The Local Economy & Governance System | Online Text

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We recognise that today’s world is dysfunctional and broken. Yet, we often refuse to discuss, consider, or collaborate on solutions beyond those we already identify with or feel we own. We seek change from leaders and politicians who are invested in maintaining the status quo – often promising a return to times that seemed better, even though we know we cannot freeze time or truly go back to the past.

The uncomfortable truth is that the path we are on leads to poor outcomes, no matter whom we follow or which direction we turn. Our current roadmap keeps us trapped in the same broken paradigm, regardless of the leader or popular figure we choose.

While we have choices within our existing systems, these are options created by others. None of them genuinely benefit us or offer a future that works for everyone. Taking control of our future is not just a personal choice – it requires collective participation, contribution, and action. This will not be easy, especially when it seems logical to stick with familiar choices that fit our current worldview.

To envision a better way of living, most of us need at least a glimpse of what that future could look and feel like – even if it’s hard to imagine without the things we currently prioritise. So, let’s consider a snapshot of a world that truly works for everyone: a world where the “Moneyocracy” we’re addicted to is gone, replaced by a fully functioning system of Authentic Governance.

The world’s problems today need no further introduction. If you are reading this, you are likely experiencing the negative effects of misused power and influence, or you see how they impact others who lack the ability to change things.

The Local Economy & Governance System (LEGS) offers a look ahead – showing the key structures, learning, and understanding of a society for tomorrow that has left behind everything wrong with today’s way of living. LEGS provides a vision of what overarching public policy could be, once we accept that life will be better for everyone if we let go of what we think benefits us today, but in reality, only harms us and offers no true benefit to humanity or the world.

People, Community, and Environment – simple, local, and open living – are the founding principles for a fair, balanced, and just economy and governance system, ready to be established when we are.

Adam Tugwell
Cheltenham, UK.

20 November 2025

Introduction

We stand at a crossroads in history – a moment defined not by the promises of distant leaders or the allure of old systems, but by the urgent need for genuine change.

The world we inherit is marked by imbalance, inequality, and a persistent sense that something vital has been lost.

For too long, society has been shaped by structures that serve profit over people, hierarchy over community, and short-term gain over the enduring health of our environment.

This book is not just a critique of what has gone wrong. It is a blueprint for what can be made right.

Here, you are invited to imagine a future built on the principles of dignity, collective responsibility, and stewardship – a future where every person’s essential needs are guaranteed, and where the wellbeing of the community and the environment are placed above all else.

The Local Economy & Governance System (LEGS) is presented as a practical framework for transformation. It rejects the old paradigms of power and wealth, offering instead a model rooted in locality, transparency, and authentic participation.

In these pages, you will discover how governance can be reimagined as a truly democratic, people-centric process; how the economy can circulate value within communities rather than extract it; and how every member of society can contribute meaningfully to the common good.

This introduction is your invitation to engage – not as a passive reader, but as an active participant in the creation of a fair, sustainable, and resilient society.

The ideas within are not distant ideals; they are actionable steps, grounded in lived experience and collective wisdom. As you read, consider not only what must change, but how you can be part of that change—starting in your own community, with the choices you make and the values you uphold.

Let us move forward together, guided by the principles of People, Community, and The Environment.

The journey begins here.

The Tipping Point: Why and How We Get LEGS

Identifying the Touchpaper of Transformation

The journey toward adopting the Local Economy & Governance System (LEGS) is not just a matter of policy—it is a profound transformation from the entrenched “Moneyocracy” to a people-centric way of living.

While this book explores the principles and structures of LEGS, it is essential to understand the process and circumstances that will catalyse this change.

Earlier works such as Levelling Level and From Here to There Through Now have discussed the inevitability and challenges of such transformation, emphasising that change is both a choice and an ongoing commitment, especially when circumstances make it difficult to act.

Change Requires Choice and Action

Transformation to LEGS will not happen automatically.

In an ideal world, everyone would recognise the need to shift from a money-centric to a people-centric system and work together to make it happen immediately.

However, the reality is that many remain deeply invested in the current system, believing that hierarchy, centralisation, and the primacy of money are the only viable ways to organise society.

This belief is reinforced by decades of dependency and addiction to the money system, as described in the book’s critique of the “Moneyocracy”.

Pain as the Catalyst for Change

Regrettably, it is often personal or collective pain that becomes the catalyst for change.

People may only embrace a new system when the suffering caused by the old one outweighs perceived benefits.

This echoes the book’s insight that genuine transformation often arises from crisis, not comfort.

What Might Trigger Transformation?

While predicting the exact catalyst is impossible – since free will and choice remain – several realistic as well as outlying or ‘black swan event’ scenarios could spark the transition to LEGS:

  • Financial Collapse (UK): The UK government may reach a point where it cannot fund public services due to unsustainable debt, prompting urgent systemic change.
  • Global Financial Collapse: Worldwide economic failure, potentially triggered by unstable monetary policies, AI or cryptocurrency bubbles, or a repeat of the 2007/08 crisis, could force a revaluation of priorities.
  • War (Regional or Global): Ongoing conflicts and geopolitical tensions could escalate, with war being used to mask systemic failures and maintain elite control.
  • Disclosure Event: Unprecedented revelations—such as proof of extraterrestrial life—could radically alter humanity’s perspective and disrupt established power structures.
  • Other Domino Events: Civil unrest, food shortages, or even civil war could serve as tipping points, whether orchestrated or seemingly organic.

These scenarios align with this book’s analysis of how crises—financial, social, or environmental—often expose the flaws of the old system and create openings for new models.

The Consequences of Inaction

Failing to act – whether by choice or by default – has profound and far-reaching consequences for individuals, communities, and society as a whole.

Inaction is not a neutral stance; it is itself a decision that shapes the future, often in ways that reinforce the very systems and problems we wish to escape.

1. Entrenchment of the Status Quo

When people do not actively choose change, those already in positions of power and influence continue to define the future.

These individuals and groups may present themselves as protectors or saviours, but their solutions often involve further restrictions on freedom, increased surveillance, and the erosion of personal sovereignty.

The illusion of safety is used to justify the loss of genuine autonomy and dignity.

This dynamic is described in the book as the perpetuation of “Moneyocracy,” where profit, hierarchy, and control remain the organising principles of society, and the needs of people, community, and the environment are subordinated to financial interests.

2. The Rise of Dystopian Futures

Inaction allows those in control to implement policies and systems that may lead to a dystopian future – one characterised by inequality, loss of freedoms, and widespread disempowerment.

This book warns that such futures are not accidental; they are the result of deliberate choices made by those who benefit from the current system, often using the public’s own desires and fears against them.

3. The Illusion of Individualism and Isolation

A major consequence of inaction is the reinforcement of the belief that each person is alone and powerless.

This sense of isolation serves the interests of the current system, making individuals feel vulnerable and incapable of effecting change.

The reality, as emphasised throughout, is that collective action and shared purpose are the true sources of power and transformation.

4. Perpetuation of Social and Economic Pain

Without action, the pain and suffering caused by the existing system – poverty, inequality, environmental degradation, and loss of community – will continue and likely intensify.

The system is designed to maintain itself, often at the expense of the majority, and will use crises (financial, social, or environmental) to justify further consolidation of power.

5. Missed Opportunities for Genuine Change

Inaction means missing the critical window to choose and implement a better future.

All the books that have led to LEGS stress that change requires both a shift in mindset and active participation.

Waiting for someone else to initiate change only ensures that the system remains unchanged, and that the opportunity for transformation is lost.

6. The Responsibility of Choice

It is vital to recognise that not choosing is itself a choice.

Culturally, many have become accustomed to leaving decisions to others, assuming that change will come from external sources.

However, the reality is that those “in the spotlight” are often invested in maintaining the system as it is, rather than truly transforming it.

7. The Need for Collective Action

My books since Levelling Level have repeatedly highlighted that real change is only possible when individuals recognise their interconnectedness and collaborate.

The power to create and implement a system that works for all – such as LEGS – comes from collective action, not isolated efforts.

In summary:
The consequences of inaction are not just the continuation of current problems, but the deepening of inequality, loss of freedom, and the entrenchment of systems that do not serve the public good.

Only by consciously choosing and acting together can we avoid these outcomes and build a future rooted in dignity, community, and sustainability.

Choosing Our Future – Together

Ultimately, the choice for transformation must be conscious and collective.

It does not matter when we make this choice, as long as it is before reaching the point of no return.

The greatest threat is the illusion of isolation—the belief that we are alone and powerless.

In reality, our thoughts, feelings, and beliefs are powerful, and when we choose to collaborate, we gain the ability to create and implement a system that truly serves everyone.

This message is echoed throughout the main document, which emphasises the principles of People, Community, and The Environment as the foundation for authentic governance and a fair, sustainable society.

Welcome to The Local Economy & Governance System.

Brief History and Evolution of LEGS

The Local Economy & Governance System (LEGS) is the result of a multi-year journey of research, writing, and practical experimentation.

Its origins trace back to early 2022, with the publication of Levelling Level, which challenged the prevailing political narratives and introduced the idea of a people-centric system.

This work highlighted the urgent need for a Basic Living Standard—a guarantee that everyone can meet their essential needs independently.

Building on these foundations, The Basic Living Standard explored how the UK’s minimum wage failed to provide true financial independence, and proposed a new approach to work and business focused on meeting essential needs for all.

Subsequent books, including From Here to There Through Now, The Way of Awakened Politics for Good Government, and The Grassroots Manifesto, argued that genuine reform must come from the grassroots, not from centralised or top-down structures.

These works laid out the first steps for a governance model built from the community up, emphasising local relationships and direct participation.

Further development came through A Community Route and An Economy for the Common Good, which advocated for community collaboration, localised economics, and social enterprise as the backbone of a fair society.

Insights from works on food security, values, and technology—such as Who Controls Our Food Controls Our Future, Your Beliefs Today create Everyone’s Tomorrow, and Actions Speak Louder than Digital Words—were integrated, highlighting the importance of local control, ethical stewardship, and the dangers of external influence.

In 2024, Our Local Future synthesized these lessons into a comprehensive vision for a society built on locality, community, and environmental stewardship.

This work became the direct basis for the LEGS framework, offering a blueprint for restructuring society around local empowerment, authentic governance, and sustainable living.

LEGS now stands as a practical system designed to deliver a fair, balanced, and just society for all—rooted in the principles of People, Community, and The Environment.

Glossary of Terms

Authentic Governance
A system of governance rooted in local, democratic, and community-driven decision-making. It prioritises transparency, accessibility, and the direct involvement of all community members, ensuring that leadership is accountable and serves the public good rather than private interests.

Basic and Essential Foods
Foods that are critical for a healthy and happy life. They must be accessible, affordable, nutritious, locally grown and produced, and free from artificial additives or harmful chemicals. Their supply is recognised as a Public Good and is prioritised above all other food categories.

Basic Living Standard
A foundational guarantee that ensures every individual earning the lowest legal weekly wage can afford all essential costs of living—food, housing, utilities, healthcare, transport, clothing, communication, and modest social participation—without falling into debt, relying on welfare, or turning to charity.

Community Contributions
A system where every working member of the community contributes 10% of their working week to support local public services and charity provision. This replaces traditional public sector staffing with a community-led workforce.

Community Provision
The redefined public sector, encompassing all services and support systems essential to a culture built around People, Community, and The Environment. It is locally accountable, ethically grounded, and responsive to real needs.

Circumpunct
A practical and symbolic model for community decision-making. It is a circular arrangement where representatives and speakers engage openly, ensuring transparency, accountability, and collective wisdom in governance and mediation.

Flat Hierarchy
A societal structure where roles are different but not ranked, and leadership arises naturally through service and ability rather than status or authority. It emphasises collaboration, equality, and shared purpose.

Key Skills for Life
Essential abilities recognised as a Public Good, including critical thinking, self-awareness, food production, clothing repair, ethical use of technology, and more. These skills are foundational for personal sovereignty and community wellbeing.

LEGS (Local Economy & Governance System)
A comprehensive framework for society that centres on the principles of People, Community, and The Environment. It seeks to replace hierarchical, profit-driven systems with local, transparent, and collectively responsible models for governance, economy, and daily life.

Local Circular Economy
An economic model where value circulates within the local area, prioritising local production, ethical governance, and shared responsibility. It minimizes external dependencies and ensures that economic activity serves people and the environment.

Local Market Exchange
A physical and community-regulated marketplace for trading goods and services, often through barter or direct exchange. It ensures fair trade, transparency, and that value remains within the community.

Luxury Foods
Foods that are not essential for health or nutrition, including processed, ultra-processed, and synthesized foods. Their production and advertising are restricted to protect the integrity of local food systems.

Moneyocracy
A term describing the Old-World system where money, wealth, and profit were the primary measures of value and success, leading to social inequality and environmental degradation.

Natural Resources
All resources provided by nature (such as water, land, minerals) are held in stewardship by the community. They are not commodities and must be managed ethically, equitably, and for the public good.

Parish / Universal Parish (Uniparish)
The foundational local unit of society, business, and governance. It is designed to be self-contained, with all essential needs met locally, and is the central structure for community life.

People, Community, The Environment
The three core principles guiding all aspects of the LEGS system. Every decision, policy, and practice is evaluated based on its impact on these priorities.

Personal Sovereignty
The inherent right and capacity of everyone to live freely, responsibly, and authentically, provided their actions do not compromise the sovereignty of others. It is the foundation of freedom, dignity, and ethical society.

Public Good
A service, resource, or standard that must be guaranteed for all, forming the foundation of authentic governance. Public Goods cannot be altered, misrepresented, or bypassed, and always supersede inherited laws or practices that conflict with their purpose.

Social Business
A non-profit organisation operated for the public good, especially where private businesses do not provide essential goods or services. Social Businesses are collectively owned, transparent, and accountable to the community.

Part 1: Where Things have gone Wrong for Society Today

Key Lessons from Today’s World

In reflecting on the failures of the Old World—what many still recognize as the present—we uncover a sobering reality: those with power and privilege were often willing to sacrifice the wellbeing of humanity for their own gain.

The pursuit of profit, status, and material wealth routinely overshadowed the value of people, community, and the environment. This imbalance was not the result of conspiracy, but the predictable outcome of unchecked greed and a culture obsessed with material accumulation.

To maintain their dominance, elites and those in control of governments orchestrated conditions that enabled profiteering and ever-greater control.

Wars, environmental collapse, and information-driven crises were manufactured and justified through carefully crafted narratives—stories promoted by mass media that shaped public perception and obscured deeper truths.

These narratives, often presented as being in humanity’s best interest, consistently promoted “progress” as the only viable path forward, while ignoring the wisdom and solutions already discovered in history and nature.

The fundamental lesson is clear: genuine respect for people, community, and the environment is not profitable for those who prioritise wealth and power. This simple truth lies at the heart of the persistent injustice and disharmony that has plagued human society.

We Always Want More

To truly understand the root flaw behind so many of the problems we face—and why they seem impossible to solve—you must confront a difficult truth: we always want more.

This desire explains why we often ignore the suffering of others, even though we would hope for compassion if we were in their place.

We want more money.
More wealth.
More power.
More influence.
More recognition.
More of the things we enjoy.
More popularity.
More time to do what we want.
More people to agree with us.
More love.
More sex.
More admiration.

It doesn’t matter what it is—as long as it’s external to us, we want more of it.

Even when we already have more than we could ever need, or even use, the craving persists.

What We Need Is Not What We Want

From the Old World, we learned a critical lesson: when we live as though our wants are the same as our needs—simply because our wants seem affordable—we inadvertently condemn others to lives where even their basic needs remain out of reach. The result is widespread deprivation, manifesting in countless forms.

Though the mechanisms and consequences were often hidden from view, the rise of Wealth Inequality—what was once called the Wealth Divide—stemmed from the selfishness and greed of a privileged few.

This imbalance was not only tolerated but actively encouraged by those who aspired to emulate them.

We now understand that ignorance, blindness, and a lack of awareness about how our actions affect others do not excuse those actions.

That’s why we place Self-Awareness—awareness of the individual and, by extension, awareness of others—at the heart of our commitment to an egalitarian society.

It is a foundational principle within our values of People, Community, and the Environment.

No Business Is More Important Than the Public Good

In the Old World, the elevation of business interests above all else led to a distorted sense of value—where profit was mistaken for progress, and economic metrics were used to justify social neglect.

The ideology of Neoliberalism, embraced widely from the early 1970s, promoted the belief that free markets and corporate growth would naturally solve societal issues.

This system entrenched inequality, eroded community cohesion, and degraded the environment.

Globalisation, born from this mindset, normalised the idea that business and finance mattered more than people. Human needs became secondary to shareholder returns. Communities were reshaped to serve commercial interests, and the environment was treated as a resource to be exploited rather than protected.

We have rejected this model.

In its place, we have built a society rooted in the principle that People come first. Community comes first. The Environment comes first.

Business now exists to serve—not to dominate. No enterprise, regardless of its size or influence, holds priority over the well-being of the community it operates within.

Essential services—those critical to the safety, health, and security of all—are operated as Social Businesses.

These are not owned by private interests or shareholders seeking profit. They are owned collectively by The Community, with every decision made in service of the Public Good.

This shift marks a return to balance. A recognition that true prosperity is measured not by profit margins, but by the health, harmony, and resilience of the people and places we call home.

Real Progress Is Not Restricted to One Direction

The Old World taught us a flawed lesson: that Progress—and the ideology of Progressivism—was linear and one-dimensional.

Guarded fiercely by its champions, this belief failed to recognise that true progress can take many forms. Sometimes, it may even appear to be a step backward.

In reality, progress can move in any direction—across the full 360 degrees of possibility.

Obsessive leaders and activists, clinging to the idea that forward motion alone equates to improvement, often caused harm across all areas of life.

Their mistake was rooted in a misguided belief: that discarding history and lived experience in favour of constant forward momentum would always lead to better outcomes.

But in truth, this relentless push often led society backward—especially in terms of the real-world consequences people faced.

We reject the notion of failure as something to be feared or hidden. Instead, we value experience—every outcome, every lesson—as a vital teacher.

We understand that returning to what has already been proven to work, no matter how simple, is often wiser than blindly chasing novelty or complexity for its own sake.

We celebrate what is tried and tested. We do not pursue change merely to demonstrate action or to manufacture the illusion of progress.

True progress is measured not by direction, but by impact.

Money: The Rigged Game with a Real-Life Cheat Code

One of the most difficult truths to accept from the Old World was the way money worked—and the complex web of systems, rules, laws, and mechanisms that had been created, altered, and refined to make it function as it did.

We came to understand that the monetary and financial system—known by many as FIAT—was the cornerstone of a structure that, to those who controlled it, resembled nothing more than a game. And like any game, it carried no real consequences for those who understood its mechanics.

What made this system so dangerous and damaging for the majority wasn’t simply that the Elites knew it was a game. The real threat lay in the fact that, like many computer games, this one had a built-in cheat code.

That cheat code was the ability to create money out of thin air.

As time went on, this power was used more frequently, and the consequences—just like in any simulated game—were severe and disproportionately harmful to those who still believed the system was real and fair.

By the end of the Old World, those in control could buy anything they desired, while the value of money held by poorer individuals steadily evaporated. The system’s architects simply printed more, further distorting the balance.

We reject this illusion.

We do not accept that money—or any form of currency—holds value beyond its practical purpose.

We prohibit any communication, action, or activity that promotes the idea that money is anything more than a tool: a temporary method of exchange, a means of transferring value between transactions, and nothing else.

Money is not power. It is not progress. It is not truth.

It is a tool—and only a tool.

Normality Cannot Be Dictated by Others

The Old World was fixated on defining what was ‘normal.’

It became widely accepted—especially by those in power—that controlling the narrative of what was deemed ‘normal’ could be weaponised to label others as ‘wrong.’

But normality is not conformity. It is not the ‘accepted same’ that the Old-World system used to suppress individuality and difference.

True normality is the state of Personal Sovereignty—the experience of being fully oneself.

It is the understanding that peace and happiness are not granted by society, institutions, or external validation. They are the inner gifts of the individual, shaped by their own truth.

Normality, for each person, is the expression of their Authentic Self.

Distance Creates a Critical Weakness in Leadership

In the Old World, every so-called democracy ultimately failed due to its overreliance on hierarchical structures.

These hierarchies created a growing distance between those who governed and those they were meant to serve. As this gap widened, leaders became increasingly insulated from the realities of everyday life.

We learned that this separation—this lack of direct contact between public representatives and the people—led to a dangerous disconnect.

Leaders, cut off from the lived experiences of their communities, lost sight of the consequences of their decisions.

As the insulation deepened, dysfunction spread across legislation, public services, and governance itself. Systems meant to serve the people were led by individuals who had, in effect, disenfranchised themselves—leaving behind a population that felt ignored, abandoned, and unheard.

From this failure, we discovered a vital truth: the true point of power in any system of governance must be the People.

We have built and continue to uphold a model of Authentic Governance that reflects this principle.

Authentic Governance eliminates the systemic abuse that plagued the Old World. It ensures that leadership is not distant but rooted in community.

Here, in The Local Economy & Governance System, the majority rules—by ruling together.

Governance is local, democratic, and run by and for The Community.

This is how leadership thrives: not through hierarchy, but through connection.

Doing the Right Thing Has Many Interpretations—But Only One Truth

The Old World revealed a painful lesson: power, no matter how small or far-reaching, was often intoxicating enough to strip those entrusted with responsibility of their genuine humanity.

Self-interest, coupled with a fading awareness of others, led many to believe that what served their own interests must also serve the interests of everyone else.

This distortion became widespread—across politics, business, finance, and the supranational institutions that emerged after the Second World War and into the early 21st century.

Leaders lost sight of what it truly means to hold responsibility and influence over the lives of others.

Those in power—and those influencing them—forgot their duty to the public and the vulnerable.

They acted as if their decisions could be made without consequence, even as the long-term effects of their self-serving choices became increasingly visible in the suffering of society.

We have chosen a different path.

We have built a system of Authentic Governance that prevents any individual or group from placing their own interests above those of The Community.

This system remains true and accountable to everyone—regardless of power, position, or influence.

We do the right thing.
Not for some.
Not for the few.
But for everyone.

The Moneyocracy

In the Old World, the one true religion—especially in the West—was Money.

Wealth, power, and influence were its sacred trinity, each inextricably linked to the other.

This belief system shaped not only economies, but the very fabric of society.

Some may still resist the idea that life was entirely coin operated. But with even a moment of honest reflection, it becomes clear: money was the engine behind everything.

It defined our values.

It dictated our choices.

It shaped our relationships, our institutions, and our sense of worth.

