RT America
Presents
The dictionary defines Zeitgeist
as the general intellectual,
moral, and cultural climate of an era.
And even though the 21st
century has forced humanity
into so many different fractured elements,
there's an inescapable need to unify,
to ensure a future for our species.
It's with this in mind that the
Zeitgeist Movement was formed:
as a collective call to
challenge the global status quo.
And next month on October 4th in Los Angeles
the organization will host its 4th
annual Zeitgeist Media Festival,
which has traditionally brought together
artists, activists and musicians
to enthusiastically embrace the
solutions to the global problems we face.
Earlier today I was joined by the founder
of the Zeitgeist Movement, Peter Joseph.
I first asked him why the themes
of his festival are an integral
to the revolution of consciousness.
[Peter Joseph] Activism has
been the cornerstone of ...
development, social development,
experimentation,
technological development,
all of these things have interweaved,
all the great scientists of the past,
that have made
massive contributions have also
been free thinkers and great artists.
From Arthur C. Clarke,
who had basically invented
satellite communication was also,
as you may well know,
one of the greatest non-fiction writers and
quite prolific in his
view of the future world,
to Albert Einstein who played
the violin and Nikola Tesla.
There is a deep-seated
experimentation in art needless to say
as you well know,
and that bridges open-mindedness,
that bridges creative thought,
experimentation,
courage of course, which is something
that's long lost in our world
when it comes to be willing
to risk your identity,
risk your reputation to do
something different, experiment.
So the Zeitgeist Media Festival
in a lot of ways is a parallel
to our intellectual day,
Z-Day as it’s called or Zeitgeist Day,
which occurs in March of each year,
which is a very intellectual day,
highly organized
as far as trying to present
solutions to global problems.
Very heavy, often depressing,
as you might understand
considering the state of the world,
and so we try to balance
it in the fall of each year
with the Zeitgeist Media Festival.
It’s an inspirational type
of event and I encourage
anyone out there to come out if
you’re in Southern California.
- I’m really sad I’m missing
it this year because it really was
such an amazing event when I was there;
it was incredible.
I encourage everyone to definitely
check it out if you’re in the area.
And let’s talk about the
Zeitgeist Movement as a whole Peter.
You famously created those three
mind-blowing viral documentaries
breaking through some of
those most dominating myths
that keeps humanity stunted,
which spawned an international
organization pushing
for an alternative future.
Briefly talk about what the
Zeitgeist Movement is all about.
- Sure.
The Zeitgeist Movement is a global
sustainability advocacy organization
and what that means is we deal
with three primary issues:
public health, ecological sustainability,
and social stability.
And clearly all of those
intertwine in a systems context.
And I’ll just jump to the end realization.
If we alter our basic socioeconomic system,
the underpinning
of everything that we do -
we can call it market economics,
we can call it capitalism,
we can even go deeper to address
the actual foundation of what
those words and what this system
actually organized out of -
if we take that and we modify it a certain way,
we can resolve all of the major
problems we have in the world today.
From poverty,
to the propensity towards conflict,
to the growing and developing mental illness,
to the huge lapse of public health,
to these enormous flaws.
We don’t need to live this
way anymore if we simply
obtain the type of efficiency
and industrial practice
that we’re now capable of doing
through technological development.
And that’s the big realization.
And if anyone wants to learn more about that
they can read the book that’s
been written that's free online
called 'The Zeitgeist Movement Defined'
or they can go of course to the
Zeitgeist Movement’s website
thezeitgeistmovement.com and see
hours and hours and hours of
lectures and general media
on this subject.
But I would add one more thing,
is that all the problems
we see in the world today
are not going to be resolved
within the framework
of the current socioeconomic model.
It’s a very bold statement,
but that unfortunately is the conclusion
that’s drawn by the Movement
with an immense amount
of supporting evidence,
and until we start to address this
core source base root problem,
we have a lot of running in
circles to do unfortunately.
- Right, you’ve said that activist groups
fighting for their respective
causes working within the framework
of that system is failing.
- Right.
- It’s basically because they’re
merely patching the problem.
It’s mostly fruitless unfortunately.
Explain the difference between
categorical and systems thinking
and how people CAN take
effective direct action.
That’s a great polarized qualification:
categorical thinking versus systems thinking.
I’ll jump deep just for a moment, you know,
we evolved with a 5-sense
perception and we are very tangible.
we want to palpably understand and
perceive but it’s also very limited.
We think categorically.
