Tag: STEWARDSHIP

  • The Real Meaning of “No Kings”

    The Real Meaning of “No Kings”

    The streets are filled with people.

    The No Kings protest is not just another protest. It is the largest movement of its kind in history—millions of people gathering across an entire nation at the same time.

    For comparison, even the largest demonstrations in recent history—from the Women’s March to the Vietnam War protests—mobilized millions, but rarely with this level of simultaneous, nationwide coordination across so many locations. And while those movements were primarily national, this one has also sparked demonstrations beyond the U.S., pointing toward a broader, international resonance.

    And now, millions are raising their voices with a simple, powerful message:

    No Kings!

    It’s a message that resonates instantly. No one should stand above others. No one should hold unchecked power. No one should rule like a monarch.

    And yet… there is a deeper question quietly waiting beneath the surface:

    Why do kings exist in the first place?

    The Pattern We Keep Repeating

    History has shown us something again and again.

    We remove a king.
    We celebrate freedom.
    We keep the same system.

    And slowly… power concentrates again.

    Different names. Different faces. Same structure.

    Kings return—not always with crowns, but with influence, wealth, and control.

    So perhaps the real question is not:

    “How do we remove kings?”

    But:

    “What creates them?”

    The Hidden Mechanism

    If we look closely, two elements appear again and again throughout history:

    1. Ownership
    2. Money

    These two are so deeply embedded in our system and minds that we rarely question them. They feel natural. Necessary. Even protective.

    But what do they actually do?

    Ownership allows individuals or entities to claim exclusive control over land and resources.

    Money becomes the permission system that determines who gets access to those resources.

    Together, they create a structure where:

    • some control access
    • the rest depend on that control

    And from that imbalance… power emerges.

    From Owners to Kings

    A king is simply someone who has ultimate control. Through ownership.

    In the past, that control was explicit: land, people, resources—all under one ruler.

    Today, the structure is more fragmented, but the principle remains:

    • ownership concentrates control
    • money amplifies it
    • power accumulates

    And eventually, we get modern forms of kings:

    • economic elites
    • corporate dominance
    • concentrated influence over entire systems

    No crown required.

    Why “No Kings” Is Not Enough

    Saying “No Kings” is a powerful first step.

    But if the underlying system remains unchanged, the pattern will repeat.

    Because as long as:

    • ownership allows control over essential resources
    • money controls access to them

    then power will always find a way to concentrate.

    And new kings will emerge.

    Why More Rules Won’t Solve It

    A common response to the problem of concentrated power is to add more rules:

    • more regulation
    • more oversight
    • more checks and balances

    And while these can slow down the concentration of power, they don’t remove its source.

    Because as long as ownership and money remain in place:

    • control can still accumulate
    • influence can still grow
    • power can still concentrate

    Rules can manage the symptoms.

    But they cannot eliminate the underlying mechanism.

    And there is something even deeper:

    Rules are only rules.

    They sit on top of an already heavy system—and an already conditioned mindset.

    A mindset where:

    • ownership feels natural
    • competition feels necessary
    • trading feels like the only way to organize life

    So even when new rules are introduced, they operate within the same framework of thinking.

    And over time, the system adapts. Loopholes appear. Influence finds new paths. And the same patterns return—just in more complex forms.

    To truly change this, rules are not enough.

    We need a shift that is both structural and psychological.

    Not just a modified system—but a fundamentally different one.

    A system so simple and so aligned with reality that it changes how we think.

    Where stewardship replaces ownership.

    Where sharing becomes the default.

    Where stewardship and organizing life around access and cooperation feels just as natural as ownership and trading does today.

    The Simple Shift

    What if we go one step further?

    What if we remove the very mechanisms that create kings?

    Not by force. Not by ideology.

    But by agreement.

    Two simple shifts:

    • replacing ownership with stewardship
    • replacing money with optimized sharing

    What Happens Then?

    Without ownership:

    • no one can claim exclusive control over land or resources

    Without money:

    • no one needs permission to access what already exists

    And without those two elements:

    • trading disappears
    • accumulation becomes meaningless
    • power cannot concentrate

    What remains is something far simpler:

    • access
    • coordination
    • stewardship

    We begin asking different questions:

    • What do we have?
    • What do we need?
    • How do we organize this efficiently and sustainably?

    Instead of:

    How do we maximize profit?

    From Scarcity to Abundance

    In today’s system, scarcity is often manufactured through ownership and access control through money.

    Remove those constraints, and something else becomes possible:

    Not as an ideal.

    But as a practical outcome of cooperation, optimization, and shared access.

    Completing the Sentence

    “No Kings” is not wrong.

    It is incomplete.

    It removes the symptom.

    But the cause remains.

    To truly live in a world without kings, we must ask:

    What kind of system makes kings impossible?

    And the answer may be simpler than we think.

    A World Without Kings

    Imagine a world where:

    • no one owns the Earth
    • no one needs money to live
    • no one can control access to what others need

    A world where humanity has moved from ownership to stewardship.

