Timothy Wilken, MD
Science fiction is a form of Time-binding. “Science fiction differs
from science fantasy in that science fiction must obey the Laws of
Nature.” A simple example is found in motion picture films.
In Gary Lucas’ Star Wars trilogy
we hear explosions of battle in the vacuum of Space although sound
cannot be conducted in a vacuum. However, in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey all the scenes in space were truly silent. The film 2001 is science fiction while Star Wars is science fantasy.
The best science fiction writers are always good scientists. And
the best science fiction often predicts future science. Many scientific
discoverys and technologies are described in science fiction stories
years or even decades before they become realities. Jules Vern,
described travel from the earth to the moon in 1865 and ocean going
nuclear submarines in 1869.
Issac Asimov is perhaps one of the best examples of both a
great science fiction writer, and a good scientist. His interest in
science and writing developed in tandem.
He wrote his first story when he was only 11 years old, his
first published writing was a column he did for his high school
newspaper. While he continued writing, Asimov also attended college and
managed to graduate from Columbia University with a B.S. in Chemistry
in 1939, and two years later earned his M.A. in Chemistry. He continued
studying at Columbia in a Ph.D. program, but with time off for WWII, he
was not awarded his Doctorate in Biochemistry until May 1948. During
this same period, he also managed to write 36 science fiction stories.
Asimov is most famous for his Robot stories. Asimov’s Robots
were something very special. They could take any form, from a small
household appliance to large space craft carrying tens of thousands of
human travelers. Their most common form however was humiform. Examples
of humiform robots are seen in recent science fiction movies. Most
notably 3CPO the intergalactic translator in Gary Lucas’ Star Wars trilogy, Arnold Swartzenegger’s performances as terminators in James Cameron’s The Terminator films, Brent Spiner’s performances as Lt. Commander Data in Gene Rodenberry’s Star Trek — The Second Generation, and most recently Robin Williams’ performance of The Bicentennial Man based on an original Asimov story.
Asimov’s robots were were highly intelligent, spoke and
understood all human languages, were highly mobile, physically strong
and enormously powerful. They were awesome machines. If they had wanted
to hurt human beings they could have in an eyeblink. But Asimov’s
robots never wanted to hurt humans. Their powerful “positronic” brains
were constrained by the Three Laws of Robotics. These laws first
appeared in print in 1942 as follows.
Asimov’s Three Laws of Robotics (1942)
1) A robot may not injure a human being, or through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
2) A robot must obey orders given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
3) A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Laws.
Here we see that Asimov’s First Law of Robotics contains the
commitment to helping. Not only must the robot not injure a human being
it must protect the human being from harm. This is a requirement for
helping. His Second Law of Robotics states again that the Robot must
help human beings by obeying their orders. In Asimov’s stories the
robots were often owned by the human beings they served. Asimov’s
robots were almost always very decent and caring individuals, while
their owner’s were often only too human. The robots were treated in the
best of circumstances as respected and valuable friends, and in the
worst as victims and slaves.
Asimov’s robot stories were remarkably interesting and
intelligent. He fully explored the ramifications resulting when his
robot’s intelligence evolved to a point that it equaled human
intelligence and finally surpassed it.
Writing in 1942, Issac Asimov described a futurescape, where
Robots had been invented in 2007. He invented the Three Laws Of
Robotics to insure that this servant class of robots were safe to be
with human beings. His futurescape spanned 6 decades and by 2064,
positronic robots governed by the three laws of robotics were a
widespread and common phenomena on Earth. They were especially
important in humanity’s expansion into space and the colonization of
other planets.
Forty-five years later, Asimov was still writing robot stories, but things had changed.
Twelve centuries had passed in his imagined futurescape, the
science of robotics had progressed as rapidly as Moore’s Law drives
computer design on Earth today. Robots were smaller more
intelligent and could be made to look exactly like humans.
Theoretically, a robot’s lifespan was unlimited. Robots had an endless
opportunity to learn and to think about what they had learned. They
were more intelligent than most humans, and their long life experiences
meant they were usually much wiser.
