Frederick Bott
2 min readJun 14, 2022

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It has to change because it is energy unsustainable.

The root source of it is/was all energy coming from fuel requiring work to be done for its extraction, which also generates pollution. As long as that continues, the bill for extraction of energy has to be distributed to all people, however unevenly, and the pollution has to continue to choke all life.

But now we are moving to hydrogen fuel from solar, the fuel is actually reeceived for free, after installation of the means to receive it, and generates no pollution in either its production or consumption.

Further, since that product is actually added to the wealth capital of Earth, money has to be issued to reflect it, but so far has not been (At least not formally), because the pre-solar power economy is based on a constant, whereas now it is no longer a constant, but an increasing amount, becoming more so as we progress into more and more production of fuel, and even food from solar (See "Solein").

At some point, conventional economists will begin to acknowledge this, and so will money issuers.

It actually means the end of all value in capital, as money will need to be issued to all people, to reflect the product received for free.

Even better, it is unlimited, unlike any fuel from Earth.

If anyone thinks this can't happen, look at when it happened already, when $4Tn stimulus was issued in US, every month, for several months, the dollar value itself went up, whilst oil prices went negative, and gold languished. Ordinary folks were trading in markets with free money, voting for the things they saw as important, including shares in technically bankrupt yet still loved companies, like Hertz, who were rescued by that action.

Just there we saw the first glimpse of pure fine-grained democracy, and the future world, it seems to me.

The reason the dollar is struggling right now is not because it was issued for free, but because that issue was stopped, by those wishing to preserve the value in capital, and who had the power to stop it. But as the dollar loses value so also does the capital lose value.

So they have no choice now but to give in to this reality sooner or later.

The value of capital fundamentally cannot be preserved, but the value of freely issued money can be recovered, by issuing it in response to actual product received.

Watfch that space, I would say.

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Frederick Bott
Frederick Bott

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