ONLINE BOOK 16

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ARTICLE 147 – THE STATUTES OF AUTONOMY

1. Within the terms of this Constitution, the Statutes shall be the basic institutional standard of each Province and the State shall recognize and cover them as an integral part of its legal order.

2. The Statutes of Provincial Autonomy shall contain:

a) The community denomination that best corresponds to your historical identity.

b) The delimitation of its territory

c) The name, organisation and seat of the autonomous institutions themselves.

(d) The powers assumed within the framework set out in the Constitution and the basis for the transfer of the services corresponding thereto.

REFORM OF THE STATUTES OF AUTONOMY

3. The reform of the Statutes will comply with the procedure laid down therein and will require, in any case, the approval by the National Assembly by organic law.

ARTICLE 148 – PROVINCE COMPETITIONS

1. The Provinces may assume competence in the following matters, always under the approval of the National Assembly:

1st Organization of its institutions of self-government in Assemblies and Government Executives.

2.a Alterations of the municipal terms included in its territory and, in general, the functions that correspond to the Administration of the State over local corporations and whose transfer authorizes the legislation on local regime.

3rd OrdeNation of the territory, urban planning and housing.

4a Public works of interest of the Province in its own territory.

5.a Railways and roads whose itinerary takes place entirely in the territory of the Province and, in the same terms, the transport developed by these means or by cable. Works affecting more than one Province will be administered by a Temporary Interprovincial Assembly and maintained for pre-agreed prorated costs prior to the execution of the work.

6.a Ports of refuge, ports and sports airports and, in general, those which do not engage in commercial activities.

7.a Agriculture and livestock, in accordance with the general trade of the economy.

8th Mountains and forest harvests.

9.a Management in environmental protection.

10.a The projects, construction and operation of hydraulics, canals and irrigation of interest of the Province; mineral and thermal waters.

11th Inland fisheries, seafood and aquaculture, hunting and river fishing.

12th Indoor Fairs.

13a Promoting the economic development of the Autonomous Community within the objectives set by national economic policy.

14th Craftsmanship.

15th Museums, libraries and conservatories of music of interest to the Autonomous Community. Province.

16th Monumental Heritage of interest of the Province.

17.a The promotion of culture, research and, where appropriate, the teaching of the language of the Province.

18th Promotion and tourism tourism in its territorial area.

19th Promotion of sport and the proper use of leisure.

20th Social Assistance.

21st Health and Hygiene.

22.a The monitoring and protection of its buildings and facilities. Coordination and other powers in relation to local police in terms established by an organic law.

2. After five years, and through the reform of their Statutes, the Provinces may successively expand their powers within the framework set out in Article 149.

ARTICLE 149 – EXCLUSIVE COMPETENCE OF THE ASSEMBLY STATE

1. The State has exclusive competence over the following matters:

1. The regulation of the basic conditions that guarantee the equality of all Citizens in the exercise of rights and in the fulfillment of constitutional duties.

2nd Nationality, immigration, emigration, aliens and the right of asylum.

3rd International Relations.

4th Defense and Armed Forces.

5th Administration of Justice.

6th Commercial, Criminal and Prison Legislation; procedural legislation, without prejudice to the necessary specialties arising from the particularities of the substantive law of the Provinces.

7a Labour legislation, without prejudice to its implementation by the bodies of the Provinces.

8th Civil Laws, without prejudice to the conservation, modification and development by the Provinces of civil rights. In any case, the rules concerning the application and effectiveness of legal rules, legal-civil relations relating to forms of marriage, ordeNation of public registers and instruments, basis of contractual obligations, rules for resolving conflicts of laws and determination of the sources of law, with respect, in the latter case, to the rules of foral or special law.

9th Legislation on Intellectual and Industrial Property.

10th Customs and Tariff Regime; foreign trade.

11th Monetary system: currencies, exchange and convertibility; foundations of the ordenation of credit, banking and insurance.

12th Weights and Measures Legislation, Determination of the Official Time.

13th Bases and coordination of general planning of economic activity.

14th General Treasury and orientation of agricultural, livestock and industrial production.

15th Promotion and general coordination of scientific and technical research.

16th Outer Health. Bases and overall coordination of health. Pharmaceutical legislation.

17th Basic legislation and economic regime of Social Security, without prejudice to the implementation of its services by the Autonomous Communities Provinces.

18.a The legal regime bases of the public administrations and the statutory regime of their officials which, in any event, shall ensure that those administered are treated in common; the common administrative procedure, without prejudice to specialties derived from the proper organization of the Provinces; legislation on forced expropriation; basic legislation on contracts and administrative concessions and the liability system of all public administrations.

19.a Maritime fishing, without prejudice to the competences conferred on the Provinces in the sector’s ordenation.

20th Merchant Navy and flagship of ships; illumination of coasts and maritime signals; ports of general interest; airports of general interest; airspace control, air traffic and transport, weather service and aircraft registration.