It became obvious that the laws of robotics needed to be
advanced as well. Asimov rose to the occasion by creating an additional
or fourth law of Robotics. It was called the Zeroth Law because
although it was created fourth chronologically, it was logically the
First Law.
Asimov’s Four Laws of Robotics (1985)
0) A robot may not injure humanity or, through inaction, allow humanity to come to harm.
1) A robot may not harm a human being, or through inaction,
allow a human being to come to harm, except where that would conflict
with the Zeroth Law.
2) A robot must obey orders given it by a human being, except where that would conflict with the Zeroth and First Laws.
3) A robot must protect its own existence except where that would conflict with the Zeroth, First or Second Laws.
Robots in Asimov’s earlier stories then became known as 3-Law Robots in contrast to these new more powerful 4-Law Robots.
Recall that Asimov’s First Law of Robotics contains the commitment
to helping. Not only must the robot not injure a human being it must
protect the human being from harm. This is a requirement for helping.
His Second Law of Robotics states again that the Robot must help human
beings by obeying their orders. Thus within the original Three Laws of
Robotics, we see a strong commitment to helping humans. This commitment
to helping is expanded with the Zeroth Law.
As 20,000 year old 4-Law Robot Daneel Olivaw explained:
“The Zeroth Law is a corollary of the
First Law, for how can a human being best be kept from injury, if not
by ensuring that human society in general is protected and kept
functioning?”
The Zeroth Law of Robotics introduced the concept of responsibility
to and for the entire human species. Now Asimov’s robots were required
not only to care for and protect the individual human beings that owned
them, but also to protect all human beings and by extension the
ecosystem and the earth itself.
Guardians of the Synergic Trustegrities
Asimov’s Four Laws of Robotics can serve as the basis for a code for Synergic Trustegrity Guardians.
We can eliminate Asimov’s Second law which does not apply since humans
are not property and cannot be slaves, and we can elimate the Third law
as redundant since a Guardian Trustee is a human being and so is
protected by the First law. This leaves us with only two laws to serve
as the:
Code of the Synergic Trustegrity Guardians
1) A Trustegrity Guardian may not injure humanity or, through inaction, allow humanity to come to harm.
2) A Trustegrity Guardian may not
injure an individual human being, or through inaction, allow a
human being to come to harm, except where that would conflict with the
First Law.
The Needs of the Many
In Gene Rodenberry’s original Star Trek, Mr. Spock, the Vulcan Science Officer from a race ruled by logic, would remind his shipmates that: "The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or of the one."
The human body is a community of 40 trillion individual cells. The
individual cells are organized synergically to be interdependent upon
each other. They cannot separate themselves from the body as community.
The survival of the cells depends on the survival of the body. The
needs and safety of the body precedes the needs and safety of the
individual cells. Sometimes individual cells are injured or even
sacrificed to protect and insure the survival of the body as a whole.
The needs and safety of the community of cells takes precedence over
the needs and safety of the cells as individuals.
With the discovery that humanity is an interdependent species comes
the realization that we humans can no longer separate ourselves from
community. Humanity as community is larger and contains humanity as
individuals. The needs and safety of humanity as community must precede
the needs and safety of humanity as individuals.
Our present culture based on the false premise of human
independence often places individual needs and safety over community
needs and safety. This will shift dramatically in a synergic culture.
The first law of the of the Guardian Trust Code commits to
protect Humanity as Community. The second law commits to protect
Humanity as Individuals. This represents a major shift in human values
from today’s focus with the individual as primary to tomorrow’s focus
with community as primary.
While the Trustegrity Guardians are responsible for the safety
of both humanity as community and humanity as individuals, the needs
and safety of community take precedent over the needs and safety of
individuals.
This does not suggest a casual attitude towards the rights of
individuals. Trustegrity Guardians may not injure a human being, or
through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm, except where
that would cause injury to humanity as a whole — except where that
would cause injury to humanity as community. When an adversary event
presents no risk to humanity as community then the Trustegrity
Guardians' first responsibility is to the safety of the
individual.
