| Subject: | Re: [socialcredit] Finance: Credit "Crisis" and "Depression" | | Date: | Monday, December 1, 2008 10:35:01 (-0500) | | From: | adavans <adavans @...com>
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| In reply to: | Message 5735 (written by Wallace Klinck) |
Wally Klinck wrote:
Because Social Credit would operate in the context of a much lower price level
that other nations it would place us in a position of tremendous advantage in the
export market--an advantage however which we would be no longer under duress to
pursue. This would provide an enormous incentive for other nations to quickly
adopt the Social Credit measures. A Social Credit nation would be in a much
better position to offer assistance to other nations if it were socially desired....
I wonder how far out it might be on one hand and how plausible it might be on
the other to shop around for a country or any other political jurisdiction with a
sufficient amount of autonomy and saturate it with a campaign for implementing
Social Credit? While there is presently a small crowd of Social Credit activists
perhaps with sufficient funding of a Social Credit think-tank (an expanded role
for the Social Credit Secretariat perhaps?) the number of practitioners,
scholars, activists and supporters will rise and the chance to get an actual
pilot project for 21st. Century Social Credit could be on its way. I suggest a
focus on sovereign states and suitably autonomous states, provinces and regions
with populations between 3 and 12 Million and a sufficiently diverse set of
industrial and service sectors.
My current favourite list of possbilities:New Zealand, Uruguay, Venezuela (say
what you want about Chavez puzzling paths, Venezuelans are very open to new
ideas), Denmark (grab Denmark while you can....before it enters the EuroZone!),
and perhaps the Baltic states. Did I mention Uruguay already? ;)
Regards
Alan Avans
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