrum dominance, whose aim was global governance under the control of the Anglo-American imperialist plutocrat class.

The US would have the power to dictate the rules of global governance and, with the support of the "allies," would guarantee the means of enforcing them through economic-financial subjugation supported by military hegemony.

We take for granted a reality that depends on a complex chain that begins with the extraction of resources, goes through transformation and transport, and ends with the distribution of goods and products we find displayed in stores. This chain can be interrupted by several factors that local and national governments cannot control. We must also not forget the ecological footprint and pollution we do not see, but we have the moral obligation to be aware of. Conspicuous consumption normalized by the throwaway society is unsustainable, and by unsustainability, we must understand leaving behind irreversible damage.

In the current paradigm, it is acceptable to have access to everything that money can buy without limits. Most of us live in urban bubbles subjected to the ubiquitous hammering of advertisement ads telling us that to be happy and fit socially; we need to buy the latest model, try out the latest innovation, enjoy the new flavor, and the list could go on…

Freedom is not about having the right to access everything that money can buy but the right to equitably access what nature can give us within ecological limits. Most of us don’t satisfy our needs directly from nature; we acquire transformed products and buy food from the supermarket, which means we need an economy; what kind of economy do we need? It is the political question we need to ask ourselves. Limitless freedom doesn’t exist; there must be rules and regulations to make sure we don’t step on each other toes.

Quality and durability should be the aim of scientific research and technological development based on the precautionary principle for a sustainable society.

The biosphere's limits have to be the limits of the economy, just as the limits of my consumption have to be the possibility to satisfy essential needs, not to be determined by the "freedom" of my wallet.

Monetization distorts the value of everything we need to live; a chicken in the refrigerator window becomes a commodity. How it was grown, how long it lived, and how it was slaughtered do not matter because it is just a commodity with a monetary tag. That is called dehumanization; nothing matters besides the egotistic satisfaction of immediate desires and whims.

The disconnection with the reality from which the essential goods to our survival come makes us insensitive to the unnecessary suffering caused for our convenience. Convenience is a form of blindness; everything that does not concern us directly doesn’t exist.

Economic degrowth in the context of an ecosocialist political economy is neither a war against the economy nor the people. Instead, it has to be democratically decided by consensus, which means people must agree on what kind of goods, products, and services should be restricted or eliminated from the production and consumption chain. What is most important is to create a resilient steady-state economy that is socially equitable and ecologically sustainable.

The capitalist political economy is controlled by private finance, commercial banks, retail banks, and investment banks with the power to determine which economic sectors and activities have priority in accessing credit. The real economy that produces essential goods and services is neglected in favor of the speculative "economy." The FIRE sector and the rent-seeking plutocratic class do control the system and do not run us having our best interest in mind.

In an ecosocialist society, banking has to be public and cooperative. Banking exists to serve society by supporting the real economy, small-scale family projects, and cooperative production and distribution networks to provide for society without damaging the environment. Housing is a public good, not a speculative asset; there is no need for a private FIRE sector to squeeze the working class through debt enslavement and other financial instruments.

Financial speculation is a crime; a healthy society does not need financial markets; the whole thing is a vile scheme that needs to be ended. The so-called free market does not exist to benefit the consumer; the “law” of supply and demand is a fallacy that puts price control in the hands of financial speculators and monopolies. Prices must be fixed and controlled, and international trade agreements must have price stabilizing mechanisms because the raison d'être of the economy is to serve people, and the current system produces inequality and social exclusion while telling stories about meritocracy and entrepreneurship.

The so-called financial markets represent a form of organized crime supported by fallacious economic models and custom-tailored legal codes to protect the rentier class. In 2008, the too big to fail lie made people believe that there was no alternative but save broken criminal institutions. Since then, we have done nothing but allow things to go from bad to worse.

According to neoliberal policies, sacrifices must be made through austerity measures to cut public spending. The financialized economy prioritizes investments in the FIRE sector; the real economy is no longer the primary source of wealth creation. Instead, wealth is created artificially by resorting to financial instruments. The wealth created in the virtual world of financial markets is used by the plutocrat class to control the real economy and to bribe political actors through lobbying and the revolving door system. The system is irredeemable, and we let 15 years go by without being able to organize an internationalist, anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist left project for a classless and ecological society with the capacity to confront and dismantle the status quo. Will the war wake people up to the real problem that has been eating away at the fabric of society for at least five decades?

The parasitic and predatory sector FIRE increases inequality, and social misery crushes the small family economy and small and medium-sized companies and controls who has access to the government through the financing of electoral campaigns and many other ways of rewarding the services provided to the oligarchic class and plutocracy linked to the interests of Anglo-American capitalist imperialism.

Speculative banking has to be eradicated. Money has to be controlled by the State, and public banking must be re-established.

Humanity needs an international financial system that respects national sovereignty. A financial system to promote economic development to achieve a steady-state economy compatible with the biosphere's limits. There is a need to implement an international order based on cooperation and exchanging know-how to create a stable world where the countries cooperate more and compete less. Imperialism and colonialism need to end, but when we say need to end, we must understand that it needs to be us to end it; we need to take responsibility for building the society we want.

The globalized financial system controlled by Anglo-American financial imperialism is a nightmare. The sooner we bring it down, or at least weakened and circumscribed, the better for humanity, including the dumbed-down Western citizenry.