Synergic Trustegrity Guardians
The Synergic Trustegrity Guardians could fufill this obligation
by joining on of the three divisions — the Earth
Trustegrity, , the Life Trustegrity , and the Time-binding
Trustegrity. Recall the Trustegrities are structured using the
principles and mechanism of the Organizational Tensegrity. Decisions are made in heterarcy using synergic consensus. Loss within the organization is eliminated with the synergic veto. Action is carried out by negotiated hierarchical. This eliminates conflict. The three trustegrities would work together. They would be guided by Humanity as Community using Synocracy.
The Earth Trustegrity Guardians
would protect and preserve the Earth Trust including the Earth and all
the Natural Resources. The Trust would be administered to best
serve present and future humanity.
The Life Trust Guardians
would protect the Life Trust including all living systems — all life
forms — this includes all humans, all animals, and all plants.
And, thirdly the Time-binding Trustegrity Guardians
would protect and preserve the Time-binding Trust — the accumulated
“knowing” from the lives and actions of all the humans who have ever
lived and died. Our inherited Wisdom, Knowledge, and Information
including Architecture, Art, Literature, Music, Science, and
Technology. Because of their committment to protecting all who have
lived and who have died, they also protect the "knowing" of the living
— the Intellectual Property of living humans.
Best of the Best
The Synergic Trustegrities will seek to attract the best of the
best as candidates for Trustegrity Guardianship. Once selected these
Trustegrity Guardians would have greater trusteeship privileges with
concomitant authority and responsibilities for and to the Synergic
Trustegrities. Once selected Trustegrity Guardians can serve in one of
the three branches of the Synergic Trustegrities — the Earth
Trust, the Life Trust, or the Time-binding Trust.
Trustegrity Guardian Candidates should have repeatedly
demonstrated both personal and public honesty, and should have a
history demonstrating synergic morality and behavior. In the future,
Universities will offer degrees in Trustegrity and Guardian
Science to prepare those young humans to desire to serve Humanity
as Community. A careful selection process will be developed to select
the very best which could include Trustegrity Guardian Academies.
It is apparent that the responsibilities of Trustegrity
Guardians will be great. They of course are not allowed to hurt anyone
through their control of the Synergic Trusts. But in addition they are
required to protect and conserve the Synergic Trusts. Further, they are
required to help others and to insure that all humans have the basic
needs of life —both survival and meaning. This is a binding obligation.
Failure to meet these obligations results in the immediate loss of
Synergic Trustee privileges.
The Trustegrity Guardians will be charged with protecting
Humanity as Community, and Humanity as Individuals, the plants and
animals, the Earth and all Natural Resources, Intellectual Property and
the Time-binding Trust
They will protect and
conserve the Earth and the Natural Resources — including both the
renewable resources — soils, water, and minerals — and the nonrenewable
resources — coal, petroleum, natural gas, metals and other mineral
ores.
They will protect Life — plant, animal and human.
The Life and Earth Trusts are finite and fragile. Once a species
of plant or animal becomes extinct, it is lost forever. Once our
nonrenewable resources are consumed they are lost forever. And even the
renewable resources can be damaged by careless use. And once damaged,
they may not be repairable.
The Synergic Trustegrities hold all land and all the
natural resources including native plants and wildlife in synergic
trust. Land and natural resources cannot be owned. Land may leased as
living sites for individuals and families. Land may be invested as
production sites for manufacturing and commerce and earn revenue shares
on behalf of the Trust. Natural resources may be invested in synergic
production if it serves the interests of humanity as community and
public welfare. Such investment would earn revenue shares on behalf of
the Synergic Trustegrities.
The revenues the Synergic Trustegrities receive from their
leases and investments are used not only to protect and preserve the
synergic trusts, but also to help others.
The Trustegrity Guardians accept as their primary
responsibility the protection of humanity as community and
humanity as individual. They will seek to ensure that all humans are
safe from crime and war; that all humans have access to shelter,
nutrition, medical care, and education. They will further accept
responsibilty for the provision of good care and life support for
all humans in need — children and adults — the ill and injured,
the poor and destitute, and the homeless.
