Friday, June 7, 2013

Domestic Spying and My Digitized, Serialized Dollar Monetary System

So here is a parallel:  The domestic spying system is an information management system that most closely resembles my concepts for a digitized, serialized dollar monetary system.

Every transaction must be documented by association to a specific individual entity exchanging (communicating) an item of value in a structured information system (communication network) providing for support of the exchange.  That information system identifies the communication by unique attributes of the two (or more) parties to the communication (transaction) as well as the unique attributes of the information (object or service) exchanged.  These unique attributes include person identity, time, geographic location, content or nature of the the item exchanged.  The system also maintains a searchable history of all information history.  Each system has secret protections related to privacy.  Those internal and external protections may be removed by a controlling authority.

Bottom line:  They are both systems with objectives to gather and retain all information all the time.  Access to all information is controlled by some means that can always be overridden secretly or publicly.

The information system and information gathered and retained is neutral.  It works for good or evil depending on who obtains it and how it is used.

It is like Google.  All website information, current and historical (from real time to chronological records) on the web is collected.  Users may access it as they wish or are allowed to do so.  User access and their interaction with information (access or creation) also become part of the information structure.

The Internet System provides the structure to do all this in the Spying World.

The Monetary System fails to provide this information structure.  The Banking System is an information structure that uses the lack of a Monetary Control System analogous to the Internet System in order to serve its own Banking System structure and prohibit the creation of a Monetary System that would define what money is and provide total information regarding what money does.

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