We are living in a situation where the powers that be have reversed what should be logical and normal; the financial sector should be a public good to support the economy and provide well-being to the society, but what we have is the opposite, the real economy and the whole society has to bear the burden. In contrast, the plutocratic class controlling the globalized neoliberal capitalism has transformed into a machine for dismantling social, civil, and labor rights, resorting to the narratives of entrepreneurial meritocracy; the mythology of the free market was integrated into the social engineering process that brought us to the present day, where we have virtually no political agency.

Politics is the ideological chisel with which economic, social, and cultural reality is carved; ideas have consequences, and reality is shaped and transformed by the ideas that are best promoted regardless of their intrinsic value and what interests they are intended to defend. The set of ideas forming the neoliberal theology, which most Westerners believe is a doctrine willing to sacrifice humanity to guarantee the future where elites continue living out of touch and the useless class will have to be sacrificed, probably euthanized.

The dominant capitalist doctrine is anti-social, anti-human, and anti-nature; the solution for social redundancy is eugenics; to enhance humanity, transhumanism, and to save nature, financialize ecosystem services. What could go wrong?! Society, the economy, and the biosphere deserve more respect than the current system is willing to give. We need systemic change, not social engineering and transhumanism.

People become a problem when inoculated, infected, or colonized with deceitful ideas; ideas have consequences, and propaganda is the vehicle to spread deceitful ideas. First principle: follow the money, Cui bono, second try to think outside of the box, become a skeptic, follow people for their consistency and integrity, never because they are popular, knowledge is a socially shared good, what we individually achieve, even when our ideas and actions make the difference, it didn’t come out of the blue, we don’t stand in the shoulders of giants, progress in arts, sciences, and technology is a collective endeavor.

In the first place, we cannot leave to others what is up to us to "judge"; our well-being cannot be dissociated from the well-being of others; society is a living organism, a system made up of a set of systems that must work in an integrated way to achieve a dynamic balance, namely a steady state economy that serves society and respects ecological limits.

We have a system transformed into a wealth accumulation machine by a class of megalomaniac sociopaths and psychopaths who can afford to lead an existence completely dissociated from social and material reality and perceive themselves as demiurges above public accountability.

We are responsible for choosing the social paradigm we wish to have. We need to reflect on why we believe what we believe because much of what we believe, or take for granted, is not the product of conscious choice but the result of the process of living in a given sociocultural and ideological-political system. Symbols loaded with ideological messages are ubiquitous in the sociocultural environment where our existences occur. The function of our sensory organs is to capture signals sent to the neural areas responsible for pattern identification and classification, determining the adequate behavioral response. Most of the information we process does not represent either immediate danger or opportunity. Therefore it does not receive conscious attention, which does not mean that it does not exert influence in the process of putting together the narratives that shape our bio-sociocultural identity defining what we are and the principles we defend, whether we took the trouble to reflect on the origins, causes and consequences they have on what we stand in the world.

The formation of implicit memories does not require conscious intervention. Still, it relies on the emotional tag that attributes a quality associated with an idea, concept, perception, experience, or story to which we are voluntarily or otherwise exposed. An important principle is to cultivate a different look at the nature of the human condition, to see ourselves as what we are, a species vulnerable to ideological-conceptual and psycho-affective manipulation, and this attitude changes everything. The humble attitude of self-analysis builds awareness of how easy it is to go down paths of self-deception to avoid facing reality.

What should be the objectives of the economy? What is the purpose of society? Are we condemned to voluntary servitude because we must feel obliged to serve people equal to us in every respect, but a class-based society normalizes servitude by allowing the privileged classes to subjugate their fellow men? No, we are not. This is not how we are meant to live, but we can be educated, tame, trained, and brainwashed into becoming almost anything. Every society resembles what it rewards; if we have a closer look, we can identify default behavior patterns underlying what seems to be a diversified reality.

Do we want to be accomplices in plundering the planet until there's nothing left but leaving behind piles of toxic waste? Are we fated to "evolve" towards transhumanism and live in a technofeudalist political system? We are not, but we must stand up for the society we want to build. We cannot expect our “leaders” to change; because they won’t, their allegiance is towards the imperialist rentier class, not us. Green capitalism and green energy transition through the financialization of nature and a technofeudal form of governance.

Economic degrowth doesn’t mean the impoverishment of society, which is currently happening with the imposition of neoliberal austerity. Economic degrowth aims to curb the compulsive consumption of superfluous products, goods, and services. It is unsustainable to maintain the level of consumption of non-essential products, and we live in a society that relies on the constant appeal to overconsumption. Economic degrowth is not about attacking or demonizing any particular sector but selecting products, goods, and services that must be discontinued or prohibited from production due to the destructive environmental impact.

In a steady-state sustainable economy, innovation must serve the well-being of society as a whole because it is completely idiotic to believe that everything labeled innovative represents some "advance" to society. On the contrary, it is a sick trend that constantly compels people to seek new stuff.

We live in an age where everything is thrown away. Most products on the market are not made to last. Many consumers don't realize that this throwaway world is created by design, such as “planned obsolescence.” The disposable society can’t go on forever. The Global South should resist western cultural colonization and see the western consumer culture as poison tailored to enslave people, not to liberate people.

The Global South must implement the ecosocialist political economy because the productivist socialist model no longer meets today’s requirements. Capitalism's neocolonialist "choice" should be ruled out; only fascists and oligarchs that hate democratic societies are willing to open their nations to imperialist plunder for their benefit; they often implement neoliberal policies with an iron fist, condemning people to extreme poverty and allow ecological destruction caused by mineral and raw materials extraction by foreign conglomerates with ties to the financial tycoons. That is precisely the rules-based international order humanity doesn’t need, and we must get organized to defeat it. It won’t go away if we ask nicely; it is a class war, and we have been on the losing side for a long time while we hope for change in Obama style. Weapons of mass deception work because we believe our masters somehow have our best interests at heart. They don’t; they want us crushed and fearful.

