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Interdependence
is Totalitarian
Mankind at the Turning Point Part 1
by Brent
Jessop
"The World Has
Cancer And The Cancer Is Man" - A. Gregg as quoted in Mankind at
the Turning Point (1974)
In 1974 the book Mankind
at the Turning Point: The Second Report to The Club of Rome [1] was published.
This report states the need to create an "organic" or a truly
interdependent society as the only way to save the world from the almost
overwhelming world problematique.
According to The Club
of Rome, the world problematique is the set of interlocking world problems,
such as, over population, food shortages, non-renewable resource depletion,
environmental degradation, etc. With the use of absurd, exponentially
based computer models, the complete unravelling of society and perhaps
the biosphere was predicted. Not surprisingly the only solution capable
of adverting global catastrophe is the development of an organic society.
As I will show, a global organic society is only a euphemism for totalitarian
world government.
The Club of Rome is
a premiere think tank composed of approximately 100 members including
leading scientists, philosophers, political advisors and many other characters
who lurk in the shadows of power.
Organic Growth
From Mankind at the
Turning Point:
"In Nature organic
growth proceeds according to a "master plan," a "blueprint."
According to this master plan diversification among cells is determined
by the requirements of the various organs; the size and shape of the organs
and, therefore, their growth processes are determined by their function,
which in turn depends on the needs of the whole organism.
Such a "master
plan" is missing from the process of growth and development of the
world system." - 7
"The concept
of the "organic growth" of mankind, as we have proposed in this
report, is intended as a contribution toward achieving that end. Were
mankind to embark on a path of organic growth, the world would emerge
as a system of interdependent and harmonious parts, each making its own
unique contributions, be it in economics, resources, or culture.
...Such an approach
must start from and preserve the world's regional diversity. Paths of
development, region-specific rather than based on narrow national interests,
must be designed to lead to a sustainable balance between the interdependent
world-regions and to global harmony - that is, to mankind's growth as
an "organic entity" from its present barely embryonic state."
[emphasis mine] - VIII
"Apparently,
the emerging world system requires a "holistic" view to be taken
of the future world development: everything seems to depend on everything
else." - 21
Interdependence is
the End of Independence
Though rarely stated
and frequently denied, the concept of interdependent nations implies the
end of national independence or sovereignty.
"And cooperation,
finally, requires that the people of all nations face up to an admission
that may not come easy. Cooperation by definition connotes interdependence.
Increasing interdependence between nations and regions must then translate
as a decrease in independence. Nations cannot be interdependent without
each of them giving up some of, or at least acknowledging limits to, its
own independence." - 111
"...the statement
acknowledged, even if unintentionally, the dawn of an era of limits to
independence - even for the strongest and biggest nations of the world."
- 114
Interdependence is
Totalitarian
Bertrand Russell,
a strong proponent of world government and all around elitist, wrote in
his 1952 book The Impact of Science on Society [2] that the inevitable
result of a society based on an organic philosophy can only result in
totalitarianism. For more on this book please read this.
From The Impact of
Science on Society:
"The most obvious
and inescapable effect of scientific technique is that it makes society
more organic, in the sense of increasing the interdependence of its various
parts..." - 42
"Totalitarianism
has a theory as well as a practice. As a practice, it means that a certain
group, having by one means or another seized the apparatus of power, especially
armaments and police, proceed to exploit their advantageous position to
the utmost, by regulating everything in the way that gives them the maximum
of control over others. But as a theory it is something different: it
is the doctrine that the State, or the nation, or the community is capable
of a good different from that of individual and not consisting of anything
that individuals think or feel. This doctrine was especially advocated
by Hegal, who glorified the State, and thought that a community should
be as organic as possible. In an organic community, he thought, excellence
would reside in the whole. An individual is an organism, and we do not
think that his separate parts have separate goods: if he has a pain in
his great toe it is he that suffers, not specially the great toe. So,
in an organic society, good and evil will belong to the whole rather than
the parts. This is the theoretical form of totalitarianism.
...In concrete fact,
when it is pretended that the State has a good different from that of
the citizens, what is really meant is that the good of the government
or of the ruling class is more important than that of other people. Such
a view can have no basis except in arbitrary power.
More important than
these metaphysical speculations is the question whether a scientific dictatorship,
such as we have been considering, can be stable, or is more likely to
be stable than a democracy...
... I do not believe
that dictatorship Is a lasting form of scientific society - unless (but
this proviso is important) it can become world-wide." [emphasis mine]
- 64
A worldwide organic
society is exactly what The Club of Rome is proposing.
Selling Totalitarianism
It is interesting
to note the pleasant soothing words used to sell the concept of totalitarianism:
"organic", "holistic", "differentiated",
"harmonious", "interdependent", "balanced"
and "sustainable". The very same "sustainable development"
is all the rage these days. Sustainable development was codified into
international law during the United Nations Conference on the Environment
and Development (popularly known as the Rio Earth Summit) in 1992. The
Secretary General and main organizer of the conference was Maurice Strong.
According to his own book, Where on Earth Are We Going? [3] he is a "Member
of the Executive Committee of the Club of Rome".
Creating A New Man
and Total Material Interdependence
How do you make the
transition to an organic society? Part 2 of this series will examine the
desires of The Club of Rome to change the value system of modern man.
"An analysis
of problems and crises as reported in subsequent chapters indicate that
(1) a "horizontal" restructuring of the world system is needed,
i.e., a change in relationships among nations and regions and (2) as far
as the "vertical" structure of the world system is concerned,
drastic changes in the norm stratum - that is, in the value system and
the goals of man - are necessary in order to solve energy, food, and other
crises, i.e., social changes and changes in individual attitudes are needed
if the transition to organic growth is to take place." [emphasis
mine] - 54
The final part of
this series will discuss the need for total control of all resources by
a world authority.
"Now is the
time to draw up a master plan for organic sustainable growth and world
development based on global allocation of all finite resources and a new
global economic system. Ten or twenty years form today it will probably
be too late..." [emphasis mine] - 69
[1] Quotes from Mihajlo
Mesarovic and Eduard Pestel, Mankind at the Turning Point: The Second
Report to The Club of Rome (1974). ISBN 0-525-03945-7
[2] Quotes from Bertrand
Russell, The Impact of Science on Society (1952). ISBN 0-415-10906-X
[3] Quotes from Maurice
Strong, Where on Earth Are We Going? (2000). ISBN 0-676-97364-7
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