Joined: Sun Jan 22, 2012 11:16 pm +0000 Posts: 1126 Location: Nanticoke NY
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Riktare wrote: the development of a more refined planetary culture.
I think you Riktare is correct, certainly, to point out that the issue is for children to have rolemodels in order for the potential to mature be cultivated. That is the beginning, and if we praise false role-models, if we ourselves fail to admit the folly of our actions, if your standard of goodness is too low, then there is no encouragement at all for these children of our nation.
If we are praising each family for having its own raised bed garden, for doing family activities, this could be common recognition or it could be false exaltation. In our encouragement and identification of good rolemodels, we must be careful to ensure that we are encouraging, and not displacing the child's own identification with both that one and ourselves.
This is to ensure that productive habits are ordinary, not exceptional. Do you think that there is fairness in the marketplace, only in the rights of man. Beyond this, there are forces of competition that have created unfair socialisation and subsidies, for one product over another. In price and in the attention it receives from the public media.
I do not think there is currently fairness because the Wall Street Journal and other national newspresses stays away from indepth accounting analysis. The focus in economics has been on point-of-sale transaction too much, on the glossy exterior of a product rather than what is contained within.
But I would refer to the overall impact of the action of an individual, a corporation, a company, and simply investigate if the goodness is a false claim, or if it authentic. What does it do for a man's soul? And does this improve the land-man ratio by raising overall yields.
You have to answer for yourself, but no making excuses; the traditional model/goal for economics in a healthy nation has always been to export more than to import. Now, I say, the evaluation of exports has shifted from manufactured goods, to "intellectual assets". The measure of value for a product cannot be self-verifying by the company's own survey/analysis. Once, in A.D. 1934 the danger was materialism. But are we more materialistic even though our corporations are "intellectually value-heavy"?
One recent farm-industry research predicted a 3% decline in overal sales of American Agricultural Goods in A.D. 2016 from A.D. 2015. But there is a slight increase in wheat-corn-barley, accompanied with a dramatic decrease in less common crops. There is a growing focus on annual crops, instead of dividend-yielding perennials. There are more small farmers who have been disestablished than ever. Such an essential economic branch receives secondary attention, but it is of primary importance.
_________________ to the Underlaying Unity of All Life so that the Voice of Intuition may guide Us closer to Our Common Keeper
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