In the first place comes food sovereignty to satisfy the population's basic needs; a country should never depend on imports of essential goods to feed the nation, primarily for a matter of sovereignty but also for ecological reasons.

The extractive economy, even controlled by the State, must serve to develop a steady-stable sustainable ecological economy for a just society. Exports of raw materials and rare minerals must obey clear international rules to avoid and punish human rights violations and environmental crimes. The disposable and planned obsolescence economy cannot continue, much less at the expense of exploiting local inhabitants and child labor, displacing indigenous people, and causing environmental devastation.

Ecosocialist policies must be deliberated through direct democracy. Democratic deliberation requires sound knowledge, which means the responsibility to decide must be preceded by carefully analyzing the best available data. A culture of democratic participation does not exist because the capitalist system relegates the political intervention of the citizenry to the role of consumer and spectator. Some people believe in the power of consumer choice, I do not deny that we can put some pressure on the system with our choices, but in the end, they are not meant to challenge the system. Many people don’t have a choice because they are too short money-wise; they buy what they can afford.

The precautionary principle is the filter that protects society from possible attacks by snake oil sellers.

An egalitarian, balanced, and ecological society can never be taken for granted. Democracy is a process; it's not something you buy and put in a drawer, but a living system that needs regular care. Potential threats will emerge where you least expected; fascism is like rust; it never sleeps. However fair and balanced a society may be, it does not have the power to prevent the emergence of narcissistic sociopaths and megalomaniac psychopaths with delusions of grandeur who will try to seduce compatriots to join forces to restore order, glory, morals, identity, influence in contrast to a decadent and immoral order that increasingly engulfs Western society.

Human beings easily allow themselves to be carried away by illusions, which is always bad for the majority. The horrors of war, imperialist conquest, and colonial adventures are real and cannot be ignored. The stick and carrot trick is recurrently used as an instrument of social engineering; on the one hand, it is crucial to keep people fearful and, on the other hand, to feed the necessary illusions of hope that favorable changes will eventually happen.

A culture of sufficiency will have to replace the culture of conspicuous consumption. Economic expansionism accomplices with imperialism and neocolonialism because the raw materials and rare minerals needed to manufacture the desired electronic devices, gadgets, and batteries for electric vehicles have to be extracted somewhere. The extractive industry has a terrible history of human abuse, corruption, and environmental destruction. Whenever they intend to settle in a region, they resort to public relations campaigns, presenting themselves as agents of economic development, job creation, and wealth for the targeted areas. Whenever the local inhabitants resist, they are confronted with violent repression by the police and military forces. Local inhabitants are also excluded from the decision-making because corruption speaks louder than words. Poor people from small villages do not have the political leverage to confront the national oligarchs, let alone neocolonialist organizations. The world market needs to be supplied with raw materials essential to economic growth so the technocentric civilization can progress without setbacks. This is the dominant mindset that we have to trust blindly. Humanity does not have the right to choose alternative paths because an imperialist elite imposes a one-way hegemonic reality.

The progressivist dogma promises salvation if we hand over control of society to techno-scientism. This theology opens new frontiers and promotes discoveries that will free humanity from biophysical limits. On the other hand, technoscientism is an absolutist theology demanding the complete loss of privacy and the merger of humans with the virtual realm.

Ecosocialism preconizes economic degrowth as a tool, not a goal. Degrowth is a political instrument to combat abuses and crimes against society and the environment. Conspicuous consumption of superfluous goods and services results from a culture exploiting superficiality and immediacy. Freedom of choice is described and understood as a democratic value. Still, freedom of choice, expression, and movement are conditioned by economic and financial capacity and socio-professional status. Nothing should be above the respect for the dignity and integrity of all forms of life and nature. All forms of freedom humans deserve to enjoy must consider that society is a sub-system of nature and the economy is a sub-system of society. The economy's objective is to satisfy society's essential needs, not to serve special interests and unlimited enrichment. Society is a complex system that cannot be stretched indefinitely because by adding more layers of complexity and requiring more resources that need to come from farther and farther away, the risk of collapse increases, and faith in the power of technofixism does not prevent collapse when the same becomes inevitable.

In a class society dominated by neoliberalism, the plutocratic and oligarchic classes control political and economic power through an unregulated globalized financial system.

Currently, the public space is emptied of political debate. Cynicism and political apathy contribute to the problems getting worse and running the risk of becoming irreversible. TINA continues to be the dominant ideology fueled by necessary illusions underpinning the current model of society. Humanity will have to choose between submitting itself to the globalist geopolitical agenda advocated by Anglo-American imperialism through the financialization of the world economy by the western rentier class and protected by the US/NATO and the network of alliances and military partnerships subordinated to the US geostrategic interests, including the approximately 800 US military bases and installations around the world, or multipolarism and respect for sovereignty based on a system of democratic and fair international rules.

The ecosocialist ideology is incompatible with the existence of private monopolies. In an ecosocialist society, there is no place for oligarchs and plutocrats, nor for a private financial and banking system that uses credit to financially enslave individuals, families, small and medium-sized companies, and states. But, unfortunately, most people believe in the legitimacy of the sector because they do not know the structural and functional betrayal of the system, from the creation of money through debt to the use of the so-called sophisticated financial instruments; look here: https://www.investopedia.com/terms/f/financialinstrument.asp.

