241 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
241 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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| File Name : ALTENERG.ASC | Online Date : 05/18/95 |
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| Contributed by : Josef Hasslberger| Dir Category : ENERGY |
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| From : KeelyNet BBS | DataLine : (214) 324-3501 |
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| A FREE Alternative Sciences BBS sponsored by Vanguard Sciences |
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| KeelyNet * PO BOX 870716 * Mesquite, Texas * USA * 75187 |
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| Voice/FAX : (214) 324-8741 InterNet - keelynet@ix.netcom.com |
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| WWW sites - http://www.eskimo.com/~billb & http://www.protree.com |
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Alternative energy needs an Alternative Economic Basis
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Since the industrial revolution, energy has become an increasingly important
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factor for the functioning of our economy.
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No matter whether that economy is called socialist, capitalist, market
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oriented or whatever, the availability of energy at an affordable price is one
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of the first conditions for industrial production. Transportation and
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distribution of all products, whether industrial or agricultural, is also
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dependent on energy.
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Because energy was of such basic importance to the economy, it soon became a
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target for monopolization and we find today, that a large part of the world's
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energy supply is controlled by a small number of multinational companies.
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Our main concern with this energy monopoly is not the fact of its existence,
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but a very serious secondary effect that is a consequence of it. This is an
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absence of progress in energy technology, an almost complete stop of the
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development of alternative energy production technologies.
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Any new technical solutions that do get developed are improvements of fossil
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fuel based technologies currently in use. For real alternatives there is no or
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very little money.
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Fossil fuels include coal, gas, petroleum but also uranium. These are all
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substances that have been accumulated in the earth's crust in the course of
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millions of years and that we are using up in the blink of an eye in a
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geological time frame.
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Apart from the threatening shortage of raw materials, the fossil fuel economy
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has another very important drawback, which is the fact that we are destroying
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our environment with the pollution that is inherent in the mining, the
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transport, the transformation and the burning of fossil fuels.
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If we are to believe the proponents of fossil fuels and the government
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officials supporting them, there is no alternative to these fuels at this
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time.
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Is that really true?
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No, it is definitely not true. The alternatives do exist.
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We have various proposals being made right here in this exhibition.
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I myself have been researching for many years in this field and can say with
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certainty that there are numerous alternatives. I want to mention a few of
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those that I have encountered during my research.
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1) Hydroelectric power generation today uses only about 10 % of its true
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potential. I am not referring here to the possibility of constructing
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more dams. I am saying that current hydroelectric technology has
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overlooked a large part of the energy potential of moving water.
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Current technology concentrates exclusively on pressure induced upon the
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body of water by gravitation. The higher the dam, the greater the
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pressure. But it happens that in addition to static pressure, water
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also has energy if it is simply flowing in a river. And the faster the
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water flows, the more inertial energy it builds up. And this inertial
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energy increases with the square of the velocity, while the static
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pressure increases only in a linear relation.
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Unfortunately the two energy potentials are mutually exclusive. In order
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to use one, you have to destroy the other. In order to use the static
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pressure energy, we first have to destroy all of the water's natural
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motion-induced inertial energy by building a dam to stop the water's
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flow!
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It is obvious therefore, that our hydroelectric production could be much
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more effective if it was using the water's natural velocity, effectively
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increased by gradually reducing the diameter of the channel of flow,
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instead of stopping the motion and using exclusively the gravity-induced
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water pressure.
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I have written about this in more detail ("Die Wasserkraft nach Ludwig
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Herbrand" in raum&zeit nr 62, April 1993 and in english: "Understanding
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water power" in Explore! magazine, Vol. 4, nr 1, 1993).
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2) Water may also serve as a simple alternative to petrochemical fuels,
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because the chemical composition of water - hydrogen and oxygen - makes
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it a combustible substance.
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This alternative has been historically proposed by various inventors and
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has been rejected by those industrial interests that depend on fossil
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fuels as unpractical and dangerous.
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Most recently, the American inventor Stanley Meyer has obtained over 20
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patents connected with his "water fuel cell" system. He proposes to
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split water into its constituent gases by use of high frequency high
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voltage electrolysis in a resonance chamber, using significantly less
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energy than can be obtained from subsequent combustion, and to use the
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hydrogen directly as an alternative fuel in such applications as car
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motors, jet engines, household heating, cooking stoves and more.
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Meanwhile in Australia, an inventor by the name of Yull Brown has
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developed a similar technology, however with the difference that he has
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succeeded in recombining the hydrogen and oxygen into a gas that is not
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explosive but is combustible, called Brown's gas. Brown's invention is
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being manufactured in China for use as an alternative supply of gas for
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metal welding, but could also easily be adapted to other uses where gas
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is a possible fuel.
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3) A third and last example of an alternative method of energy production
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is the direct conversion of the electromagnetic potential of space
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background into electric energy. This is based on the concept that space
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itself is permeated by a homogenous energy field of incredibly high
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potential. According to the Japanese scientist Shinichi Seike, the
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electric field strength of space is
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E = 8.8 x 108 V/cm.