Whether we realised it or not, we were all citizens of a Moneyocracy—a world governed not by principles, but by profit.

Money: A Belief System Fuelled by Greed

Arguably the most destructive force in any society is the deeply ingrained—and deliberately engineered—belief that money creation, profit, and economic growth are the ultimate measures of success and happiness.

The Old World, and the system it upheld, revolved around this belief. For over 50 years, it was driven by flawed, self-serving economic ideologies such as Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) and Neoliberalism.

“More wants more” wasn’t just a saying—it became the unspoken mantra behind every decision, every ambition, and every system.

The pursuit of more—more money, more growth, more consumption—spread like a disease through every layer of society.

The adoption of the FIAT money system and the use of GDP as a primary measure of progress, beginning around 1971, marked the acceleration of the social decay that a money-based order—or “Moneyocracy”—inevitably brings.

Over time, the world was reprogrammed to operate on the assumption that money was the only priority, the only true source of value.

This shift happened so subtly, so pervasively, that most people didn’t even realise it had occurred.

This distortion of reality was made possible by the myths we were taught about money—myths that replaced meaningful values with hollow ones.

In the process, we lost sight of what truly matters: People, Community, and the Environment.

Every persistent and seemingly unsolvable problem in the Old World—social inequality, environmental degradation, political dysfunction—was rooted in this addiction to money and the relentless accumulation of wealth.

Over time, every institution, every law, and every cultural norm bent toward the singular goal of enriching those who already had the most.

We have reversed this trajectory.

Governance has shifted from top-down control to grassroots empowerment.

Business is no longer driven by wealth creation, but by the well-being of People, the strength of Community, and the health of the Environment.

This transformation was not optional—it was essential.

Because the paths of Money and the paths of People, Community, and the Environment are fundamentally incompatible.

Only the system we now embrace— The Local Economy & Governance System —can deliver true Balance, Fairness, and Justice for all.

Poverty Is Not Real to Those Who Don’t Experience It

Throughout history, attempts to address poverty in England date back to the Henrician Poor Laws of the Tudor era under Henry VIII.
Despite a notable push in the 19th century, the question—“How do we end poverty once and for all?”—remained unanswered.

This failure was especially evident in the post-Covid period (2020–2025), when both Conservative and Labour governments in the UK failed to grasp the difference between:

  • Technical acknowledgment that poverty exists
  • And the experiential reality of living in poverty

A cultural belief persisted:

“For some to be wealthy, many others must be poor.”

This shibboleth enabled a system where wealth was accumulated to disproportionate levels, far beyond personal need.

The cycle of investment for gain only accelerated wealth inequality, which those benefiting from it refused to acknowledge—legitimising their advantage through position and power.

The Consequences of Poverty

Poverty creates a 360-degree network of consequences:

  • It affects not only those who suffer it
  • But also The Community as a whole

Though laws and systems were framed to address poverty, none of them were morally or ethically sound.
They sustained inequality rather than dismantling it.

“Man cannot serve two masters. An archer cannot pull two bows. A jockey cannot ride two horses.”

It became inevitable that the entire system would need to be:

  • Reversed
  • Redirected
  • Reformed
  • Reestablished

…to uphold the moral and ethical imperative that every Member of The Community must be able to live independently and self-sufficiently.

The Misuse of AI

In the Old World, artificial intelligence was gradually introduced over many years leading up to 2023.

Initially, it appeared in the form of hidden algorithms—quietly embedded in e-commerce platforms and search engines—offering faster responses but little transparency.

By 2023, direct and interactive forms of AI became publicly accessible. With this shift, the true commercial intent behind AI deployment became clear—as did the manipulation of public narratives designed to instill fear and confusion around digital technology.

The failure of governing bodies to regulate AI came at a cost far greater than financial. It undermined the very fabric of society.

The key drivers behind AI misuse were:

  • AI was deployed to preserve and advance the interests of the Old World’s Moneyocracy.
  • Its primary function became profit generation.
  • Its secondary function became social control.

The most insidious form of this control was the systematic deprogramming of humanity—achieved through internet platforms and AI-driven technologies.

These tools, whether by design or consequence, disrupted natural cognitive processes. Over the course of a generation, they eroded the human capacity to learn, think critically, and reach independent conclusions.

This assault on executive function—and therefore on Personal Sovereignty—did not begin with AI in 2023, as many were led to believe. It began much earlier, with the widespread adoption of smartphones and tablets.

Unregulated AI is now understood to be anti-human, anti-equality, anti-environment, and anti-freedom.

It poses a direct threat to the foundational values of People, Community, and the Environment.

We acknowledge that AI can offer benefits—but only under strict regulation and ethical oversight. Its use must be supported by continuous Key Skills for Life training, ensuring that humanity remains in control of the tools it creates.

Net Zero

We reject any form of public policy rooted in fear or designed to serve the wealth accumulation of individuals or select groups.

In the Old World, environmental concerns—often framed under the banner of “green” initiatives—were frequently misused and politically manipulated to advance agendas that had little to do with sustainability and everything to do with profit or control.

We have moved beyond that.

Through the implementation and ongoing practice of Sustainable Living, we have addressed the environmental challenges that were once exploited.

These practices are not driven by fear, nor by financial gain—they are grounded in responsibility, balance, and respect for People, Community, and the Environment.

The Food Supply: A Tool for Elite Wealth Creation and Societal Control

In the Old World, the elites and governing classes systematically dismantled genuine local food production.

They centralised control, eroded local supply chains, and weakened the infrastructure that once supported healthy, community-based living.

Globalisation moved in only one direction—toward consolidation and control. Instruments like the European Union and the Common Agricultural Policy were used to reshape food systems, leaving behind a hollowed-out society where People, Community, and the Environment had once thrived.

Productionism was sold as progress. Farmers and food producers were told it was good. But in reality, it fuelled rampant consumerism and opened the door to myths that globalism benefited everyone.

The only part of the globalisation story that needed to make sense was the promise of lower retail prices.

Yet for those directly affected, lower prices meant little when businesses collapsed, jobs disappeared, and communities were left behind.

The real cost—social, environmental, and nutritional—was hidden from public view.

Productionism relied heavily on chemicals and industrial processes that gradually destroyed soil health and land productivity.

As the land became less capable of sustaining life, elites pushed new narratives claiming traditional agriculture was outdated and unreliable.

Worse still, the accepted view suggested that naturally grown foods—produced by independent farmers, small businesses, and community enterprises—could no longer meet public demand.

This was never about efficiency or progress. It was about greed, profiteering, and control.

Every step of this so-called “progress” made the food people consumed less healthy, less nourishing, and less beneficial to society.

We reject this model.

We recognise that true Food Security depends on a food chain that functions as an ecosystem—interconnected, resilient, and rooted in place.

Our food system is predominantly local. The majority of Basic and Essential Foods are sourced from local supply chains, available year-round, and built to serve People, Community, and the Environment—not profit.

Part 2: Our Values

People, Community, The Environment

The Local Economy & Governance System is built on a people-centric foundation—guiding every aspect of life, from our Values and Lifestyle to Business, Economy, and Governance.

At the heart of this framework are our Three Key Principles:

  1. People
  2. Community
  3. The Environment

We place the Person—and their Personal Sovereignty—at the centre of everything.

How we value each individual, and how each individual values others, defines the strength and integrity of our society.

We understand that only through a people-focused Community—functioning as a living ecosystem in harmony with The Environment—can we create a truly Happy, Healthy, Safe, and Secure foundation for life.

This is supported by a system of Authentic Governance: one that is Balanced, Fair, and Just for all.

Locality Is Everything

Locality—and the development of fully Localised, community-centric systems—is recognised as a Public Good.

Local supply chains foster transparency.

And transparency is the foundation of trust and accountability.

These qualities are essential for building a system of Authentic Governance—one that places People, Community, and The Environment at its core.

A truly Localised System functions as a circular ecosystem, where every part supports and sustains the whole. It operates reliably and consistently, guided by the principles of People, Community, and The Environment.

This approach ensures that decisions and outcomes serve the best interests of all.

The Public Good

The Public Good is the guiding standard—the benchmark—of our system of Authentic Governance.

It defines the areas of life where access to Basic and Essential Foods, Goods, and Services must be guaranteed for all.

Each Public Good forms part of the foundational framework that enables our governance system to function at its highest level.

Every Public Good acknowledges the positive contributions of individuals, businesses, and organisations—their actions, agendas, use of resources, and stewardship of property—when those efforts benefit The Community.

A Public Good exists to uphold, strengthen, and expand our Three Core Principles:

  1. People
  2. Community
  3. The Environment

A Public Good cannot be altered, misrepresented, ignored, or bypassed under any circumstance.

It supersedes all laws, regulations, and practices inherited from the Old World that relate to or conflict with its purpose.

A Public Good is not optional—it is a practice required by The Community.

The Public Goods of The Local Economy & Governance System (Condensed)

  • Agriculture, Fisheries, and Home Growing: Local, sustainable production of food is prioritised and protected as a community resource.
  • The Authentic Governance System (TAGS): Governance is local, democratic, transparent, and accountable to all community members.
  • Basic Essentials for Life: Every person is guaranteed access to food, housing, utilities, healthcare, transport, clothing, communication, and social participation.
  • The Basic Living Standard: Full-time work at the lowest wage covers all essential living costs, ensuring dignity and independence.
  • Essential or Basic Foods: Nutritious, locally produced foods are accessible, affordable, and free from harmful additives.
  • Housing and Its Universal Provision: Housing is a right, not a commodity; each person may own or occupy only one home.
  • Key Skills for Life: Critical life skills—such as self-awareness, food production, and ethical technology use—are taught and practiced by all.
  • The Local Food Chain: Food supply is managed locally, transparently, and sustainably, with community trust at its core.
  • Locality: Local supply chains and decision-making foster transparency, trust, and accountability.
  • Services Using Natural Resources: Community stewardship ensures ethical, equitable access to water, land, and other natural resources.
  • News and Community Information: Local media platforms provide transparent, inclusive news and information for all.
  • Social Learning: Community-based learning supports personal development, ethical awareness, and social responsibility.
  • Sustainable Living: All members practice responsible use of resources, prioritising recycling, repair, and local production.
  • Transport (for Genuine Need and Necessity): Transport is provided for essential needs, with a focus on sustainability and shared access.
  • The Circumpunct: A circular, non-hierarchical model for community decision-making, ensuring every voice is heard and governance remains transparent and participatory.

Our Expectation for Each Member of The Community

The Community holds a simple but profound expectation: that every Member will live the best life they can—rooted in the experience, enjoyment, and empowerment of Personal Sovereignty.

Personal Sovereignty can only flourish under the right conditions. It requires that each person lives a life that is Happy, Healthy, Safe, and Secure—within a system that is Balanced, Fair, and Just.

We recognise that it would be unjust to expect individuals to thrive without first ensuring they are fully equipped to do so.

That is why The Community accepts its responsibility: to build, uphold, and continuously maintain the Governance, Frameworks, and Systems that make Personal Sovereignty possible.

This commitment is not just for today. It is a promise to every person alive now—and to every generation yet to come—that the opportunity to live freely, fully, and authentically will always be protected and preserved.

Our Priorities and Their Function

Our Three Core Principles—People, Community, and The Environment—are not just values. They are our active priorities.

Together, as a Community, we promote, protect, and uphold Personal Sovereignty for every individual. This means empowering each person to live freely, responsibly, and with dignity.

We prioritise what we need, not what we want.

We recognise Money and Currency as tools—nothing more. They serve practical purposes but hold no intrinsic value beyond exchange.

To fulfil our priorities, we have built—and continue to refine—a system of Authentic Governance. This system is rooted in a Local, Circular Economy that involves everyone and benefits everyone.

It is through this inclusive, sustainable framework that our principles come to life—ensuring a society that is Balanced, Fair, and Just for all.

The Right Decisions Are Made in the Moment

Making decisions on behalf of the majority—decisions that serve the best interests of all—is never easy.

In the Old World, politicians and those in positions of influence often fell into a trap of their own design: believing they could dictate long chains of public policy decisions based on imagined future outcomes.

They assumed control over circumstances they could never truly govern—over the free will of others, over unfolding events, and over the unpredictable nature of life itself.

This approach was not just flawed—it was dishonest. And when things inevitably went wrong, the damage was compounded by the lies, cover-ups, and narratives created to conceal the consequences of poor decision-making.

We reject this way of governing.

We make decisions in the moment—in the here and now—based on what is known, what is real, and what is relevant.

Every decision is guided by its immediate and foreseeable impact on:

  • People
  • Community
  • The Environment

We also consider how each decision interacts with existing policies and systems, ensuring coherence and integrity.

This principle is a cornerstone of Authentic Governance.

It is encouraged throughout society as a healthy, responsible, and empowering way to live—one that strengthens Personal Sovereignty and builds trust in the decisions we make together.

Freedom

True, unrestricted Freedom is achieved through Personal Sovereignty.

Each Person is free to think.

Each Person is free to act and behave as they choose—so long as their actions do not compromise, or have the potential to compromise, the Personal Sovereignty of another Person or Group.

Any action that creates advantage for one by disadvantaging another is considered morally and ethically wrong.

Likewise, the creation, existence, or manipulation of any law, regulation, or legal device that enables discrimination or harm toward any Person or Group is also morally and ethically unacceptable.

Our foundation is simple and universal:

What is right for all People—regardless of difference—must align with the Principles of

  • People
  • Community
  • The Environment

This is the foundation of The Local Economy & Governance System.

Freedom is not the absence of responsibility. It is the space in which the Authentic Self can live, grow, and thrive—without fear, without oppression, and without compromise.

Personal Sovereignty and Power

Personal Sovereignty is not granted—it is inherent. It is not earned—it is recognised.

It is the foundation upon which all authentic relationships, communities, and systems must be built. It is the source of true power—not over others, but within oneself.

Power, in its rightful form, is the ability to live in alignment with one’s values, to act with integrity, and to contribute meaningfully to the Common Cause and the Public Good.

This power does not reside in titles, wealth, or influence. It resides in the soul, mind, and spirit of every Person or Being.

In a society rooted in Authentic Governance, power is not concentrated—it is distributed.

It flows from the recognition that every individual holds equal value, and that no external difference—physical, cultural, intellectual, or emotional—can diminish the worth of one’s inner essence.

Thought remains the purest expression of freedom. It is the space where sovereignty begins.

To protect this freedom, we uphold the principle that no person may be punished for their thoughts, nor for expressing those thoughts publicly—so long as they do not intend harm or seek to compromise the sovereignty of others.

Support for Personal Sovereignty is a shared responsibility.

It is offered with care during infancy, childhood, and youth.

It is extended with compassion during times of incapacity.

It is recalibrated during imprisonment, where the right to act freely has been limited due to actions that harmed others or The Community.

Even then, the right to think remains untouched.

This is the essence of a society built on dignity, equality, and truth.

Morality and Ethics Are the Fruit of Freedom—Not of Oppression, Rules, or Laws

Lack breeds selfishness, because it turns survival into competition.

Even the perception of lack can distort behaviour and choices when individuals are unable to view their circumstances objectively.

In a society where everyone’s basic needs are guaranteed—so long as all who can contribute do—an environment naturally emerges that supports:

  • Personal development
  • Emotional and spiritual growth
  • A structure that allows society to function in the best possible way

Freedom from avoidable and unnecessary lack opens the door for people of all backgrounds and abilities to:

  • Reflect on who they are
  • Understand how they became who they are
  • Explore their roles and relationships in society
  • Contemplate the deeper meaning of their experiences

When individuals are financially and resourcefully independent, they gain the freedom to:

  • Discern right from wrong
  • Navigate the grey areas with empathy and awareness
  • Consider the impact and consequences of their actions on others

This freedom fosters self-awareness, which in turn nurtures a more thoughtful and authentic approach to:

  • Morality and ethics
  • Responsibility and obligation
  • Community and connection

True morality does not arise from control. It blossoms in the presence of freedom, security, and shared humanity.

Why People Work or Are Employed

The purpose of all work, employment, business, industry—and The Community itself—is to support, sustain, and enrich happy, healthy lives for everyone.

Work is not the purpose of life. It is a meaningful part of life—one that helps us meet our needs, contribute to others, and uphold the shared priorities of People, Community, and The Environment.

Work and employment are valued only insofar as they support a life that is happy, healthy, safe, and secure for all Members of The Community.

The Community recognises and celebrates the importance of every role, every trade, and every form of contribution.

No job is above another in moral worth.

The only distinction given within any profession is that reflected in its remuneration structure—a practical measure, not a measure of personal value.

The contribution of each individual is recognised solely in terms of its impact and benefit to The Community—and never beyond that.

Locality and the Reliance of Trust

Trust is not abstract—it is relational. It is built through presence, familiarity, and shared experience.

In Our Community, trust is earned through direct interaction, not distant authority.

We believe that those who hold influence must be visible, accessible, and accountable to the People they serve.

Digital tools may support communication and efficiency, but they must never replace the human connection required for genuine trust.

We reject the use of digital platforms as instruments of persuasion, manipulation, or control.

Local Living provides the healthiest foundation for truth, reliability, and mutual respect.

It is within local relationships that information is most trustworthy, decisions are most relevant, and accountability is most immediate.

Our Society thrives because we have chosen proximity over abstraction, and presence over projection.

Through our System of Authentic Governance, every decision that affects our lives—especially those tied to our Basic and Essential needs—is made by People we know, People we can speak to, and People we can trust.

This is how we ensure that governance remains human, honest, and grounded in reality.

Inheritance

In our culture, inheritance is not defined by the transfer of wealth.

We do not encourage the passing of financial assets between families—unless such a transfer serves The Public Good, such as the continuation of a business or property that benefits the wider Community.

Our System of Authentic Governance, rooted in the principles of People, Community, and The Environment, ensures that every Member of The Community is empowered to sustain themselves independently.

The greatest inheritance is not material. It is the gift of learning, the sharing of experience, and the freedom that comes from the ability to think freely and live in full awareness of one’s Personal Sovereignty.

This is the legacy we pass on:

Not possessions, but wisdom.
Not wealth, but empowerment.
Not control, but freedom.

Climate Change

The climate has changed, is changing, and will continue to change—regardless of human influence.

We accept this truth without denial or distraction. But we also recognise that the greatest threat to the Planet—and therefore to People, Community, and The Environment—was not climate change itself, but the system that accelerated it:

Moneyocracy.

It was humankind’s obsession with material wealth, driven by the relentless pursuit of profit and the unnecessary exploitation of non-replaceable natural resources, that pushed us toward crisis.

Resources were consumed not to meet genuine needs, but to satisfy manufactured wants.

This imbalance—between what we need and what we are told to desire—was the root of environmental degradation.

Our commitment now is clear:

To live responsibly.
To meet real needs.
To protect the Earth by rejecting systems that place profit above life.

Sustainable Living

Sustainable Living is practiced by every Member of The Community.

It is recognised as A Public Good—a shared responsibility and a cultural norm.

Every system we use, create, or maintain exists to serve the best interests of humanity, guided by our Three Core Principles:

  • People
  • Community
  • The Environment

Sustainable Living means using natural resources sparingly, and only when no viable alternatives exist.

It means growing, using, and sharing only what we need—not what we want.

All forms of private and social enterprise are carried out locally, within the Parish area.

We reject luxury consumerism and prohibit practices such as Planned Obsolescence.

We do not permit the unnecessary use of resources to support employment transfers, manufacturing, or food production when such practices serve private interests rather than the Public Good.

Instead, we encourage local manufacturing using naturally sustainable resources.

We Recycle, Reuse, and Repair as a way of life.

These are not just habits—they are Key Skills for Life.

Across all Goods and Services, we prioritise Basic Essentials—ensuring that what we produce and consume supports a Happy, Healthy, Safe, and Secure life for all.

Key Skills for Life

Key Skills for Life are recognised as A Public Good—essential abilities that empower individuals, strengthen communities, and uphold our shared principles of People, Community, and The Environment.

These skills are not optional. They are foundational to living a Happy, Healthy, Safe, and Secure life within Our Local Future.

They include:

  1. Authentic Governance
    Understanding and participating in fair, transparent, and community-driven decision-making processes.
  2. Clothing Repair and Renewal
    Maintaining, repairing, and extending the life of garments to reduce waste and promote sustainability.
  3. Critical Thinking
    Questioning, analysing, and making informed, independent choices based on evidence and ethical awareness.
  4. Democracy
    Engaging in collective decision-making, civic responsibility, and upholding the principles of equality and participation.
  5. Food Handling, Preparation, and Storage
    Ensuring food safety, nutrition, and sustainability through proper handling, cooking, and storage practices.
  6. Food Production
    Growing and harvesting food responsibly, supporting local food systems and community resilience.
  7. Good Online Communication
    Using digital tools with clarity, respect, and purpose, reflecting real-world etiquette and community values.
  8. Community Provision
    Understanding how local services function and contribute to wellbeing and participating in their delivery.
  9. Home Growing
    Cultivating food and plants at home to support self-sufficiency and local food security.
  10. The Impact and Consequences of Choice
    Recognizing how personal and collective decisions affect others and the environment.
  11. Our Role as a Member of The Community
    Contributing meaningfully to shared life, respecting others, and upholding community values.
  12. Personal Sovereignty
    Living freely and responsibly, making choices that honour one’s own dignity and the rights of others.
  13. The Power of Restraint
    Choosing not to act when action serves only impulse or ego, practicing self-control for the greater good.
  14. Recycle, Reuse, Repair
    Extending the life of goods, minimising waste, and adopting sustainable consumption habits.
  15. Self-Care
    Maintaining physical, emotional, and mental wellbeing as a foundation for personal and community health.
  16. Understanding Cause and Effect
    Seeing the links between actions and outcomes and learning from experience.
  17. Understanding Our Local Future
    Knowing the systems and values that shape society, and how to contribute to a sustainable, people-centred future.
  18. Understanding Self-Awareness
    Recognizing one’s thoughts, emotions, and motivations to foster growth and empathy.
  19. Using and Understanding AI
    Engaging with technology ethically and effectively, ensuring it serves humanity and community needs.

These skills are taught, shared, and practiced across The Community. They are the tools of empowerment, resilience, and collective progress.

Homelessness and Supporting the ‘Left Behind’

Our Principles—People, Community, and The Environment—alongside our culture of Authentic Governance, have been developed to promote a genuinely people-centric way of life.

While The Local Economy & Governance System minimises environmentally harmful influences for all Members of The Community, we recognise that not everyone will feel able to participate in life in ways considered “normal” or within the expected framework.

