Dear Dan,
South
Africa is looking at a paradigm shift away from state ‘delivery’ of services,
with considerable local elite corruption through supply-side dominant party patronage
to financing citizens as ‘actors’ through registered community bodies. These
act as partners of the state, providing equal ownership of joint assets and
equal rights to ‘use rights’ and to dividends.
The model
is explained in the paper attached.
Yours
truly, Norman Reynolds
-----Original
Message-----
From:
owner-monetaryreform@cog.kent.edu [mailto:owner-monetaryreform@cog.kent.edu]On Behalf Of Eric Encina
Sent: 06 April 2006 01:25 AM
To: dbell@kent.edu
Cc: Monetary Reform
Subject: Fwd: MONETARY: Philippine
E-VAT 12% must be scrapped
Hello Dan,
Well,
I think, this is an opportunity to dwell on other issues contained on that
letter whether it is from Mr. Art Bell or from a hoaxer. What could be done to
save women from prostitution under the present financial-economic system?
Genuine Monetary reformers, social crediters, activist for economic
justice and alternatives and other concerned citizens might have genuine
concern to liberate our women from the clutches of prostitution or pornography
as a result of the harsh and savage cruelty of economic injustice debt money
system.
Since
1991, I have been proposing "the salary for the mother at home" or a
remuneration for the women at home" to ensure economic security to them to
raise and look after children without being pressured to work outside because
of the lack of money and poverty. But the Philippine government is not
interested to my proposal. It is only interested to borrow money to
global mega-bankers and collect taxes like such 12% newly
implemented Expanded Value Added tax to pay interest to global bankers.
Thank
you for reading and for your comments.
Sincerely
yours,
Eric
V. Encina
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