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  by Alex Pietrowski
 November 19, 2015
 from 
			WakingTimes Website
 
 
 
 
				
					
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						Alex 
						Pietrowski is an 
						artist and writer concerned with preserving good health 
						and the basic freedom to enjoy a healthy lifestyle. 
						 
						 He 
						is a  writer for WakingTimes.com,
						
						Offgrid Outpost, 
						
						storable food and
						
						emergency kits. 
						 
						 Alex is an avid student of Yoga and 
						life. |  
			
 
			  
			  
			 
			  
			  
			  
			Similar to the end of feudalism hundreds 
			of years ago, is capitalism to be replaced by a new type of social 
			infrastructure and an emergence of a new kind of human being? 
			   
			Many believe that the much-needed shift 
			has already started, as the message that capitalism is not working 
			becomes louder and clearer.  
			  
			The system of monopolies, industrial 
			giants, banks and governments has been so focused on privatization and 
			commercialism that it has resulted in scarcity and inequality, 
			lacking the vision of true freedom and abundance for all.   
			As the era of capitalism forges on, 
			people are starting to realize the extent of its failures. 
			   
			Capitalism has been deficient in 
			ensuring that basic human necessities are available to all, and has 
			driven many people and even nations into financial ruin,
			enslaved by their jobs or by their creditors.     
			   
				
				
				Feudalism was an economic system structured by 
				customs and laws about "obligation". Capitalism was structured 
				by something purely economic: the market. 
				   
				
				We can predict, from this, that post-capitalism - 
				whose precondition is abundance - will not simply be a modified 
				form of a complex market society. 
				 
				  
				
				But we can only begin to grasp 
				at a positive vision of what it will be like. 
				 
				
				
				Paul Mason 
				
				
				
				The End of Capitalism has Begun 
			The shift into a new
			post-capitalism era is not likely to happen on a mass scale, but 
			in a modular manner as different people, in different places, and at 
			different speeds transform society, as in the example of
			Open Source Ecology, an organization that is helping to usher in 
			a new type of collaborative global 'maker' culture:             
			Some would argue that the pre-era of 
			post-capitalistic society already exists in some places, that it is 
			already sculpting what will come next, while also diminishing the 
			struggles of the "have-nots" and the artifice of the "haves".  
			  
			Take 
			Denmark for example. It is
			rated as 
			one 
			of the top 3 happiest countries in the world.    
			When one starts to compare it to other 
			countries, it appears that maybe they actually have society figured 
			out.    
			Here are some quick comparisons of 
			Denmark to the United States (the US) and other countries in the 
			Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), as 
			compiled by
			
			We Are Anonymous: 
				
					
					
					Denmark's per capita income is 
					$6000 higher than in the US.  
					
					Denmark has the second lowest 
					poverty rate out of the 34 countries in the OECD.  
					
					Denmark ranks seventh among OECD 
					countries in terms of employment rate. And their 
					unemployment benefits are admirable: if you've worked at 
					least 52 weeks over a three-year period, you are entitled to 
					90% pay of your original salary for up to two years.  
					
					The work force enjoys an average 
					work week of 33 hours per week and five weeks of paid 
					vacation each year. To put things in perspective, the US 
					average is 47 hours per week and you'd be lucky if you had 
					more than 16 paid vacation days/holidays.  
					
					Healthcare spending is around 
					$4400 per capita, above the OECD average of $3300, but 
					dwarfed by the excessive $10000 per person in the US.  
					
					Tuition costs don't exist! 
					College is free and students are given a $900 per month 
					stipend if they live on their own. Tuition costs from 
					in-state public to private college in the US range from 
					$9000 to $31000 per year.  
					
					Denmark was ranked by Forbes as 
					the best country for business in 2014, and was ranked #3 by 
					the World Bank for ease of doing business.  
					
					Parental leave after a birth of 
					a child is an average of 52 weeks paid time off. In the US, 
					an employer is required to give you no paid time off.  
					
					Although taxes are high in 
					Denmark, Danes are still able to save. Total gross national 
					saving is estimated at 24.1% of GDP in 2013 (in the US, it's 
					about 13%). This may have something to do with lower 
					household consumption, which averages at 49% of GDP versus 
					69% in the US.  
					
					Denmark uses taxes and social 
					spending aggressively to narrow the income gap between the 
					rich and the rest. 
					  
			
			*** 
				
					    
					
					"I know that some people in the US associate 
					the Nordic model with some sort of socialism, therefore I 
					would like to make one thing clear.    
					
					Denmark is far from a 
					
					socialist planned economy. Denmark is a market economy…
					   
					
					The Nordic model is an expanded welfare state 
					which provides a high level of security to its citizens, but 
					it is also a successful market economy with much freedom to 
					pursue your dreams and live your life as you wish." 
					 
					Danish Prime Minister 
					Lars Lokke Rasmussen   
			  
			  
			  
				
					
					
					Are you pursing your dreams and living 
			your life as you wish? 
					
					Could capitalism still get all of us there?
					
					
					Or is a new societal infrastructure 
			imminent, just waiting for enough of us to wake up?       
			
			Sources 
				
			 
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