I don't understand our level of maturity, or rather our lack of it, in our economic culture.
It's always all about just "more for me" money, money, money.
The wealthier someone is, the more power and influence they have, and the more their wealth compounds. And the more society as a whole holds them on a pedestal and gives them influence.
In essence, we allow the most predatory and entrenched interests to have the most power and influence. "Oh, he's a billionaire. We should listen to him and give him even more and more power."
And most achieve this by being ruthlessly focused on accumulating wealth with no other considerations.
I’m not saying it’s bad to make money or that all people who have money are bad. Of course not! However, the system itself, the culture, and the lack of maturity within the culture are the problems. When I attend conferences about creating wealth, I’m an anomaly when I ask the question, “How much are we considering whether we’re helping others versus harming others in what we’re doing?”
That is why our culture on the whole still has the pharma/vax mafia and the other related cancers it has.
Making money is the religion of the economic culture, and society applauds it as having its own virtue, regardless of how the money is made or what is done with it to affect others.
That leads to built-in conflicts of interest in our health system, or more accurately, our lack of an actual health system. The information about how to be very healthy and live a long life without disease is well known, but obviously -- obvious to you and me, that is -- there's no profit in that, so we get pharma/vax mafia poisons and they have the power to dominate the narrative and laws and literally strangle society.
In our criminal prosecution system, we have terms like "motive and opportunity” to indicate who is most likely to be guilty of wrongdoing. Then we have "recusal," meaning that if the outcome affects others and you can influence it and have something to gain by doing so, you're not allowed to participate.
So, why do we allow wealthy individuals (companies, but they are just groups of people) to wield the power they have in our healthcare system?
Is "Free enterprise" enough of an excuse? The same applies to the defense industry, and so on.
I was recently debating with someone about whether we need more regulations or fewer regulations. I made it clear that I don't see that as being the issue. It's a matter of a more evolved social fabric.
It should be self-evident that harming others for profit is unacceptable, period. It should be obvious that once someone is so rich they couldn’t spend it over ten generations, they should use their power to benefit humanity, not just to make more and more money, regardless of who they’re harming.
In a family, if one person happens to be much bigger and uses his power to take all the food and sells what's too much for him to eat, it would be so obvious that that's not cool or acceptable. It wouldn't fly.
I'm not talking about capitalism vs socialism. I'm referring to a new level of socioeconomic evolution that has never existed before.
I don’t know what that system and culture will look like. Still, common sense and common decency are all it takes for a large number of people to manage their affairs in a way that makes sense, rather than our free-for-all where the most predatory and entrenched interests have the most power and influence.
Fifty years from now -- if we make it that long in light of the profits made on war, people hating others solely due to nationality, race, and religion, and the money to be made on war and on putting implants in everyone’s brain -- we'll look back and say it's amazing we survived through this barbaric time.
It's always been about greed, but we now have nukes and AI. We’re evolving, but we must do so faster!
We used to throw Christians to the lions and call that entertainment, and we don't do that anymore.
We used to have slavery, and we don't do that anymore.
We used to hunt for witches in Salem, and we don't do that anymore.
I not only envision the evolution of our socioeconomic culture to where those who are able and committed to doing the most good for others and for all of us get the most power and resources, but I'm actively working to bring it about. If it’s an exercise in futility, so be it. I’ve got to try. I’m in the trenches.
I created an ecosystem for doing that and seem to have apparently been blessed (and burdened?) with a unique gift and obsessive drive for accelerating this evolution of how wealth is used to benefit humanity.
And I walk the walk. I've turned down so many millions from people who wanted to invest in my ionic silver company it's incomprehensible to most people. I have struggled greatly because of it… and yet!
According to some leaders in managing large wealth for clients and in socially conscious or “impact” investing, I’ve been “seasoned my whole life” to lead this movement, this accelerating of the evolution.
Time will tell but it seems I'm on the brink of seeing real progress, where I'm supporting and leading next-gen recipients of wealth in joy in life (most are miserable -- drug abuse, alcoholism, and suicide are much higher in that group than the general age group) and in collaboratively, strategically using their power to contribute to the well-being and healthy evolution of individuals, humanity, and the planet.
This will hopefully also be the ideal avenue for raising real capital to spread ionic silver far and wide, with funding from wealthy individuals who care more about the good we're doing than just endless profits.
Along the way, this may yet enable me to channel huge resources into disempowering the pharma/vax mafia, largely through massive PR campaigns to enlighten everyone to the “profit” motive skewing it all.
If you’re curious, here’s a 22-min video I recorded in June making the case for the work I’m pursuing:
Conquering infectious disease and accelerating wealth for humanity (RMN)
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-- Jay Newman