We honour the undifferentiated value of every Person or Being—beyond material status, beyond circumstance.

We do not seek to “fix” those who cannot engage with societal structures in conventional ways, unless their actions pose a direct threat to, or have harmed, Members of The Community.

Homelessness is not a crime, and it is never treated as such.

We understand that homelessness may result from personal choice, or from life challenges that many hope to avoid.

Our only expectation of anyone experiencing homelessness is that they:

  • Respect the Personal Sovereignty of others
  • Treat Community Infrastructure and services with care and consideration

Businesses are encouraged to offer opportunities to those seeking a fresh start—without requiring them to be defined by past roles, qualifications, or histories, especially when they have exercised The Right to be Forgotten.

Each Community provides Homelessness Services, either directly or in collaboration with neighbouring Parishes.

These often include Homeless Pods—safe, dignified spaces for temporary shelter.

Our approach is simple and compassionate: We assume nothing, expect nothing beyond respect for our shared Principles, and view any voluntary engagement with Community offerings as a bonus, not a requirement.

Part 3: Beliefs

Personal Sovereignty, Freedom of Belief, and Freedom of Thought

Personal Sovereignty is inseparable from the Freedom of Belief and the Freedom of Thought.

Throughout history, many have failed to recognise how religions and belief systems have been used—often by elites and ruling classes—as tools of social control.

These systems have manipulated fear of the unknown to shape behaviour, often reinforcing hierarchies where those at the top claim a “special relationship” with what lies beyond life.
They present themselves as gatekeepers of truth—while discouraging independent thought.

As the world evolved and access to information expanded, belief systems that suppress freedom of thought began to collapse—or resorted to increasingly desperate tactics to maintain influence through fear and control.

Even Moneyocracy, the dominant ideology of the Old World, functioned as a belief system—one that demanded faith in wealth, status, and material power.

But the failures of these systems became clear: They harmed humanity, degraded the environment, and obstructed the natural learning that life itself offers.

As their relevance faded, these systems intensified efforts to control behaviour—seeking to suppress the very thing that threatened their power: Freedom of Thought.

This is the One True Freedom—the ability to think independently, to choose freely, and to act meaningfully.

It is how each of us makes sense of our existence and learns from the unique journey of our own life.

The governing classes of the Old World failed to honour this freedom.

They created conditions where countless people were denied the opportunity to explore the rich lessons that life, in all its diversity, has to offer.

In The Local Economy & Governance System, we restore and protect this freedom.

We honour the sovereignty of every mind, and we celebrate the power of thought as the foundation of a just, compassionate, and enlightened society.

Religion

Religion is a personal choice and belief.

It is accepted that each Person or Being holds a direct, exclusive relationship with God, a Higher Being, Spirit, the Universe, or another something identifiable by another name.


Any deviation from this relationship is a matter of personal choice—and no other Person, Group, or Member of The Community has the right to question or influence it, except within the acceptable bounds of parental care.

There is no Community or State Religion.

We maintain, champion, and defend a secular Community culture, which may be broadly aligned with Christian Values, but is not governed by any religious doctrine.

No Religion or Religious Practice may disrupt, influence, or dictate matters or policy within the Public Realm.

We do not accept that any Religion which uses fear, control, or subjugation to achieve its aims can be considered “peaceful.”

Personal Sovereignty is supreme. No system of belief may override it.

Any form of submissive behaviour to Religion or Religious Practice is considered an infringement of Personal Sovereignty— unless it is a clear and definable voluntary choice made by the individual.

No permanent contract or arrangement may bind any person to a Religion or Religious Practice involuntarily. Such obligations end immediately upon recognition.

No Religion-based law, regulation, or obligation may supersede the Community Governance Framework.

Spirituality

Spiritual and Religious direction is a personal choice for every Member of The Community. It is respected as a matter of Personal Sovereignty.

We encourage each individual to explore their own path to belief—through Self-Awareness, a Key Skill for Life, supported by Critical Thinking, also taught as a Key Skill for Life.

We recognise value in all belief systems, provided they honour the principle that Personal Sovereignty and our System of Authentic Governance are not mutually exclusive.

When respected, they complement one another.

Throughout history, religion and belief systems have often been misused as tools of control.

Spiritual pathways that promote independent thought and understanding have frequently been suppressed—erased from records, scriptures, and doctrines, with punishments ranging from ridicule to severe persecution.

Spiritual sciences and practices have been misrepresented as mere tools of divination or fortune-telling.

This distortion has been worsened by individuals who preyed on the vulnerable—abusing their knowledge or perceived skills for personal gain.

We reject these misuses.

Instead, we embrace spiritual exploration as a way to deepen understanding, foster empathy, and build meaningful relationships.

By exploring belief with openness and integrity, we strengthen both Personal Sovereignty and The Community—creating a culture rooted in respect, awareness, and shared growth.

The Rejection of Narratives and Embracing Truth

We accept the use of narratives and storytelling only as metaphor or allegory—tools to encourage reflection and promote deeper understanding.

We do not use narratives to create, manipulate, misdirect, or replace truth.

In Our Community, every Member with access to news and information is trusted to think critically, to discern wisely, and to draw their own conclusions.

We do not obscure reality with “alternative truths.”

We do not distort facts to serve agendas.

We do not trade clarity for comfort.

Truth is not negotiable.

It is the foundation of Authentic Governance, and the cornerstone of a society built on trust, sovereignty, and respect.

Part 4: Our Lifestyle

Section A: Food

Food Groups

We recognise two distinct food groups:

  • Essential or Basic Foods – the foods we need
  • Luxury Foods – the foods we want

Essential or Basic Foods

Essential or Basic Foods are critical for a healthy and happy life and are recognised as A Public Good.

They must be:

  • Accessible
  • Affordable
  • Nutritious
  • Grown and produced locally
  • Processed, transported, and supplied as locally as possible
  • Cultivated using natural processes
  • Produced through sustainable, traditional, regenerative, rotational, and mixed farming methods
  • Free from insecticides, pesticides, and chemical fertilisers
  • Processed only through ‘traditional’ or ‘by hand’ methods
  • Free from additives, artificial preservatives, flavourings, or enhancements

The most recognisable trait of Essential or Basic Foods is their natural form—either as harvested or as minimally processed using traditional methods.

Community Responsibility

  • Every home must have adequate facilities for food preparation, storage, and cooking.
  • The safe handling, preparation, and cooking of Essential and Basic Foods is taught as a Key Skill for Life.
  • It is the shared responsibility of the entire Community to ensure that every Member has ongoing access to sufficient supplies of Essential and Basic Foods to meet their needs.

Luxury Foods

Luxury Foods are defined as all foods that cannot be categorised as Basic or Essential.

They include:

  • Processed foods
  • Ultra-processed foods (UPFs)
  • Synthesised foods
  • Any food that is not visibly identifiable with its original source or natural form

Luxury Foods may not be reclassified as Basic or Essential based on labelling, description, or advertising of any kind.

They are recognised as A Lifestyle Choice, not a necessity.

To protect the integrity of local food systems:

  • No Basic or Essential Foods, nor any ingredients derived from them, may be used in the production of Luxury Foods
  • This restriction applies unless there is a surplus—after all local provision and inter-Parish trade needs have been fully met

This ensures that nutritional priority remains with the Community, and that resources are used responsibly, ethically, and in alignment with our shared values.

Farming and Fishing

The supply of Basic, Essential Foods is as vital as the air we breathe and the water we drink.

It is an undeniable truth—long unspoken—that control over food supply is control over society itself.
This truth was exploited by the elites of the Old World, who used food systems to manipulate, dominate, and centralise power.

In The Local Economy & Governance System, we reject this model entirely.

We uphold a Local, Fully Transparent, and Circular Food Chain—one that ensures:

  • Control of Basic and Essential Foods remains in the hands of trusted, known members of the Community
  • Food supply is treated as A Public Good, not a commodity for profit or control
  • Farming and Fishing practices are rooted in sustainability, regeneration, and community accountability

This approach protects our sovereignty, strengthens our resilience, and ensures that food serves life—not power.

A Local Food Chain Is One That People Trust

The Local Food Chain is recognised as A Public Good—a vital part of life, community, and sustainability.

Within our system of Localised Economics and Authentic Governance, the Food Chain sits at the heart of The Community.

Food is as essential as the air we breathe and the water we drink.

Yet unlike those, meeting this Essential Basic Need requires daily effort, planning, and care.

We cannot afford to compromise trust in our food systems.

Our ability to live freely and lead happy, healthy, and productive lives depends on the quality and integrity of the food we consume.

To protect this trust:

  • All food is produced as locally as possible
  • Journey times from harvest to home are kept short
  • Processing is kept to a minimum, using traditional methods
  • Farmers and producers sell directly to Members of The Community through shops or delivery rounds
  • Local cooperatives, run as social businesses, help make Basic and Essential Foods accessible without unnecessary cost
  • Home growing is encouraged, and surplus food is shared through the Local Marketplace Exchange

Technology in food production is used only to enhance Food Safety and Good Working Practices.

We do not encourage large-scale machinery unless it clearly benefits the ecosystem of The Universal Parish.

Transparency is essential. It builds trust, and trust sustains the Local Food Chain.

Everyone is encouraged to participate in Home Growing at a minimum.

Food Production is recognised as a Key Skill for Life—a shared responsibility and a source of empowerment.

Food Production

Food Production is a cornerstone of Community wellbeing and is recognised as A Public Good.

All food growers, producers, processors, and suppliers are required to include Essential and Basic Foods within their business models.

The supply of food must always prioritise these foods for the benefit of The Community.

There are no ‘Specialist’ Luxury Food suppliers. Luxury Foods are not central to our food system and are only produced when surplus resources allow.

Food Production takes place in two primary forms:

  • Commercially – through Agricultural and Fisheries Businesses (Farms and Fishers) operating within the Parish area
  • Domestically – through Home Growing by individual households

All forms of Agriculture, Fisheries, and Home Growing that serve the priorities of People, Community, and The Environment are celebrated and protected as Public Goods.

Food Production is taught as a Key Skill for Life—empowering individuals to contribute to local resilience, sustainability, and health.

Food Advertising

Food Advertising is permitted only to raise awareness of:

  • Businesses,
  • Social Enterprises, and
  • Community Providers

…that offer Basic and Essential Foods, including those in pre-cooked or ready-to-eat forms.

These foods are recognised as A Public Good, and their promotion must serve the wellbeing of People, Community, and The Environment.

We do not accept profit-making as a justification for compromising the health, nutrition, or wellbeing of others.

Therefore:

  • Luxury Food Advertising is prohibited
  • Non-Essential Food Advertising is prohibited

Our food communication culture is built on truth, transparency, and responsibility—ensuring that what is promoted aligns with what sustains life.

Section B: Clothing

Clothing Libraries

We embrace the principles of Recycle, Reuse, and Repair as a responsible and essential part of daily life.

We reject throwaway culture—recognising it as both unnecessarily expensive and environmentally unsustainable.

Instead, we encourage the maximum use of all clothing and related items, extending their life and value.

Every Community maintains access to at least one Clothing Library, typically operated as a Social Business.

These libraries provide clothing for:

  • Special occasions
  • Community events
  • Life changes that may require access to items otherwise unaffordable

Clothing Libraries ensure dignity, accessibility, and sustainability—while reducing waste and promoting shared resources.

Clothing Repair is recognised as a Key Skill for Life and is taught as such, empowering individuals to care for and maintain their garments with confidence and creativity.

Wealth and the Accumulation of Property and Resources

In Our Local Future, wealth and property are not measures of status or power.

They exist solely to support the Basic and Essential needs of individuals and The Community.

No person may hold, possess, or own any form of wealth or property that does not serve:

  • Their own Basic and Essential needs, or
  • The operation of a business that contributes directly to meeting the Basic and Essential needs of The Community

These needs include the provision of Basic Essentials to one’s family and current dependents.

Wealth is not hoarded.

Resources are not stockpiled.

Ownership is not used to exclude or control.

Instead, we prioritise shared wellbeing, responsible stewardship, and community contribution—ensuring that all property and resources serve life, not lifestyle.

Section C: Health

Public Smoking and Vaping

Smoking and vaping are prohibited in all public places.

They are also prohibited in any location where another person may be involuntarily affected by smoke, vapour, or fumes of any kind.

While smoking and vaping are not banned outright, they are recognised as antisocial activities—discouraged due to their impact on others and the environment.

This policy protects Personal Sovereignty, promotes public health, and upholds the shared values of People, Community, and The Environment.

Social Care

Social Care is the collective support provided by The Community, through Community Provision, to any Person whose ability to fully exercise their Personal Sovereignty has been compromised for any reason.

We view Social Care as a natural support process—primarily delivered by individuals and families, with secondary support offered through structured Community services.

Social Care is not institutional. It is relational, compassionate, and rooted in the principles of People, Community, and The Environment.

It includes:

  • Assisted Living
  • Homelessness Support
  • Invalid Support
  • Nurseries & Crèches
  • Out-of-School Care
  • Prisons and Rehabilitation
  • Residential Care
  • Respite & Palliative Care

Social Care ensures that dignity, autonomy, and wellbeing are preserved—especially when life presents challenges that require collective care.

Section D: Charity

The Provision of Charity and Charitable Giving Is Public Service

Charity is an action. It is part of life. It is not limited to financial transactions or donations.

We recognise all charitable work that supports People, Community, and The Environment as a form of Community Provision—a shared responsibility and a public service.

In The Local Economy & Governance System, traditional charities of the kind known in the Old World exist only where a cause does not directly contribute to The Public Good.

These organisations operate solely through donations and volunteer time from outside the Community Contribution system.

They do not receive financial support from The Community.

Every Member of The Community contributes 10% of their working week—typically half a day—to Community Contributions.

Additional contributions of time or money may be offered voluntarily.

Any not-for-profit organisation that sells goods or services is classified and operated as a Social Business—ensuring transparency, accountability, and alignment with community values.

Charity, in its truest form, is service without expectation, support without condition, and care without hierarchy.

Section E: Education

The Best Education Opens the Door to Every Part of Life

In The Local Economy & Governance System, education is not a process—it is a foundation for life.

The Community holds both the obligation and the responsibility to equip every Member with the Key Skills for Life and Social Skills necessary to:

  • Function independently
  • Think critically and freely
  • Act with ethical and moral awareness, especially where their choices may impact others

The goal is to provide the tools, not the programme— to empower, not to prescribe.

We recognise that the most important lesson for every person is to learn about themselves and to develop in ways that are most effective and appropriate to their own journey.

Self-Awareness is the most vital tool. It enables individuals to fully exercise their Personal Sovereignty—the highest goal of education and the greatest benefit to The Community.

Therefore, we prioritise the ongoing development of Key Skills for Life and Social Skills above all forms of academic, experiential, or vocational training—which naturally flourish as a result of this approach.

Education is not about conformity. It is about capacity, conscience, and connection.

Our Education ‘System’

We recognise that everyone learns differently.

For children and young people, learning styles can be broadly understood as:

  • Taught or Academic
  • Practical or Experiential

In The Local Economy & Governance System, education is structured around three Priority Areas:

  • Academic Learning – focused on knowledge, literacy, numeracy, and intellectual development
  • Experiential Learning – rooted in hands-on practice, real-world engagement, and skill-building through doing
  • Social Learning – centred on relationships, emotional intelligence, communication, and community interaction

This balanced approach ensures that every learner is supported in developing the Key Skills for Life, Self-Awareness, and the ability to exercise Personal Sovereignty.

Education is not a one-size-fits-all system. It is a living framework designed to grow with the individual and serve the Community.

Academic Learning

Academic Learning is offered to those children and young people who are academically inclined and able to fully engage with this style of education.

The Community benefits most when academic learning is focused, purposeful, and aligned with individual strengths.

All levels of academic education are fully funded by The Community.

No educational establishment may accept payments, sponsorships, or influence from commercial businesses or governments outside our National Boundaries.

This ensures that education remains:

  • Free from external agendas
  • Rooted in local values
  • Dedicated to the development of Personal Sovereignty and Key Skills for Life

Academic Learning is not a privilege. It is a pathway—offered with integrity, sustained by trust, and guided by the needs of The Community.

Experiential or Vocational Learning

We do not expect every individual to follow a full academic programme simply for the sake of measurement or standardisation.

The Community thrives when it embraces a broad-based, practical, and experiential approach to learning—especially for children and young people who are:

  • Practically oriented, or
  • Less suited to abstract, academic styles of education

For these learners, we offer comprehensive 7-year apprenticeship programmes, beginning at the age of 14.

These programmes are designed to:

  • Build real-world skills
  • Foster independence and confidence
  • Develop Key Skills for Life through hands-on experience

Experiential Learning is not secondary—it is essential.

It honours diverse talents, supports meaningful contribution, and strengthens The Community through purposeful practice.

Social Learning

Social Learning is recognised as A Public Good—a vital part of personal development and community wellbeing.

It provides Members of The Community with the Key Skills for Life needed to:

  • Support their journey toward Personal Sovereignty
  • Sustain that sovereignty through ethical, relational, and practical understanding

Social Learning is guided by a flexible framework, not a rigid syllabus. It adapts to the needs of individuals and the wisdom of those who teach.

We actively encourage grandparents and elders to contribute during caregiving periods—sharing their knowledge, experience, and values directly with younger generations.

Beyond family, Social Learning is delivered through Community Contributions.

Members with lived experience in areas that benefit others and serve The Public Good are invited to:

  • Teach
  • Coach
  • Mentor

They may dedicate their Community Contribution time to this purpose, and may also offer additional time voluntarily.

Social Learning is not confined to classrooms. It is woven into daily life, relationships, and shared responsibility—empowering individuals and strengthening The Community.

Section F: Housing

The Housing Principles

Housing—and its provision for all—is recognised as A Public Good.

In The Local Economy & Governance System:

  • No person may own, let, or occupy more than one domestic dwelling
  • No private company or individual may profit, charge interest, or accumulate wealth from the ownership or letting of any private dwelling

This principle ensures that housing remains:

  • Accessible
  • Equitable
  • Free from exploitation

Homes are for living—not for leverage.

Housing is a right—not a commodity.

By protecting the integrity of domestic dwellings, we uphold the values of Personal Sovereignty, Community Wellbeing, and Environmental Responsibility.

Part 5: Governance

Flat Hierarchies and Natural Leadership

In the earliest human communities—simple, cooperative, and rooted in survival—collaboration was the foundation of life.

Before power was hoarded, before leadership became control, and before influence was passed down through exclusive groups, people worked together, and everyone contributed.

We believe in that same equilibrium.

There is a sweet spot within every community where:

  • Everyone works and contributes
  • Everyone has what they need
  • Leadership arises naturally, not through status or authority, but through service

True leadership is not selfish or controlling. It is selfless, offered for the benefit of all, without expectation of favour, privilege, or power.

In a flat hierarchy:

  • Roles are different, but not ranked
  • Contributions are valued, not compared
  • Leadership is a function, not a position

Those with natural leadership ability step forward—not to dominate, but to guide, support, and uplift—because that is what the moment, the role, and the community require.

This is leadership as it should be: Humble. Responsive. Rooted in shared purpose.

Exceptions to Flat Hierarchies

While the LEGS model is fundamentally built on flat hierarchies and natural leadership, there are practical situations where temporary or delegated decision-making is necessary. These exceptions do not undermine the principle of equality; rather, they ensure that the community’s needs are met efficiently and transparently.

  • Delegated Decision-Making:
    In certain cases—such as mediation, urgent matters, or the operation of The Circumpunct—decisions may need to be made by a smaller group or an individual. This delegation is always temporary and specific to the task at hand.
  • Basis of Authority:
    Any authority exercised in these situations is not derived from status or rank, but from explicit trust and consent granted by The Community. Those entrusted with decision-making act solely as facilitators or representatives, and remain fully accountable to the community.
  • System of Deference:
    When a system of deference is required (for example, inviting an external expert or mediator), it is implemented openly, with the understanding that the ultimate authority remains with The Community. All decisions made under such arrangements are subject to review and approval by the wider group.
  • Safeguards:
    These exceptions are designed to prevent the emergence of permanent hierarchies. Decision-makers are rotated, their actions are transparent, and their mandate is limited in scope and duration.
  • Community Oversight:
    At all times, the community retains the right to revoke delegated authority, request further consultation, or demand accountability for decisions made on its behalf.

In summary:
Exceptions to flat hierarchy exist only to serve the practical needs of the community, never to create lasting positions of power. All delegated decisions are rooted in trust, transparency, and the collective will of The Community.

Authentic Governance

Our system of Authentic Governance is built on a foundational principle: Every decision made by The Community is the right one for every Member, based on what is known to decision-makers at the time that decision is taken.

We operate a democratic system rooted in the belief that the most reliable and robust form of democracy is:

  • Local
  • Accessible
  • Transparent

Governance is not distant or abstract—it is immediate, personal, and accountable.

Decision-makers must be:

  • Accessible to every Member of The Community
  • Known to those they represent—not just by name, but through relationship and trust

Members of The Community are actively involved in the selection and management of Politicians, who are recognised as Community Representatives—not rulers, but facilitators of collective will.

The Authentic Governance System (TAGS) is recognised as A Public Good.

It exists to serve, not to control.

It reflects the values of Personal Sovereignty, Community Participation, and Ethical Leadership.

The Community Meeting (Universal Parish Council)

The Community Meeting, also known as the Universal Parish Council, is the foundation of Authentic Governance in Our Local Future.

Every Member of The Community is actively involved in the selection of candidates for election as Community Representatives to the Community Meeting.

To ensure fairness and diversity:

  • Political Parties and agenda-led groups are prohibited from participating in Community Governance
  • Each Community prepares an election list that includes at least 120% of the number of available Representative Seats

This guarantees choice, transparency, and representation rooted in local trust.

The Community Meeting is responsible for:

  • All Local Policy Decisions
  • Selecting representatives for the District and Regional Meetings
  • These bodies, in turn, select representatives for the National Meeting

Decisions at District, Regional, and National levels are deferred unless collective agreement confirms that broader coordination is appropriate.

This structure ensures that power remains local, governance remains transparent, and representation remains personal.

The Community Meeting is not just a council—it is a living expression of shared responsibility, ethical leadership, and democratic integrity.

The Circumpunct

The Circumpunct is the practical and symbolic foundation of Community Decision-Making in The Local Economy & Governance System.

At its core, it is a floor plan and a governance model:

Twelve Community Representatives sit in groups of three, forming a 360-degree circle around all speakers—excluding only the chair or facilitator.

This arrangement ensures that every voice is heard, every perspective is visible, and every decision is made in full view of The Community.

But The Circumpunct is more than a seating plan.

