An Overview of A People First Society

What is a People First Society?

A People First Society is one where people, community, and the environment come before money and profit.

It’s about making sure everyone has what they need to live well — and that everyone can contribute to the wellbeing of the whole.

Why does this matter?

Because too many people today are:

  • struggling to afford the basics
  • stressed, insecure, or isolated
  • working hard but still falling behind
  • disconnected from their community
  • living in systems that don’t put them first

A People First Society changes that.

What does this philosophy believe about people?

It starts with a simple truth:
People do best when they feel secure, trusted, and valued.

Most people want to:

  • help
  • contribute
  • belong
  • make a difference

When life isn’t a constant struggle, people naturally step up.

What is the Basic Living Standard?

It’s a guarantee that everyone can afford the essentials of life — food, housing, transport, clothing, communication, and social participation — from a normal week’s work.

No debt.
No welfare dependency.
No fear of falling through the cracks.

Just a fair foundation for everyone.

What is LEGS?

LEGS stands for the Local Economy & Governance System.
It’s a practical way of running communities so that decisions are made locally, transparently, and with everyone involved.

LEGS focuses on:

  • local food
  • local services
  • local decision‑making
  • local businesses that serve the community
  • local resilience and sustainability

It’s about bringing life back to the local level.

What is The Revaluation?

The Revaluation is the shift from seeing life through the lens of money to seeing it through the lens of people.

It’s a change in mindset:

  • from scarcity to security
  • from competition to contribution
  • from hierarchy to participation
  • from profit to wellbeing

It’s the moment we realise life can be organised differently – and better.

Is this anti‑business?

No.
It supports businesses that:

  • meet real needs
  • treat people fairly
  • protect the environment
  • strengthen the community

It only challenges businesses that exploit people or extract wealth without giving anything back.

Why is local decision‑making so important?

Because people understand their own community better than distant institutions do.

Local decision‑making means:

  • more accountability
  • more transparency
  • quicker solutions
  • stronger communities
  • decisions that actually make sense

It brings power back to the people it affects.

What does this philosophy say about the environment?

The environment isn’t a resource to use up – it’s the foundation of life.
A People First Society protects and regenerates the land, water, and ecosystems we depend on.

Healthy communities need a healthy environment.

What does “freedom” mean in a People First Society?

Freedom means being able to live without fear, contribute without pressure, and participate without barriers.

Real freedom requires:

  • security
  • dignity
  • opportunity
  • community
  • a healthy environment

Freedom is something we build together.

What’s the goal of all this?

To create a society where:

  • everyone has what they need
  • no one is left behind
  • communities are strong and resilient
  • people can contribute meaningfully
  • the environment is protected
  • life feels fair, connected, and human again

A People First Society is simply a society that works – for everyone.

Want to learn more?

This leaflet is a short introduction.

If you’d like a deeper explanation, more materials, or help sharing this philosophy in your community, just ask.

Further Reading:

  1. The Local Economy & Governance System (LEGS) – Online Text
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/11/21/the-local-economy-governance-system-online-text/
  2. The Basic Living Standard Explained
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/10/24/the-basic-living-standard-explained/
  3. The Basic Living Standard: Freedom to Think, Freedom to Do, Freedom to Be – With Personal Sovereignty That Brings Peace to All
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/12/15/the-basic-living-standard-freedom-to-think-freedom-to-do-freedom-to-be-with-personal-sovereignty-that-brings-peace-to-all/
  4. From Principle to Practice: Bringing the Local Economy & Governance System to Life (Full Text)
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/12/27/from-principle-to-practice-bringing-the-local-economy-governance-system-to-life-full-text/
  5. Visit the LEGS Ecosystem
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/12/31/visit-the-legs-ecosystem/

A Deep‑Dive Guide to The Philosophy of a People First Society

1. How does this philosophy redefine the concept of “human nature”?

Traditional economic and political systems assume humans are primarily self‑interested, competitive, and motivated by scarcity.

This philosophy rejects that framing as a structural artefact, not a biological truth.

It argues that what we call “human nature” is largely a reflection of the systems we live within.

Change the environment → change the behaviour → change the outcomes.

In this view, human nature is:

  • relational
  • adaptive
  • cooperative under conditions of security
  • meaning‑seeking
  • contribution‑driven

This is a foundational departure from neoliberal and classical economic assumptions.

2. Why is security considered the precondition for contribution?

Because fear distorts behaviour.

A person in survival mode cannot:

  • think long‑term
  • act ethically
  • participate meaningfully
  • contribute creatively
  • engage in community life

The Basic Living Standard is therefore not a welfare mechanism – it is a psychological and structural prerequisite for a functioning society.

Security → stability → contribution → community → resilience.