The Trustegrities will be three with separate but complimentary missions in service to humankind.
The Earth Trustegrity will provide:
1) Access to land and natural resources for personal use at minimal or no cost, and
2) Access to land and natural resources for synergic production
with appropriate charges payable to the Earth Trustegrity in lease or
rental fees, licensing fees, and/or revenue shares. All rental fees,
licensing fees, and/or revenue shares are entrusted to the Earth
Trustegrity for Humanity as Community.
The Life Trustegrity will provide:
3) Safety from crime and war, and full access to:
4) Comfortable, safe, healthy housing.
5) Good nutritious food
6) Good preventitive health services and comprehensive cradle to
grave medical care, and access to the privilege of Reproduction based
on fairness, equality, and mutual benefit to both humanity as
Individuals and humanity as Community. This would include monitoring
administrating, adjudicating the Trust privilege of Reproduction.
7) Access to animals and plants including native flora and wildlife for personal use at minimum or no cost.
8) Access to animals and plants including native flora and
wildlife for synergic production with approriate charges payable to the
Life Trustegrity in rental fees, licensing fees and/or revenue shares.
All payments made are entrusted to the Earth Trustegrity for Humanity
as Community.
The Time-binding Trustegrity will provide:
9) Full education to an individual’s ability and interest regardless of age,
10) The opportunity to participate in synergic organization and
invest their action and leverage to earn revenue shares and acquire
property throughout their full lifetime.
11) Access to communication with humanity as individuals and
to humanity as community for personal reasons, for synergic production
and consumption, and for synergic consensus utilizing Unanimous Rule
Democracy.
12) Protection of the intellectual discoveries and inventions
of Time-binding whether they be in the Time-binding Trust, or the
Intellectual Property of living humans.
The responsibilities of the Trustegrity Guardians are great.Theirs
is a moral and binding obligation. Failure to meet these obligations
would result in the immediate loss of Synergic Trustee privileges.
To be continued...
Timothy Wilken, MD
Science fiction is a form of Time-binding. “Science fiction differs
from science fantasy in that science fiction must obey the Laws of
Nature.” A simple example is found in motion picture films.
In Gary Lucas’ Star Wars trilogy
we hear explosions of battle in the vacuum of Space although sound
cannot be conducted in a vacuum. However, in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey all the scenes in space were truly silent. The film 2001 is science fiction while Star Wars is science fantasy.
The best science fiction writers are always good scientists. And
the best science fiction often predicts future science. Many scientific
discoverys and technologies are described in science fiction stories
years or even decades before they become realities. Jules Vern,
described travel from the earth to the moon in 1865 and ocean going
nuclear submarines in 1869.
Issac Asimov is perhaps one of the best examples of both a
great science fiction writer, and a good scientist. His interest in
science and writing developed in tandem.
He wrote his first story when he was only 11 years old, his
first published writing was a column he did for his high school
newspaper. While he continued writing, Asimov also attended college and
managed to graduate from Columbia University with a B.S. in Chemistry
in 1939, and two years later earned his M.A. in Chemistry. He continued
studying at Columbia in a Ph.D. program, but with time off for WWII, he
was not awarded his Doctorate in Biochemistry until May 1948. During
this same period, he also managed to write 36 science fiction stories.
Asimov is most famous for his Robot stories. Asimov’s Robots
were something very special. They could take any form, from a small
household appliance to large space craft carrying tens of thousands of
human travelers. Their most common form however was humiform. Examples
of humiform robots are seen in recent science fiction movies. Most
notably 3CPO the intergalactic translator in Gary Lucas’ Star Wars trilogy, Arnold Swartzenegger’s performances as terminators in James Cameron’s The Terminator films, Brent Spiner’s performances as Lt. Commander Data in Gene Rodenberry’s Star Trek — The Second Generation, and most recently Robin Williams’ performance of The Bicentennial Man based on an original Asimov story.