21st Railways and land transports that run through the territory of more than one Province; general communications regime; traffic and movement of motor vehicles; post office and telecommunications; air cables, submarines and radiocommunication.

22.a Legislation, ordeNation and granting of resources and hydraulic waste when the waters run through more than one Province and the authorization of electrical installations when their use affects another Province or the transport of energy leaves its territorial scope.

23a Basic legislation on environmental protection, without prejudice to the powers of the Provinces to establish additional standards of protection. Basic legislation on mountains, forest harvests and livestock routes.

24th Public Works of general interest or whose realization affects more than one Province.

25th Bases of the mining and energy regime.

26th Regime of production, trade, possession and use of weapons and explosives.

27th Basic rules of the press, radio and television regime and, in general, of all social media, without prejudice to the powers that correspond to the Provinces in their development and implementation.

28th Defense of the nation’s cultural, artistic and monumental heritage against export and expoliation; state-owned museums, libraries and archives, without prejudice to their management by the Provinces.

29th Public Security, without prejudice to the possibility of the establishment of police by the Provinces in the manner established in the respective Statutes within the framework of an organic law.

30.a Regulation of the conditions for obtaining, issuing and homologation of academic and professional qualifications and basic rules for the development of Article 27 of the Constitution, in order to ensure compliance with the obligations of the public authorities in this area.

31st Statistics for State Purposes.

STATE-TO-CULTURE SERVICE

2. Without prejudice to the powers that the Provinces may assume, the National State will consider the service of culture as an essential duty and attribution and facilitate cultural communication between Provinces, in accordance with them.

3. Matters not expressly attributed to the State by this Constitution may correspond to the Provinces, under their respective Statutes. The jurisdiction over matters not assumed by the Statutes of Provincial Autonomy shall be the responsibility of the National State, the rules of which shall prevail, in the event of a conflict, over those of the Provinces in all matters not conferred on their exclusive competence. National state law shall, in any event, be consistent with the law of the Provinces.

ARTICLE 150 – COORDINATION OF LEGISLATIVE POWERS

1. The National Assembly on State competence may confer on all Provinces the power to dictate, for themselves, legislative rules within the framework of the principles, bases and guidelines laid down by a state law. Without prejudice to the jurisdiction of the Courts, each framework law shall lay down the modality for the control of the Provinces over these Provincial legislative rules.

2. The National State may transfer or delegate to the Provinces, by organic law, powers corresponding to matters of State ownership that by their very nature are capable of transfer or delegation. The law shall provide in each case for the corresponding transfer of financial means, as well as the forms of control reserved by the National State.

3. The National State may issue laws establishing the principles necessary to harmonize the normative provisions of the Provinces even in the case of matters conferred on their competence, where required by the general interest. It is up to the National Assembly by an absolute majority of each Provincial Assembly to appreciate this need.

ARTICLE 151 – PREPARATION OF THE STATUTE UNDER SPECIAL REGIME

1. The five-year period referred to in paragraph 2 of Article 148 shall not be allowed to elapse where the initiative of the regional process is agreed within the period of Article 143(2), in addition to the relevant inter-island assemblies, by three quarters of the municipalities of each of the provinces concerned representing, at least, , the majority of the electoral census of each of them and that initiative is ratified by the affirmative vote of the absolute majority of the voters of each province in the terms established by an organic law. It is understood as “interinsular”, also to regions declared inhospite or remote.

2. In the case provided for in the preceding paragraph, the procedure for drawing up the Statute shall be:

1st. The National Assembly shall convene the Provincial and Local Delegates elected in the constituencies within the territorial area seeking access to self-government and all the Provincial Delegates of the National Assembly.

2nd. Approved the draft Statute by the National Assembly will be revised for final formulation and within a period of no more than thirty days will be endorsed by an absolute majority of the Provincial Delegates.

3rd. If such an agreement is reached, the resulting text shall be submitted to a referendum by the Local Assemblies of the provinces falling within the territorial scope of the planned Statute. Municipalities will have thirty days to veto the project for an absolute majority, which must be re-reviewed in the event of a veto.

4th. The Municipal Assemblies that do not veto a project will have stated it tacitly.

5th. If the agreement referred to in paragraph 2 of this issue is not reached, the draft Statute shall be archived as unworkable and may not be resubmitn until five years later.

 ARTICLE 152

1. In the Statutes approved by the procedure referred to in the previous Article, the Provincial Institutional Organization is based on an Assembly elected by universal suffrage, in accordance with a system of proportional representation which further ensures the representation of the various areas of the territory; a Governing Council with executive and administrative functions and the President of the Provincial Assembly elected by the Assembly, among its members, which is the leadership of the Governing Council, the supreme representation of the respective Province and the ordinary of the State there. The President and the members of the Governing Council shall be politically responsible to the Assembly for promptly obeying its mandate.