The sectors of the economy that are crucial for national sovereignty must be controlled by the State and managed to satisfy societal needs according to the precautionary principles, which means implementing policies to discontinue, reduce and eliminate "economic" activities that have been proven unnecessary and/or are environmentally unsustainable.

Local communities must be encouraged and supported in the search for ecological solutions for an economy centered on the well-being of populations. The path is made by walking, and democracy is built by participating because democracy is a process, just as society is a system, and nothing can be taken for granted. Only a culture of permanent vigilance can prevent the degenerated seeds of fascism from germinating. By vigilance, I mean education for a society where the sense of community is rewarded; hollow words end up emptied of meaning. The social, cultural, and economic reality must convey the values ​​and principles underlying the political-ideological system. The ideology has to be part of the everyday life of ordinary people; pompous speeches and sly rhetoric do not serve democracy but rather grow hypocrisy. Ideas live in actions and are transmuted in behavior reflected in society. Society is the mirror of the dominant ideological system materialized into human behavior.

Grow what needs to grow, degrow or eliminate what needs to be eliminated without using the loss of jobs to justify maintaining pernicious activities. In a functional society, people are first and foremost citizens; secondly, they are workers or collaborators, as they are now called. Work is essential for a society to function. Regardless of the functions performed or the roles played, citizenship is the right to equal treatment, and all existing resources must be equally shared. Wealth as a discriminating factor to access goods, products, or services is social cancer; privilege is not an incentive to excellence; individuals with a tendency towards intellectual activities do not need material incentives to stimulate intellectual curiosity; they need material conditions to be able to develop their potential and academic freedom, not mercantilist meritocracy conditioning research freedom that ends up rewarding people with fewer scruples.

The working class is more exploited despite productivity gains, and wages have lost purchasing power; the capitalist system guarantees that productivity gains are not shared with workers. The neoliberal propaganda was able to divide, atomize and isolate working-class citizens while destroying social welfare and labor rights. Privatize everything, reduce taxes for the wealthy, and austerity measures for the poor. With the relocation of companies, the service industry absorbed much of the available workforce in low-paid, precarious positions. Wealth, career, and social status cannot define the citizen's role; citizenship equality assures political, economic, social, and cultural participation. The salary attributed to performing a function, task, or service provided to society by each of us must ensure that we all live above the poverty line.

The rampant dehumanization and social insensitivity characteristic of the capitalist system and, unfortunately of, all societies that place conspicuous consumption of superfluous goods and services above common social welfare and environmental protection make societies grow dysfunctional and, over time, the implementation of dystopian solutions is normalized.

The working class is made up of a diversity of people beneficial to society; however, they are undervalued and neglected by the professional-managerial class and, in general, by those who think they are entitled to be served, regardless of profession, creed, and social class, the feeling of entitlement is part of the default cultural mindset. Work has to be seen as a form of reciprocity emphasizing the essential and never the superfluous. No one wants a society where people feel entitled to everything without giving back anything. Gratuity does not mean indiscriminate access to everything society can provide; it means democratizing access to essential goods and services for all. Housing, food, clothing, healthcare, schooling, and the right to enjoy free time is part of a functional and equitable society; how we organize ourselves to ensure everyone is fairly treated is part of the participatory democratic process. Sharing is the natural law of communal survival; the concepts of solidarity, fraternity, complicity, sense of belonging, mutual aid, and similar were practiced by indigenous peoples and tribes of all continents before they were "invented" by "civilized" peoples in the context of class-based social systems.

A society is not fair without implementing an organized model of retribution and reciprocity. The exploitation of man by man in search of profit does not generate justice or equality, but it creates unscrupulous sociopaths. To change human behavior, it is not necessary to bioengineer the human species to create a transhuman species; it is required to create a social, economic, and cultural environment where the best human qualities can thrive and a balanced society can be maintained. Like any plant or animal, human behavior is conditioned by environmental conditions that will become normalized behavioral patterns.

The concept of ​​private property is attractive, not only because it is a defining instrument of social class but also allows every citizen to gain control of something, even if that control is always relative, the closer we get to the bottom of the social ladder, the easier to be expropriated.

When achievement is correlated with material possessions, and the economy is based on the pursuit of profit and wealth accumulation for further property acquisition in search of material, economic and financial security, everything else comes in second place or is neglected. Most people seek stability and security because insecurity and uncertainty are difficult to bear. The capitalist society is structured to force people to compete for the right to material security through a prosperous professional career, entrepreneurship, or other initiatives that can contribute to enrichment, seen as the guarantor of personal and family safety. Proprietary right is codified in law as an instrument of power and class division. The structure of society is designed to ensure top-down control, and proprietary rights represent the legal framework that best protects those who own the most.

It is debatable whether having property in a classless society makes sense. There are ways to have a perfectly functioning society without private property. Most people do not realize or do their best not to recognize that hereditary rights were and still are a class-based entitlement, allowing the rich to perpetuate control over a particular territory or another form of property. Most working-class people would do better in a society free from private ownership.

We don't need to own a house; we need one to live in. In a free market capitalist system, the FIRE sector inflates real estate market prices through speculation. It creates a housing bubble, pushing prices far above the actual market value and, when the bubble bursts, pushes countless poor and middle-class families to foreclosure.

Most measures, rules, norms, and procedures instituted and legalized to serve the interests of the dominant classes are also used to control the underprivileged classes. What appears to be a universal benefit is often codified in law to defend particular interests, hereditary rights being one such case. The side effects of property and hereditary rights are overlooked because it doesn't even cross people's minds to question them. The system is taken for granted, and most of those who consider it irredeemable would never dare to demand a radical regime change.

