Thursday, November 23, 2023

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Esperanto


PREFACE   page1 

Chapter 1: LIMITATIONS OF CAPITALISM

1. Capitalism has not won the game.

 1.1. Meaning of the dissolution of the Soviet Union   page2
 1.2. The real image of Soviet-style socialism
 1.3. The failure of Soviet-style socialism   page3
 1.4. Capitalism's "victory" and "non-victory"

2. Capitalism is not out of control.  page4

 2.1. The real image of global capitalism  
 2.2. The pitfalls of the theory of "out-of-control capitalism"

3. Capitalism might not collapse.  page5

 3.1. Keynes' aphorism  
 3.2. Resilient capitalism

4. Capitalism has been reaching its limits.  page6

5. There is no need to fear communism.  page7

 5.1. Two ways of overcoming limits
 5.2. Image of communism

Chapter 2: SKETCH OF COMMUNIST SOCIETY --   PRODUCTION

1. There is no commodities production.  page8

 1.1. Not profit pursuit but social cooperation 
 1.2. Society where everything is free of charge

 1.3. A question on civilizational history

2. People are freed from reign of money.  page9 

 2.1. Liberation from exchange value
 2.2. Freedom from reign of money
 2.3. Difference between communism and socialism

3. People retry the planned economy.  page10

 3.1. The old planned economy model
 3.2. Sustainable planned economy model
 3.3. Outline of economic plan
 3.4. Non-bureaucratic planning

4. New types of production organizations emerge.

 4.1. Socially owned enterprise and self-managed enterprise  page11
 4.2. Production business organization and production cooperative
 4.3. Companies and their internal structure  
 4.4. PBOs for the primary sector of the economy  page12
 4.5. Consumer business cooperative

5. Land no longer belongs to anyone.  page13

 5.1. Communism and property rights
 5.2. Harmful effects of the land private ownership system
 5.3. Communist land management system
 5.4. Management of natural resources

6. The Great Energy Revolution is realized.  page14

 6.1. New energy system
 6.2. Criticism of the Nuclear Renaissance
 6.3. The road to “nuclear power abolition”

Chapter 3: SKETCH OF COMMUNIST SOCIETY --  LABOR

1. People are freed from wage labor.  

 1.1. Abolition of wage labor  page15
 1.2. The structure of capitalist exploitation
 1.3. The emancipation of wage serfs  page16
 1.4. Separation of labor and consumption

2. Will labor become a duty for everyone?  page17

 2.1. Labor obligations and ethics
 2.2. Occupation allocation system
 2.3. Reduction of working hours

3. Is it possible to establish a completely voluntary working system?

 3.1. Anthropological questions  page18
 3.2. Obligation of 3D labor?
 3.3. Freedom to originate occupations
 3.4. Super-robotized society

4. Marriage gives way to notarized partnership.  page19

 4.1. Fluctuations in the model of marriage and family
 4.2. Notarized partnership system
 4.3. Solution to the population problem

5. "Gender equality" will already regarded as an old-fashioned slogan.  page20

 5.1. Factors of gender disparity
 5.2. Communism and gender

Chapter 4: SKETCH OF COMMUNIST SOCIETY --  ADMINISTRATION

1. It is possible to abolish state as a political entity.

 1.1. Lamentation of Engels  page21
 1.2. Citizens as tax serfs
 1.3. Citizens as soldier serfs
 1.4. Commons' Convention System  page22
 1.5. Sublation of sovereign states

2. Local autonomy gains its highest.  page23

 2.1. Commune autonomy as a cornerstone
 2.2. Three or four layers of local autonomy
 2.3. Framework statute and common statute

3. People achieve "true democracy."

 3.1. Awakening from "faith in election"  page24
 3.2. Lottery representative system
 3.3. Politics as a non-professional
 3.4. Breaking away from "boss politics"  page25
 3.5. Majority decision and minority decision
 3.6. Prohibition of pandering to the masses

4. The bureaucracy is truly overthrown.  page26

 4.1. Integration of legislative and administrative function
 4.2. Statutes and policy guidelines
 4.3. Initiatives
 4.4. Dismantling and conversion of bureaucracy