Asimov’s robots were were highly intelligent, spoke and
understood all human languages, were highly mobile, physically strong
and enormously powerful. They were awesome machines. If they had wanted
to hurt human beings they could have in an eyeblink. But Asimov’s
robots never wanted to hurt humans. Their powerful “positronic” brains
were constrained by the Three Laws of Robotics. These laws first
appeared in print in 1942 as follows.
Asimov’s Three Laws of Robotics (1942)
1) A robot may not injure a human being, or through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
2) A robot must obey orders given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
3) A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Laws.
Here we see that Asimov’s First Law of Robotics contains the
commitment to helping. Not only must the robot not injure a human being
it must protect the human being from harm. This is a requirement for
helping. His Second Law of Robotics states again that the Robot must
help human beings by obeying their orders. In Asimov’s stories the
robots were often owned by the human beings they served. Asimov’s
robots were almost always very decent and caring individuals, while
their owner’s were often only too human. The robots were treated in the
best of circumstances as respected and valuable friends, and in the
worst as victims and slaves.
Asimov’s robot stories were remarkably interesting and
intelligent. He fully explored the ramifications resulting when his
robot’s intelligence evolved to a point that it equaled human
intelligence and finally surpassed it.
Writing in 1942, Issac Asimov described a futurescape, where
Robots had been invented in 2007. He invented the Three Laws Of
Robotics to insure that this servant class of robots were safe to be
with human beings. His futurescape spanned 6 decades and by 2064,
positronic robots governed by the three laws of robotics were a
widespread and common phenomena on Earth. They were especially
important in humanity’s expansion into space and the colonization of
other planets.
Forty-five years later, Asimov was still writing robot stories, but things had changed.
Twelve centuries had passed in his imagined futurescape, the
science of robotics had progressed as rapidly as Moore’s Law drives
computer design on Earth today. Robots were smaller more
intelligent and could be made to look exactly like humans.
Theoretically, a robot’s lifespan was unlimited. Robots had an endless
opportunity to learn and to think about what they had learned. They
were more intelligent than most humans, and their long life experiences
meant they were usually much wiser.
It became obvious that the laws of robotics needed to be
advanced as well. Asimov rose to the occasion by creating an additional
or fourth law of Robotics. It was called the Zeroth Law because
although it was created fourth chronologically, it was logically the
First Law.
Asimov’s Four Laws of Robotics (1985)
0) A robot may not injure humanity or, through inaction, allow humanity to come to harm.
1) A robot may not harm a human being, or through inaction,
allow a human being to come to harm, except where that would conflict
with the Zeroth Law.
2) A robot must obey orders given it by a human being, except where that would conflict with the Zeroth and First Laws.
3) A robot must protect its own existence except where that would conflict with the Zeroth, First or Second Laws.
Robots in Asimov’s earlier stories then became known as 3-Law Robots in contrast to these new more powerful 4-Law Robots.
Recall that Asimov’s First Law of Robotics contains the commitment
to helping. Not only must the robot not injure a human being it must
protect the human being from harm. This is a requirement for helping.
His Second Law of Robotics states again that the Robot must help human
beings by obeying their orders. Thus within the original Three Laws of
Robotics, we see a strong commitment to helping humans. This commitment
to helping is expanded with the Zeroth Law.
As 20,000 year old 4-Law Robot Daneel Olivaw explained:
“The Zeroth Law is a corollary of the
First Law, for how can a human being best be kept from injury, if not
by ensuring that human society in general is protected and kept
functioning?”
The Zeroth Law of Robotics introduced the concept of responsibility
to and for the entire human species. Now Asimov’s robots were required
not only to care for and protect the individual human beings that owned
them, but also to protect all human beings and by extension the
ecosystem and the earth itself.
Guardians of the Synergic Trustegrities
Asimov’s Four Laws of Robotics can serve as the basis for a code for Synergic Trustegrity Guardians.
We can eliminate Asimov’s Second law which does not apply since humans
are not property and cannot be slaves, and we can elimate the Third law
as redundant since a Guardian Trustee is a human being and so is
protected by the First law. This leaves us with only two laws to serve
as the:
Code of the Synergic Trustegrity Guardians
1) A Trustegrity Guardian may not injure humanity or, through inaction, allow humanity to come to harm.