A Higher Court of Justice, without prejudice to the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, shall culminate in judicial organization in the territorial area of the Province. The Statutes of the Provinces may establish the assumptions and forms of participation of those in the organization of the judicial demarcations of the territory. All this in accordance with the provisions of the organic law of the judiciary and within the unity and independence of the judiciary.

Without prejudice to Article 123, successive procedural bodies, where appropriate, shall be exhausted before judicial bodies located in the same Provincial territory in which the body of first instance is located.

2. Once the respective Statutes have been sanctioned and promulgated, they may only be amended by means of the procedures established and with a referendum among the voters registered in the corresponding censuses of all the Local Assemblies.

3. By grouping neighbouring municipalities, the Statutes may establish their own territorial constituencies, which shall enjoy full legal personality.

ARTICLE 153 – CONTROL OF PROVINCIAL BODIES

The control of the activity of the organs of the Provinces shall be exercised:

a) By the Constitutional Court, the constitutionality of its normative provisions with force of law.

(b) By the Provincial Assembly after the opinion of the State Council, the exercise of delegated functions referred to in paragraph 2 of Article 150.

c) By the contentious-administrative jurisdiction, that of the Provincial Administration and its regulatory rules.

d) By the Court of Auditors.

ARTICLE 154 NATIONAL DELEGATE IN PROVINCES

A Delegate appointed by the National Assembly shall lead the Administration of the State in the territory of the Provincial and coordinate it, where appropriate, with the proper administration of the Province.

ARTICLE 155

1. If a Province fails to comply with the obligations imposed upon it by the Constitution or other laws, or acts in such a way as to seriously threaten the general interest of the Nation, the National Assembly upon request to the President of the Province and, in the event of non-service, with the approval by an absolute majority of the other Provincial Assemblies, may take the necessary measures to compel the General Assembly to enforce those obligations or to protect the aforementioned general interest 2. For the implementation of the measures provided for in the previous paragraph, the National Assembly may instruct all the authorities of the Provinces.

ARTICLE 156 – FINANCIAL AUTONOMY OF THE PROVINCES

1. The Provinces shall enjoy financial autonomy for the development and implementation of their competences in accordance with the principles of coordination with the National Treasury and solidarity among all citizens of the Nation.

2. The Provinces may act as collaborating delegates of the National State for the distribution of management and liquidation of the resources of the National State, in accordance with the laws and the Statutes.

ARTICLE 157 – RESOURCES OF THE PROVINCES

1. The resources of the Provinces shall consist of:

a) Funds ceded in whole or in part by the Nation.

b) Your own goods, services and securities.

c) Returns from your assets and private law income.

d) The product of the industry in its territory and exports thereof.

2. The Provinces may not in any case take measures of any kind on goods located outside their territory or which impede the free movement of goods or services.

3. By organic law, the exercise of the economic financial powers listed in paragraph 1 above may be regulated, the rules for resolving disputes that may arise and possible forms of economic collaboration between the Provinces and the State.

ARTICLE 158

1. The General Budget of the State shall establish an allocation to the Provinces on the basis of the volume of State services and activities they have undertaken and the guarantee of a minimum level in the provision of fundamental public services in the national territory.

INTERTERRITORIAL COMPENSATION FUND

2. In order to correct interterritorial economic imbalances and to give effect to the principle of solidarity, a Compensation Fund for investment expenditure will be established, the resources of which will be distributed by the Ministry of Economy of the Nation among the Provinces.

TITLE IX – OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURT

ARTICLE 159

1. The Constitutional Court is composed of twelve members appointed by the National Assembly. Of these, four on the proposal of the Provincial Delegates by a majority of three-fifths of their members; four on a proposal from the Board of Directors of the National Assembly with the same majority; two on a proposal from the Executives of Government (Council of Ministers of the Nation), and two on a proposal from the General Council of the Judiciary.

2. The members of the Constitutional Court shall be appointed between Judges and Prosecutors, University Professors, public officials and lawyers, all of which are lawyers of recognized competence with more than fifteen years of professional practice.

3. The members of the Constitutional Court shall be appointed for a period of nine years and shall be renewed by third parties every three.

4. Membership of the Constitutional Court is incompatible: with any representative mandate; political or administrative office; with the performance of policy functions; with the exercise of judicial and fiscal careers, and with any professional or commercial activity. Otherwise, the members of the Constitutional Court shall have the inconsistencys of the members of the Judiciary.

5. The members of the Constitutional Court shall be independent and immovable in their terms of office.

ARTICLE 160 – PRESIDENT OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURT

The President of the Constitutional Court shall be appointed among its members by the National Assembly on a proposal from the same Court in plenary and for a period of three years.