3. How does this philosophy reinterpret the purpose of work?

Work is not a commodity.

Work is not a transaction.

Work is not a mechanism for survival.

Work is participation in the life of the community.

This reframing dissolves the coercive relationship between employer and employee and replaces it with a contribution‑based model where:

  • people work because they are part of a community
  • work is meaningful
  • contribution is voluntary but natural
  • survival is not conditional on employment

This is a profound shift from the industrial and neoliberal worldview.

4. Why is locality the “natural scale” of human systems?

Because human beings evolved in small, relational groups where:

  • accountability was direct
  • decisions were transparent
  • consequences were visible
  • relationships were personal

Large, centralised systems create:

  • abstraction
  • detachment
  • bureaucratic distance
  • moral disengagement
  • power concentration

Locality restores the natural feedback loops that keep systems ethical and functional.

5. How does this philosophy challenge the concept of economic growth?

It argues that growth is not a measure of wellbeing – it is a measure of throughput.

GDP increases when:

  • people get sick
  • disasters occur
  • housing becomes unaffordable
  • debt expands
  • consumption accelerates

Growth is therefore not neutral – it rewards harm.

A People First Society replaces growth with:

  • resilience
  • sufficiency
  • regeneration
  • wellbeing
  • contribution
  • community health

This is a paradigm shift from extractive economics to human‑centred economics.

6. What is the philosophical justification for limiting property ownership?

Property accumulation creates power accumulation.

Power accumulation creates inequality.

Inequality creates dependency and coercion.

The philosophy argues that no person has the moral right to own more than they can use, because unused property becomes a mechanism of control over others.

Housing is therefore a right, not a commodity.

This is not ideological – it is structural ethics.

7. How does this philosophy understand value?

Value is not price.

Value is not profit.

Value is not scarcity.

Value is defined as:

anything that improves the wellbeing, freedom, dignity, or resilience of people, communities, or the environment.

This reframing collapses the entire logic of the money‑centric worldview.

8. Why does the philosophy reject interest, speculation, and financialisation?

Because they allow people to accumulate wealth without contributing anything of value.

Interest and speculation:

  • extract value without creating it
  • distort prices
  • create artificial scarcity
  • concentrate power
  • destabilise communities
  • reward non‑contribution

A People First Society requires that value only flows from contribution, not from ownership or manipulation.

9. How does this philosophy view governance?

Governance is not authority.
Governance is not hierarchy.
Governance is not control.

Governance is collective decision‑making about shared life.

The Circumpunct model reflects this:

  • no permanent power
  • no hierarchy
  • no distance between decision and consequence
  • leadership as service, not status
  • transparency as a moral requirement

This is governance as participation, not governance as rule.

10. What role does The Revaluation play in the transition?

The Revaluation is the psychological and cultural pivot that makes systemic change possible.

It is the moment when people collectively realise:

  • money is not value
  • growth is not progress
  • employment is not contribution
  • hierarchy is not leadership
  • centralisation is not stability
  • scarcity is not natural
  • competition is not inevitable

Without this shift, LEGS would be resisted.

With it, LEGS becomes the obvious next step.

11. How does this philosophy address the problem of power?

By dissolving the mechanisms that create it:

  • property accumulation
  • financial accumulation
  • hierarchical governance
  • centralised decision‑making
  • opaque systems
  • dependency structures

Power is not redistributed – it is deconstructed.

The system is designed so that no individual or organisation can accumulate disproportionate influence.

12. Is this philosophy compatible with modern technology and AI?

Yes – but only under strict conditions:

  • technology must serve human agency
  • AI must never replace essential human roles
  • systems must remain understandable at the human scale
  • digital tools must have non‑digital alternatives
  • local communities must retain control

Technology is a tool, not a trajectory.

13. How does this philosophy define freedom?

Freedom is not the absence of rules.

Freedom is not consumer choice.

Freedom is not individualism.

Freedom is:

the ability to live without fear, contribute without coercion, and participate without exclusion.

This requires:

  • security
  • dignity
  • community
  • transparency
  • meaningful work
  • environmental stability

Freedom is therefore a collective achievement, not an individual possession.

14. What is the ultimate purpose of a People First Society?

To create the conditions in which:

  • every person can live a good life
  • every community can be resilient
  • every environment can regenerate
  • every individual can contribute meaningfully
  • no one is left behind
  • no one is exploited
  • no one is coerced into survival

This is the philosophical north star.

15. What is the biggest misconception about this philosophy?

That it is idealistic.

In reality, the current system is the idealistic one – it assumes:

  • infinite growth
  • infinite resources
  • infinite stability
  • infinite human tolerance for inequality

This philosophy is grounded in lived reality, human psychology, ecological limits, and community logic.