We identify things by objects
and words and subjects,
and we tend to organize our
sense of causality categorically
in a very narrow or I would say
truncated frame of reference.
And this has permeated just
about every major social facet
from the way we think about
the legal structure to the way
we think about economics of course.
Even of course as you mention activism which
everyone seems to really mean well,
they really want to resolve problems,
they're going to their state legislatures
to try and get legal
legislation in place to say
stop climate destabilization,
stop the resource overshoot that is dramatic
(it’s been estimated
we’ll need 27 more Earths by 2050
to meet demand of the 9 and
a half billion people coming),
and I’m sure you’re very aware of all
the other social and ecological issues
that pertain to this. And these resolutions
are trying to use a system that,
in the interpretation of the Movement
in which the "systems" awareness,
is actually flawed in and of itself as well;
is actually completely vulnerable
to the wrong propensities,
which is essentially the
nature of the market system
and its influence to stop this
type of interest in efficiency,
preservation and sustainability.
Efficiency, preservation and sustainability
are the enemies of the
current socioeconomic system.
Now that’s a slight deviation.
Systems thinking,
which I’ll jump to in
more of an intense manner,
has to do with the largest causal
technical reality you can conceive of,
which wasn’t in our
awareness in early evolution.
It was all purely tangible. It took
the scientific method to come forward,
to start to realize say for
example dynamic equilibrium:
to look at a forest,
and instead of cutting the
whole thing down and realizing
that it’s not regenerating fast
enough based on the consumption of it,
to actually to be able to measure this,
to be able to measure the planet,
to be able to measure energy consumption
versus resource availability.
These are basic fundamental
sustainability and efficiency aspects
that you’ll see throughout, anyone
that's involved in the technical sciences.
And sadly enough our social system doesn’t
have any of those qualifications built in.
The legal system - I’ll throw
that one out there as a final point
as again this contrast
between categorical thinking
and systems thinking -
the legal system is explicitly based
on the idea of humans'
"free will" and their "decision"
as though there’s no other influences,
to make this or that choice that may
or may not be socially offensive.
So when we throw people in jail,
is that a solution to anything?
And statistically speaking
most people that go to jail
come out with a higher
propensity to commit more crimes.
So clearly it doesn’t work in the long run,
and it’s obviously not
addressing the system consequence
and anyone that you talk to in the basic
public health sciences will tell you that
the leading cause of crime
and violence is deprivation.
What’s the leading cause of deprivation?
Social imbalance, inequity.
So if you want to stop a lot of these
huge negative tendencies and
violence and aberrant behavior,
the best solution at this
point is to reduce dramatically
class inequality, and give people
what they need to limit deprivation.
So there’s a good example.
- Incredibly enough I found
the most amazing statistic
that exemplifies exactly what
you’re saying. Right now Peter,
there are 356,000 Americans with
severe mental illnesses in prison.
That’s 10 times the amount than
in state psychiatric hospitals
which is an incredible statistic.
How does that play into the
concept of structural violence
and how much of the current system
necessitate that crime and poverty?
- Well there’s a few angles on that.
You can compare countries that have
different levels of class imbalance
and then compare their
public health outcomes.
I encourage people to read-...
there’s hundreds and hundreds
of studies on this issue.
There’s one book called 'The Spirit Level'
by Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett
that I encourage you to research,
which comprises the
majority of this research.
And what they find is that there’s a
massive increase in mental illness,
there's a massive increase
or I should say decrease in education levels,
a massive increase in violence,
The vast majority of negative
public health attributes increase
in societies that have
massive wealth imbalances.
So in America which has-...
Well, as a one brief aside, it is noted that
due to cost efficiency in the state,
they pretty much cut all mental
health services in the 1970s
and decided that the prisons would
be the new mental health facilities.
So that is a point of influence,
but that of course is a deeper,
excuse me, a more shallow link in the chain,
that leads to this.
Clearly all of the imbalance and shame
and inequality,
which has a deep emotional impact,
generates all of these factors;
statistically proven, it’s not a conjecture.
So anyone that questions that
should go out and look into this.
If we don’t take a systems perspective,
nothing gets resolved; we run in circles.
Even the criminal propensity;
everyone’s obsessed
with criminal politicians and corruption.
The analogy I use is that
you can stomp on the ants
that come out from under your refrigerator
and keep stomping on them and spraying
them and trying to get rid of them,
or maybe you can remove
the spoiled produce or food
that’s behind the refrigerator
that’s actually causing them to come.