2) A Trustegrity Guardian may not
injure an individual human being, or through inaction, allow a
human being to come to harm, except where that would conflict with the
First Law.
The Needs of the Many
In Gene Rodenberry’s original Star Trek, Mr. Spock, the Vulcan Science Officer from a race ruled by logic, would remind his shipmates that: "The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or of the one."
The human body is a community of 40 trillion individual cells. The
individual cells are organized synergically to be interdependent upon
each other. They cannot separate themselves from the body as community.
The survival of the cells depends on the survival of the body. The
needs and safety of the body precedes the needs and safety of the
individual cells. Sometimes individual cells are injured or even
sacrificed to protect and insure the survival of the body as a whole.
The needs and safety of the community of cells takes precedence over
the needs and safety of the cells as individuals.
With the discovery that humanity is an interdependent species comes
the realization that we humans can no longer separate ourselves from
community. Humanity as community is larger and contains humanity as
individuals. The needs and safety of humanity as community must precede
the needs and safety of humanity as individuals.
Our present culture based on the false premise of human
independence often places individual needs and safety over community
needs and safety. This will shift dramatically in a synergic culture.
The first law of the of the Guardian Trust Code commits to
protect Humanity as Community. The second law commits to protect
Humanity as Individuals. This represents a major shift in human values
from today’s focus with the individual as primary to tomorrow’s focus
with community as primary.
While the Trustegrity Guardians are responsible for the safety
of both humanity as community and humanity as individuals, the needs
and safety of community take precedent over the needs and safety of
individuals.
This does not suggest a casual attitude towards the rights of
individuals. Trustegrity Guardians may not injure a human being, or
through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm, except where
that would cause injury to humanity as a whole — except where that
would cause injury to humanity as community. When an adversary event
presents no risk to humanity as community then the Trustegrity
Guardians' first responsibility is to the safety of the
individual.
Synergic Trustegrity Guardians
The Synergic Trustegrity Guardians could fufill this obligation
by joining on of the three divisions — the Earth
Trustegrity, , the Life Trustegrity , and the Time-binding
Trustegrity. Recall the Trustegrities are structured using the
principles and mechanism of the Organizational Tensegrity. Decisions are made in heterarcy using synergic consensus. Loss within the organization is eliminated with the synergic veto. Action is carried out by negotiated hierarchical. This eliminates conflict. The three trustegrities would work together. They would be guided by Humanity as Community using Synocracy.
The Earth Trustegrity Guardians
would protect and preserve the Earth Trust including the Earth and all
the Natural Resources. The Trust would be administered to best
serve present and future humanity.
The Life Trust Guardians
would protect the Life Trust including all living systems — all life
forms — this includes all humans, all animals, and all plants.
And, thirdly the Time-binding Trustegrity Guardians
would protect and preserve the Time-binding Trust — the accumulated
“knowing” from the lives and actions of all the humans who have ever
lived and died. Our inherited Wisdom, Knowledge, and Information
including Architecture, Art, Literature, Music, Science, and
Technology. Because of their committment to protecting all who have
lived and who have died, they also protect the "knowing" of the living
— the Intellectual Property of living humans.
Best of the Best
The Synergic Trustegrities will seek to attract the best of the
best as candidates for Trustegrity Guardianship. Once selected these
Trustegrity Guardians would have greater trusteeship privileges with
concomitant authority and responsibilities for and to the Synergic
Trustegrities. Once selected Trustegrity Guardians can serve in one of
the three branches of the Synergic Trustegrities — the Earth
Trust, the Life Trust, or the Time-binding Trust.
Trustegrity Guardian Candidates should have repeatedly
demonstrated both personal and public honesty, and should have a
history demonstrating synergic morality and behavior. In the future,
Universities will offer degrees in Trustegrity and Guardian
Science to prepare those young humans to desire to serve Humanity
as Community. A careful selection process will be developed to select
the very best which could include Trustegrity Guardian Academies.