It is not utopian.

It is necessary.

Further Reading:

This “Further Reading” section offers a set of resources that will deepen your understanding of the Local Economy & Governance System (LEGS), the Basic Living Standard, and the broader philosophy of a people-first society.

Each link explores a different facet of the philosophy, from practical implementation to foundational principles. Engaging with these readings will provide you with richer context, practical examples, and a more nuanced grasp of the ideas behind LEGS.

Whether you are new to these concepts or seeking to apply them, these resources will help you connect theory to practice and inspire new ways of thinking about community, governance, and human flourishing.

Ordered List of Further Reading

  1. The Local Economy & Governance System (LEGS) – Online Text
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/11/21/the-local-economy-governance-system-online-text/

Summary:

This foundational text introduces the LEGS framework in detail, explaining how local economies and governance can be structured to prioritise human dignity, participation, and sustainability. It’s ideal for readers seeking a comprehensive overview of the system’s mechanics and philosophical underpinnings.

Benefit:

Start here for a solid grounding in the core ideas and practical structure of LEGS.

  1. The Basic Living Standard Explained
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/10/24/the-basic-living-standard-explained/

Summary:

This article breaks down the concept of the Basic Living Standard, clarifying what it means in practice and why it is central to a people-first society. It addresses common questions and misconceptions, making it accessible for those new to the idea.

Benefit:

Read this to understand the practical implications and necessity of guaranteeing basic security for all.

  1. The Basic Living Standard: Freedom to Think, Freedom to Do, Freedom to Be – With Personal Sovereignty That Brings Peace to All
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/12/15/the-basic-living-standard-freedom-to-think-freedom-to-do-freedom-to-be-with-personal-sovereignty-that-brings-peace-to-all/

Summary:

This piece explores the philosophical and ethical dimensions of the Basic Living Standard, linking it to personal sovereignty and collective peace. It’s a reflective essay that connects individual freedom with societal wellbeing.

Benefit:

Recommended for readers interested in the deeper values and ethical commitments behind the LEGS philosophy.

  1. From Principle to Practice: Bringing the Local Economy & Governance System to Life (Full Text)
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/12/27/from-principle-to-practice-bringing-the-local-economy-governance-system-to-life-full-text/

Summary:

This resource provides practical guidance and real-world examples of how to implement the LEGS philosophy. It bridges the gap between theory and action, offering insights for communities and individuals ready to make change.

Benefit:

Essential for those looking to move from understanding to action, with concrete steps and inspiration for local transformation.

  1. Visit the LEGS Ecosystem
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/12/31/visit-the-legs-ecosystem/

Summary:

This link offers an overview of the broader LEGS ecosystem, showcasing projects, communities, and ongoing initiatives. It’s a gateway to seeing the philosophy in action and connecting with others on the same journey.

Benefit:

Explore this to find community, resources, and inspiration for your own involvement in the LEGS movement.

Life for the Many, or Money for the Few?

A common reaction to this question is, “how about more money for everyone?”

And that response alone should already be telling us something important about what we all need to recognise.

A Grim Outlook as 2026 Begins

As we roll into 2026, it’s difficult to picture anyone feeling genuinely happy or hopeful about the year ahead. Few would disagree that the road in front of us looks bleak.

That feeling alone would be reason enough for concern. But when we look ahead from the wide range of perspectives, backgrounds and political standpoints that even the quietest or least informed among us hold, very few believe there is an obvious solution that will make life feel good again in the months and years to come.

The only exception might be those who believe that gaining power for themselves will somehow deliver positive change for everyone – simply because they assume their own improved circumstances would be mirrored across society.

What We’re Told… and What We’re Not

Through the lens of the mainstream media (including many who insist they are anything but), the picture is stark.

Tax rises from every direction. Food prices climbing while we’re told inflation is falling. Thousands crossing the Channel seeking a better life that the state can no longer afford to provide. Digital ID policies creeping in through every possible back door. A government full of incompetents who barely bother to hide their ambitions for power. And now, even they openly appear to admit – just as the recently ousted Tories have done so – that civil servants don’t listen to them anyway.

Then there’s what isn’t being discussed openly, yet sits in plain sight the moment you look behind the sofa and chairs of this same living room.

The price of silver has surged. The current US administration’s approach to global policy resembles an economic war on everyone else. Iran may be on the verge of a revolution that many elsewhere may soon find themselves wishing for. And behind all of this lies the deeper reality: the harm caused by the West’s obsession with a money‑centric system that ignores the human cost, and the understandable desire of the rest of the world to have their own moment – once the West falls and they believe their time has come.