And that’s what this society doesn’t do.
It doesn’t resolve any of its problems and,
to add one more punchline to that,
it’s not profitable to resolve
any problems in this society.
If peace and sustainability and efficiency,
these are things that if achieved,
create a nice
equilibrium where little action is required.
And that is again the antithesis
of what our economic system demands,
especially at this stage.
Given the unemployment,
it needs problems in order
to keep persisting with GDP,
employment, growth, etc.
- I just don’t understand
why people can’t see the link
between that structural violence
and the millions of deaths,
hunger, poverty, inequality-...
- I will add one more thing since
I don’t want to pass this up;
it’s a very dramatic statistic.
In one of the more seminal works
in structural violence in 1976,
public health authors figured out that
back then there were 18 million
deaths that were caused a year.
I suspect it’s much higher now.
18 million deaths a year.
And that’s what, 34 years later?
That’s about 700 million deaths
that have been caused unnecessarily.
That outpaces the deaths of every dictator,
every war in the 20th century. This is-...
I mean we talk about terrorism when people
are freaking out right now over ISIS.
And, as you know very well,
the statistics of any
American or any in the West
dying of terrorism is about
as nominal as you can get.
We’re not focusing on
the car death epidemic
that’s a true public health issue.
We’re not focusing on people
that simply die of mere allergies
and trying to help them to
avoid these types of things
or get them into some type of medical
condition where it doesn’t happen.
The spectrum, the relativism
of - the distortion of this relativism -
is truly mind numbing.
If anything, anyone,
people walk away with this interview is
really stop to think about what
you see in the media as important,
and then ask yourself statistically,
what is really important to public health?
What is really important to
reducing human suffering?
and what you see in the media
is just a big dog-and-pony show
for ulterior motives. So I’ll stop at that.
- Yeah, it is amazing.
I mean the fear-mongering,
the 9/11 fear-mongering still today and,
I mean it’s basically- it’s very
obvious that the military industry complex
needs this manufactured enemy continued.
First it’s Al-Qaeda,
then it’s ISIS, what’s next?
It’s always going to be something Peter.
Let’s talk about how capitalism
of course is unsustainable,
predatory, and you say it’s
a contradiction unto itself.
But you also say it’s not the source
of the problem, it’s merely a symptom.
Elaborate on why.
- You usually get a labeled really rapidly
when you start to criticize capitalism,
given the decades of propaganda
and the kind of educational
bias you have in traditional
educational circles:
high schools in America and the West.
And it’s assumed that if
you’re not for capitalism,
which they block out as a
particular socioeconomic ideology
(again in this truncated framing,
they don’t look at the system
reality of how it emerged)
they assume that you’re a
either Marxist or a communist;
these things instantly
go into people’s minds.
The first thing to point out is
that it’s completely narrow
to even to decide that type of fact
because capitalism is a symptom
of a larger deeper problem
that has happened in our
socioeconomic understanding,
which goes back in my view,
at least in a formalized sense,
to a man named Thomas Malthus
who was hired by the
British East India Company
to do the first global survey of resources.
And basically Malthus said that humans...
humans multiply exponentially
while resources are acquired
or regenerate geometrically.
So in this ethic he said
there are always gonna be more
people than there are resources,
there are always gonna be poor,
and there are always gonna
be people that are basically
gonna have to die for the
benefit of the rest of the world.
You couple that in with a
century and a half later
when Darwin comes around,
writes a very profound book
about basic evolution.
It was quickly bastardized
by the more militant
interests in society that said
“Oh! This proves everything
that we thought all along:
social Darwinism, survival of the fittest.”
We live in Malthusian society,
we now have social Darwinism that
says only the strong survive.
Boom! You have the entire basic ethic of war
instilled right into the model,
and you have the entire
basic ethic of capitalism
instilled right into the value system
of the social architecture that says:
there’s not enough to go around.
Therefore some will have to compete,
well everyone will have to compete,
and some are gonna lose tremendously
and some are gonna win tremendously,
and it’s all natural.
Let’s just let it happen.
And that’s clearly the state
today with the 100 billionaires,
the 100 billionaires
right now that can resolve
global extreme poverty four times over,
and the 3000 other billionaires
that have now emerged.
And we’re gonna see that
number increase through time,
with 43%, up to 46% based on some estimates,
of the wealth of the world owned by 1%.
This is considered a virtue
in the deep-core ethic
and which is also deeply and
atrociously offensive and wrong.
