Friday, December 26, 2008

A letter i wrote to obama's website Change.gov

Here is a little something i wrote for change.gov's vision section.

My vision for the country deals with competing with other countries on every level. I personally feel that anarchism isn't for the whole country, but that there should be some space reserved for anarchist inhabitants who can live similarly to the ways of the native americans with a little twist of modernization. Anarchists are inventors, they fend for themselves, live off the land and they don't create imagined monetary credits for motivation. Their motivation is instead one of competing with neighbors to outperform others, while also working with them to create the very best the mind has to offer. Since anarchism doesn't have a place in American cities, its an idea that should be nourished for what it offers. It hasn't been given the chance because the government doesn't allow communities to form for power reasons... but i feel in the years to come, it should be encouraged to governments that anarchists should be allowed to exist and establish themselves in small numbers in small communities with able resources to begin.

When it comes to America, i feel that the less the government helps out corporations and banking systems, the easier it will be for the average man to find a new way of doing things for themselves which has more to do with personal savings, to manage to buy a house without anyone getting a cut of the action.
The credit card and banking institutions are known for burning people and ruining peoples ability to reform their financial situation for years.. they are more of an enemy to the working class than they are an ally, and the govenrment shouldn't be using peoples tax-payer dollars to support them. My vision is to see the end of these billion dollar companies.

My vision for America, when dealing with lower-skilled workers, unemployed or even homeless people, is to establish government funded apartment complexes, freely available to all who wish to participate. The apartment complexes will have the very basics for people who don't have a job and aren't looking for one. People still need to live, and it will be a place that shelters the needy.

As people graduate to become low-skilled workers, they will start to be able to expand their living quarters (the architecture being able to acquire special amenities for the apartment, as well as customized flexible spacing options. They also will have the option for storage facility spacing for low-skilled worker status. Along with the low-skilled worker status will be an opportunity for them to invest in their own advancement. If they decide to do so, they could invest their time and maybe a small amount of money (with eligible tax write off) so they could become better skilled workers with guarantee middle-upper class status pay, which will be open to a wide variety of specialized industries provided by government contracts.
Obviously upper-middle class earnings potential will give them the ability to own their own home privately, or if they prefer the government housing community, they could make specialized and sophisticated housing for people in this category.

This sounds rather communistic in some ways, but i figure humans are social creatures who ALL deserve some respect to live like human beings. If someone cannot afford to own or rent, they shouldn't be abandoned by humanity, that is just not what society is meant for. It is what it has become, but that could change. It just takes more structure, more caring, a better and more sophisticated way of doing things. Obama's victory for the presidency had inspired many, and for some people, there are no bounds for opportunity.

I see green algae energy plants becoming our solution for both getting rid of Co2 emmisions and providing us a hybrid solution for cars which will take us into the 21st century where we belong. We need to make this century ours, and our dependency on the past needs to be cut like an umbilical cord, giving birth to a new life. We need to stay focus, nurture our progress with worldclass education, free healthcare for all, and sharp directive for establishing government funded employment throughout the United States. Jobs to be available throughout, showing that Private billion dollar corporations have no business calling themselves free market capitalists, and giving the little guy a chance the chance to become a key player at industry. Their days for pointing their fingers at anything that gets in their way, communists or fascist, is completely over. They realize that people and their decision-making are their clear enemies, and if they cannot control them, and instill propaganda.. then they (the corporations) are finished. Their contributions to corrupt gov officials cannot battle a boycott which would cut their life supply. People need to reclaim their power over politicians and judicial systems. I feel the road ahead requires swift action for people to take back their power rightfully earned from the founding fathers. Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin both insisted that revolution is healthy every decade or so, and it was established that when tyrannical governments establish themselves to disallow people from making their own decisions, that democracy burns away into ashes, and what becomes of the system is redesigned by very private and secret institutions, those types most likely to benefit from tyrannical members in power.

It is not my will to see a revolution. Instead to shine light on the ideals this country stands for from its establishment, to use common sense to repeal many laws, to insert new laws for abolishing corporate funded lobbyists, and to provide people another outlook on how to work towards utopian ideals. The established wealthy class will have to invest in their own country once again and have faith that people will do the right thing, unlike the many unethical acts taken by them against their lower-class-men. The goal here is to create a symbiotic relationship. There are opportunities to work together, and that brings out the best of human nature.

No comments:

Post a Comment