ARTICLE 161 – JURISDICTION OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURT

1. The Constitutional Court has jurisdiction throughout the territory of the Nation and has jurisdiction to hear:

a) Recourse of unconstitutionality against laws and regulatory provisions with force of law. The declaration of unconstitutionality of a rule of law, interpreted by case-law, shall affect it, although the judgment or relapse will not lose the value of res judicata.

b) From the appeal for protection for violation of the rights and freedoms referred to in Article 53,2 of this Constitution, in the cases and forms established by law.

c) Conflicts of jurisdiction between the National State and the Provinces or theirs.

d) Of the other matters attributed to it by the Constitution or organic laws.

2.  The National Assembly may challenge before the Constitutional Court the provisions and decisions adopted by the organs of the Provinces. The challenge will result in the suspension of the provision or decision under appeal, but the Court, where appropriate, shall ratify or lift it within not more than three months.

ARTICLE 162 – UNCONSTITUTIONAL AND AMPARO RESOURCES

1. They are legitimized:

(a) To bring an appeal of unconstitutionality: the President of the National Assembly. The Provincial Delegates of the National Assembly, the Executives of Government of the Provinces and, where appropriate, the Assemblies thereof.

b) In order to seek an appeal for protection on a constitutional basis, any natural or legal person who invokes a legitimate interest, as well as the Public Prosecutor’s Office.

2. In other cases, the Organic Law shall determine the legitimate persons and bodies.

ARTICLE 163

Where a judicial body considers, in some proceedings, that a rule with a status of law, applicable to the case, the validity of which depends on the ruling, may be contrary to the Constitution, it shall raise the matter before the Constitutional Court in the cases, in the form and effects established by the law, which in no case will be suspensive.

ARTICLE 164 – JUDGMENTS OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURT

1. The judgments of the Constitutional Court shall be published in the Official Gazette of the State with the particular votes, if any. They have the value of res judicata from the day after their publication and there is no recourse against them. Those who declare the unconstitutionality of a law or a rule with force of law and all those that are not limited to the subjective estimation of a right have full effects on all.

2. Unless otherwise provided for in the judgment, the law will survive in the part not affected by unconstitutionality.

ARTICLE 165

An organic law shall regulate the functioning of the Constitutional Court, the status of its members, the procedure before it and the conditions for the exercise of the actions.

TITLE X

ARTICLE 166 – CONSTITUTIONAL REFORM

The constitutional reform initiative shall be exercised in the terms provided for in paragraphs 1 and 2 of Article 87.

ARTICLE 167

1. Draft constitutional reforms must be approved by a three-quarter majority of the full National Assembly.

2. If approval is not achieved through the procedure in the preceding paragraph, the reform cannot be voted on again until after five years.

3. Approved by the National Assembly, it will be put to a referendum for ratification within fifteen days of its approval by all Provincial, Local and Minor Assemblies through the Assembly Process.

ARTICLE 168 – ESSENTIAL REFORMS OF THE CONSTITUTION

1. When the full revision of the Constitution or a partial affecting the Preliminary Title is proposed, Chapter II, Section 1a, Title I, or Title II, the principle of a majority of three-quarters of the nation’s citizenship shall be approved by assembly process.  The approved reform will come into force immediately.

ARTICLE 169

Constitutional reform may not be initiated in time of war or in force of any of the states provided for in Article 116. The state of war is only understood as rejection of an armed invasion from abroad, or defense requested by another Ecologenic State, in which case it will only be participated if it is to defend its national territory.

 

ADDITIONAL PROVISIONS

First

HISTORICAL RIGHTS OF THE TERRITORIES

The Constitution covers and respects the historical rights of Citizens throughout the territory of the Nation. The updating and replacement of any political system prior to this Constitution will be carried out by the Assembly system and will be carried out, where appropriate, within the framework of the Constitution and the Statutes of Autonomy of each Province.

 

Second

ECONOMIC REGIME OF ISLANDS AND TERRITORIES

Away

The island or geographically distant Provinces possess the same attributes, privileges and qualities as any other, with special assistance from the National State in the differential aspects of its island status, geographically inhospite or distant.

 

Third

All previous ancillary political entities are abolished, being replaced by the Citizens’ Assemblies and the Executive Bodies of Government that they have created.

 

Fourth

When several draft Statutes are forwarded to the National Assembly, they shall be given by the order of entry there, and the period referred to in Article 151 shall begin to count from the end of the Assembly’s study of the project or projects it has successively known.

 

Fifth

DISSOLUTION OF PROVISIONAL BODIES

Regional interim bodies, if necessary to facilitate the political transition to the Assembly, Republican and Ecologenic system, shall be considered dissolved in the following cases:

(a) If they existed, once the Local, Minor and Provincial Assemblies and their statutes have been established, they are approved in accordance with this Constitution.

b) In the event that the initiative of the regional process did not succeed because it did not meet the requirements of ARTICLE 143.

(c) If the body had not exercised the right granted to it by the first transitional provision within one year.