Now the final thing I’ll
add is this contradiction
that’s happened throughout the
evolution of capitalism itself.
Capitalism defends itself as being
a scarcity-focus system, right?
It says: What? But there's scarcity!
We have to - it comes this Malthusian premise -
there’s not enough to go around.
And some people distort this to say there's
"infinite" wants,
that human beings,
given their own free interests,
would want everything, which is another
completely ludicrous social projection.
So it defends scarcity as its reasoning
but then what does it do?
It goes out and it promotes
infinite consumption.
Because consumption is what
drives the entire thing.
Consumption is what keeps the money
moving between all the major actors.
If you have less consumption,
it’s like the gas pedal on a car.
If you have less consumption,
you have more unemployment,
you have reduced growth.
So it’s completely schizophrenic,
do you see my point? It’s insane.
- That’s amazing.
You just broke it down pretty well Peter.
But of course a common
protest about it is that
human nature is competitive, you know.
I keep hearing this over and over
again and I wanted you to address that.
- Sure. Human nature IS competitive,
when it needs to be.
Human nature is many things;
our neural plasticity is unbelievable.
If there’s anything that
neurological science has
shown us in the past 50 years
is that our ability to adapt and
change is absolutely incredible.
And to quote Stanford neuroscientist
and anthropologist Robert Sapolsky,
“Our nature in part is not being
particularly restricted by our nature.”
And this is profound, and what I think
what happens in this system is
people think it’s human nature
because it’s all they see. And there’s
what I call a primal provocation.
If you have this Malthusian
socially-Darwinistic basis over the society
and you’re born into it,
it’s constantly pinging
that element of your
nature that is aggressive,
that does look out for itself,
that drives self-interest
in this tribalistic need
to disregard the well-being of others.
So there’s no mystery
as to why people are
continuing to behave this way,
but to confuse it with something
that is considered to be empirical
to our condition that is inescapable,
is absolutely ridiculous indeed,
and any qualified neuroscientist
will tell you the same.
- Of course more common objections
to this line of thinking
is that the Zeitgeist Movement
is just repackaged Marxism,
and it’s gonna turn into
some technological tyranny.
How is it different, how can it maintain
people’s agency, ownership,
control over their lives
while establishing a civil rights imperative?
Well, back to my prior point,
there's that knee-jerk reaction
to Marxism which tends to happen
by people that don’t even
know what Marxism is/was!
They see that little encyclopedia blurb that
they basically read in high school
and they think they understand
what happened in that
historical period of time.
I’ll address that one briefly.
Anyone that says it’s Marxism or communism,
needs to remember that communism and
Marxism were based on a moral philosophy.
Marx talked about a lot of things,
some of it actually very
cogent and proper and right,
but he also proposed solutions
that were very much erroneous
and very unscientific.
And if you read the Communist
Manifesto by Marx and Engels
you’ll find it has absolutely NO comparison
to what the Zeitgeist Movement promotes.
The Zeitgeist Movement -
back to my original statement -
it’s about public health,
it’s about social sustainability,
excuse me, ecological sustainability
which is social sustainability,
and social stability and all of that
I would say,
is really about social sustainability.
And when you put this
train of thought together -
there’s that term "train of thought" -
you have a ground-up realization
based on the evidence that exists
of what actually makes a working society,
what actually will assure future generations-
which we by the way share the world with.
We don’t just share the world with
the 7 billion people we have right now,
we share the world with
our kids and our grandkids,
we have to keep that in mind.
And the more we are irresponsible,
the more it hurts everybody in the future
just as much as it hurts everybody right now.
And this type of awareness has no
resemblance to communism in any facet,
it’s just that knee-jerk
reaction that people have.
As far as the freedom neuroses ...
As far as the freedom
neuroses that people have,
that’s a knee-jerk reaction once again,
to this propaganda of the market that says that
people are free, and they can achieve
and they have infinite social mobility.
First of all,
you need to debunk the fact that there’s no
real freedom in the
market complex whatsoever.
It is structurally coercive.
It is a coercive system that
puts certain people in power
in a completely dictatorial manner,
as a system consequence,
a system orientation that deeply separates
owners and workers -
this is the core characteristic -
and in that equation there
are very limited options
the farther you go down
on the stratified ladder.
And if you’re like the majority of
people that exist in this lower platform,
your freedom is so incredibly restricted,
your health options are
so incredibly restricted,
and has been proven by statisticians,
the ability for social elevation
has been increasingly limited
as time has moved forward,
as this system has compounded itself.