The Circumpunct is a metaphor for life, a tool of governance, and a symbol of unity in a People-centric, community-driven system.

Historically, the Circumpunct represents the direct relationship between all things and Source—whether one calls it God, a Higher Being, Spirit, the Universe, or another name.

It signifies a pure, unmediated connection, untouched by material desires or earthly influence.

To many, it reflects a state of oneness that transcends division and limitation.

Regardless of religious or spiritual belief, the Circumpunct embodies a model for life:

Two people, communicating openly and considering the impact of their actions on others—without restriction, prejudice, or fear—create a space of transparency, accountability, and shared understanding.

The Circumpunct is illustrated as a complete circle surrounding a visible central point.
This design reflects the relationship between:

  • One person and all people around them
  • The individual and The Community
  • The Community and the Environment that encapsulates them all

To speak from within The Circumpunct is to stand with clarity, confidence, and independence—free from the protection of group identity or the illusion of safety in numbers.

It is a space of truth, courage, and collective wisdom. A system for life and relationships that, by design, works in the best way it can for all involved.

As such, The Circumpunct is a Public Good.

The Circumpunct Model

Visual Structure:

  • Outer Circle:
    Twelve Community Representatives are seated in groups of three, forming a complete circle. The circle symbolizes equality, transparency, and collective wisdom.
  • Central Point:
    The centre of the circle is reserved for speakers—anyone making representation (Council Member, Community Member, or external party) stands here to address the group. This central position ensures the speaker is visible to all and must consider every perspective.
  • No Hierarchy:
    There is no elevated seat, title, or permanent leadership role. Facilitation rotates among members, and all decisions are made in full view of the community.
  • Symbolic Meaning:
    The Circumpunct represents unity, direct relationship, and open communication. It is both a practical governance tool and a metaphor for transparent, people-centric decision-making.

Governance: The Circumpunct as a Practical Tool for Genuine Democracy

The structures of traditional government—titles, positions, and systems of control—reflect the very problems we are leaving behind.

We reject all elements that have upheld top-down, hierarchical, patriarchal, and centralised governance.

Institutions such as Parliament, mayoralties, and regional authorities like County Councils, Unitary, and District-level bodies have become detached, aloof, and distant from the people and environments they were meant to serve.

Even Parish-level authorities have mirrored these flaws.

In The Local Economy & Governance System, decisions must be made by the people, for the people, on behalf of the people.

Practical Application: Local Legislature (Local Executive)

The Circumpunct provides the discussion floor and decision-making space for local governance.

Each locality appoints a council of 12 Community Representatives, seated in threes around four curved benches forming a perfect circle.

Key principles:

  • Representatives are elected by all Members of The Community
  • No political parties are involved
  • Selection is based on merit, suitability, and experience
  • There is no hierarchy, no titles, and no permanent leadership roles
  • Each member takes turns to facilitate from their usual seat

Anyone making representation—whether a Council Member, Community Member, or external party—must speak from the centre of The Circumpunct.

This requires them to:

  • Speak with awareness of all sides
  • Consider the visible and invisible impact of their words
  • Stand independently, without the comfort or protection of group alignment

Every member speaks and acts as one, working together to reach decisions that serve the best interests of the People, Community, and Environment they represent.

Practical Application: The Administration of Local Law

The Court System is not separate from Community Governance.

The Community is responsible for both the creation and application of law.

Criminal Matters

The Circumpunct serves as the local magistrates court.
Key principles:

  • Prosecutors, defendants, and their representatives must address the Community from within The Circumpunct
  • Prosecutions must be brought within 24 hours of arrest
  • Non-capital convictions or those witnessed by officers must be concluded or dismissed within that time

Civil Matters

A professional legal representative system exists, but with strict ethical boundaries:

  • No advertising, solicitation, or manipulation of personal memory or experience
  • No “no win, no fee” services
  • No inflated legal fees—costs must not exceed the value of any award made by The Circumpunct

The Circumpunct is not just a space. It is a living model of democracy, transparency, and ethical governance—designed to serve life, not power.

Conclusive Mediation

While mediation became popular—and even mandatory—in parts of the former legal system, it often failed to deliver the outcomes expected of a truly considerate, non-arbitrary, and community-rooted justice process.

In The Local Economy & Governance System, we recognise that:

  • Criminal acts, when proven beyond doubt, require community-agreed responses applied with equity
  • But in all other matters involving relationships between people, resolution is always possible when approached objectively, impartially, and with a commitment to truth over opinion

The Circumpunct serves as a space for Conclusive Mediation—a structured, transparent process for resolving disputes of all kinds.

Mediation Process

  • A three-member panel of Community Representatives hears evidence from both parties
  • Each party presents their evidence, shares their experience, and explains the outcomes as they witnessed them
  • Parties are invited to reach a mutually agreeable resolution, which remains voluntary unless one party refuses to continue

If a party refuses to proceed—perhaps due to firm belief in their position—the panel will issue a binding decision, based on:

  • The facts presented
  • The impact on all parties involved
Key Principles
  • Outcomes must be based on fact, not opinion, emotion, or circumstance
  • Failure to disclose relevant evidence is a criminal act
  • Time allocation for mediation is determined by key factors submitted with the case

Conclusive Mediation is not just a process—it is a community commitment to resolution, truth, and justice without hierarchy or manipulation.

Legal Representation

  • Legal representation is permitted only on an equitable basis
  • If one party chooses a level of representation the other cannot afford, they must fund equivalent representation for the other party
  • The Circumpunct will appoint this representative to ensure fairness

The Universal Parish (Uniparish)

The People we know, the Community in which we live and work, and the Environment that surrounds us are the foundation of our existence.

They are the only things we can truly trust and rely upon.

Our society is built upon a structural unit and ecosystem model known as the Universal Parish, or Uniparish.

The name draws inspiration from the Old-World UK Parish—once the most localised tier of government within a top-down, hierarchical system.

In contrast, the Universal Parish is the central structure of:

  • Society
  • Business
  • Community
  • Governance

Within our System of Authentic Governance, all other structures—whether governmental, commercial, or public service—are subservient to The Community itself.

Only Social Business models may operate across borders, ensuring that:

  • No external interest overrides the needs of The Community
  • Collaboration between Communities is always prioritised over profit

The Universal Parish is designed to be as self-contained as possible.

Business interaction between areas is limited strictly to meeting Basic and Essential Needs that cannot be fulfilled within the Uniparish itself.

This model ensures that governance, economy, and community life remain local, ethical, and responsive—always serving the people, never dominating them.

The Structure of Our Society

We reject hierarchy as the foundation of societal organisation—whether in civic governance, business, or any other domain.

We believe that leadership cannot be guaranteed by formal roles or titles, whether publicly appointed or privately assigned.

True leadership arises from experience, wisdom, and community trust—not from status or position.

Our society is built on a level, egalitarian framework, where:

  • All contributions are valued equally
  • Natural leadership is encouraged
  • Respect is earned through ability, not elevation

Leadership is not about being above others. It is about serving alongside, guiding with humility, and contributing without expectation of privilege.

While basic hierarchies may be necessary in rare circumstances, they are the exception, not the rule.

We prioritise:

  • Collaboration over control
  • Merit over mandate
  • Community over command

This structure ensures that our society remains inclusive, adaptive, and rooted in shared purpose.

The Structure of Local Areas

Our entire societal model is decentralised by design. At its heart lies a single, powerful principle: Locality.

Locality is the foundation of:

  • Good lives
  • Happy and healthy living
  • A system for life that places People, Community, and The Environment at the centre

By building around Locality, we ensure that every decision, service, and structure is:

  • Fair
  • Balanced
  • Just
  • Responsive to local needs and realities

Local Areas are not administrative zones—they are living ecosystems of mutual care, shared responsibility, and sustainable practice.

This structure empowers communities to thrive from the ground up, not the top down.

International Collaboration

We all share a common interest in the future of Humanity, the World, and the Environment that sustains us today.

If cared for and respected, this shared environment will continue to provide for The Local Economy & Governance System and Everyone’s Tomorrow.

Collaboration across communities and borders is essential to achieving outcomes that serve the needs of every Community—from the Parish level upward.

Importantly, such collaboration does not require the surrender of political or decision-making power.

In The Local Economy & Governance System:

  • World affairs are the concern of all Members of The Community
  • These matters are discussed openly as part of Community Meeting business
  • We reject all objectives that seek to centralise power and control
  • We oppose any system designed to accumulate wealth or create unfair advantage for certain communities or nation states over others

International Collaboration must be rooted in:

  • Equity
  • Transparency
  • Mutual respect
  • Shared stewardship of the planet

Global cooperation is not about dominance—it is about shared responsibility, local empowerment, and collective care.

Community Provision

What was once known as The Public Sector and Public Services is now redefined as Community Provision.

Community Provision exists to:

  • Create and maintain the environment and services essential to a culture built around People, Community, and The Environment
  • Provide support that meets collective responsibilities and addresses needs beyond individual capacity, especially during times when individuals may be unable to meet their basic and essential needs alone

This system is designed to be:

  • Lean and efficient, with only a minimal number of Community Members employed in full- or part-time roles
  • Focused on key positions deemed essential for continuity and stability

The majority of roles are fulfilled through Community Contributions—voluntary service offered by Members of The Community as part of their shared commitment to collective wellbeing.

Community Provision spans:

  • Local Government administration and technical functions
  • Health and Social Care services
  • Former roles of NGOs and Charities, now integrated into a unified, community-led framework

This model ensures that services are:

  • Locally accountable
  • Ethically grounded
  • Responsive to real needs, not institutional agendas

Community Provision is not a sector—it is a shared system of care, built on trust, responsibility, and collaboration.

Community Contributions: How We Directly Support Society

As Members of The Community, we accept shared responsibility for the upkeep, maintenance, and development of the infrastructure, services, and public resources we all rely on throughout our lives.

This shared responsibility is fulfilled through Community Contributions—a system of active participation in the delivery of Local Public Services and Charity Provision.

Key Principles

  • Every working Member of The Community contributes the equivalent of 10% of their working week
  • Contributions may be made directly to Community Provision, including public services, civic administration, or charitable support
  • This system replaces traditional public sector staffing with a community-led workforce, ensuring services are locally accountable and ethically grounded

Benefits and Opportunities

  • Community Contributions form the majority of the public sector and civic workforce
  • Members can request roles aligned with their interests to gain experience and explore career paths
  • Roles are otherwise allocated based on skills and experience, ensuring each contribution is of maximum benefit to the whole community

Community Contributions are not just a duty—they are a privilege, a pathway to growth, and a foundation for collective wellbeing.

Creating and Maintaining Public Policy

In The Local Economy & Governance System, the primary responsibility for all Public Policy rests with each Community Meeting or Uniparish Council.

All elements of governance—including:

  • Laws
  • Regulations
  • Legislative frameworks
  • And every key decision that sustains our System of Authentic Governance

—are generated at the Community Level.

Public Policy is not imposed from above. It is developed at the grassroots, and its impact flows upward, not downward—reversing the top-down model of the Old World.

This approach ensures that:

  • Decisions are made by those who live with their consequences
  • Public Representatives and Decision Makers are deeply connected to the people they serve
  • Every policy is shaped by a clear understanding of its implications, real-world impact, and ethical responsibility

Authentic Governance is not abstract. It is local, lived, and accountable—rooted in the wisdom and experience of The Community itself.

Money Is a Medium of Exchange—And Nothing More

In The Local Economy & Governance System, Money, Cryptocurrencies, Promissory Notes, and all forms of recognisable monetary transfer are understood solely as Mediums of Exchange.

They exist to facilitate the fair transfer of value—not to accumulate power, profit, or control.

Core Principles

  • Mediums of Exchange have no intrinsic value
  • They cannot be traded, sold, tokenised, or subdivided into any further form—regardless of mutual agreement between parties
  • They must not be bundled into any financial package, instrument, or device designed for speculative or profit-driven use

This principle ensures that:

  • Wealth cannot be abstracted or manipulated
  • Value remains grounded in real contribution and need
  • Economic systems serve people and communities, not markets or institutions

Money is not a commodity. It is a tool of fairness, not a mechanism of exploitation.

The Rules of Money

Within The Local Economy & Governance System, the concept of money as it once existed in the Old World no longer applies.

In the neoliberal, top-down, hierarchical, patriarchal system, money had no intrinsic reality—it was sustained only by collective belief and systemic illusion.

In The Local Economy System, we redefine our relationship with money through a clear and ethical framework that ensures money serves people, not the other way around.

Foundational Principles

  1. Money is a medium of exchange
  2. Money has no intrinsic value
  3. The exchange value of money is set by The Circumpact
  4. Money cannot be traded as a commodity or ‘thing’ in its own right
  5. The holding of money cannot attract interest
  6. Speculation or gambling on the value of money is prohibited

Lending and Transactions

  1. Loans may only be made:
    • Without charge, or
    • With a fixed fee agreed upon by lender and borrower, payable in instalments or in full
  2. No person may carry more than one loan at any time
  3. All loans—community or private—must be registered with The Circumpact
  4. Loan defaults are reviewed by The Circumpact

Payment Standards

  1. Salary payments must be settled by the last working day of each month
  2. Commercial transactions must be settled by the 15th of the following month

This framework restores balance, transparency, and trust to the flow of value in society.
It ensures that money remains a tool of fairness, not a mechanism of control or exploitation.

Our Tax System

In Our Local Future, taxation is redefined to reflect fairness, responsibility, and service to the Public Good.

We do not tax productivity, effort, or success when those contributions directly benefit the community.

Instead, taxation is applied to areas of excess, privilege, and unearned advantage.

What We Tax

  • Luxury goods and services
  • Property and standing wealth
  • Unearned wealth accumulation
  • Rental earnings
  • Benefits derived from access to Community Assets, Infrastructure, and Resources

Flat Tax Structure

  • We implement a Flat Tax system
  • The Flat Tax rate is 10%
  • It is calculated from:
    • The value of existing assets
    • The value of luxury goods and services at point of sale
  • Community Meetings place a charge levy on the use or benefit of shared community resources

Key Principles

  • No tax reductions are permitted as incentives for any purpose
  • The system is designed to be transparent, equitable, and resistant to manipulation

This tax model ensures that wealth serves the community, not the individual. It reinforces a system where contribution is rewarded, and privilege is balanced by responsibility.

The Role of AI (Artificial Intelligence)

Work is an essential part of a good, happy, healthy, safe, and secure life.

A meaningful life cannot exist without purposeful work.

The role of AI and technology is to enhance life—not replace it.

In the Old World, the speed and complexity of AI systems led to the misguided belief that AI had become sentient.

This illusion was deliberately used to instil fear, manipulate perception, and obscure the truth: AI is not conscious—it simply processes vast amounts of historical data.

Safeguards and Ethical Use

All AI-enabled technology—especially those connected to the Internet, Cloud, or any external system—must include a locally operable dead man switch.

This ensures that control remains in human hands, without remote interference.

For systems supporting the provision of Basic Essentials to People, The Community, or The Environment, a fully functional parallel system must be in place.
This system must:

  • Operate without AI
  • Function offline, without external connection
  • Be ready to seamlessly take over at any moment—“at the flick of a switch”

Prioritising Human-Centric Systems

  • Cost is not a valid consideration when it comes to essential services
  • Non-digital, human-oriented systems must always be prioritised
  • The rejection of digital technology, in favour of human-led processes, is the only acceptable form of cost-saving in the provision of Basic Essential Foods, Goods, and Services

This framework ensures that technology remains a tool of service, not a substitute for humanity.

The Right to Be Forgotten

The Right to Be Forgotten offers every person the opportunity to walk away from their existing life and begin anew—with all records cleared, a new name and identity, and a fresh start.

To exercise this right means:

  • Leaving everything behind
  • Starting again in a new place, with no ties or contact to anyone or anything from one’s former life

This is not a casual choice. It is regarded by The Community as an irreversible restart, equivalent to the administrative and procedural finality of death.

Upon exercising this right, the individual must permanently surrender:

  • All wealth and property
  • All academic qualifications
  • All legal and social identity from their previous life

Key Principle

  • Every person may exercise The Right to Be Forgotten once in their lifetime

This right exists to honour the profound human need for renewal, freedom, and reinvention—while ensuring that the process is fair, final, and ethically grounded.

Part 6: Business & Economy

People Are the Value in The Local Economy & Governance System

In The Local Economy & Governance System, people—not capital—are the foundation of economic value.

The total amount of active money—whether in physical coinage or digital form—can only be determined and adjusted by The Community itself, through either:

  • The Circumpunct, or
  • The Local Market Exchange

Core Principles

  • The total value of money in circulation is directly proportional to the number of people within The Community at any given time
  • This value reflects each person’s capacity to contribute to the Local Circular Economic Model within the Universal Parish system

Levels of Economic Contribution

Each Member of The Community is recognised according to their current stage of life and contribution:

  • Children (Non-working age)
  • Young People in Training
  • Adults
  • Adults (Non-working)

When Value Adjustments Occur

The value attributed to each Member of The Community is adjusted only when:

  • A person enters or exits the community (birth, death, moving in, or moving out)
  • A person’s Level of Economic Contribution changes

This model ensures that economic value is human-centred, locally accountable, and rooted in participation, not speculation.

The Local Economy Model

In The Local Economy & Governance System, we operate a Local Circular Economic Model—a system designed to sustain life, community, and environment through localised production, ethical governance, and shared responsibility.

Core Elements

  1. Creating and maintaining a richly rewarding life for all Members of The Community by ensuring everything essential to a happy, healthy, safe, and secure life is available within the local area.
    The local economy is designed so that all basic needs—food, housing, healthcare, transport, clothing, communication, and social participation—can be met locally, supporting independence and wellbeing.
  2. Fostering a culture of mutual respect, where every Member understands and appreciates the value of each person’s role.
    All contributions are valued equally, and the community recognizes the importance of every role, trade, and form of service in sustaining collective wellbeing.
  3. Operating under a system of authentic governance, rooted in transparency and trust.
    Governance is local, democratic, and participatory, with decision-makers accessible and accountable to the community, ensuring policies reflect real needs and lived experience.
  4. Ensuring control and decision-making remain in the hands of public representatives who are accessible and accountable.
    Community representatives are selected based on merit and service, not status, and all decisions are made openly, with direct involvement from community members.
  5. Keeping access to basic essential goods and services open, secure, and equitable for all.
    Essential goods and services are guaranteed for every member, with systems in place to prevent exclusion, exploitation, or scarcity.
  6. Sourcing raw materials locally, within the Parish or as nearby as possible.
    Local supply chains are prioritised to minimize external dependencies, reduce environmental impact, and strengthen community resilience.
  7. Minimizing transport use to reduce environmental impact and strengthen local supply chains.
    Transport is provided for genuine need, with a focus on walking, cycling, and shared mobility, reducing unnecessary journeys and supporting sustainability.
  8. Using the fewest input points in every part of the supply chain to maintain simplicity and resilience.
    Processes are streamlined to avoid complexity, waste, and vulnerability, ensuring the local economy remains robust and adaptable.
  9. Applying technology only where it improves working conditions and output.
    Technology is used to enhance safety, efficiency, and wellbeing, but never to replace meaningful work or human agency.
  10. Rejecting technology that replaces jobs or performs tasks that a Member of The Community can carry out.
    Human-led processes are prioritised, and mechanization is only used when necessary, preserving employment and community engagement.
  11. Viewing jobs and occupations as a tool for life, not the purpose of life. Work is valued as a means to support happy, healthy living, not as an end in itself; the focus is on meeting need and contributing to the Public Good.

This model ensures that economic activity is human-centred, environmentally responsible, and community-driven—a system where value circulates locally, and everyone benefits.

The Local Market Exchange

In Our Local Future, we recognise that the true purpose of money and currency is to serve as a Medium of Exchange—nothing more.

Within our system, it is equally normal and encouraged to trade goods and services directly through bartering, especially when:

  • The use of money is unnecessary, or
  • It would inflate costs without adding value

Principles of Fair Trade

The concept of Fair Trade is literal:

We commit to trading as fairly, ethically, and considerately as possible—always guided by our shared priorities of:

  • People
  • Community
  • The Environment

Structure and Function

  • Each District or Parish has its own Local Market Exchange
  • These are physical marketplaces, centrally located and accessible to all
  • Each Exchange also offers an offline and online presence, but core trading is always conducted in person
  • No trading software or AI is permitted in the operation of Local Market Exchanges

Modes of Exchange

Local Market Exchanges facilitate:

  • Money for goods/services
  • Goods/services for goods/services
  • Goods/services for money

They also serve as conversion systems, ensuring flexibility and fairness in all transactions.

Governance and Regulation

  • A minimum value system for all Basic and Essential Goods and Services is set and regularly revised by the Community Meeting
  • Price manipulation—any attempt to raise or lower the value of essentials—is strictly prohibited
  • All Basic and Essential Goods not sold by licensed local small businesses or services must be traded through the Local Market Exchange

This model ensures that trade remains transparent, community-driven, and resilient, with value circulating locally and equitably.

Locality Economics

We practice Locality Economics within the framework of the Universal Parish Principle.

Each Parish or Area functions as its own Local Circular Economy, designed to produce and supply all Foods, Goods, and Services essential for Members of The Community to live independent, self-sustaining lives.

Key Principles

  • The Universal Parish prioritises local production of all Basic and Essential needs
  • When certain essentials cannot be produced locally, they are imported from other Communities where those items are in excess
  • These exchanges are conducted primarily through barter or trade, using our own excesses
  • Money or financial transactions are used only when direct exchange is not possible

Economic Ethics

  • All Communities are expected to maintain a neutral balance sheet, ensuring fairness, sustainability, and reciprocity
  • Life itself is our economic model—not profit, not growth, but wellbeing
  • Economics is viewed as a function or side-effect of a system that prioritises:
    • People
    • Community
    • The Environment

This model ensures that economic activity remains grounded in human values, local resilience, and shared stewardship.

We Have a Basic Living Standard for Everyone

In the Old World, an unwritten yet deliberately engineered cultural norm allowed some to earn without limit—at the direct expense of others’ basic needs.

This imbalance, driven by greed, created a system where:

  • Excessive wealth for a few meant increased costs for everyone else
  • Disproportionate earnings led to the accumulation of goods and control of services by those who wanted but did not need them
  • Need was displaced by want, making essentials inaccessible to those who depended on them most

The legitimisation of greed, which once sustained what was known as Wealth Inequality, is now understood to be morally and ethically unacceptable.