Hope in the Wrong Places

Yes, there is hope. But for most people, that hope is pinned on the idea that the same system and the same tools that brought us here will somehow save us – just as long as they are placed in different hands.

And this is where the dose of reality must come in.

Why Changing Politicians Won’t Change the System

There is a hard truth that many people are still trying to avoid: changing the politicians will not change the system.

Even the newest parties, even the ones that claim to be different, even the ones people are now pinning their hopes on – such as Reform – are still trying to work with the same broken tools.

They are still operating within a framework built around money, competition, corruption, centralisation and control. And no matter how sincere their intentions, no matter how fresh their faces, they cannot escape the reality that a system designed around money will always produce outcomes that serve money first.

Even if a party like Reform managed to sort out its recruitment problems, its leadership problems, its internal contradictions – it would still be trapped. Because the problem isn’t the personnel. It’s the operating system they are all trying to ‘win’ within.

And you cannot fix a failing operating system by installing new users.

You have to replace the system itself.

Money Can No Longer Solve the Problems Money Created

Because money – and more specifically the value of money – sits at the heart of everything we say, think and do, it feels natural to assume that money is also where the solutions lie.

Be honest with yourself, as so many now need to be: if you simply had more money -enough to pay for everything you want as well as everything you need – you believe that you’d feel happier about life, and it wouldn’t matter who was in charge, would it?

That’s how it feels to many of us. The solution appears simple, the outcomes easy to imagine. And that is precisely why we have become addicted to an unsustainable way of living that destroys everyone and everything to make a very small number of people very wealthy, while pushing aside everything that once held real value to humankind.

Money – and this money‑centric system of Moneyocracy – is responsible for almost every practical problem the world faces. Yet our so‑called leaders and elites, obsessed with it, continue trying to use it to create solutions when solutions that help all of us no longer exist within that framework.

The Illusion of Progress

As long as the system continues to function, we will still be able to earn, borrow or obtain more money. But because the deck is stacked and the flow of money is rigged, the numbers may rise while the value stays the same – or more likely, falls.

This paradox allows politicians to use doublespeak and gaslighting to convince us that things are, or will be better than ever.

In monetary terms – figures on a page – there will always be a way to manipulate statistics or analysis to argue that point with a straight face. But a system that can only succeed by impoverishing the many to benefit the few can only ever produce outcomes measured in money.

The real, non‑financial cost to humanity is beyond calculation, and it is spiralling out of control.

Everything about humanity and the human experience has been trashed so that money can rule, and those who benefit from the system can consolidate their control and keep making more.

A System That Has Reached Its End

The problem is that there is no “more” left for them to make. They already own everything that once had real value.

Now they are using that ownership to box everyone else into a corner through laws and regulations crafted for this very purpose – laws created by usefulidiot politicians like too many of those we have today, replacing the protections that once existed to prevent exactly this kind of tyranny being inflicted upon us, as they are now under the Moneyocracy.

This is not happiness.

Lack is not happiness.

Always feeling pressure to better ourselves is not happiness.

Mental health crises are not happiness.

Joblessness is not happiness.

Division is not happiness.

Financial servitude is not happiness.

Poverty is not happiness.

Yet we are expected to believe these things don’t matter – so long as we aren’t experiencing them personally.

What LEGS and BLS Offer That the Old System Never Can

This is where the Basic Living Standard and the Local Economy & Governance System stand apart.

They are not about swapping one set of politicians for another. They are not about trying to make a money‑centric system behave like a people‑centric one.

They are about building a foundation where people, community and environment come first – not as slogans, but as the structural basis of how life works.

LEGS and BLS don’t pretend that everyone is the same.

They make everyone the same in the only way that matters:

by ensuring that every person has the freedom, resources and security to meet their needs without fear, without servitude, and without dependence on the whims of markets or the ambitions of politicians.

This is personal sovereignty in the truest sense. Not the fantasy version sold by the money centric system. But the lived reality of having enough to live, enough to contribute, and enough to participate fully in the decisions that shape your community.

It is a contribution culture rather than a consumption culture.

A participatory democracy rather than a spectator democracy.

A system where value is measured in human terms, not monetary ones.

A Kind of Freedom Nobody Alive Today Has Truly Experienced

Because this system puts people first, not money, it offers something that almost nobody alive today has ever naturally experienced:

the feeling of being free simply because your needs are met, your community is strong, and your life is not defined by debt, scarcity or competition.

Most of us have only ever had a false version of that feeling – a temporary illusion created by credit, convenience or consumption.

But real freedom, the kind that comes from security, dignity and shared purpose, is something entirely different. And it is only possible when the foundations of society are built around people rather than profit.

We Still Have a Choice

The truth beneath all of this is that we do have a choice.