So I ask people that question:
What freedom are they expecting?
See, it’s really a loss of creativity.
They only know what they
perceive and what they feel
and they’ve been brainwashed to think
that walking into a store and choosing between
40 different types of cereal is freedom,
while they have two political
parties that pretty much
ignore everything the
public says to begin with.
This isn’t freedom,
and I think when people research the Movement
they’re gonna understand what
true freedom actually means.
And that’s the freedom not
to be held down to a slave job
(which is what it is at this point in time).
The vast majority of
occupations in this world
are not necessary and
counterproductive to human health,
and actually having freedom
away from the property system,
which is another point we can talk about,
a different point of this address,
to actually have the freedom to
get away from the property system
and to move around and not have the
"liability" of ownership.
And that’s a very radical term,
that goes completely contrary to
this consumption/materialistic
vanity-oriented society,
but I really believe that the
true freedom of our future will be
NOT having property,
NOT having ownership, having access!
We promote an access society
in the Zeitgeist Movement
where people have access to
everything that they need,
not hoarding property and value arbitrarily
in this archaic system we have now,
which is destroying the
planet and human psychology.
- And let’s talk about mechanization.
You mentioned how technology is
destroying the market system as well.
How? Because it seems to me
like technological innovation
is constantly creating new markets.
- That seems to be what’s happening.
The defense, the Luddite fantasy defense,
is that we have displaced labor
in proportion to creating new jobs.
This is absolutely absurd.
In 1929 they actually wanted to put a halt -
during the Great Depression -
they wanted to halt (this is in Congress),
halt technological development,
because they were so
terrified and were so shocked
by what was happening by the early stages
of mechanization back then.
They literally tried to pass a
law that said no one can apply
or create any more technology
that relates to labor.
If you can imagine that. Now if that isn’t
a telltale sign of what was in store.
Now there has been dramatic
improvement in the goods and services
which is based on technology, not capitalism.
If I hear one more person
say to me that: “Oh,
capitalism created your smartphone”
or “capitalism did all...”
No, capitalism is a delivery system and
a financing system of its own creation,
and there’s no other alternative to
using this system in the world today.
It’s only technology and
technological innovation
that has created these things;
capitalism is just along
for the ride at this point.
So that out of the way,
technological unemployment is the core driver
of all unemployment in the world,
if you take a system perspective.
Forget policies of
government and all this stuff
that seems to come into play,
our monetary policy and
injections to give big business more
money so they can hire more people.
All of that is completely superficial in
again that categorical narrow thought.
It’s actually the movement of technology,
the development I should say of technology,
throughout time that has changed everything!
that has moved every single labor role.
And the big thing now is that
technological development
is exponentially increasing faster
than the human mind can redevelop
to gain new occupations.
And then the big question becomes:
Why do we need new occupations?
Why can’t we reach a point,
which we already really have,
where we have such an incredible range of
activity within what we’ve developed,
and progress itself becomes actually
enduring what we’ve already
generated in living life,
as opposed to this neurotic
need for so-called "progress"
which I could talk about
the neuroses of that word
at great length as well.
Punchline being is that this
exponential increase in technology
will create more cost
efficiency for corporations,
it will become cheaper to automate over time,
and they will, one way or another,
because the basic ethic of
profit-seeking corporations,
displace human labor over and over again.
What does that do?
That removes purchasing
power from the society
and that entire cyclical system
is going to slow down on its own accord.
It’s called the
contradiction of capitalism.
It’s one of the strongest, and
it’s going to happen and
you’re going to see a lot of
loss of growth over the course of time,
inevitably because of these
conflicting incentive structures.
So I hope that make sense.
- Right. And what’s so,
I guess the biggest tragedy of all
is that America is one of the
most overworked countries,
people are just working so hard to try to
achieve this unattainable American goal.
Or people put money as the
highest attribute of worth,
I mean the most important attribute here.
What’s the first step
in the shift of this warped value
system Peter? How can we start this?
I think it already is happening but I mean,
I just...
Yeah... Going back to that point about
what it means to be successful in this,
this basic social value orientation we have,
that’s been distorted by
advertising that we value each other
based on our perceived success
because of materialism.
There’s a great shift that’s
happening amazingly enough and
it’s a system pressure
that’s generating this,
and people are finally
starting to be offended
by the gross excess lifestyles of the world.
