Fundamentals
Jim Hlavac
Fundamentals
Sections
Resources

The resources of the world are divided and located unequally, despite royalist, theological
and Marxist doctrine and wishes

No one place on earth has all the resources it needs

Throughout all recorded and unrecorded (but deduced) human history, in all places there
is evidence that societies, however big or small, with unlike resources have traded with
each other

That the technology today is more sophisticated and pervasive is merely the sum of this
millennia old globalization

Different societies at different times have valued or known or didn't know their resources
at different rates

Economic theories which require an even distribution of resources cannot work, since they
are not distributed equally

Marxism, Sir Thomas More, Charles Fourrier, Plato, Aristotle, Thomas Aquinas, Jesus,
Buddha and many others require this even distribution for their systems to work

Paradoxically, in those societies where resources are owned collectively for the so called
good of the people, the people are poorest

Utilizing resources involves risks, the greater the risk the greater the profit

The development of resources has been incremental and in fits and starts