    From competition for survival to cooperation for thriving.

    That world may sound distant.

    But every shift begins with a simple realization.

    The Real Question

    If we truly believe in a world without kings…

    Are we ready to let go of the systems that create them?

    Discover the World After “No Kings”

    It might sound impossible—a world without kings, without ownership, without money. A world where humanity has chosen to share the planet and optimize it for everyone.

    As the movement already shows signs of international resonance, it may in fact be the beginning of something much bigger. Maybe the next slogan will not be “no kings”, but what create kings in the first place?

    No Ownership!

    What if this is not just about removing kings—but about creating a world where kings can never arise again?

    A world truly without kings… not only politically, but structurally. A world where the systems that enable kings—ownership and money—are no longer in place.

    Benjamin Michaels is a former billionaire who wakes up 100 years in the future to shockingly find exactly that world. Explore the story here:

    👉 Waking Up – A Journey Towards a New Dawn for Humanity

    And Please share this article if it resonates. I thank you.

  • Stewardship Is Not a Stranger

    Stewardship Is Not a Stranger

    This is a continuation of the conversation about a revolution of humanity.

    But before we go further, it’s worth pausing for a simple question:

    What is actually stewardship?

    By definition stewardship is a practice committed to ethical value that embodies the responsible planning and management of resources. It can apply to the environment and nature, economics, health, places, property, information, and cultural resources.

    The Humanitary System

    Notice the word responsible.
    It is something our monetary system is not—arguably one of the most irresponsible systems ever invented. That brings us back to the humanitary system, the system mentioned in an earlier article. The irresponsible monetary system is built on ownership, while the responsible humanitary system is built on stewardship.

    Because if we are serious about creating a new world—one not driven by money—we cannot stop at only removing money itself.

    We must also rethink ownership.

    Because without money, there is nothing to buy and sell.
    And if nothing can be bought or sold, the idea of ownership as we know it begins to lose its meaning.

    So the question becomes:
    What replaces ownership?

    This is where stewardship enters—not as an abstract ideal, but as a practical alternative.

    Instead of asking who owns something, we ask who takes care of it.
    Instead of control, we focus on responsibility.
    Instead of exclusion, we move toward access and use.

    And once you look at the world through that lens, something interesting happens.

    Because perhaps the shift we are talking about is not as distant as it seems.

    Perhaps it is already here—quietly, partially, and waiting to be recognized.

    We have already done it.

    The Places We Do Not Own

    We have already declared the Moon beyond ownership—through an agreement that no nation can claim it, no flag can make it property, and no one can own a piece of it simply by arriving first. It belongs, in principle, to all of humanity.
    We have already set aside an entire continent—Antarctica—for cooperation, where territorial claims are frozen, no military activity is allowed, and nations work together in research rather than competing for control or resources.
    We already share the air, the oceans, and even the space above our heads.

    Stewardship is not a stranger to humanity.
    We just apply it selectively.

    Beyond our atmosphere, humanity made a quiet but profound decision. Through the Outer Space Treaty, no nation may claim the Moon, the planets, or the Sun. The entire solar system, at least in principle, was set aside as something no one can own.

    Even within our everyday world, we find variations of the same idea. In Greenland, you can own your home, but not the land beneath it. The land itself remains held in common, allocated for use rather than possession.

    And above us, circling Earth, the International Space Station operates as a shared human endeavor. Built and maintained by multiple nations, it functions without a single owner, sustained by cooperation rather than control.

    The Commons We Depend On

    Some of the most essential systems in our lives are already beyond ownership.

    No one owns the air.
    No one owns the rain.
    No one owns the high seas.

    These are not abstract ideas. They are practical realities. The atmosphere sustains every breath we take. The oceans regulate our climate and connect our world. They are governed, managed, and sometimes contested—but fundamentally, they are not owned in the way land is owned.

    When something becomes too vast, too essential, or too interconnected, ownership begins to break down.

    A Pattern Hiding in Plain Sight

    If we step back, a pattern emerges.

    We choose stewardship over ownership when:

    • The stakes are global
    • Conflict would be catastrophic
    • Cooperation is simply more effective

    We have already applied this logic to space, to a continent, to the systems that sustain life itself.

    Not everywhere. But enough to prove that the idea is not foreign to us.

    The Question We Avoid

    If we can do this for the Moon…
    If we can do this for Antarctica…
    If we can do this for the air we breathe and the oceans that surround us…

    Why not here?

    Why do we accept stewardship in the places that are most obviously shared…
    But cling to ownership in the one place where we are all equally dependent?

    Not a New Idea

    This is not about inventing something new.

    It is about recognizing something we already practice.

    Stewardship is not a stranger to humanity.
    It is a principle we return to when the alternative no longer makes sense.

    The real question is not whether it works.

    The real question is where—and when—we are willing to apply it next.