 

Sixth

THE CHAMBERS AND THE PREVIOUS GOVERNMENT, AFTER THE CONSTITUTION WAS APPROVED

1. The Houses or other bodies as well as the political parties that have supported the outdated partycracy, which have approved the previous Constitutions, are definitively abolished as a form of government.  Citizens who have participated in such bodies and parties with partisan or political office are vitally inhibited from state political or administrative exercise, with the exception of those provided for in the Preliminary Title, Article 1(1).

2. For the purposes of Article 99, the promulgation of the Constitution shall be deemed to be a constitutional assumption in which its application is appropriate. To this end, a period of thirty days for the application of the provisions of that Article shall be opened from that promulgation. During this period, the current President of the Constituent Assembly who will assume the functions and powers established for that office of the Constitution, may choose to use the power conferred on him by Article 115 or to give way, by resignation, to the application of article 99, remaining in the latter case in the situation provided for in Article 101.

 

Seventh

RENOVATION OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURT

Three years after the election for the first time of the members of the Constitutional Court, a group of four members of the same elective origin to be ceased and renewed will be held by lot. For these purposes alone, the two appointed by the Government and the two who come from that made by the General Council of the Judiciary shall be understood as members of the same origin. Likewise, another three years will be carried out between the two groups not affected by the previous draw. Thereafter, it shall be as set out in Article 159, 3.

 

REPEAL PROVISION

REPEAL OF FUNDAMENTAL LAWS

1. All laws of political effect prior to this Constitution are repealed.

2. In addition, any provisions are repealed to support the provisions of this Constitution.

FINAL PROVISION TO ENTER INTO FORCE

This Constitution shall enter into force on the day of the publication of its official text in the “Official Gazette of the State”. It will also be published in the other languages of the Nation.

 

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IDEA AND RECOMMENDATIONS

 

WAR AND PEACE

            It is not war, the problem is not war evil, nor is war a disgrace, but the inevitable consequence of slavery, when slaves are not willing to be. Pacifism is one of the most subtle and terrible weapons of the slaver. The problem with wars and the armed forces is when soldiers and police are also slaves, not conscious warriors. Evolved man does not disguise cowardice in the name of Peace. This sacred word is only real as a feeling of the Free Man, and Freedom is the product of Conscious Loyalty and Dignity. Whoever is unwilling to die for the Freedom and Peace of his people does not deserve them. As long as there is a slave man, a usurper, an unconscious of ethical values, and unscrupulous without respect for the life and freedom of others, it is not possible to live in the helplessness that they seek to produce with pacifism.

 

THE FALSE “ANTISYSTEM”

Many people believe that mafias, terrorists, street protesters and financial criminals are “antisystems,” either partially or completely. It is in a great mis concept, because mafias are groups of conspirators, whose aim is to obtain economic benefit, both by lawful and illicit means. They all seek to violate laws with impunity, rather than change them. There is some other exception from people who have ripped off financial scammers, as a means of attracting social attention, but that is not enough, because the usurers will not be persuaded to stop being social. If the system were not a moneycracy, there would be no such mafias, they would have no reason to be, unless their activity was strictly political, in which case they would be simply subversive.

            Terrorists are key pieces run by the world economic government. The terrorist is an important pawn in chess played by these global bankers, but he is not an anti-system. It serves the system in the dirtiest way and even it is convinced to be anti-system, without realizing what threads handle it. It serves to mobilize the economy of the arms industry, serves to entertain the mass and at the same time to justify the increase of individual and collective control in the system. It serves to destroy anything and whoever is sent to him by international puppeteers; many do it for religious reasons (system things) and others just for money. It serves to “justify” wars that would not occur if the ideologue was well informed and thought for himself, free from the taras imposed by religions and the false ideologies of the system.

            The criminal serves the system in many different ways. It maintains a prison regime with many thousands of employees, serves to keep the conscience money in society and the discussion about whether it is right or wrong to steal, without seeing the causes that impel someone to become a thief. On the “antisystems” who protest in the streets without providing concrete ideas and firm and clear alternative plans, we must make a difference: On the one hand, the mass, which is what really is worth, on the other hand, those who lead them like sheep to return home without any clear results or work to do, many are trained to do so.

 

MARRIAGE and ECOLOGENIST ETHICS

            Marriage is not the basic cell of society, while this is the individual, the person, but marriage is the fundamental organ of society. The institution of marriage has been, is and will remain a natural institution, although the cries of laws that subject it and pervert it under the yoke of moneycracy, must disappear for marriage to be truly natural.

            On the other hand, Ecologenia has not been written only for the countries of the “first world”, nor only for the most advanced groups in ideas. It has been written with all peoples in mind their particularities. The outlined Constitution takes into account for the charges, a series of psychological factors that make it necessary to have stability and maturity that is easier to verify in the person with a stable partner, than in the one who does not have it. It is not that a single man cannot be able to take any position, but in global statistics that clause satisfies much the general mindset in more than eighty percent of the world’s inhabitants.