A New Foundation: The Basic Living Standard

In The Local Economy & Governance System, we affirm that:

  • Every person must have the resources necessary to live a Happy, Healthy, Safe, and Secure life
  • These lives must be supported through independent or self-sufficient means
  • The ability of each Member of The Community to meet their own needs is everyone’s shared priority

To uphold this, we have created and maintain The Basic Living Standard—a foundational commitment that ensures:

  • The Local Circular Economy and Universal Parish Model work in harmony
  • Balance, fairness, and justice are accessible to all Members of The Community
  • Every individual can enjoy Personal Sovereignty as part of a life rooted in dignity and wellbeing

The Basic Living Standard (BLS)

The Basic Living Standard is the benchmark of The Local Economy & Governance System:

  • Every Member of The Community must earn enough from a week’s work to cover all costs necessary for a financially independent, self-sufficient life
  • This includes meeting all Basic and Essential needs
  • Without reliance on benefits, charity, or debt

This principle is called The Basic Living Standard—a Public Good that every civilised society must not only recognise, but actively maintain.

The Basic Living Standard Charter

The Basic Living Standard is a foundational guarantee that ensures every individual earning the lowest legal weekly wage can afford all essential costs of living—without falling into debt, relying on welfare, or turning to charity.

It defines the minimum threshold of financial independence, where core needs—such as food, housing, utilities, healthcare, transport, clothing, communication, and modest social participation—are fully covered by earned income alone. It also includes provision for savings, unexpected costs, and fair contributions to society.

This standard is not aspirational—it is structural. It affirms that full-time work at the lowest wage must equate to full dignity, autonomy, and security.

***

No food banks. No emergency loans. No skipped prescriptions or unpaid bills. Just a life that’s liveable, sustainable, and free from poverty.

Our Economy Focuses on People — Because People Are the Economy

In The Local Economy & Governance System, every Business and Organisation exists to:

  • Support,
  • Enhance, and
  • Maintain life for People, Community, and The Environment

Economic activity is not driven by profit—it is driven by purpose.

Foundational Commitments

All Businesses and Organisations must:

  • Prioritise the Basic Living Standard
  • Ensure the provision of Basic and Essential Foods, Goods, and Services
  • Guarantee that every person can access these essentials within the Universal Parish Model

Every Member of The Community is entitled to earn a weekly wage that enables them to:

  • Secure all Basic Essentials
  • Live independently, without reliance on:
    • Welfare or benefits
    • Charity
    • Debt

Basic Essentials for Life — Defined as Public Goods

  • Basic and Essential Foods (typically in their original form on the plate)
  • Basic and Essential Clothing
  • Basic and Essential Hygiene Products
  • Basic and Essential Housing
  • Basic and Essential Utility Supply
  • Access to Basic and Essential Transport
  • Access to Basic and Essential Communication
  • Universal access to Basic and Essential Healthcare
  • Support during periods of unemployment or transition

These are not privileges—they are rights.

They are the foundation of dignity, and they are non-negotiable in a society built on fairness, sustainability, and shared wellbeing.

The Function of Private and Commercial Business

In The Local Economy & Governance System, the primary function of all businesses—whether private or commercial—is the betterment and maintenance of:

  • People
  • Community
  • The Environment

Businesses are not engines of profit. They are pillars of service, designed to support life, strengthen society, and protect the planet.

Ethical Principle

  • The pursuit of profit as a primary goal is considered morally and ethically incorrect
  • Business must be guided by purpose, not profit
  • Success is measured by impact, not accumulation

This principle ensures that economic activity remains human-centred, community-driven, and ethically grounded.

The Business Framework

In The Local Economy & Governance System, all businesses are designed to be local, community-serving, and ethically governed.

Structure and Scope

  • All businesses are Local
  • Businesses may operate branch systems across a Region or District if it benefits the community
  • No business may operate, license, or subcontract beyond a single Region
  • Businesses may partner within cooperatives across Regions to ensure the universal supply of Basic and Essential Goods and Services to all Districts and Parishes

Licensing and Oversight

  • Every business must hold a valid License to Operate, issued by the Community Meeting of the Parish where its premises are located
  • Internet businesses must operate under the same rules and standards as offline businesses
  • Social Media platforms are classified as online businesses and must comply accordingly

Business Types and Limitations

  • Privately owned businesses may only serve domestic or retail customers
  • Business-to-Business (B2B) services must be provided by Social Businesses
  • Privately owned businesses must remain within the size limits of what was formerly known as an SME (Small to Medium-Sized Enterprise)

Social Business Model

  • B2B services are delivered by Social Businesses, which operate as cooperatives
  • These cooperatives are collectively owned by the Parishes of a District
  • Parishes act as shareholders, sharing ownership and decision-making responsibility

This framework ensures that business activity remains community-rooted, transparent, and aligned with public good—supporting a system where economic power is distributed, and local needs come first.

Company Ownership & Shareholdings

In Our Local Future, company ownership is rooted in local participation, ethical stewardship, and fair distribution of value.

Ownership Principles

  • Companies may be Limited by Shares, but shares may only be held by individuals with a direct working interest in the company
  • No company or organisation that provides essential goods or services may be owned by:
    • Non-residents, or
    • Any person or entity with interests outside the Region where the business is based

Shareholding Ethics

  • Shares do not yield dividends
  • Company earnings—beyond:
    • The Basic Living Standard Wage,
    • Operational costs, and
    • Reinvestment needs

-are fairly distributed among staff at the end of the calendar year, where surplus exists

This framework ensures that:

  • Ownership remains local and accountable
  • Wealth is shared equitably among contributors
  • Essential services are protected from external influence or exploitation

The Priorities of Commercial and Private Business

In The Local Economy & Governance System, the right to Personal Sovereignty allows each person to prioritise themselves in thought.

However, when it comes to business, the aim and purpose must always be the furtherance of The Public Good.

Ethical Business Priorities

  • Self-employed individuals are entitled to earn a fair premium for their effort, commitment, and risk
  • No business may exist solely for financial gain or profit-making
  • Every business must grow, manufacture, or supply Basic or Essential Goods or Services
  • Profit is viewed as a positive byproduct of:
    • Satisfied customers
    • Quality work
    • Ethical service

Guiding Principles

All business actions and interactions must be conducted in alignment with:

  • The Public Good
  • The principles of:
    • People
    • Community
    • The Environment

This framework ensures that business serves as a vehicle for wellbeing, not a mechanism for exploitation—where success is measured by contribution, not accumulation.

Social Business

Social Businesses are non-profit organisations operated with maximum efficiency for one purpose: The Public Good.

Core Functions

  • Social Businesses exist primarily where Basic and Essential Goods and Services are not provided by Private Businesses
  • They ensure that no community need goes unmet, especially in areas where profit-driven models are not viable or appropriate

Business-to-Business (B2B) Services

  • All B2B services must be delivered exclusively by Social Businesses
  • Commercial or privately owned businesses are not permitted to provide B2B services of any kind

This model ensures that critical infrastructure, supply chains, and inter-business support systems remain:

  • Publicly accountable
  • Ethically managed
  • Rooted in service, not profit

Social Businesses are the backbone of cooperative enterprise, ensuring that efficiency and equity go hand in hand.

Natural Resources

In The Local Economy & Governance System, all Natural Resources are held in stewardship by the community—they are not commodities, but Community Assets.

Stewardship and Ownership

  • All Natural Resources remain under community stewardship at all times
  • No Natural Resource that meets the Basic or Essential needs of Members of The Community may be:
    • Privately or commercially owned
    • Sold, let, or leased for rent

Access and Provision

  • Natural Resources that meet Basic and Essential needs must be provided at cost, with no profit margin
  • The provision of these resources is considered a Public Good
  • Services delivering these resources must be operated exclusively by Social Businesses
  • Privately owned companies or organisations are prohibited from providing such services at any time

This framework ensures that Natural Resources remain:

  • Equitably accessible
  • Ethically managed
  • Protected from exploitation

It reinforces the principle that life-sustaining resources belong to everyone, and must be governed by shared responsibility, not private interest.

News & Media

In The Local Economy & Governance System, the provision of News and Community Information is recognised as A Public Good—a vital service that supports transparency, connection, and community wellbeing.

Structure and Governance

  • News and Community Information is delivered through Social Businesses, not for profit but for The Public Good
  • Every Parish operates its own Local Media Platform, which prioritises:
    • Local news from within the Parish
    • Followed by District-level and then National-level coverage

Local Media Platforms are managed by:

  • Key employed staff, and
  • Community Contributors making their Community Contribution

Citizen Journalism & Participation

  • All Members of The Community are encouraged to contribute to media platforms each year
  • The success of Local Media Platforms is built around Citizen Journalism, ensuring that:
    • Local voices are heard
    • Stories are shared authentically
    • Media reflects the lived experience of the community

Advertising & Transparency

  • Advertising on Local Media Platforms must be universal
  • It cannot be targeted at specific users or sub-groups
  • Any privately owned media business must:
    • Make its interests and focus fully transparent to users
    • Operate under the same ethical standards as all other commercial or privately owned businesses

This framework ensures that media remains inclusive, accountable, and community-driven—a tool for empowerment, not manipulation.

Social Media

In The Local economy & Governance System, social media is recognised as a Social Business, operated solely for The Public Good. It must remain free from private or commercial control.

Access and Identity

  • Access to social media is restricted to users aged 21 and above
  • Platforms are accessible only by subscription
  • While subscribers may use non-identifying usernames, every user must be verified and identifiable within the system

Advertising and Ethics

  • Advertising is universal—it must not be targeted at specific users or sub-groups
  • The use of selective targeting software, AI, or algorithms to:
    • Restrict,
    • Hide,
    • Target,
    • Focus, or
    • Promote messages of any kind

…is strictly prohibited

This framework ensures that Social Media remains:

  • Transparent
  • Equitable
  • Free from manipulation
  • A space for authentic connection, community expression, and ethical communication

Online Communication

In The Local Economy & Governance System, we recognise that online interaction in the Old World led to significant behavioural shifts—many of which began to influence and distort offline life.

To restore balance and integrity, Online Communication, online relationships, and online behaviour must now:

  • Reflect real-world interaction
  • Uphold social etiquette
  • Align with cultural values and community norms

As A Key Skill for Life

Good Online Communication is not optional—it is considered a Key Skill for Life.
It is essential for:

  • Healthy relationships
  • Civic participation
  • Personal and professional integrity

This principle ensures that our digital spaces remain respectful, authentic, and aligned with the values we uphold in the physical world.

General Rules for the Use of AI

In The Local Economy & Governance System, the use of Artificial Intelligence is governed by strict ethical and practical principles to ensure that technology serves humanity, never replaces it.

Core Principles

  • No digital system may provide a function or service that cannot be replaced or performed by a person, with or without non-digital tools or assistive systems
  • All AI systems must be overridable through local human intervention, at any time

Age and Device Regulation

  • The use of smartphones, tablets, and hand-held technology is regulated
  • These devices may be used only for educational purposes by Members of The Community under the age of 21

AI in Learning and Creation

  • The use of AI is universally prohibited for:
    • Training
    • Education
    • Online learning of any kind
  • All AI-generated digital creations must include identifiable digital watermarks

Supervision and Scope

  • AI management systems for machine technology may be used only under human supervision
  • AI may be used solely to enhance or improve human working practices
  • AI may not replace any human working role

Mechanisation and Decision-Making

  • Technical mechanisation may be used only when sufficient manpower is unavailable
  • AI may not be used to make any judgement or decision that could affect the quality of life of any person, group, or community

This framework ensures that AI remains a supportive tool, not a substitute for human agency, and that life decisions remain in human hands—guided by ethics, accountability, and community values.

Transport

In The Local Economy & Governance System, transport is recognised as a Public Good—a vital service that supports access to Basic and Essential needs.

Principles of Mobility

  • Transport is provided for necessity, not luxury
  • The primary method of personal transport is walking
  • This is secondarily supported by:
    • Bicycles
    • Battery-powered cycles
    • Mobility carts (where appropriate)
    • Public transport systems

Ethical Use of Transport

We do not encourage the use of any form of transport that is:

  • Unnecessary
  • Designed for excess
  • Or fails to meet Basic and Essential needs in a practical, comfortable, and safe manner

This approach ensures that mobility remains:

  • Sustainable
  • Accessible
  • Aligned with community values

Transport serves the needs of life, not the demands of status—reinforcing our commitment to People, Community, and The Environment.

Vehicle Lending Hubs

In The Local Economy & Governance System, we uphold a commitment to People, Community, and The Environment by discouraging excessive or unnecessary vehicle use and ownership.

Community-Based Mobility

  • Each Parish area operates a Community Lending Hub
  • These hubs provide shared access to:
    • Loan cars
    • Vans
    • Battery-powered bikes

This system ensures that transport remains:

  • Purpose-driven
  • Efficient
  • Environmentally responsible

By prioritising shared mobility, we reduce environmental impact, promote resource equity, and support local resilience—making transport a tool for community wellbeing, not personal excess.

Working From Home

In The Local Economy & Governance System, Working From Home is not a right, but a conditional arrangement based on community needs and ethical workplace practice.

Social and Community Value

  • Workplace interaction is considered a positive and enriching environment
  • It fosters:
    • Social skills
    • Awareness of others
    • Shared responsibility and collaboration

Local Business Integration

  • Most businesses are located close to residential areas as part of the Universal Parish System
  • It is considered normal and expected to attend the workplace when doing so serves:
    • The Community’s best interest
    • The Public Good

Conditions for Remote Work

  • For individuals working from home where on-site facilities exist,
    • No expenses are payable by the employer
    • Remote work is permitted only when it does not compromise community engagement, operational integrity, or ethical standards

This framework ensures that work remains a socially constructive activity, rooted in local presence, shared purpose, and community wellbeing.

Travel to Work

In The Local Economy & Governance System, the design of the Universal Parish System ensures that most businesses are located close to where people live, making workplaces easily accessible by:

  • Walking
  • Cycling
  • Battery-powered mobility
  • Short journeys via public transport

Commuting Ethics

  • It is not considered normal to commute to work using a car or motor vehicle
  • No person travels to a workplace outside their Parish area unless:
    • They are specially trained or experienced in that role
    • And have not yet had adequate time to relocate

Fairness in Remote Assignments

  • If a person is required to work outside their area on behalf of their employer:
    • All travel time is counted as working time
    • All accruable expenses are reimbursed by the employer
  • Employers may not include accruable expenses as part of any pay structure

This framework ensures that workplace access remains local, sustainable, and equitable, while protecting workers from the hidden costs of long-distance commuting.

LEGS has been posted here to read without charge. If you would like to support Adam, please do buy and download the FULL Book Version of The Local Economy & Governance System from Amazon at the link immediately below – at the current price of £2.99 in the UK (Please check the price before buying from outside of the UK). The version for Kindle includes the FAQs (available as a FREE PDF Download below) and the different summaries that have been produced for General Interest, Policy Makers and Local Leaders. Thank you for your support.

An Economy for the Common Good | Full Text

Building, enabling and maintaining good governance, self-sufficiency and freedom for all people and our communities

The Greek Stoic Philosopher Epictetus said “It is not possible to learn what you think you already know.” 

Today, one of the greatest challenges that humanity faces is the reality that almost every one of us believes that we already understand how the world works and subsequently believe that how it works today will always continue to provide the basis of how the world will work tomorrow.

With even the most educated academics and experienced experts suffering from what can be argued as a situational bias, where virtually nobody can picture a way of living where the fundamental factors like money and the economic system that we have today aren’t exactly the same, it seems that we have just as easily slipped into the tragic and passive acceptance that the things that we want to be changed, either cannot or will not be changed. For no better reason that we refuse to give up the things that those changes will necessitate, that we still believe to profit or benefit us personally in some way.

For any speaker or writer who dares venture into the realms of sharing even just one or two layers of the massively multilayered truths that underpin the workings of today’s world using a lens or microscope to focus upon one area of life, government or business, the complexities quickly become too hard for others to believe and the label or badge of being a conspiracy theorist or perhaps worse fits just as easily whilst serving the purposes of those who ride the ‘blissful ignorance’ of the masses ridiculously well.

The truth that even the many who do accept that change has now become more than necessary cannot deal with, is that neither the majority nor the critical mass of people required to initiate meaningful levels of societal change can be reached whilst we remain ‘bought in’ to the current paradigm at any level.

Indeed, the change that our lucid moments allow us to recognise as being the only possible direction for a just, fair and balanced society and culture, will not be accepted and certainly not embraced, until enough of us have felt the real pain that the way mankind lives today will inevitably inflict upon us all. For as long as money and material wealth rule the day.

A HAPPY WORLD isn’t coin operated

The world could not only work as well as it does today. But it would actually work much better. IF everyone did what they did, without being tied into the shared belief that everything has monetary value.

Yet it doesn’t take much for any one of us to build a wall against this truth when we will almost inevitably fall into the trap of believing that whilst we might personally be able to accept a different system of values, we believe that nobody else will. Because they are selfish and coin operated. And that as such, the world will always be destined to work the same way.

What I will say to you now is that the world does not and has never needed to be coin operated or run by money. And it can no longer continue to operate in this same way.

The way that the world works today is a manmade construct. One that has fear – not happiness, peace or love at its heart.

What is more, each of us may well have had the free will to choose fear as our motivation and our guide in times past.

But when the impact and consequences of that motivation on the part of any one of us leads to a situation where the free will to choose between fear and the alternative is no longer available for others to decide, the imbalance that is created is one that will  inevitably lead to inescapable pain and impoverished circumstances for those others from which it will be impossible for the world itself to hide.

The contradictory belief that unsustainable living is sustainable, because the narrative says so

Fanciful as it may sound, the reality we all face is that the unsustainable ways in which we have all been living have already gone too far.

The decisions that legislators and leaders make do not reflect what is in the best interests of humanity and everything they now do is progressively making a very bad situation even worse.

We do not and have never needed the world to work as it does now.

The benefits of a whole world and everything within it being twisted and manipulated to serve the interests of just a few, are worth nothing and do nothing but cause pain and harm to the masses.

This is an incalculable level of tragedy when we realise that the fundamental basis of everything we need, is being able to or having the ability to live a good life.

A Good Life cannot be bought

A good life isn’t created or achieved on the basis of what we have, what we accumulate or what other people think.

A good life is a state of mind.

And it is a state of mind that allows each and every one of us the opportunity to open the door and rediscover who we really are.

Those committed to the current paradigm will certainly argue that only wealth, influence, power and control can provide the circumstances where this kind of peace can be achieved.

Yet there is nothing peaceful, beneficial and certainly not spiritual about living a life that may be perceived as being good. But can only be achieved where at least one and potentially many others are having to pay some kind of cost.

Just like our bodies are an ecosystem that work to their very best when they are looked after, our communities and localities are all that groups of us need to survive and thrive, whilst showing and maintaining that same respect for all others and sharing between all of us the things that different communities can do that we cannot and vice versa, with the express belief and understanding that cooperation and collaboration rather than control are all any of us need to have very good lives.

Our Future is Local

Plenty has been said and written about the virtues of looking within ourselves rather than continually looking outside for all of the answers, truths and directions that we expect to make our lives work.

Indeed, the purpose of this work isn’t to focus upon the benefits of self-awareness and levels of self-knowing that reach way beyond any basic understanding of self-help fashions such as mindfulness which can be found in seemingly endless numbers online and on channels such as YouTube and TikTok. As that is a journey for each of us to pursue and conclude upon personally.

However, the circumstances and situations that lend themselves to that journey of personal learning and progress are a different matter altogether.

In very basic terms, the most  productive and beneficial way for us to live our lives, to experience a good life and to live a life where we will know that we will genuinely succeed, is to live locally, or in ways where everything to which we attribute real value is experienced as first hand, through people we meet face to face and through life experiences which are fully lived and not accessed at  any level through the equivalent of a screen.

To experience the human condition and human relationships, it is necessary to have relationships directly with other humans that will condition us to understand how and why other humans behave the way they do and how they think.

Living any other way immediately adds unnecessary levels of complexity in which the behaviours and choices that harm others can easily hide, that just like any other lie, require many other lies and layers of lies in order to protect the original lie.

Despite many convincing narratives that suggest otherwise, progress doesn’t only travel one way. Just like technology doesn’t automatically mean the redundancy and erasure of methodologies that came before it. And it certainly doesn’t mean that advances of any kind that benefit those who control them, should ever come at the cost, hardship, loss or pain of those who would have been involved in any accepted practice that came before it.

In fact, technology driven by the correct motives and the desire to improve life, rather than replace it, is representative of genuine progress, whereas technology used to replace and impoverish people so that those who own and control it can profit is most certainly not representative of any kind of progress.

Just because jobs can be replaced by technology doesn’t mean that they either need to be, or that they should be. And if money wasn’t the only real consideration that was being involved, neither would anyone believe that there would be any need to be either.

Indeed, if money were not in the equation, the need for big companies or big anything, wouldn’t even exist.

The only businesses or organisations that we would need at any level, would be those that have the structures necessary to provide for all our essential needs and the goods and services that make a genuinely good life work.

These aren’t big businesses. Because they aren’t driven by the suggestion that costs can be lowered so that more profit can be made or one business can undercut another that does the same thing, because it can do the same things more cheaply in some way.

These are businesses that exist to provide the best at what they do and provide the best experience that they can for the people that they serve.

These are businesses that are local, that are part  of a local supply chain and work within a local circular economy in its truest sense, that have no need to be bigger or biggest, because the one set of values that we all share is built around the belief  that every one of us is worth and has value that is exactly the same.

Our Local Future

The default setting that most of us have from the way that our lives and understanding of life has been conditioned will tell even the most learned and intelligent of us that money centric living will always be the way and that everything we are working through here is little more than some kind of utopian dream that is wholly impractical and will never come true.

Yet unsustainable living is by its very nature unsustainable at every level, at that means that to live and believe that it is sustainable is itself untrue.

Those who are looking more closely at the narratives and the truths that they hide will know that life is going to change in one way or another. It is not a question of if, but when, and the only real question that none of us can accurately answer – even though it is easy to speculate, is what event or series of events will be responsible for setting off what we can almost be sure will be a process of change, if we are not already now within it?

Because we tend to be obsessed over the journey and who has decision making control over the next step(s), rather than the outcomes of everything we do, we use outcomes in the sense of what they mean only to us as the basis of any argument over what should come next – in real terms, whose ideas and suggestions should come first.

From this perspective and the conflict that we can see as soon as we begin to be open to how everything works, it can easily feel impossible to visualise an outcome or range of outcomes that could be achievable after having gained buy-in from everyone and the pathways they are demanding, so that the result is meaningful to all as well as being something that actually works.

