We are not alone we are "us humanity".

As a species, we can only survive by working together. In post-industrial cities, we organize this cooperation through public services. We, FreeWorldPeople, want to organize these services globally, outside of feudal concepts. We want to build a global network of public services that cooperates with one another.

Our tribe

Our tribe is more important than our government. This is a fact that governments do not want to acknowledge. As individuals, we exist within concentric circles of tribal relationships, with our families at the center. This is our security. Governments and religions that forget their role in this are helping to destroy themselves. In our society, academics have become their own global tribe, separate from the tribes that form from the bottom up in wider society. Artificial intelligence and the internet mean that knowledge is no longer a domain in which this tribe can maintain its position. To prevent uprisings and civil wars, academics must change.
It is unlikely that the necessary changes will occur in the West without conflict. Instead, counterforces from the academic world (via the government) will continue to grow. Along with this, polarization will increase.
Through the cracks in the social fabric, increasingly autocratic and Islamic influences are creeping into Western society under the guise of a new sense of security based on tribal solidarity. Ultimately, this creeping influence aims to replace current academics with new ones. The transformation of Western society will not stem from current academic interests. Rather, it will come from the core of the free Western population.

Our main types (grouping) of public services we recognize are

  • Security and disaster recovery services
  • Infrastructure services
  • Health and health issue recovery services
  • Old age services

The public service piramide organization

We want to organize public services globally in a democratic way based on the mathematics behind the six-handshake rule and sociocratic principles.
The "6 handshake" rule, also known as the "six degrees of separation," is the idea that any two people on Earth are connected through a chain of no more than six social connections, where each connection is a personal acquaintance.
This concept was first proposed in 1929 by Hungarian author Frigyes Karinthy in his short story "Chain-Links," where he suggested that any person could be connected to another through no more than five intermediaries.

legal philosophy foundations

Introduction

Humanistic Christian

Communistic or socialist autocracy

Islamic