Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Water Engines and World Freedom

-Water Engines and Repraps
-Economics of Water Engines and RepRaps
-The Desired Enclave
-First Year Prediction
-The Existing SuperState

Water Engines and Repraps


A piece of technology that could be a boon to world libertarianism and world anarchy/freedom. It is a central piece of my campaign and a reason I am a candidate.

Have you seen Aquygen's water engine? If you turn water into fuel, what does the economy look like? Grossly undernourished.

How can currency be meaningful if water is fuel? Or control of consent? This is precisely the thing motivating those who keep it secret. Look for these two videos to determine for your own finances what is best.

Aquygen:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J9iWaCMbw60

Pentagon Energy Interviews:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uGRsQZx6zWA

Aquygen's Web Site:
http://hytechapps.com/

My economic policy is on display at www.WilliamBunker2008.blogspot.com.

Let's examine the economics of the advent of this engine in pure terms, particularly in one of the biggest areas of expense in the life of an average citizen: the car.

Even with robotics the number of manhours required to build that car and its materials is monumental.

Steelworks rely on large furnaces fueled with electricity or coal to produce alloy from raw materials mined from the earth. Water engines will be less helpful securing these raw materials, but they will provide the quantity of heat that the steelworks needs at less than 30% of today's cost and total pollution generated. Electricity for the furnaces can be generated at power plants that cost $300,000 instead of $300 million, and without producing pollution.

The steel needed to build the car becomes ready at the auto plant. Skilled workers maintain robotics and use designs to build vehicles using roughly the same amount of time per car of handiwork as today. The cars run using simpler, more efficient, and smaller water engines at a similar price to modern gasoline engines. Costs to the factory to use electricity to run and build the robots declines to about 30%.

The capital investment of equipment remains more robust, after a business cycle reducing to perhaps 60% of today's price from lower costs to dealers and greater efficiencies.

The cost of wages remains high as workers consumer more readily available products while also doing less work. The cost of living reduces by 30-60% from less fuel cost and lower cost of less labor intensive products. The cost of doing business reduces by a similar fraction while profitability rises substantially as currencies extend their value and markets reduce inefficiency and solidify.

Entire sectors of industry currently profitable but wasteful to the final productivity, functionally a market of parasitism, can be shut down and eliminated. Among these are the heaviest polluters. The large infrastructure networks of the energy industry in particular and numerous other industries generally can be eliminated and

The petroleum industry can stop searching as aggressively for oil fields and focus on producing a meaningful quantity of artificially generated oils and synthetic materials where electrical energy lost is not a factor. Refineries can eventually be shut down or reduced and converted into these chemical laboratories instead of production facilities. Massive scale power plants can be shut down and replaced with locally generating neighborhood energy grids and personal energy sources.

[math: A* to the energy industry. Z > Y.]

Existing market controls would be difficult to maintain if water engines proliferated. Currencies would be difficult to secure because of the evaporation of many kinds of market shortage. Every industry in the world would face enhanced competition from a dramatic drop in price of goods. Workers and purchasing patterns would shift profoundly as the necessities of life became more fulfilled. Every IMF borrower country to immediately escape the bonds of 1st world domination and repay its loans within a 6 month period.

Energy companies like Duke will find the profitability of their infrastructure eliminated. We know no easy way for them to gradually unload their liabilities which they continue to build up at ~8-10% for profit.

Giving these tools of production to the common man will eliminate the ability of big companies and states to control markets through finance, production, and banking.

The Desired Enclave


Consider the benefits these water engines will have on human liberty. Anyone who wants will functionally be as rich as the sea allows, to store and hold as much energy and value as he or she can in any possible medium of enterprise. It's beautiful and competitive based on beauty and love. [Physicists: what is the densest energy structure you can make? This might need to be done astronomically remotely. "Do you see that star, there? ...That's mine." Now think genesis.]

Anyone who wants will be able to form a new enclave of their own in the wilderness, or compete in an urban environment of limited space using new voluntary economics. "I will leave this place if...", and "I respect your right to this privacy because it is better that way, and I can have anything I want elsewhere also. The only thing that makes this place valuable to me is that you have it, because I can have another ~immediately. Cities would be white holes of industry and production and likely origins of trucking or shipping lines as they are today. Living in a city would be specklessly clean of pollution thanks to power plants and cars and industrial functions becoming sanitary and non-toxic as polluters are basically tracked down by their pollutants themselves.

The enclave that I personally would desire is in a forest a stretch out from a road. I'd be there with a number of great libertarians and positive anarchists and purveyors of information. It'd be a library and an engineering laboratory and a remote viewing commune. We'd have the software defined radios for internet communication. I see no reason in particular to be 'without an address', although the remoteness is a positive factor. We'd have hydroponics farms and grow various foods to wholly supply ourselves. I'd keep a light moped around or bike and a half to get back around to the city if I chose to go. but basically everything I'd need except for adventure would be there in the woods. I imagine there'd be tens of thousands of these enclaves, each independent and awesome, and a number of great towns and cities enhanced by the technology, Modernized Old West or Amish style, populated as they are today in many ways, but without the same corporate or economic or state centered elements. They would become community centered, for those things, state, money, brand, they would be no longer important nor break points in our day.
http://mises.org/media.aspx?action=author&ID=425