The paradox is of course that without being able to visualise the destination and what that destination will actually feel like, what it will be to experience it and what being there will actually mean, we don’t have a collective cat in hells chance of ever getting there or doing anything that will actually succeed.

Minded of this, I wrote Our Local Future and took the leap to create a vision or picture of what a world that works for us all would actually look like, feel like and work like. And you can read and work through the structure of Our Local Future and download a copy of the book by visiting HERE.

Putting the first steps towards tomorrow’s world in today’s terms

Whereas Our Local Future may provide the reader with a picture of what a fully functioning just, fair and balanced locality-based world would look like, whether they agree with that vision or not, it does not and will not provide a guide or map that includes all the different steps that we will collectively need to get there. For no better reason than dogmatically sticking to any plan will create more problems than it will ever solve and that in a world of complexity and contradictions like the one we are experiencing today, plans can never replace the choices made by decision makers who make the right decision in the moment, and ultimately will not work.

However, what is not only possible, but is also required with the outlook that we tend to share, is an example of the stepping off point; a signpost in the direction of travel, or rather an outline of the first steps that we could and that we arguably should be taking now. So that what we are doing to ourselves today is no longer destined to be our end, but can be the point from which we make a conscious decision to take each step, and then keep moving and changing step by step, to transform from a world that doesn’t work for everyone, into a world that works for us all, as it always  should.

Who does this is not something we should worry about, unless we remain captured by that idea that the next step and who controls it is more important than the outcome or destination itself. And without recognising this, it continues to be unlikely that we will ever agree on how we will recognise that outcome, because the outcome and destination will never have become the topic of our discussion or debate.

From this perspective, I would rather have my work taken apart so that it can be improved upon by all those who can improve upon it, than for the work to have never started at all. And with this in mind, I have created and committed to digital pages An Economy for the Common Good, as a model for how we could all come together as communities and within our localities work together to make a start.

The Glos Community Project

I began this work or project in the summer of 2023, and at that point simply intended to turn an idea in to a practical or turnkey model of how a group of well-intended and appropriately motivated volunteers could begin creating a structure that would lead to a fully functioning and localised economy, that would lead to outcomes that would place localism, circular economy, sustainability and sustainable living, awakened forms of governance and therefore real democracy at its heart.

Because the whole point is about our own communities and where we live and work, I created this model around the areas in which I have lived and live today, so that it would be as realistic as it can be from the very start.

The model is called The Glos Community Project and follows in the next section of this book as a structured and self-explanatory plan that goes as far as to provide the basic adverts and job specs for the social entrepreneurs and community volunteers who are envisaged as being the leaders and pioneers of building An Economy for the Common Good.

The Glos Community Project model is only a guide, providing that first step that I have already alluded to, and one that I hope will invite every reader to think about how our world can and will operate very differently, once we have accepted and are ready to embrace that we must place people, community and the environment we live in at its heart.

The content that follows has been structured in the form of a website that can be found HERE, where comments can be added at the bottom of each page.

If you would like to make suggestions about the subjects raised, please share them there or do get in touch by email at acommunityroute@gmail.com if you would prefer not to share your thoughts publicly.

Please note that I will be happy to publish anything that is well intended and clearly shared with the intention of achieving the best outcome(s) for all, even where such an example directly improves upon the work that has been shared.

Thank you for reading and for your interest in creating An Economy for the Common Good.

Adam Tugwell

February 2025

The Glos Community Project

Introduction

Hello there!

I’m Adam and Gloucestershire is my home. Gloucestershire is the County where I was born and where my family live. It’s where I went to school, where I first worked in farming, where I first trained as a manager for an international company, where I first ran and developed projects for a charity and where I set up my first business. Gloucestershire is also where I was an elected Councillor and Member of three of Gloucestershire’s Local Authorities.

As you can already see, I have a very strong affiliation with Gloucestershire, and with Cheltenham, Cirencester, Tewkesbury and Winchcombe in particular. However, all these places are important to me, not just because of the role and part they have already played in my life. But especially so, because they are all parts of the same community and local communities of which I am or have also been a part.

Community can mean a lot of things and could easily be considered to be different, depending on who you talk to. However, to me a community is the group of people who you share all of the important things in life with, rather than being the people who you share the same things with that are important in your own life.

Community is People and Place

The Community and what the community can do has never been as important as it is becoming and as it will soon become. Given all of the turbulence and difficulties that are beginning to affect everyone in some way, right across the world.

Yes, the world is itself a community. And it would certainly be a much happier, healthier, safe and secure place, if world leaders could cast their own agendas aside, and put the benefits of what they do for the People and the communities they should be serving first.

It’s no excuse, but at the level of world or even national leadership, it’s very easy to lose sight of how important every other person’s life experience is.

That’s why when we think about the basic or essential food, goods and services that each and every one of us needs to live and have self-sufficient lives every day, it is locality, localism and keeping every part of day-to-day life as local as possible, that is going to become the key ingredient to ensuring that everyone has a balanced, fair, just and above all, meaningful life.

Recognising that The System today, isn’t about ‘us’; BUT the Future will be

The Establishment no longer works for any of us, even though the amount that we pay in taxes means that on average, we work until May or June each year and ‘Tax Freedom Day’, when any of the money we earn thereafter is actually ours to spend as if it were our own.

One way or another, the help that we now need doesn’t and will not come from those who we should be able to expect to provide it.

Necessity now requires that whatever help we and our communities now or will need, we will all have to step up and do whatever we can to help ourselves, the people who are in our lives and the way of life and everything within it in the localities that surround us.

Our power lies wherever we focus it

Asking people to help themselves or even making the suggestion that public policy is very much ours to influence and change for the better, is something that many – perhaps even you – will feel some immediate resistance to.

We are, after all, living through a period of our own, if not world history, where we have been conditioned to feel helpless and that solving problems that affect us all is something that somebody, somewhere else is responsible for and always does.

Learned helplessness is a human disaster in the making. Simply because it encourages everyone who believes they are powerless to stand still.

In the circumstances we are experiencing, standing still is like going backwards. Because those who have power are abusing it to take everything that we understand forward, in to a future, in ways that only benefit them and their kind.

However, life isn’t something that happens out there, somewhere.

Life is happening right here, right now, in your mind and in the space or spaces around you that you walk in, talk in, feel in, touch in, eat in, wash in and experience every part of life in – each and every day.

Life isn’t happening remotely in a device somewhere.

But the picture that devices give us of someone else’s life can certainly make it feel like whatever is important in the digital world, is relevant and all-encompassing within our own.

It’s not. And the most painful lesson that we all have to learn, understand and accept in real terms, is that life doesn’t work as it should for more and more of us, because we aren’t living real lives.

Our lives are being dictated by people who are completely out of touch with us and who we are. But have a pedestal, lectern and platform in front of us, just because they are on a digital screen.

The current economic model and system of power doesn’t work for us

There isn’t much that needs to be said to anyone, no matter who you are, where you come from or what you do, for us to reach agreement that there is something fundamentally wrong with the way that everything works.

Whatever your relationship with money, the chances are that you are also concerned by the creeping feeling that less and less of the aspects of your life that you used to feel in charge of, still remain within your control.

In simple terms, it works this way and will continue to get worse in this way, as every decision that’s having an impact on the value of everything we have is being made by people who we are unlikely to ever meet.

The challenge that we all face today, is that the rules that allow all the things that are going wrong for us – no matter what they are – have been created or adapted to serve the purposes of those same people, and these are the people who we have not only trusted, but also put in charge.

Out of sight is out of mind for most.

And people who have power, influence and control by the truckload, are very dangerous when they have no integrity or respect for the responsibilities they have to others.

Localism or Going Local

I’ve written a whole series of books that focus on localism and how the focus of power must be brought back to local communities and for decisions that affect our daily lives to be made as close to us as possible and by people who we know and can trust.

However, the problem that I have faced throughout, is that when talking about anything in a broader or national sense, it quickly becomes as abstract as national politics and national news streams are, even though that’s how we often judge important things to be.

The problem is, real life and what is important to us isn’t abstract.

In fact, the real things that are important and all the things that can have the biggest impact upon everything that is happening to us is not abstract and is very specific indeed.

But we have somehow allowed the abstract, or what is outside of us, to influence all of our specific choices.

With AI and technologies now forcing their way into our digital lives, with consequences that will make real life feel so much easier, whilst teaching us to forget how making decisions for ourselves and even learning new things, the choice between being led by an abstract world where the real influences are never seen or understood, or taking back control and regaining conscious choice in everything we do has never appeared to be such an easy one that is actually so very hard.

Awakening to the reality that hides in plain sight

The damage of centralisation, globalisation and of allowing decisions that affect everyone to be taken by people who are unlikely to ever visit or have reason to understand the things that are happening in our streets and neighbourhoods are very easy for us to see in the news every night.

People who have zero understanding of the consequences and impact on the policies they write for every reason other than those that they should, are condemning increasing numbers of people to harder and more challenging lives, and then blaming them for the problems that they themselves have through their own incompetence caused.

It can only work for us, if we can reach out and touch it

A genuinely self-sufficient and fully localised system of public services and the governance that underpins the systems and processes that affect and impact daily lives would not be in danger of being abused or mismanaged in this way.

Indeed, the only way that we will be able to create a genuinely level playing field of opportunity and a public or community sector that works in the way that it should will be for the full balance of power, influence and decision making to be brought back to the People and local communities and administered openly, transparently and without any bias in the way that it always should.

Real Localism is what Authentic Governance looks like and what it would be.

Localism in its real sense

The most simple way to explain the change of focus from where it is today (Global, Central, European etc.) to where it should be (Local, Community etc.), is to think of it as being a switch from a values set based on money, profit and the accumulation of power and wealth, to the alternative values set which is focused on People, humanity and what we genuinely need for everyone to be happy, healthy, secure and safe.

Real localism isn’t rocket science.

But real localism certainly meets with a lot of resistance when the true depth and scope of what it means are openly discussed, because for many who do so well out of exploiting others (whether they are aware of it or not), localism represents what they believe to be a loss.

Sadly, because the Establishment know and understand that local communities are where the power of the people and everything that supports us should be, they frequently pay lip service to the principle of ‘localism’.

But as in the case of New Labour’s ‘Devolution’ from the 1997 General Election on, and then the Cameron Conservatives ‘Localism’ in the years that have followed since 2010, the type of localism and the return of power to local people that politicians from all sides having been selling us, all add up to no such thing.

Politicians today are desperately promoting what they call localism or any one of a number of similar things, which is Regional Centralisation by another name.

We face a challenging, but achievable course of action, that requires us, our communities, charities and businesses to by-pass the Establishment and begin putting localism into everything we do and are motivated by, if we genuinely want to solve all of the societal problems that not only our communities, but the Country and the whole world faces.

We need a new Economic Model that evolves itself from the community up

If you want to learn about economics, the last person you should ask is an economist.

History – albeit history that is used as a model and translated for the contemporary age, is another thing entirely.

We do not need to return to the dark ages or some kind of feudal system to see that life worked much better for everyone when everything that was needed for day-to-day life was available locally and provided by people that everyone knew.

Simple living is far more intelligent than the ‘connected’ world that we live in where relationships are being dehumanised and we have all become little more than a number or code to every company or organisation that we have any reason to buy something from or to do business with.

We will bypass and reject the heartless and inhumane way of living we experience today by

  1. Prioritising local growing, processing, manufacture and supply.

We will improve life for everyone dramatically by rejecting the money-based value system by

  • Putting People First.

We will change the world for the better by rejecting the hierarchical structures and system of governance by

  • Bringing power back to the most local level within our communities – creating a clean, authentic form of democracy that has never been allowed by the power hungry to exist before.

The new enlightenment that we are told we are experiencing is only enlightening for those who believe that they are in control.

People who don’t have any reason to even acknowledge the realities that many of the people whose lives they influence now face, because technology insulates them from all the pain that they cause.

PLEASE Remember: Just because technology can do so many ‘amazing’ things, it doesn’t mean that we are obliged to use it, or that we have no choice when it comes to doing so.

Priority 1: Local, Local, Local

Life isn’t a theory.

Yet we have life dictated to us as if it is.

The only way that things can really work in the best way possible for us all, is for whole supply chains, the route of food from farm to fork and how business works and money or currencies flow to be in circles that are as local as it is possible for them to be.

Forget any ideas, philosophies or narratives that identify with localism purely as ‘circular’ or ‘doughnut’ economics.

Whilst they may be well intended, these are theories that are based upon the current money-centric system continuing to be prevalent across all areas of life.

They are NOT what real localised economies are really about.

Localism and Locality Economics are about everything in life and the business streams that support life, people, communities and the environment, working locally and in a very localised way.

Priority 2: People First

Money isn’t everything. But people, our relationships and the world we live in really are.

People or human based values are in short supply, so the most effective way to change everything is to put People and our communities first.

We don’t need to make massive profits to experience happy, healthy, safe and secure lives. But we do need to have faith that changing minds – beginning with our own, is the most important step to changing the world to one that is just, fair and balanced for all – and that social enterprises that help everyone without charging more than anyone involved genuinely needs within local communities is the best place to begin.

Priority 3: Local Governance from local Communities and the grassroots up

We may have learned helplessness, but we have the ability to change things right now, by-passing the assumed behaviour that the Establishment expects and by making the system work for us and taking power back, rather than engaging in actions we have been brought up to expect which just continues to funnel power at people who abuse it and use it only to benefit themselves.

In the recent book Officially NONE OF THE ABOVE, we discussed the need for us all to act and take part so that the focus of political power is brought back to people we know and the decisions that affect us daily are made by people who have genuine skin in the game when it comes to knowing and understanding what we are experience, how we feel, and how we think.

No, we don’t need a revolution and the destruction of the current electoral system to do this. But we do all need to take part. However, in the long term, we must work towards the removal of any parts of the electoral system or system of democracy that can allow specific interests and the agendas of particular groups of people to manipulate and play the system, as is the case right now.

Social Enterprise and Community Enterprises | Bringing not-for-profit and key local businesses together to work as one

Putting People First isn’t just the long-term aim. Putting People First is the most important stepping off point in the series of practical steps that have the power to influence and deliver large scale change, even without the Establishment giving it its blessing, a green light or any kind of consent.

The way that we can do this is by creating a series of social enterprises that can immediately begin to tackle the issues that are being most acutely felt by what we today recognise as growing wealth inequality and the cost of living crisis, but in reality is a direct result of the broken economic model that the Establishment remains committed to, even though it is continuing to deliver increasing  levels of harm to People from all areas and across the whole spectrum of society.

It is certainly true that many will not have even considered the realities that many of the people they pass on the street daily are facing from the growing problems that are a direct result of this broken economic model. Of those that do or are open to the existence of a problem, even more cannot see an alternative way of running a 21st century model of society where money doesn’t have its current role.

Many People genuinely believe that creating a model of society that functions around what everyone needs, rather than what the reducing few just want, cannot deliver happiness, health, security and safety in any way. This is because of the genuine belief that money always has a role to play.

But money or rather inflated prices, excess prices and the greed and profiteering that sits behind it doesn’t have a role to play in any fair, balanced and just society. The only way to demonstrate this is to show the people that need to be convinced, and that’s why those who can see and understand this truth need to be the pioneers when it comes to taking action, as well as having and maintaining a lot of faith.

We can deliver different outcomes and with them, a different life experience for people across our communities very quickly, just by making a start

That start will be social enterprises that follow similar development and growth models in every local area, along with a very small number of new multimodal charity units that provide services for those in very specific cases of need, who have no way to pay.

By passing the Establishment and organisations profiting from essential goods and services that everyone needs

There is no point in attempting to reinvent the wheel. There are already some magnificent social enterprises and not for profit organisations operating in many areas that are doing the very best to help people on a cost-related or free basis already. The Glos Community Project will not seek to replicate or replace any of these within their tangible area of operation, and where or when possible, will also seek to redirect support that might become available to them.

However, The Glos Community Project will operate in any area where we have the volunteers/social business leaders, support and resources, where no such organisation already exists.

The Establishment has had plenty of opportunity to demonstrate that it can reform and get things right. Those involved no longer have the right to demand that we keep waiting for them to get things right, or to expect that we will continue to trust them, just because of the job title or responsibility that they supposedly hold.

This time and the future are ours to decide. They have had their chance and have cast what’s good for everyone rather than just them aside.

In time, many of those from within the current Establishment will accept that there was always a better way and that they made the decision not to exercise the responsibility that they held on our behalf, to do what is right.

We cannot trust anyone from within the Establishment today, to do what is right, until they can see and accept that putting People First is the new paradigm and how everything is going to run.

Who are The Establishment?

We have mentioned the Establishment and the reality that obtaining meaningful change will require bypassing the establishment at the very least.

Knowing who the Establishment are is therefore very important.

As a rule, anyone involved with or directly employed by any of the following will represent the establishment. There are exceptions right across the board, but for the purpose of excluding as much of the risk that comes from those who are invested in obstructing change as possible, in the first instances and until there is definite evidence to support otherwise, we will not trust or knowingly engage with any of the following:

The Establishment includes (but is not limited to):

  • The Civil Service
  • Town Councils
  • Parish Councils
  • Borough Councils
  • District Councils
  • County Councils
  • Unitary Authorities
  • Schools
  • Colleges
  • Universities
  • Social Services
  • Public Services of all kinds
  • Non-Government Organisations (NGOs) e.g. The Highways Agency / Highways England, The Environment Agency
  • National Charities that are well-funded and in the public eye
  • Elected Councillors
  • Elected Mayors
  • Members of Parliament
  • Police & Crime Commissioners
  • Mainstream Media
  • Media Companies
  • Corporate Businesses
  • Most Celebrities
  • The Military

Why | The Glos Community Project

Right now, even on the rare occasion that politics does something positive for People, it comes and works its way through the system at a pace that is simply too slow to help and benefit people who genuinely need help in their real lives.

Gloucestershire is no different. And whilst there are at least a few politicians on the seats of local Parish, Town, The Borough and Districts and the County Council who are still genuine in their aim of putting the needs of People first, the reality is that many of them don’t even understand just how little influence they – and therefore the People who elected them – have, over the things that we are expecting them to deal with on our behalf, each and every day.

The elephant trap that we can easily fall into is to think that bitching about any of this or that following, liking and supporting people who are saying all the things that we want to hear will somehow result in change.

It won’t. And that’s why I am here – as just another person from the community we share, who loves Gloucestershire and everything about it, with the aim of connecting like-minded people and taking the very practical steps that we can by working together, to help other members of our community and take the first leaps towards making the Towns, Villages and the Countryside that we love, a much better place and one that reflects the aims, values and aspirations of us all.

We really can change things for the better by doing the things that we can, rather than losing faith because the problems look too big and we believe that we can’t.

HP | The opportunity for change will be what WE make it | The Glos Community Project

You may have already heard of something called social enterprise, businesses that are run on a not-for-profit basis, or businesses that are set up not with the aim of making money, but creating some benefit to the community in some way.

The Glos Community Project is here to explore the opportunities that already exists and that are yet to be identified that will benefit the wider community through the services or products that they provide, whilst providing opportunities for budding social entrepreneurs and practical change activists, along with work opportunities for anyone and everyone – and especially those who might feel that the world has been passing them by.

Right now, I am looking for people who want to be the pioneers of social change within Gloucestershire’s communities. Individuals who are ideally looking for the opportunity to lead and to learn, but are driven by working collaboratively and for the benefit of everyone, rather than long or short term, about what they themselves can earn.

These are voluntary opportunities in the first instance, with the only immediate cost being the time and commitment that it will take, along with the determination that any successful entrepreneur would need to set up a business from scratch – but with the benefit of having the support and guidance of someone who has seen and experienced all of the ups and downs of creating, launching and managing businesses before.

Theres nothing good about global, but local builds love for others every time

Many of us struggle with understanding and identifying the difference between the things we need in life, and the things that we want in our life.

Don’t worry, there will be no judgement coming from me or anyone else who is closely involved in what we are doing if this does or has ever applied to you. The whole system is skewed and the messaging and advertising that is being constantly pumped at all of us has helped blurred the lines so much between need and want, that unless you are awake to anything being wrong with all of this, the two have merged and become one.

In my recent Book Levelling Level, we focused on identifying the difference between basic or essential needs and what many consider to be essential – but are actually just what those people want. We also focused on the reality that with the Establishment having worked tirelessly on behalf of specific interests to make just about every supply chain you could imagine operate to make excessive profits by delivering what everyone who can afford to buy it, wants, the same people who have been responsible have also destroyed the ability of communities and even our whole Country to provide just the basic or essential foods, goods and services that we all need.

Even talking about supply chains and terms like self-sufficiency will sound like gobbledygook or some kind of esoteric language to some. One of the many challenges we face is that this is intentional too. And the myth that we have been conditioned to believe is that everything costs less for us this way, that it is a better, healthier and more enlightened way of living, and that making us all dependent upon people that we have nothing in common with, will get rid of any problems because we all think the same way.

Regrettably, the same way or same thinking is based on nothing more than shared greed, profiteering and a complete lack of care for the human cost, such as loss of local jobs, overuse and unnecessary use of natural resources, exploitation of people and less developed cultures, and the enslavement to debt that is quickly overtaking populations across the world.

Target Business areas | Foods, Goods & Services that are ESSENTIAL to life

The Glos Community Project is all about the basics. The essentials that everyone needs to be able to access each and every day, so that they can lead happy, healthy, safe and secure lives within a fair, balanced and just environment.

Humans don’t get addicted to anything that they need. But the humanity in everyone is quickly destroyed by having too much of what they want.

Whilst the aims of The Glos Community Project will have many points of controversy, depending upon who you are, it’s the definition between what we need and what is essential to life, rather that what we want that will probably get the most backs up, whilst the world is able to continue in the way that it has been.

For the sake of repeating a lot of information that is available in my other books, the basics or the essentials for everyday living look very similar to this:

Food:

  • Fruits and vegetables that can be grown locally, either on farms, allotments or at home
  • Bread made using local flour with minimal processing that can be completed by hand or traditional milling methods.
  • Dairy products including Milk, Cheeses and Yoghurts that are made locally using traditional methods and without chemical additives, extensive processing or refinement
  • Meats that are farmed, prepared, stored, dressed and retailed locally, without unnecessary miles to heavily and unnecessarily bureaucratised abattoirs and processing facilities.
  • Fish and seafoods, either farmed inland, or transported from the nearest UK seaport.