They see the climate destabilization,
the resource overshoot,
they see all the social problems,
the tremendous wealth imbalance.
And all of that glory that used to be
being super-wealthy as the sign of success,
that is starting to dissipate.
That is to me a very powerful marker,
because that implies that it’s
really about balance in the world
that is going to create a high level
of social respect and integrity.
People will look at each other and say:
“Wow, that guy
is completely self-sustaining,
he lives in absolute equilibrium
with his environment.
"His footprint (in other words) is
the lowest I’ve ever seen!”
That is a hero;
that is the highest level of status.
As far as how this transition works,
that type of value system
has to come into play.
And I think again, it’s on pace.
Then concrete projects need to be set
in motion; I'm talking about building.
As difficult as it is,
you have to start to build
this type of ideology,
well excuse me, this type of society,
it’s not really an ideology.
You have to build this framework,
and show people what’s possible
to expand that creative realm,
and then they’ll start to
realize that they can do this.
And I advocate virtual building projects.
I have a project called the
Global Redesign Institute.
The Movement has it;
I actually have a few of these projects,
I'm going to organize into an offshoot
of the Movement over the course of time,
dedicated only to technical construction,
to show the world what’s
actually technically feasible
and a lot can be said on that issue.
As far as transition step-by-step,
we have to get away from this
“labor for income” system.
I propose what Martin Luther King proposed:
a universal guaranteed income.
And I say that people should start to chop
the wealth of the top one percent
and start to give it to
the rest of the population
at this point as a form
of wealth distribution.
Ooh, a lot of people hate that,
we got the socialism,
I can hear them yelling at me right now.
But what else do we do at this stage?
We have to have some type
of resolution to stop
this type of increase in
poverty and destabilization,
and that type of idea is not irrational.
And I think that any billionaire out there
with any type of social consciousness
should be doing this themselves.
As I stated earlier,
the top 100 billionaires
out there can resolve
extreme poverty four times over.
I mean that’s incredible.
And there’s numerous
other statistics that show
how much more capable they could
be if this type of resource,
a monetary allocation,
was done to the general population.
That aside, universal guaranteed income
would raise the standard of living
of the vast majority of humans in America
and on the planet if it was applied,
removing an enormous amount
of public health stress.
You would see an absolute
[de]crease in violence,
you would see an absolute [de]crease
in mental health disorders,
you would see an absolute
[de]crease in just about everything
that relates to general
public health concerns,
if we did that. Then as another
step (and I could go on and on,
so you stop me when you want me to),
you start to create technical applications
in local cities for food production.
Localized food production
through automated means,
not financial means,
we’re not financing corporations.
You take the city government,
and you get them to build
hi-tech food creation systems
through aquaponics and aeroponics-
it’s in the book,
that’s 'The Zeitgeist Movement Defined.'
I outline this specifically
because of the power of this;
traditional our agriculture is over
and it’s a massive detriment
given how much water it requires.
70% of worlds water -
we have a water shortage in California -
70% of the world's water is going towards
traditional industrial agriculture,
and only about a 10th of
that would be required
if we were to do this
through advanced means that
are out there right now.
So you make food free!
You give it away through technical
means again, not subsidization.
And then you begin this transition,
where you go step-by-step
to making things free for
technical reorientation.
Eventually you're gonna hit a halfway mark,
where you've offset all the
labor displacement, excuse me,
all the income displacement
because of unemployment,
by these free mechanisms,
and of course universal guaranteed income.
And if you follow that train of
thought which I’m gonna stop here,
you can do a step-by-step process. Now,
will corporate and the corporate
in the state government
(which of course is a corporate institution),
will they facilitate or want that?
Of course not.
And that’s where the massive
necessity for global activism
towards this type of technical
resolution is required,
and that’s why I recommend people
to look into the Zeitgeist Movement.
It’s not an easy question; I wish I had
a complete plan but there are too
many factors that come into play.
But we have to do something because
everyone’s lives are at stake.
- Right, I mean, if we don’t want
a bloody revolt, a bloody revolution,
we need to start really acting here Peter,
because the old guard is not gonna
give up this old system without a fight
and without a lot of deaths,
and it’s time for us to step up to the
plate really for the future of humanity.
Thank you so much Peter.
theZeitgeistMovement.com,
everyone check it out.
Incredible to have you on as always.
- Thank you Abby, it’s an honor, thank you.
- Thanks so much Peter.
theZeitgeistMovement.com
