Political Principles

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2 min read

Political Principles

1. Principle of Minimal Interference

States commit to minimizing interference in the internal affairs of other states. However, this principle makes an exception for human rights issues, where intervention may be justified to prevent or counter severe violations.

2. Principle of Non-Evasion

Individuals and states may attempt to circumvent the law without technically violating it, yet still acting against its spirit. States commit to refraining from evading international agreements, ensuring compliance with both their letter and intent.

3. Right to Land and Gold

A state’s land and gold resources are considered in proportion to 1/10 of its total holdings.

Given a population of X individuals, each person is entitled at birth to 1/(X*10) of the state’s land and territory, allocated randomly.

3.B. State Allocation of Resources

The state distributes 20% of the entitled land and gold starting at the age of 30, with allocations occurring every 10 years.

Entitled land randomly selected. 1/3 good, 1/3 middle, 1/3 poor land.

These resources cannot be sold to foreign entities or transferred abroad.

However, the beneficiary cannot spend, trade, or transfer these resources arbitrarily. Instead, any use of the allocated wealth must be approved by the state to ensure that it is directed toward productive, ethical, and sustainable investments.

4. Wealth Indicator

The primary index for evaluating a country's wealth growth is the GDP per capita of the poorest 25% of its population.

This index is adjusted for purchasing power parity (PPP) and then normalized.

Normalization

  • The index spans from 0 to 10, where:

    • 0 represents the poorest country, defined as the nation where the bottom 25% of its population has a lower income than the bottom 25% of any other country.

    • 10 represents the wealthiest country, with a progressively scaled ranking between these extremes.

This metric ensures a relative comparison of economic well-being across nations, prioritizing income distribution and cost of living over raw GDP figures.

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