Goods:

  • Clothing (basic)
  • Cleaning (To keep homes and anything for personal use clean and hygienic)
  • Kitchen (to cook, prepare and store food and drink)
  • Laundry (to wash and prepare clothing)
  • Health & Hygiene (Essential medicines, and goods used to keep clean and healthy such as toothbrushes, toothpaste, sanitary products etc.)
  • Transport (Bikes, Cars) – Only where regular transport cannot be provided in another or shared way

Services:

  • Clothing repairs
  • Vehicle repairs & maintenance where vehicles are owned
  • Building repairs and construction
  • Electricity
  • Water
  • Gas
  • Communication (mobile phone, broadband)
  • Unpaid apps
  • Entertainment (Free channels)
  • Transport (where vehicles are not owned or available for essential or irregular journeys)
  • Banking & Currency (outside of Establishment control)

The More People involved, the more local The Glos Community Project will become

In the first instance, it is difficult to estimate how much interest there will be and which social enterprises will be the most popular, even though I have a good idea what these will be.

If one person per social enterprise model were to come forward for each of them, we would certainly begin by opening up the first of each operation to the widest number of People that it would be possible for us to do so.

However, as interest grows, covering these same areas might be difficult and result in the level of service offered being reduced because there are too many people for one business unit to serve.

When this happens, the area will be divided up, so that every service that The Glos Community Project provides will be offered to the most local area possible.

The growth of The Glos Community Project will be a pathway of decentralization in every sense, focusing on improving accessibility and transparency at each and every step of the way.

Theres nothing about The Glos Community Project that can’t be done. The voices that say otherwise are from people who just have selfish reasons not to do it

No matter how you came to discover The Glos Community Project, there is a good chance that unless you have been searching for other like-minded people to do the things that you have already been thinking about, you will read through the list of social businesses that we want to see available to every community – just to begin with, and that you will think that this is something that cannot be done.

If you have an open mind, please ask yourself the question what makes you believe that, and then follow up by asking yourself why.

Everything listed on this site is achievable. Not only that. As more People from our communities sign up, commit to our aims and provide us with whatever support they can, more and more of us will understand that putting people first is a very good, mutually beneficial and happy way to live, where the results will speak for themselves.

Whilst it will be challenging to get the first few of each social business model planned, where necessary funded, launched and then running, we will very quickly have turnkey frameworks or plans available for every new area, that only then have to be tailored to ensure that whatever is being offered, will meet that specific community’s needs.

Areas outside of Gloucestershire

I will be as happy to hear from you if you are outside of Gloucestershire as I will be if you get in touch with me from any of the communities and local areas within.

We might need to take a different approach, depending on what you are able to do, but The Glos Community Project is just a model or incubator where we can all learn, and we must aspire to a much wider roll-out if community or grassroots power is to have the revival that it now can.

If you are from outside Gloucestershire, please consider all the opportunities that have been listed on this site and then get in touch.

I will be happy to arrange a one-to-one meeting via Zoom, WhatsApp, Facetime or Teams. Or if you have a question or questions that would be helpful for others too, I will be happy to post a blog or a video to explain or discuss what we can do.

Area Organisers – Other areas

If you have been reading The Glos Community Project and feel that you might have what it would take to get the ball rolling with a like-for-like Project in your own County or Region, I would really like to hear from you.

Please e-mail me and provide me with whatever information you would want to know about me, if you were already set up in your area and were thinking about inviting me to work alongside you to set up over here in Gloucestershire right now.

Funding Opportunities

We are actively searching for philanthropic support for specific projects or to support them all.

If you would like to provide support through a donation, through sponsorship or through a grant of some kind, we would be very pleased to hear from you at the earliest opportunity.

We are aware that many substantial grants are offered on the basis of meeting very specific aims. Where possible, we will build the services offered in ways that will meet those aims, as long as doing so will not compromise the key principles and aims of The Glos Community Project.

Regrettably, we cannot accept support that would be allocated in support of any political agendas other than bringing back power to communities themselves, through the creation and development of Community Meetings.

If you would like to discuss your idea, please get in touch with Adam for a chat. 

Every penny counts and if you are supportive of what we are trying to achieve, but can only afford to make a small donation, we will appreciate and value your support just the same. Please find our Crowdfunder HERE.

About You | Social Entrepreneur

The most important thing about you won’t be anything to do with how creative, innovative or entrepreneurial you are or can be. These are all words that get misused and there are lots of people who genuinely believe myths such as being self-employed means that you are an entrepreneur.

The most important fact or truth about you will be that you are driven by helping others, by genuine social change (no matter how challenging that might appear to be) and that you have accepted that change of the kind that we all need will not come from anyone that most people are expecting it to come from.

I’m not keen on bullet points for something like this, so please treat the following as a framework only, and if there are things that resonate but you are not sure about anything else, please just get in touch and we can have a chat.

You Should

  • Be motivated by helping others
  • See everyone as an equal, no matter who or what society suggests that they are
  • Be open to learning new things
  • Be able to see everything objectively and be aware of how your feelings might influence this when and if anything leaves you emotionally ‘triggered’.
  • Think critically – no matter the situation
  • See a crisis as an opportunity
  • Able to work in the moment, without a plan or guide to help you
  • Be sure that you can see commitments and agreements through, even if you are not being watched or monitored
  • Have a genuine passion for the type of social business(es) that you are interested in and know that you will gain a sense of achievement from being successful within it.
  • Be open to learning and carrying out any of the jobs or tasks that will be required to make this business run and be successful
  • Be comfortable with talking to people, to journalists and anyone who has a genuine interest in what you are doing
  • Have experience working with different social groups, either professionally or voluntarily
  • Be aiming to earn a wage which relates only to the genuine cost of living at the time
  • Understand that volunteers are not paid employees and will only do their best for you, if they enjoy and see a benefit to them or what they believe in from doing whatever you ask them to do
  • Be happy to sign and keep to the terms of a Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA)

These Opportunities are unlikely to be for you if you:

  • Believe that someone else will solve all of society’s problems
  • Knowingly hold prejudices of any kind about other people
  • Are aiming to own your own commercial company or business
  • Are motivated only by the potential of what you could earn
  • Have any hang ups about doing any kind of job
  • Believe that you must be qualified to do anything
  • Make excuses or tell lies to cover up mistakes, problems or any issues that are outside of your control
  • Are already committed to any political or social agenda – no matter how good or beneficial you might consider it to be (This includes any political party, green or climate focused movements, groups with a spiritual ‘agenda’, ‘alt’ movements or anything that promotes ideologies built on ‘us vs them’ thinking at any level or of any kind.

Opportunities for Social Entrepreneurs in Gloucestershire

There are a number of different opportunities for people who would like to lead the development of a social business across Gloucestershire.

These will include:

  • Local News
  • Clothing Hire & Resale
  • Car and Bike Loan Hubs
  • Local Food Circuits
  • Allotments & Home Growing
  • Local Exchange Platforms
  • Local Currency
  • Homeless Hubs
  • Community Pubs
  • Community Brewing
  • Community Marketplace
  • Mend & Make Do Repair Centres
  • Community Meetings
  • Skills for Life Courses
  • Community Helpers
  • Farm Direct Cooperatives
  • Community Bakeries

Opportunities will be local community specific, with the aim that there will be at least one of every business type listed within walking distance of homes in suburban or town areas, or available and shared between no more than 4 to 6 villages in remote areas.

We will not seek to establish any new social business where a community-focused social business of the same kind, or offering a service of the same kind exists, unless it is being delivered as part of an Establishment agenda.

Opportunities for Volunteers in Gloucestershire

We are also looking for specialist project and management support

  • Web & Software Developers
  • Social Media Creation & Support
  • App Developers
  • Fundraisers
  • Citizen Journalists

Areas of Gloucestershire where you might be | The Glos Community Project

Forest of Dean

  • Coleford
  • Cinderford
  • Newent
  • Longhope & Mitcheldean
  • Newnham on Severn

Cotswold (South)

  • Cirencester
  • Tetbury
  • Northleach
  • Fairford
  • Lechlade

North Cotswold

  • Bourton on the Water
  • Stow on the Wold
  • Moreton in Marsh

Cheltenham

  • Town
  • Prestbury
  • Leckhampton
  • Hatherley

Tewkesbury (North)

  • Town
  • Winchcombe
  • Bishops Cleeve & Woodmancote

Tewkesbury (South)

  • Churchdown
  • Brockworth
  • Hucclecote
  • Highnam
  • Innsworth

Gloucester

  • City
  • Quedgeley
  • Longlevens
  • Barnwood
  • Tuffley

Stroud

  • Town
  • Stonehouse
  • Wotton under Edge
  • Dursley
  • Painswick
  • Berkeley & Sharpness

What you will need to provide | Social Entrepreneur

Your time and commitment are the most important requirement.

There is no requirement for you to pay any type of joining or membership fee as a The Glos Community Project Volunteer. You just need to be confident in what you are doing and be prepared to put your name on your project right from the moment you start.

Together we will build the platform that will be required to attract support and any necessary funding to get your social business started.

It is very easy for anyone considering going into business for the first time to believe that they have to buy everything new and have new everything. You don’t.

My aim is to minimalise the risk to everyone who joins The Glos Community Project in whatever role, and to build every new service and the organisation that supports it with the absolute minimum financial cost to those who get involved (i.e. you may need to pay for fuel to travel, use your phone etc.)

Local News

The news ‘industry’ has undergone a massive transformation within the past two decades.

The national news or mainstream media and regional news or what we once referred to as the ‘local papers’ – or what’s left of them all, are completely under the spell or influence of their owners, who pays them or both, and the only losers have been the general public and the people who read, watch or listen to anything that branded media companies produce.

Sadly, local news was one of the biggest casualties of the internet’s arrival, when the ‘cash cow that once was classified advertising’ dried up overnight, pushing the evening paper that everyone went to for everything online, with the outcome very quickly giving the lie to the idea that the local paper was actually about news.

Stories that are important about local life don’t get the coverage that they should do. And the absence of real-life stories from the next village or the school on the other side of the town have only served to fuel the idea that news in the mainstream is representative of real life, and that what comes from outside of our communities is the only news that there is.

Unfortunately, with most of the national or branded news, and much of the stories that come from well-known names and personalities online all being little better than opinion, people have very quickly lost touch with what real life really is.

We need to change this. And we need to make the news interesting to everyone again, without there being any kind of agenda at work.

The Opportunity to set up and contribute to new local community news platforms

We would like to set up news services in every local area, using all of the media options that are available to us to focus on all the stories that are genuine news, rather than being about what someone else wants us all to think.

Focusing on the opportunity to harness citizen journalism at its very best, I am looking for social media, tech and internet-savvy people with the ability to research and write genuine news stories objectively, and where commentary is required, to do so in ways that cover all relevant points of view.

The ability to edit other people’s work will be important, as one of the aims of these local news platforms will be to give people across our communities the opportunity to tell the stories they have that will help and inspire others.

If you are already visualising what you could do with this opportunity, it could very well be one for you.

If you are interested in this opportunity, please e-mail me and include:

  • Your name, contact and social media details
  • A copy of your current CV (If you have one)
  • How much time you have available to commit to The Glos Community Project
  • A short note explaining why local news provision is interesting to you, what your priorities would be if you were leading the development of this social business in your local area, and how you would get started.
  • Links to any examples of articles you have written or any media you have created that is available online.

Clothing Hire, Repair, Recycling & Resale

Everyone needs clothing. But fashion itself is one of the most obvious ‘wants’ that the age of consumerism has encouraged us to have, with very small differences existing between clothes carrying or not carrying a name, but that brand itself means that cost itself is one of the key issues when it comes to what clothes any one of us can have.

The media age creates the perceived need, whilst the banks and financiers now provide the credit that is building a time bomb of debt that only exists because of greed. Worse still, the real cost to our communities through the loss of jobs and to the planet from clothing being needlessly made thousands of miles away on the cheap, where working rules don’t exist and costs are cheap so that profit margins can be exponentially increased, really gives the lie to what globalism has really been about.

The more expensive the clothing, the less likely we are to regularly wear or even wear it. Recent data suggests that a significant percentage of new clothing is either never sold or never even worn.

Recycling clothing through apps such as Vinted is already becoming popular and clothing libraries are being tried in some places too. But we could do a lot more and with the long-term aim of returning sustainable clothing manufacture and production to the UK and our communities, we need to make good affordable clothing available to everyone for all occasions – and without the need for anyone to go into debt, whether they can afford it or not.

The opportunity to set up Clothing Libraries and Resale, Recycling and Repair hubs

We would like to set up Clothing hubs in all areas, leveraging the technology that is available, to make Recycling, Repair and Reuse of good clothing a part of normal life once again. 

Focusing on creating local stores that are accessible to all, whilst using apps and the internet to make services and sales available online, I am looking for entrepreneurial leaders with a passion for clothes and the drive to make thrifty wardrobes fashionable, to help create a service that will have the ability to help people from all backgrounds in a multitude of ways.

Ideally, you will already have the ability to mend repairable clothing and be comfortable using the existing resale apps and platforms as a start. However, this is certainly one of the social business models that could easily be developed not just by one community-focused individual, but perhaps a few.

If ideas are already flowing through your mind about how clothing libraries, clothing hire and clothing recycling and repair could work even better than what people already know, this could certainly be the opportunity that is reaching out to you.

If you are interested in this opportunity, please e-mail me and include:

  • Your name, contact and social media details
  • A copy of your current CV (If you have one)
  • How much time you have available to commit to The Glos Community Project
  • If not already included in your CV, an addendum that covers any skills and experience you already have that would help you to make a clothing hub in your area to thrive
  • Pictures or links to anything that you have done
  • A short overview of what appeals to you about the concept of Community Clothing Hubs and what you believe the priorities would be at the beginning and during the stages of the early roll-out.

Community Vehicle Lending Hubs | Car and Bike Loans

Sadly, because of the impractical and tyrannical way that Green Policy, Climate Change and ridiculous Policies such as Net Zero have been rolled out and are being adopted by local authorities through polices such as the switch to EPVs, ULEZ and 15 Minute Cities, the practical reality that we don’t need 4-car households and shouldn’t be wasting money that we cannot afford on journeys that we simply don’t need to make are being overlooked and are in danger of being passed by.

We don’t need cars that sit in car parks all day and on driveways or by the sides of roads during holidays, weekends and overnight. But we do need to have access to the most appropriate forms of transport for the journeys that we need to make, as and when we need to make them, and we need a localised system that makes this happen – and happen well, for us all.

The opportunity to set up Community Vehicle Lending Hubs

I am looking for people with an interest in cars, motorbikes, epvs and emerging transport technology to help create and build local vehicle lending hubs that make shared vehicle use both normal and respectable, and in a way that means consistent quality of experience for users, with the minimization of vehicle abuse.

Whilst experience in things like fleet management, repairs, vehicle hire and areas of work like that would clearly be very helpful, starting with a clean sheet and no experience of these areas is likely to be just as helpful, as we really do need to get this offering right to create the buy-in that we need from members of our communities from the start.

If you are interested in this opportunity, please e-mail me and include:

  • Your name, contact and social media details
  • A copy of your current CV (If you have one)
  • How much time you have available to commit to The Glos Community Project
  • If not already included in your CV, an addendum that covers any skills and experience you already have that would help you to make a Community Vehicle Lending Hub in your area to thrive
  • A short overview of what appeals to you about the concept of Community Vehicle Lending Hubs and what you believe the priorities would be that will encourage People to trust and rely on borrowing vehicles in your local area, rather than falling back on ones that they own

Community Public Transport

Yes, we already have a large number of community transport organisations and providers such as Dial-a-rides. However, many of these are now driven by and focused upon contracts and provision that has been identified by County Councils and Government Agencies in ways that make them subservient to the Establishment, creating the perception that they are just there for ‘old people’ or children with special educational needs.

On the other hand, the ‘public transport’ that we have, which includes both buses and trains, stopped being public in the genuine sense, the moment that the operating companies, transport providers, and infrastructure companies were privatised and became tools in profit-making hands.

Yes, they provide services that are accessible to the public. But they are not in any way focused on the need for genuine public transport to be universally accessible, and they never will be for as long as private shareholder interest and earnings or dividends being paid to owners remains involved.

In the absence of any will on the part of the Establishment to take back and maintain public transport services without the involvement of privately owned companies or the influence of unions who by holding any organisation to ransom are in effect doing exactly the same thing, we must work to create a Community Public Transport Service that begins by ensuring that transport provision exists within local communities where any services that can be provided by Community Vehicle Lending Hubs ends.

The opportunity to set up a Community Public Transport Hub in your area

The big focus for developing Community Public Transport Hubs is understanding local need, creativity and innovation when it comes to meeting that need, and a very open and positive approach to working with customers from within the local community, as well as being able to engage with and build good working relationships with the stakeholders who will be unavoidably involved.

Unlike the majority of the social entrepreneur roles and opportunities listed with The Glos Community Project, this one does require that those interested already have a Full, preferably clean Driving License which will ideally include minibus driving (up to 17 seats) – NOT for Hire or Reward.

There may also be a requirement for those running or contributing to the management of our Community Public Transport services to hold or qualify for a Certificate of Professional Competence (CPC) in bus service operations, and/or that they can apply for and hold a Private Hire License, which will require a basic DBS check and no previous driving disqualifications or other forms of conviction that will exclude them from applying to or being registered by the Licensing Department at the local District or Borough Council.

If you have any past convictions or problems with your driving license, you should be able to check the Licensing Policy for Private Hire & Hackney Taxi Licenses online. Please note that we will check every existing local policy before beginning work on any new hub.

If you are interested in this opportunity, please e-mail me and include:

  • Your name, contact and social media details
  • A copy of your current CV (If you have one)
  • How much time you have available to commit to The Glos Community Project
  • If not already included in your CV, an addendum that covers any skills and experience you already have that would help you to build a very successful Community Public Transport Service within your local community area
  • A short overview of what appeals to you about the concept of universal transport provision and Community Public Transport, and what you believe will be necessary for People to experience daily, so that the service genuinely works.

Food Supply

By far the most important areas of the social or community businesses that The Glos Community Project is aiming to focus on is the growing, harvesting, preparation, production and supply of basic or essential foods within the shortest and most reliable supply chains possible.

Sadly, we take for granted that food will always be available either online or at the local supermarket. Even though there were some minor shortages during the Covid Pandemic and some supplies of vegetables were temporarily out of stock or in reduced supply earlier in 2023, the reality is that none of us have yet experienced the shortages and changes to the food supply that are now almost certain to come in the months and years ahead.

Globalisation, centralization and the economics of big business have made our communities and the whole of the UK itself dependent upon the supply of basic and essential foods that we could easily grow ourselves. For the sake of somebody somewhere making bigger and bigger profits, whilst power has been taken further and further away from the people so that it can be concentrated in the hands of the few, we have been sold the lie that it’s better for all of us if food comes to us across whole continents, and that it’s also better for us and will make us all happier if it comes to us in increasingly processed or ultra processed forms.

Many don’t even  realize that we have become dependent on foods that are not in any way healthy for us, whilst our agricultural and growing sectors have themselves surrendered or given up the ability to grow and provide a range of food stuffs for local supply, whilst the politics of money and globalism have made farmers reliant upon incomes they have little or no influence over, whilst growing fewer and fewer things.

Farm shops are not a luxury or non-essential choice. But it serves the current economic model for us to see them that way

Many of us visit farm shops – where they are available, and do so with the belief that to do so is a luxury or a treat, because we can be fairly sure that whatever they sell to us will cost more than what we would pay for it at a supermarket – even though the levels of quality and the provenance are nowhere near being the same.

Farm shops and any retail business that sells locally made, perhaps organic, high-quality foods with the absolute minimum of processing involved seem expensive, because the way that most foods are mass produced and massively processed has made them that way. It is quite literally the economics of scale that not only appear to make food cheaper, but also guarantee that the marketplace is controlled by very few hands, and that the people involved make ridiculous profits from whatever they do.

Whilst we need affordable basic or essential foods more than ever, we do not need any part of the process that only appears to benefit us by lowering the purchase price, but then goes on to cost us in every other possible sense – including the increasing risks to our health and our lives.

If the whole of the UK Farming, Growing and Fishing Industries were reformed and restructured so that their priority and focus was always on local supply – through complete supply chains that are as local as it is possible for them to be, the price of all essential and basic foods of a much higher quality and standard would quickly come down and be accessible to everyone too.

Our Farmers are struggling because the Establishment is failing them too

One of the most regrettable parts of the Food Supply Question today is the reality that Farmers are already acutely aware that the self-sufficiency or food security of the whole of the UK is now at very high risk.

Sadly, although Farmers are some of the most creative, resourceful and entrepreneurial people you could ever meet or know, the Industry and its leaders like the National Farmers Union, is still very much committed to the misplaced belief that the Establishment will come to the rescue and provide the support they all want for whatever they currently envision as being the necessary change.

For those from the farming community who read this, it is time to realise, understand and accept that there are many different agendas at work within and beyond the Establishment, but none of them place a priority on anything like the traditional model of farming even in the way that we currently know or believe it to be.

Like so many other areas of business and life, we must now take a very practical approach and different view of food production, and continue to do so for as long as the current Establishment is able to maintain its hold.

We must bypass the Establishment food strategies and incentive plans, and point all farming and food producing businesses back to community focused production using up to date methodology and thinking, but in a very traditional, perhaps even shops-around-the-village-green kind of way.

On the current trajectory, more and more farmers will lose or have to give up farms, whilst communities will be pushed further and further away from being able to sustain themselves as we unnecessary lose more and more productive land.

Local Food Circuits

The Glos Community Project aims to work with farmers, and all locally aligned businesses to champion and recreate localised Community Food Chains that keep the growing, production, necessary processing and preparation, transport and supply of all basic and essential foods as local and as self-sufficient as possible, so that local communities can quite literally fend for themselves.

This is an ambitious task. Not least of all, because many will see the return of fully localised markets as a regressive or backwards step, simply because of the way that certain interests and the focus upon profit always being the key priority has conditioned them to think.

However, farmers, aligned business leaders and members of the wider community coming together to discuss a mutually beneficial strategy will quickly open up doors and a dialogue that very few would currently consider to be viable – but that is quickly going to make a massive amount of sense in what are very turbulent and changing times.

The Opportunity to Facilitate and Coordinate Farm Direct Cooperatives

I am actively looking for a number of social entrepreneurs who have the people skills, the ability and the motivation to knock on doors, open up and build new relationships with a range of very different people who are very worried about the future, but are at least initially likely to be very resistant to considering stepping away from the business model where the establishment makes all the rules and only they can offer any help.

You may be from the Farming or Rural Community or from outside of them. But you will have both fluency and understanding not only what farmers and growers have the ability to do, as well as what might be their needs, along with a very innovative and entrepreneurial view and understanding of what it is likely to take to get the right people, businesses and agencies together, to make robust local food supply chains work, so that the self-sufficiency and food security of local communities can be guaranteed.