            In any case, this proposal and any of those contained in the Ecologenic Plan will be modified in each community, not only at the national level, but by the very structure of power, the Assemblies will actually dictate the most appropriate standards to each community. Delegates will be constant spokespersons in referendums, so those details will change and evolve as dictated by the majority, but respecting everyone, not a religion or an institution other than the Citizens’ Assembly itself.

            The family, in the case of an Environmental politician, cannot be used as a hostage. An Environmentalist cannot be a hostage, because he will kill or die before he is a hostage. If he were still taken prisoner alive, no Ecologist will seek to “negotiate” for his life. You have five options for any critical situation: succumb, flee, avoid, ignore or attack.

            An Environmental citizen does not have great demands, although they are different from those of the modern slave. You won’t pay mortgages, you won’t suffer to “get to the end of the month” or spend in luxuries what you haven’t earned, you won’t be able to use it to kill people in other countries for financial reasons, you won’t have to worry about the cost of health and education yourself and your children. To some extent he is allowed to flee, avoid, ignore and be instructed not to succumb. But an environmental politician is not an “ordinary citizen”, he cannot marry someone who does not share to the extreme the highest ideals, because he must be willing to attack and resist to the last consequences when it comes to defending not only his family in a one-off case, but always, at all times and places, he must be prepared to sacrifice himself for his people.

            Without that spirit of absolute dedication and life that the People must demand from their politicians, there is no politicians, but the filthy army of legumes, lying charlatans and parasites, servile employees of the hidden powers (now not so hidden). Those puppets of moneycracy today fill thrones, seats, parliaments, chambers and it would be cyclopean task to find one that is truly honest, although there will surely be some. For these exceptional personalities of politics, it is the great hour, the great opportunity to truly contribute to humanity, starting with its own nation.

            There are magnificent leaders, overwhelmed by reality, informed of everything there is and with good ideas. But almost everyone is disconnected from people who understand their judgment, who are willing to move into practice. Perhaps the biggest problem is in many cases the lack of coherent doctrine. The mobilizations of the 15 M were inspired, but quickly the mobilizations and groups that were plunged, were infiltrated to provoke anarchy, so that there would not exist or become a coherent body of law, so that no one agrees to produce a real assembly movement, because if there is anything that global slavers fear, it is an assembly movement , where people start to agree, where true leaders have the opportunity to express themselves and do concrete things. For all of them, then, this book has been written, as a basic manual, with a proposal for a constitution that is typical of an advanced civilization, truly democratic.

 

CHANGING POLITICAL PARADIGMS

            Here are some concept changes, essential to change the world, even if we start with our neighborhood. We will compare some ideas of great men of history, who may be right in some cases for the purposes envisaged under the conditions of their time, but which today suffer from obsolescence.

 

1) “Men must be ruled with a steel glove inside the velvet glove.” Napoleon Bonaparte.

            Diplomacy is worth it, but without hypocrisy. The Ecologist says: “Men must be served. Those who do not serve to govern themselves, do not serve to be rulers”

“Anyone with form can be defined, and anyone who can be defined can be defeated.” Sun Bin (Art of War II)

            True for the case of war, but not for a society that pretends to be fairer. The Environmental Politician says: “The Environmental Man is defined, clearly coherent, predictable according to his honesty. He is not able to betray, but the enemy fears him, because he cannot corrupt him, because he cannot frighten him, because he knows he will react with intelligence and firmness.”

 

“Be extremely subtle, discreet, to the point of having no shape. Be completely mysterious and confidential, to the point of being silent. This way you can direct the fate of your opponents.” The Art of War (Sun Tzu)

            Completely true and the Ecologist shares this idea when it comes to combat, of political strategy against petty interests, but his ethics do not allow him to act like this when it comes to making things clear to his rulers, who are citizens.

 

“We must contride, above all, so that each of our actions will give us fame as great men and excellent wit.” The Prince (Machiavelli)

            That’s how we have big hypocrites rather than politicians. However, Humanity is experienced and it is time for you to learn to differentiate true leaders.

 

“If the sovereign is not mysterious, ministers will find an opportunity to take and take.” Huanchu Daoren

            And true is, that is why it is necessary to overthrow all who say themselves “Sovereigns”. Only the People is Sovereign and is able to learn from their mistakes and correct them. The plenipotentiary rulers have always declined through their vices, thereby dragging the Peoples. It’s time to learn…

“A wise prince will devise a way to keep all citizens in all circumstances in a situation of dependence on the state and his; and then they will always trust.” The Prince (Machiavelli)

            To some extent it is so, so it is necessary to overthrow the princes, or leave them in the dreams of teenage girls. The Ecologist says: “A wise politician will make the state dependent on citizens, it will make there be total reciprocity between State and People, because the former is an intruder for the latter and will sleep peacefully. Majorities are always wrong when they leave the state in particular hands, but not when they have to decide what they want.”