A society that normalizes conspicuous consumption and commodifies everything, including human relations, must generate profits for wealth accumulation and property acquisition to guarantee material security within a societal system where economic growth should last forever.

It is crucial to implement awareness to combat the excesses of mindless consumerism. However, these measures can only be implemented in a sociocultural and ideological context of a non-capitalist political economy. Class, environmental, and social consciousness are three essential pillars underpinning a political economy to serve the people and respect the environment and the community of living organisms that depend on it. Limiting or eliminating the production and consumption of superfluous and iniquitous goods, products, and services requires a political economy and a society in which people are not obsessed by the fear of compromising their livelihoods, essential comfort, and well-being if confronted with unemployment, interest rates and/or tax hikes, inflation and other downsides associated with the so-called free market capitalism. It is imperative to introduce the subject of economic degrowth in the political economy debate because of the insanity of unlimited growth as part of a dysfunctional, destructive, and criminal economic system that will not stop of its own accord.

Entitlements and privileges tend to be taken for granted even when meaningless and undeserved. No one likes to lose acquired benefits; among highly educated and intellectually refined people, some exhibit superiority and feel entitled to humiliate people who belong to a lower social rank. For people who have eventually developed feelings of inferiority because they were born, raised, educated, and indoctrinated to submit to the will of authorities, the antidote is to cultivate class consciousness that will erode the entrenched prejudices that excuse and make exploitation and social injustice palatable.

Why should a poor person feel ashamed or guilty of their condition? There is no objective reason, but the upper class takes advantage of this flawed assumption. In a class society, poor people are expected to believe they are mainly poor because of their incompetence, laziness, lack of will, self-confidence, etc. Class privileges are not awarded based on actual merit but on the service rendered to the system. The more crucial the role, the more generous the reward. Class is the root to which other problems created intentionally or derived from a dysfunctional social system are linked, some of which are planted with the sole objective of dividing the working class; woke imperialism is one such case. As long as imperialist capitalism manages and subjugates society, we are condemned to slavery.

Ecosocialism represents a civilizational transformation, a “way of life” based on cooperative interdependence. Solidarity, fraternity, and reciprocity have been emptied of meaning by a system that puts people in competition for crumbs to satisfy basic needs, making people selfish, cynical, insensitive, and cruel. Homo sapiens sapiens survived 200 thousand years living in tribal communities; if they had adopted a system similar to ours, they would have ended up self-destructing, and the species would have gone extinct. For most of the history of our species, survival was dependent on a solid sense of community-bound, the absence of the notion of private property beyond a handful of personal objects; everything was shared because it was not about competing to know who is the best, what means being the best and for how long does it last? Without social, family, and communal bonds, human beings wither away, and one doesn't need a Ph.D. in social psychology to understand that.

Dream rules life, and money rules the economy. Both assumptions are wrong. Reality rules life, and cooperation must lead the economy. Capitalism is social engineering at its worst; it only adds ugliness and exploits the worst that exists in human nature, which, like any other animal forced to survive in unnatural conditions, develops behaviors that are atypical for its species that can be manifested in self-destructive behaviors and/or sociopathic tendencies. This is precisely what happens to us, we are conditioned to adapt to abnormal conditions and circumstances, and as a result, we develop mental disorders and epigenetic changes. Meanwhile, we are told that the problem is the human condition. Society is controlled by sociopaths and psychopaths who live in a parallel dimension and look down on humanity and Planet Earth as toys that can be manipulated and destroyed to satisfy their Machiavellian whims.

The new civilization has to break with productivism and consumerism, less time dedicated to conventional work and more free time to dedicate to social, political, recreational, and artistic activities and, above all, to personal and/or collective projects that give meaning and purpose to individual existence embedded in and for the community.

Manufacture durable and quality products to save resources and energy. A healthy society, economy, and culture do not require permanent change and innovation. This frenzy culture is recent in human history. When the pace of change accelerates to the point of pressuring society to disrespect the capabilities of senior generations to adapt and have a saying instead of labeling them as incompetent and useless, we live already in an asylum euphemistically called society. Then it is time to question the purpose of such a society; dehumanization shouldn’t be a purpose, and confusing the interests of the out-of-touch minority with the fundamental objectives of society might not end well.

The resources to meet people's needs exist; the priority must be to equalize access to a basic level of well-being instead of encouraging unrestrained consumption. A society that generates anguish, anxiety, uncertainty, helplessness, and social alienation while mainstream economists brag about the virtues of the free market economic system. We are doomed if we don’t demand radical change.

I don't know what to say to anyone who doesn't feel the need to question the existence of a class-based society. In a few generations, if nothing is done, homo sapiens sapiens will be replaced by homo transhomo by the omniscient techno-scientific class funded by the imperialist plutocrat elite.

Ecosocialism is not against techno-scientific development innovations must go through quarantine and be introduced in a way that can be absorbed at an organic pace. Not everything that glitters is gold. The citizenry has the right and the duty to filter what should or should not enter the commercial circuit by resorting to the precautionary principle to understand the long-term impacts. The current frantic pace is unnatural and inhumane. We get used to it because the majority has no alternative. After all, political decision does not go through the people, and changes in legislation and regulatory bodies rarely reflect the interests of the working class and the regular consumer. We have all the reasons to demand a radical system change but mainstream politics and economics are unwilling to implement it because that goes against their hidden agendas, known goals, and best interests, so there is only one solution left, revolution. Ecosocialism is a realistic proposal that we could work on to build an alternative international order.

