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Re: MONETARY: Social Credit co-operation with others.



Dear Monetary Group members,
Below is a private email to me from Mark Reiners which I now post to
Monetary with Mark's permission.
Rodney Shakespeare.

-------------------------------
Hello Rodney:

You make some statements in this COG submission from Friday of considerable
interest for further specification.  Specifically:

"However, it (a key Social Credit proposal) is only PART of the overall
counter-inflationary proposal and is dependent upon certain other conditions
being met.

So I'm saying that, if Social Credit is prepared to co-operate with others,
it could achieve a large part of its goals (and even all of them)."


It would be useful to me to know whether your Seven Steps book specifically
addresses the ways in which this "is dependent upon certain other conditions
being met" so that I can assign priority to where I place the reading of
Seven Steps in my rather imposing reading agenda.  If not, will you be
planning to flesh out these key, specific dependencies in COG in the
immediate future?

Let me also mention something that I wish I had mentioned to you long ago as
you may have seen fit to also include this in some fashion within The Seven
Steps as, I noted with interest, you made footnote mention of the MEG.
There is a Professer Terry Collins at Carneige Mellon University who heads a
Dept. working on what is called "Green Chemistry"; a discipline at the
interface of pure chemistry and materials science.  They are working to
develop both materials and industrial processes that will allow for the
creation of materials subject to completely environmentally benign
dissolution at the time of product expiration and the processes able to
effect such dissolution of the expired products back into benign components
at time of recycling.  Their website is at:

http://www.chem.cmu.edu/groups/Collins/index.html

Needless to say, this area of R&D is highly relevant in the context of a
vastly more productive national/global economy such as would be unleashed
under pervasive implementation of a Binary System.  Another example of why
I'm so convinced that "we ain't seen noth'n yet".

MARK