 

“Native spies are hired among locals. Internal spies are hired among enemy officials. Double agents are hired among enemy spies. Liquidable spies transmit false data to enemy spies. Floating spies return to bring their reports. Among the officials of the enemy regime are those with which contact can be made and who can be bribed to find out the situation of their country and discover any plan that is directed against you, can also be used to create disagreements and disarmony.” The Art of War (Sun Tzu)

            And the Ecologist says: “Ecologenic state has spies everywhere. Every citizen of the Nation is a “spy” who knows everything that is done in the country, everything politicians do, and everything that is said in the Assembly because he participates in them. That is why there is no possibility that another enemy “spy” will come to harm the interests of all citizens.”

 

“You have to tell others what they want to hear”

This phrase has been attributed to many politicians, the Ecologist says: “The truth must be told, even if it hurts, sooner or later things are known.”

 

“No man has to despair thinking that he will not get converts for the most extravagant cause if he has enough art to represent her in favorable colors.” David Hume. And the Ecologist adds: ..” And so he will have a human herd, instead of an educated and noble people living happily.”

“The truth is cold, it’s not comfortable. A lie is more beautiful. It’s much more interesting and profitable to fantasize than to tell the truth.” Joseph Weil

            And that’s the rotten mentality of the moneycracy, the partycracy and all the corruptela we’ve endured for 17 centuries. The Ecologist says: “The truth can be uncomfortable and bitter in principle, but deep down and for its results, it is immensely beautiful and finally sweet and happy.”

Gabriel Silva:

 

 

GENERAL VOLUME INDEX

Index:

PRELIMINARY NOTE FROM the Author…………………………… 2

Jover Pepón Prologue ……………………………………………………. 4

Chapter I – Two Great Purposes ……………………………………..10

Ecology against Dinerocracy …………………………………………… 12

Chapter II – The Myth of the Fourth Dimension ………………….18

Chapter III – The Current Policy ……………………………………….20

Political Aberrations – Fair Trade ……………………………………. 21

Conspiracies and conspiracies ………………………………………… 22

Polarization……………………………………………………………………… 24

Right and Left: Two Dirty Hands ………………………………………..27

The Anonymous Vote ……………………………………………………….. 31

Entertainment and Detour ………………………………………………… 31

On Terrorism and False Flag…………………………………………….. 33

About Anarchy………………………………………………………………… 33

National Unification and Division …………………………………………37

About Democracy …………………………………………………………… 41

The Media ………………………………………………………………………. 52

About Tolerance ………………………………………………………………. 53

The Fatherland ………………………………………………………………… 54

Perpetuation in Power ……………………………………………………….. 55

Genocidal Market Medicine …………………………………………………56

Nanochips ………………………………………………………………………. 67

The Demographic Crisis – Ecology or Genocide …………………… 68

Urban Laws, Energies and Technologies……………………………….71

Concrete Demographics ……………………………………………………. 92

Global Deception Policies …………………………………………………… 93

Global Military Policy …………………………………………………………. 95

Immediate Solutions …………………………………………………………. 96

 

PART TWO

The Environmental Plan

Plan T.E.O.S. (Higher Order Educational Treaty)……………………104

Objectives……………………………………………………………………….. 105

Philosophical and Doctrinal Guidelines ………………………………. 106

Single Economic and Labour Document ………………………………110

Eco-gene education …………………………………………………………. 114

Recreation and Free Time …………………………………………………. 116

Work Activity …………………………………………………………………….118

Distribution of Land, Property and Establishments………………..120

The Laws of the Nation – T.E.O.S. Plan

Justice Code …………………………………………………………………122

Chapter Io

State Composition ……………………….,,……………………………….124

The Judicial Structure and the Law ………………………………… 126

Chapter II The Crimes and Punishments …………………………… 129

Chapter III of Prisons ………………………………………………………… 136

Chapter IV, Military and State Affairs …………………………………. 138

Chapter V. Laws of Journalists and Information ………………………. 140

Chapter VI The Assembly of Citizens ……………………………………..142

CHAPTER VII Law of Ethical and Moral Regulation……………… 143

CHAPTER VIIIo Freedoms and Guarantees ……………………….. 144

 

INDICE ECONOGENIA

Author’s Prologue……………………………………………………….. .. 148

Chapter One

Axioms………………………………………………………………………….150

Economy AND Cosmovision…………………………………………….151

Basic Ecologenic Government Program…………………………….152

Essence of Economics and Economic Policy……………………… 155

Differences with liberalism and Marxism……………………………. 160

Liberalism and individualism…………………………………………….. 160

Marxism………………………………………………………………………. 164

a) Philosophical materialism……………………………………………. 165

b) The materialistic conception of history…………………………….. 166

The Consequences of Marxism………………………………………… 166

 

Chapter Two

The conception of the Ecologenic world

1 – The Fundamentals of Ecology……………………………….168

The movement cannot lack leaders……………………………. 169

2.- The Proposal……………………………………………………… 170

3.- More About the Environmental Program………………… 173

4.- Enthusiasm……………………………………………………….. 174

 