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It is sufficient to bring about a discontinuity in the homogenous field,
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in order to "channel" some of that abundant energy for use in various
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electrical applications.
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This feat has been achieved not by one, but by a whole number of
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inventors and scientists. I am giving a few names here, as examples
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only. The list is by no means complete.
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Nikola Tesla, Henry Moray, Lester Hendershot, Howard Johnson, Hans Coler,
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Edwin Gray, John R.R. Searl, Shinichi Seike, Bruce De Palma, Wingate A.
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Lambertson, Paul Baumann, Robert Adams.
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None of the inventions have been developed to be put into mass production, and
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very few of them have even been able to take the first hurdle, to be accepted
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by patent examiners. None of them have had any funding worth speaking of.
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A big difficulty in this respect is our limited conception of the conservation
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of energy, which is expressed in the socalled laws of thermodynamics. These
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laws do not express basic truths of nature. They are based on experiential
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data and have wrongly been given the status of natural laws. But still they
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are used by patent offices all over the world to select out and discard any
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inventions that are truly revolutionary, with the justification that the
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invention violates a natural law and so could not possibly work.
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I have written in more detail on thermodynamics (article not yet published: "A
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new beginning for thermodynamics" and in german "Ein neuer Anfang f<>r die
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Thermodynamik").
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Let us get back however to the economic basis for alternative energy. It is
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clear that the existing fossil fuel monopoly has much influence on what is to
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receive financing for development and production and what is not. And from
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actual experience by many desperate inventors, there is no financing available
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for a real alternative, expecially if it goes against established theories or
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against the "laws of nature" as understood by science in general or if it
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threatens the monopoly.
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Our economy unfortunately is somewhat schizofrenic.
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One part of the economy, which I would call the real economy or the people's
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economy is concerned with production, with energy, with raw materials, with
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distribution and commerce and with the consumption of goods by the end user.
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On this level of the economy, the basis of dealings between companies and
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individuals is proper exchange. In order to facilitate this exchange, we have
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invented money to make it easier to buy and sell the goods that are being
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produced.
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The second part of the economy is the world of finance, which I would like to
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call the speculative economy, whose interests unfortunately are not the same
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as those of the real economy. This speculative economy is the world of
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investment and speculation, of the cruel and merciless side of capitalism,
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where the most important thing is not production and not the survival of
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people, but the payment of interest! On this level of the economy, the basis
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of dealings is out-exchange (defined as an absence of proper exchange or a
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desire to get something for nothing).
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The mechanism which permits this "something for nothing" of the speculative
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economy is the practice of taking interest. This has become a major factor
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even for the financial dealings of countries, especially those less developed
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nations which have been induced to take large loans as "development aid" and
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which are now unable to pay the interest, let alone pay back the loans. Their
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people are starving but apparently this is of no concern to the buerocrats of
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the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, or to the banks who loaned
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the money.
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Russia is suffering not because its people do not want to work, not because it
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is poor in raw materials, but because it has to pay tribute to the speculative
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side of the international economy. The austerity programs advocated by certain
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economic "experts" are said to be necessary to stabilize the economy. In
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reality they are needed only to make sure that the country will continue to
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pay interest to its international creditors.
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I have written in more detail about the question of interest and of its
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influence on the economy. (Article in TOKO Zeitkompass: "Wirtschaft wohin - In
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Memoriam Silvio Gesell").
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Unfortunately the speculative economy has gained force in recent years and is
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much stronger than the real economy. Our lives are determined by the
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speculative economy. The energy monopoly is an expression of and a necessary
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condition for the speculative economy.
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We are witnessing a genocide of gigantic proportions, the killing of ourselves
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and our children. Whether it is done through denial of proper energy
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technology or through economic austerity imposed so as to collect interest,
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the starving and poisoning of people is genocide and should be recognized and
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stigmatized as such.
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What would have to happen then, to create an economic basis for alternative
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energy to develop? What can each one of us do to help bring about the needed
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change?
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The cure for the economy is to lead the patient back towards reality.
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First and foremost, we must refuse to play the game of "something for
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nothing", each one in our personal lives, and who has government
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responsibility must refuse to play the game in his area of responsibility.
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Refusing to play the game means both from the active and from the passive
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side. As individuals and as countries we must not receive something for
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nothing and we must not allow that someone else takes from us without proper
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exchange.
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Secondly, we must recognize that production and exchange are the basis of the
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real economy, the economy that will result in people having enough to eat,
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having houses, having proper education and all those things that we recognize
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as necessary and positive for our lives. We should strive to strengthen the
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real economy, each one according to ability and position.
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Finance must be put at the service of the real economy, not the other way
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around.
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And we will discover that all of a sudden, there will be all kinds of funds
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available for research and production, for putting into reality that dream of
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alternative energy, for providing unlimited amounts of power to everyone,
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practically for free, and without destroying the environment in the process.
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Josef Hasslberger
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November 1993
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Note: This article is the text of a talk given to a seminar on alternative
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energy in St.Petersburg, Russia, in November 1993.
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