In current historical circumstances, discussing libertarian utopias wastes time and energy. The theoretical debate as an intellectual and/or academic exercise is understandable, but discussing political solutions to change the political and economic landscape is something else.

Technology and the State will remain with us. The core of the problem is a class-based society, and that's where we have to start instead of believing in abolishing the State to solve the problem. Just as the State facilitates labor exploitation and guarantees wealth accumulation and private proprietary rights, the State can work on behalf of a balanced and equitable society and an ecological, political economy. We need to democratize society and start by helping to decolonize the minds of our compatriots who are exploited to their core. We need to restore the spirit of class solidarity and fraternity to build a sense of shared problems and interests.

Most people take techno-scientific development as something positive; each innovation seems to represent another step on the ladder that brings us closer and closer to some technological paradise, opening doors to increasingly fascinating achievements. It is undeniable that information and computing technologies have revolutionized many sectors of activity and aspects of personal and collective life. However, we must not pretend that it has no costs and risks. Once Pandora's box is opened, it can trigger irreversible damage, and the entire web of life, including the human species, can be wiped out. Let’s not forget that techno-scientific development cannot be separated from neocolonialist imperialist expansionism, geostrategic militarism, and corporate agendas. The citizenry can easily become guinea pigs in scientific experiments to feed corporate greed and governmental agendas. Technocentric scientism, like any other religion, believes it owns the truth.

The risks of building a dystopian society are real. When techno-scientific development for perpetual economic growth does not require democratic scrutiny. Most technological innovations are introduced from the top down with little or no public debate; technology is not neutral. Every time new technology becomes available as a product of mass consumption, habits, and behaviors change. Technological innovation can give a competitive edge to the companies, organizations, institutes, universities, and the countries that develop them, but with what objective? What does humanity have to gain from countries competing for techno-scientific, economic, geopolitical, and military supremacy? Increasing complexity and specialization are not synonymous with building a safer and more prosperous future; on the contrary, more layers of complexity will bring us closer to the verge of collapse. At this point, humanity needs more cooperation, not competition for supremacy. We need to defeat imperialism and end the Capitalocene.

The precautionary principle must become the standard of reference for making conscious democratic decisions and delineating the boundaries and purpose of the economy so that resources and raw materials are used sustainably to provide for society without destroying the environment.

The idea that the purpose of the economy is to monetize, commodify and financialize everything, including human relationships, is boundlessly perverse. I think it's time to face the problem instead of continuing to kick the can down the road. Technofixism is a dangerous ideology because it disseminates the blind belief in technological omniscience to solve any problems humanity popping up on the horizon. Delusional hopism for participatory annihilation.

Complex societies avoid collapse by resorting to technological innovation, but this solution does not last forever. Human capabilities have limits, and respecting them should be considered common sense. But the delusional arrogance of the dominant political-cultural ideology is so extreme that instead of holding back and creating space for reflection, we move towards a technofeudalist transhumanist dystopia.

It is possible to live with more quality and dedicate more time, creativity, and talent to projects and activities with meaning and purpose. A society that despises empathy, compassion, and the intrinsic dignity of life is vile. We are indoctrinated towards dehumanization because this is how to become civilized, focused on techno-progressivism as the path to liberation/salvation.

The manufactured scarcity forcing the majority of the population to worry constantly is not and inevitability; it is a feature of the capitalist system that can and must be abolished. We must adopt another intellectual attitude to debunk systemic lies that parasite within ourselves.

Civilization as we know it is little more than a form of organized violence and extreme arrogance. Civilization is almost always controlled by megalomaniac sociopaths obsessed with perpetuating their existence in the form of colossal architectonic works as a demonstration of power and unbridled vanity.

Modern biotechnology and bioengineering seek to modify and redesign life to meet the needs of the fourth industrial revolution and green capitalism projects. The primary requirement of so-called free markets is to cater to the whims and interests of ruling elites who live in the parallel reality of extreme wealth and luxury.

Humanity, nature, and the planet are being modified and redesigned by people, organizations, and institutions dissociated from the real world. Economists learn how to design beautiful mathematical models that have nothing to do with the real economy but are used to rule and regulate the economy as sound tools. Much of what passes for scientific research has nothing to do with solving real societal problems. Nowadays, it doesn’t matter how dangerous, treacherous, or useless a scientific project is; some billionaire or government will fund it for as long as it fits the imperialistic agenda for global domination.

These elites fund and control academic institutions, laboratories and institutes, and organizations of the non-profit industrial complex by selecting human resources with academic and techno-scientific excellence that are willing by conviction and/or interest to transform ideas into knowledge and technological innovation for hegemonic power. In a social environment of intellectual arrogance and unlimited financial resources to squander, we can expect anything from a society where money's of democratic "control."

Ecosocialism implies a change in the civilizational paradigm. A radical sociocultural transformation is based on developing a social and ecological economy. The economy's priority is to satisfy basic needs and provide the minimum comfort to all citizens without exception.

The human being is much more than a simple bipolar consumer/spectator, as quickly apathetic and bored as he is hyper-excited and enthusiastic about trivia. For those looking for personal and spiritual growth through meditation, yoga, spiritual purification retreats, etc... the ecosocialist society provides more free time for citizens to dedicate themselves to what gives meaning to their lives. The goal of an ecosocialist economy is to build a participatory economy centered on social well-being instead of mindless consumerism, instilling individualism and inhibiting social and political participation.

