We believe that all humans(1) are entitled to life and subsistence upon the resources available to their societies, countries, or states so long as they are willing to produce and contribute to that same society, country, or state. We believe that such subsistence must include housing, food, education, health, and any other opportunities for growth beyond current standards of living they currently
now enjoy. We believe that all humans must be allowed and able to be productive with their abilities, and accommodation must be made to facilitate their ability to be productive if needed. The cost of automation, robotics, and the replacement of processes that adversely affect human productivity must use whatever means is saved to facilitate the happiness and productivity of the humans adversely affected by those changes. Such changes must also serve to provide alternate means to displaced humans to be productive in other avenues. We state boldly that all humans have the unequivocal right to full claim upon the resources of their societies, countries, and states. We also state boldly that all humans have the right and obligation to employment and use of their abilities toward productivity, and that such employment gives them the right and ability to provide for their livelihoods, families, and communities. No human must endure living below a clearly defined base line standard of living. If they currently cannot produce or contribute, sufficient to live above this base line, there must be found a way for them to produce and contribute to the whole according to their abilities, regardless of the costs to society. No one is left behind, and all benefit or must burden these costs together. We believe that all humans must contribute and be productive; that responsibility to society, community, and culture cannot be disregarded by any individual. Indolence shouldn’t be rewarded, but that such behavior will require that accommodations be made to help the individual “find their place” in society. Unfortunately, there will be a very few who will not contribute regardless of any provision or effort on their behalf. Some of these will even be violent and unable or unwilling to contribute to society in any productive means. In these very few cases, incarceration, or the limiting of their freedoms to act in society is acceptable. Such actions must be done very carefully and only after every avenue has been exhausted. Even those incarcerated by society must be provided the means to be productive if they choose to do so at any time, under sensible oversight and controls. We state boldly that societies, countries, and states must not allow human life to be monetized. Humans cannot be monetized and their productivity in one area, if no longer needed, must be brought to serve in other sectors of the society and/or economy. Human productivity must be counted separately from all other resources, since we are unique, cannot be monetized, and our societies, countries, and nations are a creation of our own selves. They are there to benefit humanity. Our productive service to our societies, countries, states, and to each other must be the primary goal of companies, governments, and communities. We affirm that any changes in automation, robotics, or means whereby productivity is replaced with such and taken from humans must protect the livelihood of humans before any changes are agreed upon or made. If that means that human workers choose the course a company takes, or choose to make less in order to preserve the jobs of other human workers, it should be their choice. All negative costs to companies, governments, or societies must be born equally based on percentages(2). All human workers should bear burdens together and share in the rewards equally, based on percentages. We believe that any company, government, or society that suppresses the will of their human population and that take away from the human whole must be brought to account by any means possible up to but not at the cost of human life. Protection of all human life, firstly, and their livelihoods, secondly, are our directives and cannot be compromised in any way. Any organization, no matter how great or small, which seeks to destroy livelihoods without accommodation for such, must be stopped. Until they are willing to compromise, all avenues must be pursued to bring said organization to a willingness to protect all human life and livelihoods as their own primary goals. We believe that every human worker should be rewarded, based on incentivisation and merit. We believe that once human capital is distributed based on consumption of resources, companies can then compete freely for additional resources based on the complete cost of products(3), their merits, benefits, etc. Humans play the primary role in any society’s economic structure, and must be treated as so much more than a resource. The whole of any company, society, government, state, or country that recognizes the human worker and their contribution, will also recognize humanity. They will protect human responsibilities, human culture, human communities, and all humans. They will recognize the need to protect such and fostered such at all costs. FOOTNOTES & DEFINITIONS
1) Humans: Humans are defined by this organization as human beings, created human by an egg and s***m, without any genome splicing, replacing, or adding from another species. Individuals which are, or began as humans, and are at least 60% remaining such are considered human. Augmentation of the brain cannot exceed 10% and the total augmentation cannot exceed 60%. Any manipulation of the genome to splice, replace, or add genome from another species, unless performed to prolong life and/or enhance natural abilities will negate any claim to being human. The individual becomes a different species and is no longer human if that individual can no longer reproduce as a human because of such changes.
2) Percentages: Percentages include the combined resources and benefits received from all resources that a company, society, country, or nation is endowed with, under jurisdiction of, created by, or sold by.
3) Complete Cost of Products: The complete cost of products should include both the cost to produce, both in material, but also in human productivity. It should also include the likely lifespan of the product including durability. It should also include the cost to deconstruct the product after its lifespan is expended. Resources invested should be recovered if possible.