5. The police system will no longer be necessary.  page27

 5.1. Drastic decrease in crime
 5.2. Civil Patrol and Investigative Commission
 5.3. Traffic Safety Headquarters and Maritime Safety Headquarters 
 5.4. Special investigative agency

6. A judicial system that does not judge will appear.  page28

 6.1. Communist judicial system
 6.2. Equity Commissioner and Truth Commission
 6.3. Correction and Probation Commission
 6.4. Tribunes
 6.5. Jurisprudence committee
 6.6. Impeachment Courts

Chapter 5: SKETCH OF COMMUNIST SOCIETY --   WELFARE

1. Welfare system without any financial resources is not a utopian policy. page29

 1.1. Contradictions of the Welfare State  
 1.2. Two types of  "welfare society"
 1.3. Completely free welfare

2. Pensions and public assistance will no longer be necessary. page30

 2.1. Irrationality of the pension system
 2.2. Communist retirement life
 2.3. Social Work Council

3. People enjoy comfortable and complete care system.  page31

 3.1. Public long-term care
 3.2. Integration of nursing care and medical care
 3.3. Partnership-type retirement model

4. Universal design advances in both name and reality.  page32

 4.1. Deinstitutionalization
 4.2. Manufacturing entities mainly for people with disabilities
 4.3. Anti-discrimination and barrier-free minds

5. Environmental welfare housing will be realized.  page33

 5.1. Release from rent or loan
 5.2. Enhancement of public housing supply
 5.3. Intersection of environment and welfare

6. Efficient and equitable medical care is provided.  page34

 6.1. Community-centered medical system
 6.2. Planned allocation of doctors
 6.3. Role of Public Health Centers and Pharmacies

Chapter 6: SKETCH OF COMMUNIST SOCIETY -- EDUCATION

1. Children are raised by society.  page35

 1.1. Breaking away from parent-centrism  
 1.2. Compulsory childcare system
 1.3. Children's Group activities

2. Emphasis is placed on fostering of imagination and originality. page36

 2.1. Removal of prejudiced image
 2.2. Capitalist intellectual class system
 2.3. From knowledge capitalism to knowledge communism

3. Universities will be abolished and converted.  page37

 3.1. Universities – strongholds of the intellectual class system
 3.2. Becoming an academic research center

4. Distance learning will be the principle.  page38

 4.1. A camp called a school
 4.2. Towards dropping out of school

5. Consistent compulsory education begins.  page39

 5.1. From sieving to scooping
 5.2. Overview of the seven basic subjects
 5.3. Vocational introductory education

6. True lifelong education is guaranteed.  page40

 6.1. Reset education system
 6.2. Multi-purpose colleges and technical schools
 6.3. Advanced Professional School 
 6.4. Towards a life-reset society

Chapter 7: SKETCH OF COMMUNIST SOCIETY -- CULTURE

1. People are freed from commodity worship.  page41

 1.1. Capitalism where people are also commodities
 1.2. To the world of authenticity and content game

2. Anyone could be a writer/artist.  page42

 2.1. Censorship by the market
 2.2. Premonition of the Internet Commons
 2.3. Blooming freedom of expression

3. The mass media empire will be dismantled.  page43

 3.1. Diversification of media
 3.2. Making anyone a reporter

4. The culture of competition will decline.  page44

 4.1. Capitalist struggle for existence
 4.2. Possibility of coexistence instinct
 4.3. Competition as friendly rivalry
 4.4. Ultimate suicide prevention measures

5. To be simple is the best.  page45

 5.1. Simple social culture
 5.2. Four Simplicity
 5.3. Modern times with a human face

Chapter 8: NEW REVOLUTIONARY MOVEMENT

1. The leading actors of revolution are the common people.  page46

 1.1. Political enterprise called "revolution"
 1.2. Marxist model answer
 1.3. A difficult "proletarian revolution"
 1.4. Deconstruction of the "proletarian revolution"  page47
 1.5. Common sign "exploitation"
 1.6. Possibility of  "plebian revolution"