It is apparent that the responsibilities of Trustegrity
Guardians will be great. They of course are not allowed to hurt anyone
through their control of the Synergic Trusts. But in addition they are
required to protect and conserve the Synergic Trusts. Further, they are
required to help others and to insure that all humans have the basic
needs of life —both survival and meaning. This is a binding obligation.
Failure to meet these obligations results in the immediate loss of
Synergic Trustee privileges.
The Trustegrity Guardians will be charged with protecting
Humanity as Community, and Humanity as Individuals, the plants and
animals, the Earth and all Natural Resources, Intellectual Property and
the Time-binding Trust
They will protect and
conserve the Earth and the Natural Resources — including both the
renewable resources — soils, water, and minerals — and the nonrenewable
resources — coal, petroleum, natural gas, metals and other mineral
ores.
They will protect Life — plant, animal and human.
The Life and Earth Trusts are finite and fragile. Once a species
of plant or animal becomes extinct, it is lost forever. Once our
nonrenewable resources are consumed they are lost forever. And even the
renewable resources can be damaged by careless use. And once damaged,
they may not be repairable.
The Synergic Trustegrities hold all land and all the
natural resources including native plants and wildlife in synergic
trust. Land and natural resources cannot be owned. Land may leased as
living sites for individuals and families. Land may be invested as
production sites for manufacturing and commerce and earn revenue shares
on behalf of the Trust. Natural resources may be invested in synergic
production if it serves the interests of humanity as community and
public welfare. Such investment would earn revenue shares on behalf of
the Synergic Trustegrities.
The revenues the Synergic Trustegrities receive from their
leases and investments are used not only to protect and preserve the
synergic trusts, but also to help others.
The Trustegrity Guardians accept as their primary
responsibility the protection of humanity as community and
humanity as individual. They will seek to ensure that all humans are
safe from crime and war; that all humans have access to shelter,
nutrition, medical care, and education. They will further accept
responsibilty for the provision of good care and life support for
all humans in need — children and adults — the ill and injured,
the poor and destitute, and the homeless.
The Trustegrities will be three with separate but complimentary missions in service to humankind.
The Earth Trustegrity will provide:
1) Access to land and natural resources for personal use at minimal or no cost, and
2) Access to land and natural resources for synergic production
with appropriate charges payable to the Earth Trustegrity in lease or
rental fees, licensing fees, and/or revenue shares. All rental fees,
licensing fees, and/or revenue shares are entrusted to the Earth
Trustegrity for Humanity as Community.
The Life Trustegrity will provide:
3) Safety from crime and war, and full access to:
4) Comfortable, safe, healthy housing.
5) Good nutritious food
6) Good preventitive health services and comprehensive cradle to
grave medical care, and access to the privilege of Reproduction based
on fairness, equality, and mutual benefit to both humanity as
Individuals and humanity as Community. This would include monitoring
administrating, adjudicating the Trust privilege of Reproduction.
7) Access to animals and plants including native flora and wildlife for personal use at minimum or no cost.
8) Access to animals and plants including native flora and
wildlife for synergic production with approriate charges payable to the
Life Trustegrity in rental fees, licensing fees and/or revenue shares.
All payments made are entrusted to the Earth Trustegrity for Humanity
as Community.
The Time-binding Trustegrity will provide:
9) Full education to an individual’s ability and interest regardless of age,
10) The opportunity to participate in synergic organization and
invest their action and leverage to earn revenue shares and acquire
property throughout their full lifetime.
11) Access to communication with humanity as individuals and
to humanity as community for personal reasons, for synergic production
and consumption, and for synergic consensus utilizing Unanimous Rule
Democracy.
12) Protection of the intellectual discoveries and inventions
of Time-binding whether they be in the Time-binding Trust, or the
Intellectual Property of living humans.
The responsibilities of the Trustegrity Guardians are great.Theirs
is a moral and binding obligation. Failure to meet these obligations
would result in the immediate loss of Synergic Trustee privileges.
To be continued...