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After 2001: Our Neotech World



After 2001, looking back from the new code at the old code, we knew what defense spending and interest on the national debt were for. But we had a hard time understanding the good intentions or how they helped the people. You see, tomorrow we learned the best way to help the people was to release the geniuses to make the people all super rich: to make their buying power go so high they lived like millionaires.

After 2001, the make-the-people-millionaires program on the preceding charts freed technologies and freed super entrepreneurs to drive the new technologies into computerlike revolutions in every which way. A President whose career was not politics turned inward and slashed his own base of political power -- regulatory power -- to free the technologies and the super entrepreneurs.

After experiencing being wealthy tomorrow, the debilitating past became so clear. In the 20th century, to be the President of the United States was to be a career politician. Career politicians always built their base of political power. The President's base of political power so happened to be regulatory power -- the regulatory bureaucracies, commissions, and agencies beneath him (see previous flowcharts). That was why 20th-century Presidents budgeted massive spending toward social and regulatory programs supposedly "for the public good". You see, those massive spending programs, those seemingly "good intentions", all came hand in hand with massive regulations. Unbeknownst to you back then, but so obvious after 2001, those massive regulations actually blocked the Neotech Society in which you would live like a millionaire.

We looked back in disgust at our 20th-century Presidents when realizing their 20th-century regulations built their structure of power as the boss of all regulatory bureaucracies. Those so-called "for-the-people" social and regulatory programs were illusions that actually hurt the people while building the Presidents' popularity, ego, and power. In my Second Vision, I was amazed that the "great" presidents of the 20th century were looked back on as the worst malefactors of society.

People soured as they reviewed 20th-century history, especially looking back at the biggest illusion -- the most accepted social program of the 20th-century so-called "for the public good" -- approaching an annual trillion dollars in entitlements known collectively as social welfare. The social welfare programs accounted for over half of all government spending, which was 1/4 of the Gross Domestic Product during the last decade of the 20th-century! That massive spending program so-called "for the public good" in turn gave the government absolute power to regulate the economy and rule over our money. Controlling 1/4 of our Gross Domestic Product meant the government had its regulatory web all throughout our economy -- in every business, every consumer product, every job, every profession, including every hospital, every doctor's office, every research and development program, every discovery, every invention, every paycheck, every person's wallet. Looking back in disbelief, the people after 2001 were aghast that politicians and bureaucrats ruled over our money and our lives. Their archaic regulatory web throughout the economy trapped and paralyzed 20th-century new technologies. Without super rapidly advancing technologies in the 20th century, costs did not drop to fractions so that we could live like millionaires -- the way we were meant to live. Instead, costs went up and up and up for the entire 20th century. We just could not believe it, looking back: prices went up for 100 years! The elderly who lived on set pensions and measly entitlements got trapped in the dungeons of society as long-term inflation ate up everything they had. We felt so sorry for our parents and grandparents.

Of course, after 2001, we finally knew that the only way to truly help the needy and everyone else was to send the economy through a buying-power metamorphosis like the computer industry's buying-power metamorphosis. The Second Vision showed me the needy and everyone else's limited buying power leapt a hundred times when the Neotech President's protection-only budget swished away the regulatory web throughout the economy. His budget swished away those "good intentions", like social welfare, that wove regulatory control throughout every nook and crevice of the economy. When that 20th-century regulatory web was gone, 21st-century technology was free and took off like the computers had, but in every direction...and so did everyone's buying power.[ 2 ]



Footnotes:


[ 2 ] This ended all Social Security payments. Moreover, this unique approach miraculously repaid every penny of social security to Americans with full fair-market interest! That financial miracle meant elderly Americans received a small fortune from Uncle Sam, as explained in the First Vision.



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