The role of advertising in a consumer society is to stimulate the acquisition of unnecessary goods, products, and services that often have an unsustainable ecological footprint. The PR industry resorts to all the available scientific tools and innovations to manipulate the will and perception of consumers. The goal is to spread artificial needs, shape new tastes, explore psycho-emotional weaknesses and physical imperfections, offering easy solutions to become more beautiful, younger, accepted, happy and successful. Consumers in the lower income rank spend their time performing shitty jobs to spend their hard-earned money on acquiring superfluous and nefarious goods, products, and services, which do little more than feed illusions and encourage harmful habits and addictions. It doesn’t seem like a paradigm of a functional society.

A steady-state economy is structured to maintain a dynamic balance between producing goods and services while respecting environmental integrity. The efficient use of natural resources and the equitable distribution of the wealth generated by transforming these resources. By wealth, I refer to goods, products, and valuable services, not capital. The stability of economic output requires democratic and balanced management for social well-being within the biosphere's limits.

A steady-state economy ensures human well-being while minimizing ecological impact. An ecosocialist political economy should aim to follow that path.

A steady-state economy is not synonymous with a stagnant economy. It is an economy governed by clear social, economic, and environmental stability parameters. The boom & bust roller coaster of the financialized economy is incompatible with a real economy and social welfare; it accumulates capital in a few's hands. With capital accumulation comes the concentration of power and the ability to use it for social engineering. The financialized economy does not depend on the real economy to grow. The FIRE sector concentrates an essential share of investment, and more recently, the financialization of ecosystem services entered the chain of speculative predation of the web of life.

The concept of a stationary economy dates back to classical economics. However, it is associated with the economist Herman Daly, economists such as John Stuart Mill, David Ricardo, and Adam Smith predicted that economic growth would plateau when competitive advantages, labor specialization, and resource availability reached their natural limits. The steady-state economy offers the right conditions for demographic stabilization. The idea of ​​unlimited population growth is as irrational as the belief in unlimited economic growth. Technological development driven by the prospect of enrichment leads to imperialist expansionism, transforming itself into a genocidal and ecocidal machine. With the development of productivist industrial capitalism, society was progressively transformed into a space dedicated to conspicuous consumption and mindless entertainment. All these trends together will become our demise, and I don’t understand why we feel entitled to drag the rest of the web of life along with us!

A stationary economy differs from a stagnant economy because the parameter used to measure the economy is the social value-added, not the monetary value of the financial wealth generated.

Unfortunately, there is a profound asymmetry between the growing destructive power of technology serving economic growth and the development of individual and collective awareness that other models of economy and society are not only possible and desirable but have become imperative.

If the wealth generated by the economy is not distributed equitably to ensure the well-being and social stability, then something is wrong with this economic model. But, unfortunately, in a class-based capitalist society, narratives that justify social inequality abound, and the most extraordinary thing is that many of those who take them as venerable explanations are exploited by a system that discards them at the very moment when they no longer are needed, and that does not shy away from to use violent methods to bring them into line.

Steady-state economics is the way to create inter-generational economic, social, and political stability. The steady-state economy does not depend on stimulating superfluous consumption because it is focused on serving society and not exploiting it to generate profits at any cost. The vitality of society does not depend on economic growth; it depends on how the economy is organized. The motto of a social and ecological economy is to serve people, not private interests, within the boundaries of the biosphere.

We currently have a financial system that uses debt as an instrument of lifetime servitude; therefore, wealth can be funneled to the top of the social hierarchy. Financial speculation is a crime against the real economy and society. Public banking is an essential requirement for any democratic political system.

Class-based societies are governed top-down by distributing roles, functions, and expertises, guaranteeing the kind of structure and sociocultural order indispensable to technological development and economic growth. This model of society exerts unsustainable pressure on the environment. Socio-politically acceptable environmental awareness cannot jeopardize the so-called free market capitalist order; the duty of loyalty towards the capitalist system and the consumer society, greed, and wealth accumulation is above dispute.

Societies that allow themselves to be enchanted by laissez-faire capitalism become controlled by unscrupulous citizens, self-centered sociopaths, and genocidal psychopaths with delusions of grandeur.

Believing in the possibility of a radical change within the framework of the capitalist order is entirely delusional. In my opinion, The only viable alternative is ecosocialism with adaptations to cover the specific needs of societies with different characteristics.

The dictatorship of the free market is against free trade; the capitalist class is monopolistic by default, competition is for the poor, and an excellent excuse to clear the market of small and medium operators by replacing them with large corporations and multinationals. The FIRE sector as it exists must be eradicated; property speculation is financial cancer serving the rentier class while metastasizing throughout the social organism in the form of austerity and an "overheated" housing market. Housing is a human right, and a society based on the so-called free market rules that sees housing as a commodity and demands inhumane evictions is criminal. More specifically, it is a society ruled and controlled by criminals.

Compliance with the law becomes a criminal act whenever human rights are violated.

Most citizens do not benefit from the “prosperity” generated by the financialized economy but must bear the consequences. Anyone who wants to understand how perverse the current economic-financial system is has to start by deconstructing the absurd ideas about how the system works. The information exists, but the fog takes time and patience to dissipate. When the process reaches a certain degree of cultural-ideological decolonization, we realize that the system is much worse than we could have imagined. The wall of prejudices that dulls our minds and hinders our steps has to be knocked down; it takes time to be knocked down because it is part of the bio-sociocultural and political-ideological identity that conditions the way we perceive reality.