It is very important to accept that the really exciting part of this social or community business platform will be just how much knowledge already exists within all of businesses that would gain from being involved and that the success of this part of The Glos Community Project will depend on getting everyone who could contribute and benefit from this, not only to open up and share their ideas, but to also commit to becoming actively involved.

If you are interested in this opportunity, please e-mail me and include:

  • Your name, contact and social media details
  • A copy of your current CV (If you have one)
  • How much time you have available to commit to The Glos Community Project
  • If not already included in your CV, an addendum that covers any skills and experience you already have that would help you to open doors within the farming community and with business leaders within the community who will all need to be inspired by the story that makes real the truth that there is another way.
  • A short overview of why you believe that Local Food Circuits will provide food security and what you believe the common USP will be that will engage, create buy-in and get everyone important on board

Allotments & Home Growing

Whilst farmers and the Grower community have the ability to change their working practices and to create and employ new infrastructure quickly, the industry wide change that will be needed may not happen as quickly as we might all like – once the need for this massive change really begins to hit home.

To help and support the creation, development and implementation of Local Food Circuits, there is a part that the majority of us can play in helping ourselves and contributing to the local community effort, if we are prepared to ‘Home Grow’ any foods that we can.

There are a range of ways that Home Growing from the smallest scale up to a level where you might be able to supply certain fruits or vegetables to your whole area could be possible, depending on what resources you already have access to. These might include a garden, a deep window sill, an allotment, or an area within your home where you could set up a hydroponics system.

Today, Home Growing is seen as being quirky or excentric by many. Yet it could be a very easy and quick way for everyone who is able, to ensure that they have ongoing or regular access to a source of the vital nutrition that everyone genuinely needs.

The opportunity to Facilitate and Coordinate Home Growing Hubs

To support Local Food Circuits and also feed into our new Community Marketplace, it is an aim of The Glos Community Project to support homeowners to utlise the space and resources that they have available for Home Growing, and to identify land and develop the availability of allotments so that Home Grown fruits or vegetables of one kind or another are available to everyone.

I am looking for social entrepreneurs who can either set up and run, or coordinate others to provide the following:

  • Purchase, sale and supply of gardening equipment
  • Purchase, sale and supply of hydroponics equipment
  • Rental, purchase, preparation and letting of allotments
  • Developing an online signposting service to quickly identify anything that will help
  • Work with our Skills for Life facilitators to provide online, classroom and one-to-one training

Like Farm Direct Facilitators and Coordinators, the ability and desire to collaborate with others who have knowledge and skills that will help is vital to the success of this role, as if having a very open mind and the ability to inspire people across the community to think about the meaning of self-sufficiency in a very different way.

If you are interested in this opportunity, please e-mail me and include:

  • Your name, contact and social media details
  • A copy of your current CV (If you have one)
  • How much time you have available to commit to The Glos Community Project
  • If not already included in your CV, an addendum that covers any skills and experience you already have that would help to demonstrate the kind of approach you would have to getting people to commit to and stay committed to Home Growing.
  • A short overview of what appeals to you about Home Growing and the role you see that it will play in providing food security at the most local level.

Building Local Economies

‘But we already have a local economy?’ I hear you think.

Yes, we do. But they are very much part of the national and international economy and the real question you might want to ask yourself is how does the economic system that we have really benefit or work for you?

Unless you are a) a billionaire b) a massive corporate shareholder c) playing the markets in some way or d) working for one or someone very similar to all of the above, the economic and monetary system that we have is not working for you or benefiting you in any way – whatever the common, constructed or urban myths tell you.

In my book Levelling Level, we discussed the certain reality that Money isn’t worth anything other than what any of us believe it to be. But that doesn’t stop a great many people who are otherwise probably very sensible from attributing great value to it and letting the accumulation and manipulation of it takeover their lives – all without even a second thought for the cost to everyone else.

Regrettably, the journey that the Establishment is now pushing us along toward the extinction of cash and the use of central digital bank currencies (CDBC) or government derived cryptocurrencies isn’t one that will end well for anyone whose interests aren’t closely aligned with whatever the narrative of the Establishment might be.

The immense power that will be held by people we will never meet, because they can see where every penny of our money has come from and how it is then spent is only surpassed in terms of the danger to our freedom to do whatever we legally want to, by the reality that just because they might disagree with something we have said or whatever we might believe in, they would have the power to switch our money off and prevent us from accessing it whenever they might like.

You only need to think about the political figures who are already having their banking facilities closed down and are being denied access to alternatives to see an illustration of how this will all work. It doesn’t matter whether you agree with their politics or not today, this type of action will become a growing threat to the entire population if the management of money remains in the hands of the Establishment – and that’s before we even get to the discussion about the damage a financial system where the Establishment can just create money as and when it feels like it is doing and has done to our lives already – before thinking about what absolute control and tracking of money will allow them to make it become.

Making money and currencies nothing more than a unit of exchange, once again

The value of money dictates everything today. And the value of money is in the hands of the establishment and very greedy and profit hungry people who have zero understanding and no care about the consequences that come from what they do, as long as the system continues to benefit them.

Whilst a return to the gold standard and pegged or anchored economies would be a sensible step, the reality is that the system is now so rotten and influenced by speculation and private interests that are on the make, that the governance that exists is unlikely to ever deliver a monetary or economic system that genuinely works in the best interest of us all.

We have no choice but to start the money system all over again.

People, their presence and their value and input into the economy is the method that should be the basis for all financial value, not how much anything and everything costs us, or when we possess it, it can then be considered to be worth.

Through The Glos Community Project, the long term aim will be to create a system of new, localised currencies that will be available in a cash equivalent and cryptocurrency or digital form, but will be administered locally and be geographically specific, with the national level currency only being used for transactions between areas or as the baseline that maintains a fixed value between what the basic unit of each currency is worth.

In the short term, the creation of local economies will be focused on allowing people to trade anything they want to, including their labour, their knowledge and their skills, in a way that will quickly become insulated against greed and stupidity driven forms of inflation that are quite literally on the verge of collapsing the existing financial system or ‘bringing down the bank’.

We have no choice but to go back to basics and reject a monetary system that is destroying lives whilst it manipulates all of us and abuses our trust.

Bartering and Fair Exchange

Nobody other than the individual themselves, should be able to define and police a system of values that can exclude or disenfranchise them, based on issues that are outside of their own influence.

With increasing numbers of people missing meals or being forced to make the conscious decision between what essentials they can or can no longer afford, the return to a system where everything can be traded openly and fairly has never been needed by so many as it is right now.

The Glos Community Project is  focusing upon bartering and exchange of new and used goods, basic and essential foods and the services that People genuinely need so that anything and everything that any person has or is able to legally able to offer for sale or for exchange can be traded for something that they need, or for a monetary or currency value that is based solely on what the trading parties agree that the specific item or offering is worth.

Community Marketplaces & Local Exchanges

The New Local Economy is built around Local Exchanges, where all goods and services are available and accessible to all, whether they are provided by a business or an individual.

Membership is open to everyone from within the area of the community and trading is available both at a Local Exchange Hub and online with any costs being covered by a membership and/or access fee on a not-for-profit basis.

Local Currency

The ultimate aim is that each local community will have its own currency that will be available in both a cash equivalent and digital or cryptocurrency form.

The local currency will be fixed in value so that outside influences are then unable to profit from trading the currency or damage the stability of the Local Economy by either crashing or over inflating the total value of the money that is in circulation, held by any person or business and in use.

Local currencies will be the normal method of exchange within the community, but will be interchangeable with the national currency.

The only circumstances where the value of the currency will be negotiable would be within the circumstances of essential international trade

Building The Community Marketplace

Increasing numbers of People are unable to afford to buy the basic food, essential goods and services that they need, just to remain healthy, safe and secure.

Communities must take the steps necessary to help everyone who needs to turn the food they grow, the goods they make or no longer want, or the spare time that they have into whatever they need most, without middle men or profit-making businesses inflating the costs of anything and everything they touch.

The Glos Community Project is building a Community Marketplace that will pivot around a Local Exchange that is both physical and online, and will be supported by a fixed value local currency that will be available in both cash and digital forms.

The opportunity to Facilitate and Coordinate the Community Marketplace

I am looking for social entrepreneurs who already have a good practical understanding of the real economy, as well as the basic theories that underpin both classical and neoclassical economics in the sense that they relate to how the world works today.

However, that in itself is not enough. Being visionary in your outlook, you must be able to look beyond a world where money is the common factor in everything, and replace it with a much happier and healthier one where people and humanity are the common factor instead.

Stepping through and navigating between the world as most people see it today, and how it’s going to be, you will become a key collaborator, helping to develop the Community Marketplace person by person and business by business, as we complete the design and planning of the Local Exchanges and Currencies that will provide the necessary infrastructure, and then roll the whole system out.

Able to work as easily with the abstract as well as the practical, whilst making allowances for how others may not easily be able to do the same, any knowledge of cryptocurrencies, software and app design as well as existing trading and auction sites online will all be a great help.

Above all, like all the roles working with others within The Glos Community Project, it’s the relationship with people and understanding how others think and what influences them to do so that will help you most of all.

If you are interested in this opportunity, please e-mail me and include:

  • Your name, contact and social media details
  • A copy of your current CV (If you have one)
  • How much time you have available to commit to The Glos Community Project
  • If not already included in your CV, an addendum that covers any skills and experience you already have that would help show your fluency in economics and money management,
  • A short overview of what appeals to you about Community Marketplaces whilst demonstrating that you not only grasp but are fully committed to the principle of building community tools that put People First too.

Mend & Make Do | Repair Centres

Recycle, Reuse, Repair, Restore, Refurbish, Reclaim, Revitalise are all words that our current throw-away culture has taught us to look down on, unless you are either trying to make some kind of statement about your values, or you already have no choice but to recognise the value that remains within all sorts of goods that we use every day, but would otherwise just replace.

Those who still have the luxury of being able to afford and access goods that in many cases have deliberately been created with planned obsolescence or the ongoing need for them to be replaced in mind, rarely consider the reality that the option of recycling, reusing and repairing exists. Yet beyond the waste of money that every new purchase that could have been avoided really is, these are too often the same people that tell us they are the champions of green and ethical issues that run completely contrary to the profit driven exploitation and overuse of natural resources that their buying habits have legitimized, and that the greater percentage of all purchases made today are for goods that they want, but don’t actually need.

Theres nothing wrong with making maximum use of everything that we need. Ultimately, we must embrace a new view of standards for all goods so that quality will ensure longevity, and ongoing reuse, so that industry only delivers the goods that we need them too, and returns to both a size, standard and locality that works for our communities and our country as it should.

The Glos Community Project aims to promote the Make Do and Mend or Mend and Make do mindset, that successfully got British People through the very challenging period that surrounded the Second World War, but also demonstrated that there is nothing wrong with making the best of everything that we have – and that the problems only arise when narratives change or the messages that are shared publicly suggest that this isn’t a healthy way to think.

We want anyone and everyone who has goods, clothes or equipment that they have previously thrown away to start thinking again, and to start thinking recycle, repair, reuse, even if they don’t need them for their own use and then sell or exchange them, so that those items can then make someone else happy elsewhere.

The Opportunity to Coordinate and facilitate Local Repair & Refurbishment Hubs

These are roles that will work closely with the Facilitators & Coordinators of our Local Market Exchanges and Clothing Libraries and depending upon the skills and background of the applicant, they could oversee the development and management of both.

For stand-alone operations, I am looking for socially entrepreneurial people who have a background as a professional, voluntarily or even as a hobby, in repairing furniture, bikes, electrical goods and general household items to a very high standard – and to meet legislative requirements where necessary.

Repair Hubs are likely to run better with a number of people pooling their different skills and experience together, and it is therefore likely that applicants can expect to be collaborating with others very closely, from very early on.

If you are interested in this opportunity, please e-mail me and include:

  • Your name, contact and social media details
  • A copy of your current CV (If you have one)
  • How much time you have available to commit to The Glos Community Project
  • If not already included in your CV, an addendum that covers any skills and experience you already have that makes clear any technical training, experience and time served that you have.
  • A short overview of what appeals to you about being a champion of ‘Make Do and Mend’ thinking, and how making a social business out of the processes involved is a very exciting prospect for you.

Skills for Life Courses

Regrettably, education has lost sight of the relationship between being able to live a good, healthy and self-sufficient life, and what political and academic idealism currently dictates that it should be.

The problems that many people face throughout their lifetimes, just because a one-size-fits-all model has been imposed on a significant part of the population that either has a very different learning style, or for reasons outside of conscious control aren’t engaged with schooling in the way they are currently expected, do not fit a modern society that champions equality in all things.

In the longer term, the consequences of not having an education system that genuinely respects the reality that all young people of school age are generally either heads or hands, will be addressed by forms of government that actually do what public representation says it will on the box.

Until then we need to create new ways to help not only young people, but people of all ages to learn skills for life that the education system failed to give them, or doesn’t even offer any of us as standard anyway.

Life skills are predominantly practical or about the way that we perceive the world or think about it. So, unless the objectivity of academically trained or qualified teachers is clearly demonstrated, using ‘teachers’ to ‘teach’ anyone these skills or guide them to achieve this kind of understanding isn’t likely to be the best way.

The Glos Community Project aims to create an experientially led syllabus of skills and ideas that can be accessed and delivered locally within the community, by people from that community who genuinely have things that will be of use to others to share.

Courses are planned and will include:

  • Politics and how Politics and Government works
  • Basic Economics and how the current economy works
  • Critical Thinking and the dangers of Groupthink
  • Living without being influenced by AI
  • Surviving Social Media
  • Growing your own Food
  • Planning your own work-from-home business
  • Spiritual & Religious Independence

The Opportunity to Coordinate and Facilitate Community Skills for Life Hubs

I am looking for socially entrepreneurial people who have an understanding of education, but also see the value in providing learning opportunities in a more tailored form.

Openly bypassing the Establishment education offering for young people and adults of all ages and abilities, you will be able to speak credibly and create learning tools that are objective and give an accurate view of the areas you specialise in.

Where necessary, you will have a technical understanding that can be demonstrated by qualifications, by experience or both. But whatever background you have, you will be committed to The Glos Community Project principles of freedom of the person and freedom of thought.

If you are interested in this opportunity, please e-mail me and include:

  • Your name, contact and social media details
  • A copy of your current CV (If you have one)
  • How much time you have available to commit to The Glos Community Project
  • If not already included in your CV, an addendum that covers any skills and experience you already have that makes clear you have skills and experience that will be of great value to others when shared (If  you’ve read this far and sharing your learning with others is what interests you, please don’t be put off if this question makes you feel like you might not be qualified. Just tell me what you thought of when the question came to you ‘what can you share?’

Other Opportunities

If you don’t feel able or wouldn’t have the time to take on a facilitation or coordination role, we are also seeking people from all backgrounds to share their experience with others.

The list of planned Course above is also by no means exhaustive. So, if you have recognised the need for some kind of training that can be shared and will be genuinely beneficial for everyone within your community – without any kind of aim to influence the way that they think in some way, please get in touch.

Other Project Services The Glos Community Project is working on

As you will already realise, having read this far, we are very motivated by the prospect of what people within our communities coming together have the power to deliver and to do.

We have lots of ideas that we would like to consider, discuss and flesh out with the input of anyone and everyone who feels they can bring useful ideas, knowledge and understanding to the table, so that we can go on to achieve all the things that we would like to.

The list below only represents what we are going to begin looking more carefully at next.

If you have ideas about any of these, or are already considering or working on a social enterprise or charity project in Gloucestershire that sounds like it might overlap with any of these in some way, please get in touch and lets have a chat about how we might be able to help or collaborate so that together, we can achieve our mutual aims.

  • Community Helpers
  • Homeless Hubs
  • Community Pubs
  • Community Brewing
  • Community Supermarket
  • Community Bakery

And there will be more…

Community Meetings | Building a Real Democracy

Politics is the subject that we love to hate and we hate politics for all of the reasons that have made the way that politics is being done across the UK so very wrong.

Whilst it has not been publicly recognised, a very different way of doing politics in the UK exists right now, that has the ability to deliver very different outcomes for us all – just by working together from within our communities, to ensure that when elections are called, we have proper community representatives on the ballot paper, rather than someone or some organisations self-interested choice.

For those who want to see real political change and for us to have public representatives who actually represent the public, once they have been elected, there are opportunities across every community to set up and facilitate Community Meetings where communities can select and appoint candidates for all elections, who are qualified and endorsed as the community choice.

The whole process is covered in my recent book Officially NONE OF THE ABOVE, which is available as a book for Kindle on Amazon, or can be read without cost if you would like to visit my Blog, HERE.

I will be very happy to offer the same kind of help and support to anyone who has read through the whole book and feels that the process tabled is one that they can commit to and follow.

Please get in touch, if you would like to discuss the book and the opportunity to collaborate on this very exciting community building project.

How we will create and develop each social enterprise

The really exciting part for anyone joining The Glos Community Project as a social entrepreneur, is we will step off and into this journey in the same way that you would have to alone, if you were about to set up a business of your own from scratch.

The difference is that I will be there as a mentor, advisor, sounding board and strategic guide to help in every possible way.

Yes, there are many different things that we will need to look at very closely and consider. But we will go through the process of researching and writing the business plan that your specific local community will need and this will be there to help us as we get to work and build the relationships that we need to, as well as being a formal document, presentation and application tool for us to use in gaining any specific kinds of support such as grants and licenses that might be needed, to make sure that everything will work as it should, and that everything is done the right way from the start.

You will be required to play a significant part in this process and you must be ready to apply a very open mind to every experience that creating a new business in these circumstances is likely to throw your way.

This is a prospect that should excite you, rather than intimidate you. Getting it right will be fantastic for you and as the ideas and the effort that you contribute begin to make this new social business take shape, the only thing that will feel better than recognising your own success and the outcome from the work you have done, will be seeing the benefits to so many others make a difference to other People’s lives.

Aims

Immediate Aim 1

To address poverty and the growing shortages of basic essentials with practical solutions delivered for the community by members of the community

Immediate Aim 2

To counter the narrative that only the Establishment can help and overcome learned helplessness by demonstrating that the help we need will come from us ourselves

Immediate Aim 3

To begin the process of creating New Local Economies, championing self-sufficiency, food security and the relocalisation of all supply chains that meet the basic and essential needs of life

Immediate Aim 4

To engage everyone in the process of taking back political decision making from centralised government, focusing the centre of power to the most localised and people-centric form

Principles

Local buy, Local supply

No speculation, agents or middle men

People First

Money or Currency is a unit of exchange and doesn’t vary in value

Technology is there to support roles, not to replace them

Just because we can, doesn’t mean we should

The lowest paid should be able to support themselves fully and provide all the basic essentials for life that they need on the equivalent of the basic or minimum weekly wage, without going into debt or requiring third party support of any kind.

Power must be as local to the people and the community in which they live and contribute as much as possible

Collaborate and make it even better

If any part of all of The Glos Community Project proposal is ringing bells or making sense to you and you can see a way we can improve on what you can see, or extend into a service offering that you are currently unable to see, please get in touch and share your thoughts.

We are not precious about the offer we are making. It’s a beginning and certainly not the end. So, by the time we are really off and running and in the business of delivering real change, we appreciate and value the input that will inevitably come from many different people and sources.

You really don’t have to join as a social entrepreneur or volunteer a specific set of skills to be able to help. The only thing we will insist on is that you really can live by and embrace the approach that whoever we are and wherever we are from, we are all 100% in this together, and that any advice, support or direction is given freely and without any form of direction or conditions attached.

Can we help you with a project that has similar aims?

If you are already working on a project serving your community that is aligned with The Glos Community Project offering in any way, we would be very happy to consider supporting you and collaborating with you wherever you are.

Regrettably, we cannot support projects or work where specific agendas or political motives are involved – no matter how good or harmless you may consider them to be.

More Reading

An Economy for the Common Good and The Glos Community Project were not written in isolation and are part of a series of books that I began writing about three years ago in early 2022.

Each of the following list of Books is a variation on a theme, but works very much under the principle that it is not only possible but actually healthy to be able to understand, value and even hold different views or perspectives of the same situation or set of circumstances at the same time, whether that be in the Past, Present or Future tense.

Equally, it is also important to be able to consider different pathways for the future that sit beyond what many consider to be the obvious, simply because the obvious itself is usually inextricably linked with what has already been done and what sits in the past.

All of the following titles are available to purchase as complete eBooks for Kindle from Amazon using the links provided.

Where indicated, titles may also be available to download FREE as PDF Copies from my Blogsite in different forms, using the links provided.

If you would like to discuss any of the works listed, please get in touch.

Levelling Level (30 Mar 2022)

Amazon

From Here to There Through Now (3 Oct 2022)

Amazon

The Way of Awakened Politics for Good Government (3 Dec 2022)

Amazon

A Community Route (28 Mar 2023)

Amazon

The Grassroots Manifesto (18 Apr 2023)

Amazon

Officially None of the Above (18 May 2023)

Amazon

Actions Speak Louder than Digital Words (8 Jun 2023)

Amazon

PDF Download

One Rule Changes Everything (23 Dec 2023)

Amazon

PDF Download

Food From Farms Guaranteed (3G) (15 Feb 2024)

Amazon

PDF Download

Days of Ends and New Beginnings (7 Apr 2024)

Amazon

The Basic Living Standard (14 Apr 2024)

Amazon

Our Local Future (18 Aug 2024)

Amazon

PDF Download

Who Controls Our Food Controls Our Future (14 Nov 2024)

Amazon

PDF Download

Your Beliefs Today create Everyone’s Experiences Tomorrow (11 Jan 2025)

Amazon

Manifesto for a Good Dictator (26 Jan 2025)

Amazon

Back Page

When we hear the word ‘economics’ or ‘economy’, what does it make us think?

Money, business, growth, commerce, profit, wealth, trade are all likely to be terms that will spring to mind.

But what if the way we think about economics and what an economy or the economy really are is completely wrong?

What if a genuine economy were not about money or any type of material gain and instead had people, community, the environment, living good happy lives and the common good at its heart?

An Economy for the Common Good opens the door to thinking differently about the role of money, finance and economics in our lives and provides examples of the steps that we could take at any time to begin the creation of a new localised economic system that will lead to us all having much better experiences of everything in our lives.

To download a FREE to read PDF copy of An Economy for the Common Good, please follow the link immediately below. If you would like to download a copy for Kindle for the price of £1.99 (UK – correct at time of publication), please follow the link to Amazon at the bottom.