None of this would have been possible without generations of us blindly going along with it and playing our part.

We have already chosen money – and money as we know it is coming to its end.

If we do not choose life instead, life in any sense that has meaning will end with it.

***

Further Reading: Expanding the Conversation

The challenges outlined above – rising inequality, political stagnation, and the dominance of a money-centric system – are not isolated issues. They are deeply interconnected, shaping every aspect of our lives and the choices available to us.

To truly understand the roots of these problems and explore meaningful alternatives, it’s essential to look beyond headlines and political soundbites, and engage with broader perspectives and deeper analysis.

The following selection of articles and essays offers a structured journey through the wider context: from the origins and consequences of our current system, through the political and social dynamics that sustain it, to the human cost and the possibilities for genuine change.

Each piece is accompanied by a short summary to help you navigate the themes and insights they provide.

Whether you’re seeking to understand how we arrived at this crossroads or looking for practical ideas to help build a better future, these readings will help illuminate the path ahead.

1. Understanding the Core Problem: The Money-Centric System

2. The Consequences: Collapse, Exploitation, and Social Harm

3. Political Dynamics and the Illusion of Change

4. The Human and Social Cost

5. Alternatives and Solutions: Building a People-Centric Future

Visit The LEGS ecosystem

So here we are, New Year’s Eve, and as I sit here with not much more than 12 hours of 2025 left, my thoughts – like those of many others – are reflecting on the past year and what may lie ahead.

2025 has been a busy writing year for me, and an important one. It feels as though the real purpose behind a four‑year journey of writing, researching, studying and creating has finally taken shape in The Local Economy & Governance System, which I published in November, and in the refined or distilled version of The Basic Living Standard, which I published about a month earlier.

As I discussed in the story that gives meaning and depth to the journey that brought me here – Safe Shores, published just a day or two ago – the compulsion I first felt in early 2022 to share an honest view of what is really going on, how we got here, what lies ahead, and what we truly need to consider, first became the book Levelling Level.

At that point, nothing suggested that a whole series of standalone works would follow, each offering perspectives that wouldn’t begin to reveal their practical interconnectedness until I was already several titles in.

In the future, it may be appropriate to bring all of these works together in one or more books that will make more sense for those looking solely for reference material. However, that time isn’t now.

I feel sure of this because I understand that the different efforts and approaches I used to cover the varied but equally important perspectives needed for genuine change are best left as they are – for now. As they each feed into The Local Economy & Governance System from different directions, meeting people where they currently are.

Nonetheless, as we stare at the imminency of 2026 – with what I suspect will be a shared sense that the year ahead is unlikely to resemble anything anyone alive today has ever experienced – I feel it is time to put the list of all the key books, blogs and papers that have effectively created the “LEGS ecosystem” in one place.

This is for those of you already stepping into this room with the understanding that nothing we know can continue as it is.

You will be able to explore the different angles and perspectives I have shared so far -those I believe will be most valuable if you truly want to make sense of what change needs to be, why it must take that form, what we must consider and allow for along the way, and what a new culture of community leaders and community members will need to do once they have made sense of it all.

It is important to reiterate that while different elements of this portfolio may sound like solutions or methods that could be applied within the money‑centric system that is now collapsing, the reality is that I had always hoped the political class and establishment leaders we have would experience a lucid moment and suddenly find a set of gears they never realised they had.

Regrettably, I no longer see that as possible. The process of discovery and thought I have been on has made clear that every part of life currently points the wrong way –towards money as the priority in every sense – and that nobody who believes in, or benefits from, the systems that feed this will relinquish that belief until circumstances outside the control of the collapsing system intervene and force their hand.

The politicians we have – even those so many are placing their hopes upon – are not and cannot be the saviours that the disillusioned and angry would like them to be. They simply want to take over as the drivers of a train that can only go in the same direction.

In their current roles, and in the roles they hope to attain, they cannot be anything other than managers with an ever‑dwindling set of responsibilities – because that is how the recusers of this same system have successfully set up anyone subservient to this political model to be.

Yes, there may be some genuine leaders in politics today who have a part to play. But the difference between the end of the Moneyocracy and the centralised, hierarchical, top‑down, patriarchal system we must leave behind is that the people who lead our communities politically in the future will do so through natural disposition, respect and merit from the community itself. Not simply because someone none of us will ever know rubber‑stamped their ascent after they said and did all the right things.

There are tough times ahead. But they can be navigated and overcome if we remember who we really are, and what our relationships with other people, our communities and the environment around us should be.

It sounds simple when put like that, I know. But the work that follows in the lists below will show that it is anything but simple – until the moment when the truth of all this makes sense. Then the need to change the direction and thinking behind everything becomes clear, and you begin to believe.