2. There is another way of revolution.  page48

 2.1. Revolutionary methodology
 2.2. Popular uprising
 2.3. Collective non-voting

3. Do it differently from the Communist Party.  

 3.1. Commons' Convention as a revolutionary movement  page49
 3.2. Outline of the pre-revolutionary Commons' Convention Convention   (1): World Commons' Convention
 3.3. Outline of the pre-revolutionary Commons' Convention (2):   Commons' Convention in each country
 3.4. Flexible alliance  page50
 3.5. Fusion of red and green
 3.6. Collective non-voting movement
 3.7. Counter-legislative activities
 3.8. Abstinence from becoming a political party

4. Let's start with the revolution in consciousness.  page51

 4.1. Illusion of "happiness"
 4.2. Possibility of revolution of the elederly
 4.3. Cultural transformation strategy
 4.4. Organic cultural persons

Chapter 9: THE PROCESS OF THE UNARMED REVOLUTION

1. Figure out the timing of the revolution.  page52

 1.1. Continuation of social pain
 1.2. The era of late capitalism
 1.3. The time to form the Commons' Convention

2. Set up counterpowers.  

 2.1. Pre-revolution  page53
 2.2. Implementing collective non-voting
 2.3. Abstention as a political right
 2.4. Establishing the counter-power situation
 2.5. Communist revolution against the Communist Party  page54
 2.6. Voluntary dissolution of the Communist Party? 
 2.7. Not an anti-communist revolution
 2.8. Commons' Convention as a true Soviet

3. Establish a revolutionary system.  page55

 3.1. Lift of the counter-power situation
 3.2. Transitional concentration system
 3.3. Difference from "dictatorship of the proletariat" 

4. Advance the process of the transition period.  page56

 4.1. Preparation for the transition phase process
 4.2. Drafting of the initial Charter (constitution)
 4.3. Establishment of a republican polity
 4.4. Revolutionary defense
 4.5. Economic transition plan
 4.6. Transitional administration
 4.7. Promotion of military abolition plan
 4.8. Transitional justice
 4.9. Implementation of delegate license examination
 4.10. Convening of the Constituent Commons' Convention
 4.11. Passing and enforcement of the initial Charter

5. Proceed with the economic transition plan.  page57

 5.1. Economic transition plan
 5.2. Integration of core industries
 5.3. Preparation for abolition of monetary economy
 5.4. Land revolution
 5.5. Agricultural reorganizatio
 5.6. Announcement and trial

6. Communist society begins.  page58

 6.1. Early communism
 6.2. Abolition of monetary system
 6.3. Start of planned economy
 6.4. Progress of social revolution
 6.5. Inauguration of the zonal Commons' Convention
 6.6. Abolition of government institutions
 6.7. Implementation of disarmament plan
 6.8. Establishment of the completed Charter
 6.9. From mature communism to advanced communism

Chapter 10: Towards the World Commonwealth

1. Make the "Domino Revolutions."  page59

 1.1. Marx and Engels' big words
 1.2. Geopolitics of revolution

2. Make the communist earth.  page60

 2.1. Creation of the World Commonwealth
 2.2. Basic structure of the World Commonwealth
 2.3. Global planned economy
 2.4. The universality of communism

3. Deconstruct the United Nations.  

 3.1. The human-historical experience of the United Nations  page61
 3.2. A community of humanity
 3.3. Five grand zones
 3.4. Management focused on the southern hemispher
 3.5. Discussion of world official languages
 3.6. Non-bureaucratic management  page62
 3.7. Promotion of economic integration
 3.8. Strengthening the human rights protection sector
 3.9. Improvement of Earth observation system
 3.10. Renunciation of war on a global scale

4. Permanent peace is established.  page63

 4.1. Abolition of armaments
 4.2. Judicial resolution and conflict mediation/peacemaking
 4.3. The Peacekeeping Patrol and the Aerospace Guard
 4.4. Breaking away from the munitions economy 

EPILOGUE  page64

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Esperanto PREFACE     page1   Chapter 1: LIMITATIONS OF CAPITALISM 1. Capitalism has not won the game.  1.1. Meaning of the dissolution of t...