Public and cooperative social housing is one of the political priorities of the ecosocialist system. We are used to seeing aesthetically uninteresting social housing districts because they are considered projects to accommodate second-class citizens. Class prejudice runs through society, and people's behavior reveals what they deny, the persistence of the feeling of class superiority, and those who live in social housing neighborhoods are the target of discrimination based on class and race. Housing is a human right; real estate speculation is absurd; only a dysfunctional system accepts the existence of environmentally unsustainable and socially unfair luxury properties as acceptable.

Urbanization must be planned in such a way as to respect the terrain's orography, seeking to minimize as much as possible the intervention in the natural course of stream beds and waterways to prevent future disasters.

The steady-state economy aims to balance the extraction of raw materials and natural resources with society's needs without exceeding the biosphere's carrying capacity. Scientific research and technological innovation cannot be subordinated to private economic and financial interests. The growth in the influence of the private sector and public-private partnerships in the economy and politics is commensurate with the decline in democratic control. The government is not the problem; the government controlled by the capitalist class is the problem. The revolving door system between politics and business is the problem. Pre-election selection before the election is the problem.

In a representative democracy, the government represents someone; if the people do not feel represented, who does the government represent? The plutocratic and oligarch class, corporate interests, and the deep State.

In a representative democracy, the government represents somebody; if the people do not feel represented, who does the government represent? Most probably wealthy corporate interests, plutocrats and oligarchs, and the deep State. Most governments manage the interests of the State on behalf of the 0.1%, and the 10% benefit directly or otherwise from it, and the further we go down the social ladder, the more the benefits decrease, and the costs increase.

Libertarians advocate a minimalist government and a completely unregulated economy called a free market and a society of individuals who interrelate based on the law of supply and demand in pursuit of private profit and wealth accumulation. A weak state does not mean more freedom, a dehumanized fragile society is not meant to be fair, and an economy controlled by the wealthy turns into an unequal, exploitative, and repressive society. The government is supposed to administer the State and represent the popular will. A democratic government representing the popular must ensure that cross-cutting social welfare is above the law of the so-called free market. Most people do not take the dangers of capital accumulation seriously, perhaps because they live in the illusion of one day being able to join the club. In my opinion, the threat is evident, and we can feel it in our skin daily. A slimmed-down, minimalist government governing on behalf of the 0.1% may appeal to the free-marketeers, but not the wage earners, the government, regardless of size, must govern to ensure that no class, group, institution, or organization acquires sufficient power to influence governance and dictate how society and the economy should be managed.

The problem is not the government but who controls the government. The problem lies in the accumulation of private wealth. Over time, wealth is used to reshape society to fit the ruling class's interests, and governments become mere managers of private interests. The current economic, sociocultural, and political-ideological order exalts the role of the wealthy class and uses celebrities as role models to be followed and praised by the lower classes.

Democracy and freedom are meaningless in a capitalist and imperialist class society where the primacy of proprietary rights and the free market financialized economy are above the foundational values of a balanced and egalitarian society.

The capitalist system is irreformable, and the struggle of the countries of the Global South must be focused on neutralizing the nations, institutions, organizations, and corporations that represent western imperialist neocolonialism and replace it by developing relations with countries committed to the creation of an international order based on in ecosocialist cooperation.

The precautionary principle must be ratified internationally as a universal guiding principle of economic and social policies for an ecological society.

Economic policy means managing and using natural resources and raw materials throughout the process, from extraction, transformation, distribution, consumption, waste management, and treatment, to satisfy social needs while respecting the biosphere's limits.

Unlimited economic growth based on producing and consuming goods, products, and services without considering their real social utility is the normalization of insanity.

The World Bank, IMF, and WTO promote pro-growth agendas intending to implement neo-colonialism and perpetual debt enslavement. The “loans” include the obligation to open the national economy to foreign investment, free market solutions, and neoliberal shock therapy.

In practice, the countries lose political, economic, and financial sovereignty, being forced to implement the dictates imposed by institutions serving the Western imperialist interests. Only a small national elite profits from the looting of natural resources and infrastructure construction that aims to satisfy the needs of multinational companies and corporations which need infrastructural conditions to export the products of their legal looting, such as oil, minerals, agricultural products, timber, or manufactured products.

This development model continues to be promoted by western economic and financial imperialism, now under the banner of green capitalism.

An economy based on conspicuous consumption under constant advertisement pressure for the imbecilization of society.

The primary function of education is to indoctrinate each new batch of recruits into the voluntary servitude system.

A steady-state economy aims to satisfy the needs of all rather than the greed of a few.

A stable economy serves the goals of an ecosocialist society and contributes to creating a geopolitical strategy based on cooperation and mutual aid. The international community must vehemently reject any project of geostrategic hegemony and imperialist domination and create the conditions to demilitarize the planet. A stable economy requires national and international fiscal, monetary, and commercial policies encouraging reducing superfluous and useless consumption.

A steady-state economy must be based on a fair reward system. When privileges are taken for granted, normalize and justify class, function, and career superiority. Respect and admiration for other human beings cannot be measured based on class or other inferiorizing discrimination.

Indoctrination and habit immunize us against the injustices that occur in our presence, cultural blind spots that make us complicit in many of the crimes that happen in the society in which we live.

A classless society is not a utopia; it was the default model for most of the existence of homo sapiens sapiens; we must go back to the drawing board and start designing a more functional and fairer society.

Under the capitalist rule, the primary function of education is to indoctrinate each new batch of recruits into the voluntary servitude system.