I hope you find this resource useful, and that if you have genuine questions or an interest in building on the words and ideas I have shared, you will get in touch and step toward the opportunity of a great future that begins where the conversation begins.

Thank you for reading, and thank you for your support.

Adam Tugwell

Cheltenham, UK

New Years Eve, 2025

The LEGS ecosystem Portfolio

The collection that follows represents the full body of work that has grown around the Local Economy & Governance System – the LEGS ecosystem.

Each piece was written at a different stage of the journey, often without knowing what would come next, yet all of them now sit together as part of a single, evolving picture.

Some began as blogs written in the moment, some became online versions of the books, and others developed into the published editions now available on Amazon.

This portfolio isn’t intended to be read in a particular order or treated as a linear argument. Instead, it offers a set of perspectives, explanations, warnings and practical ideas that together help make sense of where we are, how we got here, and what genuine change will require.

Whether you dip into one or explore them all, each contributes something different to the understanding of the system we must leave behind and the one we must build.

What you’ll find below is simply a clear way to access it all: the blogs, the online texts, and the links to the books themselves.

If you’re ready to explore the thinking behind the LEGS ecosystem in more depth, this is where that exploration begins.

Foundational Concepts & Philosophy (Books)

1. The Basic Living Standard: Introducing Locality Based Economics and how we can achieve financial freedom for ALL
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0CTHS8137
Explains the concept of a basic living standard, advocating for local economies that empower everyone to achieve financial freedom. It introduces foundational ideas for a fairer, people-centric economic system.

2. Levelling Level: Using the impact and lessons of everything in crisis to change the UK for the better and create a benchmark standard for a balanced and fair way of life that will benefit us all
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B09WYVV9H8
Reflects on crises and their lessons, proposing a new benchmark for a balanced, fair society. It sets the stage for systemic change by examining what needs to be improved in the UK.

3. Safe Shores: The Pathway That Led to The Local Economy & Governance System and the Basic Living Standard
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0GD12BN5P
Shares the personal journey and motivations behind the creation of the LEGS ecosystem and the Basic Living Standard, providing context for the development of these ideas.

Core System & Practice

4. The Local Economy & Governance System: Act Now to build Fair Sustainable Communities Together
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0G34VX1LQ
Presents the core framework of the LEGS ecosystem, detailing how communities can act collectively to build fair, sustainable local economies and governance structures.

5. From Principle To Practice: Bringing the Local Economy & Governance System to Life
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0GCG1D4HG
Focuses on practical steps for implementing the LEGS system, translating its principles into actionable strategies for communities.

6. The Contribution Culture: Transforming Work, Business and Governance for Our Local Future with The Local Economy & Governance System
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0GD7VHYR1
Explores how work, business, and governance can be transformed through a culture of contribution, aligning with the LEGS philosophy for local futures.

Practical Applications & Sector Focus

7. Foods We Can Trust: A Blueprint for Food Security and Community Resilience in the UK
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0G6T5RRMR
Addresses food security and community resilience, offering solutions for trustworthy food systems within the UK’s local economies.

8. Who controls Our Food controls Our Future: Why Farming is collapsing, Food Security is disappearing, and Myths convince Consumers that no problem exists
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0DN17THTK
Examines the collapse of farming and food security, challenging myths and highlighting the importance of local control over food systems.

9. One Rule Changes Everything: Solving Society’s problems using our relationship with money, values and people to create a solution that lasts
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0CQKFW4DV
Proposes a transformative rule for society, focusing on the interplay between money, values, and people to create lasting solutions.

Societal Change & Governance

10. The Way of Awakened Politics for Good Government
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0BNYZQT95
Discusses the need for a new approach to politics and governance, advocating for awakened, community-driven leadership.

11. The Grassroots Manifesto: Establishing Policy & Governance for a post-Reset Democracy, putting People and Communities First
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0C2ZL3HZ5
Outlines policies and governance models for a post-reset democracy, emphasizing grassroots involvement and prioritizing people and communities.

12. Officially NONE OF THE ABOVE: 10 Steps to Vote NONE OF THE ABOVE and make every Vote count too
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0C5RN8BGQ
Provides a guide for political engagement, encouraging readers to make their votes count by considering alternatives to traditional choices.

13. An Economy for the Common Good: Building, enabling and maintaining good governance, self-sufficiency and freedom for all people and our communities
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0DXPQNJ28
Describes how to build and sustain an economy focused on the common good, self-sufficiency, and freedom for all.

Personal & Community Transformation

14. A Community Route: How we work together to fix the societal issues that are hurting everyone
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0BZW8JMH1
Explores collaborative approaches to solving societal problems, emphasizing community action and shared responsibility.