    A Story From the Future

    In Waking Up – A Journey Towards a New Dawn for Humanity, Benjamin Michaels wakes into a world where this choice has already been made.

    A world where the Earth’s resources are no longer owned, but stewarded.
    Where humanity has chosen cooperation over competition—not as an ideal, but as a practical necessity.

    It is not presented as a theory.
    It is simply life, once we decide to make it so.

    👉 Discover the journey.

    If this perspective resonates, please share this article. Thank you.

  • Everyone a Landlord — From Ownership to Stewardship

    Everyone a Landlord — From Ownership to Stewardship

    For centuries, humanity has measured success through ownership — of land, of things, even of each other’s time. It has shaped our countries, our cities, our politics, and our sense of worth. Yet beneath the surface of this structure lies a quiet absurdity: how can we truly own what was here long before us, and will remain long after?

    The next step in our evolution isn’t to extend ownership, but to outgrow it completely— to move from possession to participation, from control to care, from ownership to stewardship. That understanding, for me, began long ago in a house outside Oslo, Norway.

    A Seed Planted in Childhood

    When I was young, my mother rented out rooms in our big house. She had inherited a bit of money, bought the house, and made ends meet by letting others live there.

    I saw people come and go — teachers, students, workers — handing over their rent month after month for something already built, already paid for. Even as a child, it didn’t feel right. Why should people have to pay just to exist somewhere? I really wanted everyone to be able to get free money just like us.

    But of course, I soon understood that if absolutely everyone owned houses there would be no one to rent them. There clearly was an imbalance in the world.

    That early sense of imbalance would later grow into a vision of a world where sanity rules instead of profit — where fairness isn’t an ideal, but a foundation.

    The Mirror of Ownership

    Later I saw how that household was a miniature version of Earth itself. Those who own — land, housing, resources — are sustained by those who don’t. Not always by cruelty, but by design.

    Ownership quietly governs who must work, who may rest, who lives with security, and who struggles with debt. And yet we seldom question it. We call it normal.

    But what if the very structure of ownership — the belief that life and land can belong to a few individuals — is the real flaw?

    The Turning Point: Discovering a Sane Design

    Decades later, I discovered The Venus Project and its vision of a Resource-Based Economy (RBE) — and the pattern finally came together.

    Here was the model that made my lifelong intuition tangible. A system where ownership dissolves into stewardship — where resources are shared intelligently, technology serves all humanity, and access replaces price.

    With an RBE, my childhood idea of “everyone a landlord” could finally come true — not through rent and property, but through universal belonging. Everyone would, in effect, be a responsible owner — not of separate things, but of the shared planet itself.

    The Ladder of Awakening: TMS → UBI → UO (RBE)

    Human progress toward sanity can be seen as an evolution of understanding:

    1. TMS – The Monetary System

    A structure built on ownership, scarcity and control. Humanity must earn its right to live.  A small part of humanity has taken control over something that should belong to everyone.

    2. UBI – Universal Basic Income

    A compassionate attempt to soften the edges of that system by redistributing purchasing power. A kind patch, but still a patch — money and ownership remains the gatekeeper.

    3. UO – Universal Ownership

    The realization that the next step is not redistribution but redesign. Everyone shares stewardship of the planet and its resources.

    That final stage — Universal Ownershipis the Resource-Based Economy: the world functioning on sanity, efficiency, and shared responsibility. We are all equal owners and stewards of Planet Earth.

    The Shape of Sanity

    In a sane world, we build things to last because waste is irrational.

    We share because collaboration works.

    We use technology to free, not enslave.

    We stop selling survival and start cultivating life.

    When ownership becomes stewardship, competition transforms into collaboration.

    Work becomes contribution.

    The economy becomes an ecosystem.

    The Moral Foundation

    At the root lies a truth so obvious we overlook it:

    The Earth was never meant to be owned.

    Just as the Moon was declared “the province of all humankind” under the 1967 Outer Space Treaty — belonging to no nation, corporation, or individual — so too can Earth be seen through that same lens. Our planet Earth, no less than the Moon, is a shared inheritance, not a possession. 

    The shift from ownership to stewardship begins with recognizing that no one can truly own what sustains us all — we can only care for it, together, as co-guardians of our common home.

    Money and ownership was once a tool for coordination — now it’s the master of everything.

    A Resource-Based Economy simply returns design and decision-making to where it belongs: within humanity itself, aligned with the wellbeing of all. Because when everyone belongs, no one has to pay rent on life anymore. 

    A New Dawn

    That journey — from confusion to clarity, from ownership to stewardship — is what inspired Waking Up – A Journey Towards a New Dawn for Humanity.

    The book reflects what I’ve always believed: that sanity is possible, and that it begins with how we see ownership itself. Once we recognize that we already belong here, the rest unfolds naturally.

    Follow the former billionaire Benjamin Michaels into this vision of stewardship and belonging when he wakes up in a world where humanity already has awakened…