Chapter Three

Elements of the Environmental World ……………………….182

I .- The Econogenia ………………………………………………….182

II.  Ethics……………………………………………………………….. 182

Ⅲ. Individual and Collectives:……………………………………..183

Ⅳ. Culture………………………………………………………………183

Ⅴ. The Races……………………………………………………………184

Saw. Ideologies………………………………………………………….185

Vii. The Concepts…………………………………………………………187

Viii. Political Science

  1.  All science is political science…………………………………. 194 

  2. We must all collaborate………………………………………….. 195

  3. The Ecological and Patriotic Sentiment………………………….196

  4. Leadership……………………………………………………………….196

 

Chapter Four

The Pure Econogenia……………………………………………………..199

Relationship Between Economics and Politics…………………… 201

Purpose of the Econogeny…………………..,,,……………………..,,,.204

Econogenic Measures…………………………………………………….205

The Common Good Before The Common One…………………… 206

Econogenia Guiding Line………………………………………………….. 209

Business Development……………………………………………………..209

Short and Long Term Ends………………………………………………. 211

Production and Consumption……………………………………………… 215

Fundamental Economic Concepts

I. Purpose………………………………………………………………….217

II. THE WORK…………………………………………………………. 220

Ⅲ.  Private Property…………………………………………………….225

The Right to Work……………………………………………………… 226

The Liberation of Agriculture

General………………………………………………………………………… 230

Important Agricultural Measures……………………………………… 231

The National Agricultural Chamber………………………………….. 232

Maximum and Minimum Prices………………………………………. 232

Autarchy and Foreign Trade…………………………………………… 234

 

Chapter Five

Social and Economic Order

The Econogenic Conception………………………………………………… 237

Individualistic and Universalist Conceptions…………………………… 237

Socio-Economics Environmental Concept………………………………… 241

Summary of Objectives………………………………………………………. 242

Development of the Econogenic Order

The New Order at Work……………………………………………………….243

The Ministry of Labour……………………………………………………… 244

  A) The Mission of the Ministry of Labour……………………………… 244

  B) Ministry of Labour Organization………………………………………247

  C) Strategic Industrial Chambers………………………………………..248

  D) National Labour Order………………………………………………..249

  E) Business Division……………………………………………………….250

Creation of the Labour State Council…………………………………. 251

National Econogenic Order………………………………………………..254

Attributes of the Minister of Labour………………………………………254

Attributes of the Minister of Econogenia……………………………….254

The Purposes of Labor Law…………………………………………………255

Econogenic Distribution of Rubros……………………………………….. 257

Food…………………………………………………………………………………258

Culture and Education in the Econogenia…………………………….. 259

 

Title Sixth

The Abolition of Slavery of Interest

  A) The Development of the Idea………………………………………………261

  B) Programmatic Requirements…………………………………………….. 262

  C) Interest Reduction Attempts……………………………………………… 264

  D) Existing Wealth and Savings……………………………………………….267

 

Seventh Title

The Right to Strike……………………………………………………………… 268

The Fight Against Unemployment…………………………………………..269

 

Title Eighth

Structure of Government Executives……………………………………….. 272

 

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INDICE ASSEMBLY CONSTITUTION

Introduction…………………………………………………………………………. 275

Author’s Prologue…………………………………………………………… 280

General Traits of Ecologenia……………………………………………… 282

National Ecologenic Ethics………………………………………………… 288

CHAPTER II

Local Ecology, Step by Step……………………………………………… 292

Local and Global Economic Transformation…………………………. 293

Some details of moneycracy

The Mind of the Mediocre Man…………………………………………….. 294

The Achievement of Ecologenic Power………………………………… 302

Eliminating The Moneycracy, step by step…………………………….. 306

Political Plan of the Ecologenia Movement……………………………. 309

First Actions of the Assemblies………………………………………………. 312

Questions and Answers to the Government Program……………….. 316

Assembly System Scheme………………………………………………………324

National Assembly Constitution………………………………………………325

Idea and Recommendations…………………………………………………… 389

War and Peace…………………………………………………………………….. 389

The False “Antisystem”…………………………………………………………. 390

Changing Political Paradigms………………………………………………….. 392

If you really agree with what you’ve read, Act!

Fill yourself with enthusiasm to change your life and that of all your loved ones, spread Ecologenia. Don’t stay like the fools waiting for someone else to do for you. May the Light of Your Consciousness make you understand that EACH of the citizens counts to change the individual and collective destiny. That’s the difference with the partitocracy and the moneycracy that holds Humanity. To make Freedom real, get rid of your problems and psychological rolls. Whatever your other beliefs, none is as fundamental right now as your DETERMINATION.

Remember that the most important thing is announced by telegram APP on the group t.me/Ecoloenglish     (en español t.me/Ecologenia)