15. Our Local Future: People, Community, Environment and what Our shared tomorrow may look like when We leave today’s selfish Moneyocracy behind
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0DDKZC7P1
Imagines a future shaped by local values, community, and environmental stewardship, moving beyond a money-centric society.

16. Your Beliefs Today create Everyone’s Experiences Tomorrow: The Timelines we are on today, the Diversity of their Outcomes and the impact of Thinking Differently for Our Future
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0DSSY84ST
Examines how current beliefs shape future experiences, encouraging readers to think differently for better outcomes.

17. The Choice – A Waking Up Story: It may be false. It could be true. But one way or another this is a story for our time and somewhere it will probably include you
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0FJ2Y5Y92
Offers a narrative exploring personal and societal awakening, prompting reflection on individual roles in shaping the future.

18. From Here to There Through Now
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0BGSHSSDX
Focuses on navigating change and transition, guiding readers through the process of moving from current realities to desired futures.

19. Is Poverty invisible to those who don’t experience it?
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0D674762T
Investigates the realities of poverty, challenging perceptions and highlighting the need for greater awareness and action.

20. Actions Speak Louder than Digital Words: Living with & making sense of AI
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0C7L7PYRV
Discusses the impact of artificial intelligence on society, emphasizing the importance of meaningful action in a digital age.

Online Books: Titles, Links, and Summaries

Already Described in Kindle Section

The following online books correspond to Kindle editions already summarized above. For their descriptions, please refer to the previous list:

Unique Online Blogs (Titles, Links, and Summaries)

