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Carbon Currency: A New Beginning for Technocracy? |
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Written by Carbon Currency Foundation
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Global carbon currency replacing all paper currencies, limiting manufacturing, food production and people movement
Carbon Currency: A New Beginning for Technocracy?
By Patrick Wood for CFPTuesday, January 26, 2010
Critics who think that the U.S. dollar will be replaced by some new global currency are perhaps thinking too small. On the world horizon looms a new global currency that could replace all paper currencies and the economic system upon which they are based. The new currency, simply called Carbon Currency, is designed to support a revolutionary new economic system based on energy (production, and consumption), instead of price. Our current price-based economic system and its related currencies that have supported capitalism, socialism, fascism and communism, is being herded to the slaughterhouse in order to make way for a new carbon-based world.
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What is carbon dioxide (CO2) and what are the sources? |
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Written by Carbon Currency Foundation
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What is carbon dioxide (CO2)
What is carbon dioxide (CO2) and what are the sources?
Carbon dioxide is a colorless, odorless gas. It is produced when any carbon-based material used for fuel (coal, oil, wood, etc.) is burned. When fuel burning is not a factor, the main sources are tobacco smoke, human and animal respiration. Carbon dioxide is given off whenever we exhale. Cars, trucks, industrial equipment, and burning fuel for power are some of the major contributors to CO2 in the air.
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Written by Carbon Currency Foundation
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Save the Amazon Project
Carbon Currency Foundation Project
The Carbon Currency Foundation 's project "Save the Amazon" aims to preserve the most important rain forest of the planet and perhaps the most threatened by the colonization for agriculture and breeding purposes. The idea we support is that rainforests are worth much more left standing, both for the planet and for local communities. "Our approach is simple: to buy land that would otherwise be sold to loggers and ranchers and to price deforestation out of the market. It's not easy to maintain intact the tropical forests, because the problem is that they are situated on some of the largest areas remaining on the earth, adapted for the development of cultivation and pasture" declared Walter Boudaghian, main project manager .
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