  1. A Reader’s Companion to From Principle To Practice
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/12/25/a-readers-companion-to-from-principle-to-practice-bringing-the-local-economy-governance-system-to-life/
    A supplementary guide to “From Principle To Practice,” offering commentary, clarifications, and additional insights for deeper understanding.
  2. The Basic Living Standard: Freedom to Think, Freedom to Do, Freedom to Be – with Personal Sovereignty that Brings Peace to All
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/12/15/the-basic-living-standard-freedom-to-think-freedom-to-do-freedom-to-be-with-personal-sovereignty-that-brings-peace-to-all/
    Explores the philosophical and practical dimensions of the Basic Living Standard, focusing on personal sovereignty and the freedoms necessary for a peaceful, equitable society.
  3. Understanding Foods We Can Trust: A Blueprint for Food Security and Community Resilience in the UK
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/12/15/understanding-foods-we-can-trust-a-blueprint-for-food-security-and-community-resilience-in-the-uk/
    Provides an accessible explanation of the key ideas in “Foods We Can Trust,” making the blueprint for food security and resilience understandable for a broad audience.
  4. The Future of Work: Redefining Value, Meaning and Human-Centric Employment in the Age of AI and Economic Change
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/12/08/the-future-of-work-redefining-value-meaning-and-human-centric-employment-in-the-age-of-ai-and-economic-change/
    Examines how work and employment must evolve in response to AI and economic transformation, emphasizing human-centric values and meaningful contribution.
  5. Power and Distance: Why UK Politics Fails the Public and How Local Governance Can Restore Trust
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/12/06/power-and-distance-why-uk-politics-fails-the-public-and-how-local-governance-can-restore-trust/
    Analyzes the disconnect between UK politics and the public, and proposes how local governance reforms can rebuild trust and accountability.
  6. The Local Economy & Governance System (LEGS): Escaping the AI Takeover and Building a Human Future
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/12/04/the-local-economy-governance-system-legs-escaping-the-ai-takeover-and-building-a-human-future/
    Discusses the risks of unchecked AI in economic systems and presents the LEGS model as a way to ensure a human-centered future.
  7. The Role of Barter and Exchange in the Local Economy & Governance System
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/12/03/the-role-of-barter-and-exchange-in-the-local-economy-governance-system/
    Explores alternative economic mechanisms such as barter and exchange, and their place within the LEGS framework.
  8. The Basic Living Standard: How & Why It Works
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/12/01/the-basic-living-standard-how-why-it-works/
    A practical explanation of the mechanisms and rationale behind the Basic Living Standard, aimed at demystifying its implementation.
  9. LEGS: The Human Economy – A Blueprint for Transformation
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/12/01/legs-the-human-economy-a-blueprint-for-transformation/
    Presents a transformative blueprint for shifting from a money-centric to a human-centric economy using the LEGS principles.
  10. Understanding Who Controls Our Food Controls Our Future: Everything You Need to Know
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/11/23/understanding-who-controls-our-food-controls-our-future-everything-you-need-to-know/
    Breaks down the arguments and evidence from “Who Controls Our Food Controls Our Future,” making the case for local food sovereignty.
  11. The Local Economy & Governance System Policy Summary
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/11/22/the-local-economy-governance-system-policy-summary/
    A concise summary of the key policies and recommendations within the LEGS framework.
  12. The Basic Living Standard: Not a Fix for a Collapsing Money-Centric System but the People-Centric Foundation of a New One
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/11/16/the-basic-living-standard-not-a-fix-for-a-collapsing-money-centric-system-but-the-people-centric-foundation-of-a-new-one/
    Clarifies the Basic Living Standard’s role as a foundation for a new, people-centric system, rather than a patch for the old money-centric model.
  13. Technology and Artificial Intelligence Should Only Fill Jobs When No Humans Are Available
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/11/13/technology-and-artificial-intelligence-should-only-fill-jobs-when-no-humans-are-available/
    Argues for a cautious approach to AI in the workforce, prioritizing human employment and dignity.
  14. After the Collapse: Who Gets the Blame?
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/11/12/after-the-collapse-who-gets-the-blame/
    Reflects on accountability and responsibility in the aftermath of systemic collapse.
  15. Breaking the Money Myth: Rethinking Value, Exchange and Equality
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/11/12/breaking-the-money-myth-rethinking-value-exchange-and-equality/
    Challenges conventional beliefs about money, value, and equality, and suggests new paradigms for exchange.
  16. The Coming Collapse and the Revaluation of Everything Needed to Regain Personal Freedom and Control
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/11/12/the-coming-collapse-and-the-revaluation-of-everything-needed-to-regain-personal-freedom-and-control/
    Examines the societal shifts required to restore personal freedom and control in the face of systemic collapse.
  17. Government is Broken: Collapse Now or Collapse Later
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/11/05/government-is-broken-collapse-now-or-collapse-later/
    A critical look at the failures of government and the inevitability of systemic change.
  18. Why People Can’t Just Get a Job
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/11/04/why-people-cant-just-get-a-job/
    Explores the structural barriers to employment and the inadequacy of simplistic solutions.
  19. The Basic Living Standard Explained
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/10/24/the-basic-living-standard-explained/
    Provides a straightforward explanation of the Basic Living Standard for newcomers.
  20. Beliefs We Accept as Our Own Are Destroying Everything – Including Who We Really Are
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/09/16/beliefs-we-accept-as-our-own-are-destroying-everything-including-who-we-really-are/
    Investigates how internalized beliefs shape society and individual well-being.
  21. Neither This Government Nor the Next Can or Will Stop the Coming Collapse – and That’s When You May Well End Up Owning Nothing and Be Forced to Be Happy About It
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/09/05/neither-this-government-nor-the-next-can-or-will-stop-the-coming-collapse-and-thats-when-you-may-well-end-up-owning-nothing-and-be-forced-to-be-happy-about-it/
    Warns of the limitations of political solutions to systemic crises.
  22. Future Economics Must Be Tied Only to People, Their Contribution, What Is Important to Sustain Good, Fair and Balanced Lives – and Legal Currency Must Never Again Be Open to Speculation and Manipulation
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/07/25/future-economics-must-be-tied-only-to-people-their-contribution-what-is-important-to-sustain-good-fair-and-balanced-lives-and-legal-currency-must-never-again-open-to-speculation-and-manipulation/
    Advocates for a people-centered economic model and the reform of currency systems.
  23. Desperate Times, Desperate Resets
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/03/24/desperate-times-desperate-resets/
    Reflects on the necessity and risks of radical systemic resets in desperate times.
  24. How the UK Was Led into the Fiscal-Driven Armageddon We Are Now Within
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/03/24/how-the-uk-was-led-into-the-fiscal-driven-armageddon-we-are-now-within/
    Analyzes the policy decisions and events that led to the UK’s current fiscal crisis.
  25. The Basic Living Standard: A Pathway to Economic Equality and Fairness Throughout Life
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2025/03/10/the-basic-living-standard-a-pathway-to-economic-equality-and-fairness-throughout-life/
    Details how the Basic Living Standard can create lifelong economic equality and fairness.
  26. Rethinking the Minimum Wage: The Need for a Basic Living Standard
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2024/12/17/rethinking-the-minimum-wage-the-need-for-a-basic-living-standard/
    Makes the case for moving beyond minimum wage debates to a universal Basic Living Standard.
  27. The Harmful Truths That Are Hidden Behind Political Growth
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2024/12/06/the-harmful-truths-that-are-hidden-behind-political-growth/
    Uncovers the negative consequences of growth-focused political narratives.
  28. The Contemporary Politician’s Dilemma
    https://adamtugwell.blog/2024/12/05/the-contemporary-politicians-dilemma/
    Examines the challenges and contradictions faced by today’s politicians.