This paper introduces The Life-Value Framework, a diagnostic and policy architecture designed to address the growing misalignment between modern economic governance and the biological foundations of human life. Contemporary institutions largely operate according to a “money-sequence” logic in which financial growth is treated as the primary indicator of success, even when ecological systems, social infrastructure, and human well-being deteriorate. Drawing on John McMurtry’s Life-Value Onto-Axiology and Johan Galtung’s peace research, the framework proposes a Life-Value Metric that evaluates policies according to whether they expand or diminish the inclusive range of human thought, feeling, and action. Structural violence, war economies, and the erosion of public infrastructure are interpreted as measurable forms of systemic disvalue. The paper further proposes the use of AI-assisted impartial auditing to evaluate policies according to life-value parameters and universal life necessities. A staged roadmap toward planetary solvency is outlined, emphasizing investment in the civil commons and regenerative systems capable of sustaining long-term human flourishing.
The Life-Value Manifesto: Overcoming the Deep-Rooted Pathologies of the Global War State | Gemini & NotebookLM
This monograph provides a comprehensive decoding of the modern “War State” through the dual lenses of Life-Value Onto-Axiology (LVOA) and Peace Research. By synthesizing the economic and moral philosophy of John McMurtry with the psychological and sociological frameworks of Johan Galtung, the authors identify a systemic “life-blindness” driving global conflict. The work unmasks the subconscious scripts of Chosenness, Manicheism, and Armageddon that legitimize the destruction of the “Life-Ground” — the essential social and ecological requirements for human survival. Ultimately, the manifesto proposes a shift from a “Money-Sequence” economy to a “Life-Coherent” system anchored in the Civil Commons and Planetary Solvency.
The Path of the Heart: A.H. Almaas on Spiritual Love, Inquiry, and the Inner Beloved | NotebookLM
In this podcast interview, spiritual teacher A.H. Almaas discusses his comprehensive trilogy of books on love, culminating in his latest work, The Inner Beloved. Almaas explains how the path of the heart (the Bhakti approach) is integrated with his Diamond Approach, utilizing continuous inquiry to dissolve obstacles to spiritual truth. The discussion explores the heart as a dynamic spiritual organ, the intense longing and painful separation required to reach the “inner beloved,” and the ultimate goal of achieving a nondual realization that allows one to live fully and creatively in the modern world without the ego self.
Awakening is Just the Beginning: A.H. Almaas on the Journey of Descent and the Radiance of the Absolute | NotebookLM
While many spiritual traditions focus on the quest for ultimate realization — the journey out of the ego and into the Absolute — spiritual teacher A.H. Almaas argues that this awakening is only the end of the search, not the end of the journey. In this insightful dialogue, Almaas explores the critical “Journey of Descent,” a phase where profound spiritual realizations are actively integrated and embodied within everyday human life, work, and relationships. The article delves into the mechanics of actualizing our true nature, the practice of non-doing, and the profound shift in perspective where the ordinary world is recognized as a luminous manifestation of the divine.
Understanding War: A Philosophical Inquiry (1989) | John McMurtry | Science for Peace | NotebookLM
In Understanding War – A Philosophical Inquiry, John McMurtry provides a systematic critique of the conventional “military paradigm,” which normalizes mass homicide and mechanized killing as the primary means of achieving national security and defense. McMurtry argues that this model of war is a pathological deviation of a natural human capacity to struggle against threats. By deconstructing the basic assumptions surrounding national self-interest, the nature of the “enemy,” and the ethics of combat, the text reveals that ruling groups often use the pretext of national defense to advance their own economic and political power. The work asserts that the true enemy of contemporary civilization is the global military-industrial complex itself, which perpetually threatens the very citizens it claims to protect. Ultimately, the author advocates for non-military forms of war — such as society-wide civil disobedience, economic boycotts, and public shame — as rational, non-lethal, and highly effective alternatives to mass destruction.
The Moral Decoding of 9-11: Beyond the U.S. Criminal State (2013) | John McMurtry | NotebookLM
This paper critically examines the events of September 11, 2001, rejecting the “official conspiracy theory” of nineteen Arab hijackers and arguing instead that 9-11 was a strategically constructed event orchestrated by the covert U.S. state. The author posits that this crisis served as the necessary “catastrophic and catalyzing event” desired by neo-conservative planners to overcome domestic and global resistance to a “supreme moral doctrine” of limitless transnational capital accumulation. By analyzing forensic anomalies—such as the rapid, explosive collapse of the fireproofed World Trade Center towers and the systematic erasure of crime scene evidence—the paper decodes the underlying value system driving U.S. imperialism. It asserts that the resulting 9-11 Wars in the Middle East and Central Asia, alongside the rollback of domestic civil liberties, were executed to establish “full spectrum dominance” and “supranational sovereignty” for a global banking and corporate elite. Furthermore, the paper critiques the complicity of the corporate media, governmental bodies like the 9-11 Commission, and institutions like NIST in maintaining a “ruling group-mind” that suppresses evidence of institutional criminality. Ultimately, the author calls for the exposure of this life-blind system and the application of international criminal law to hold the responsible institutional architects accountable for crimes against humanity.
Understanding the U.S. War State (2003) | John McMurtry | NoteBookLM
This document provides a critical analysis of the United States’ historical and contemporary foreign policy, focusing specifically on the 2003 invasion of Iraq. It argues that the U.S. operates as a “war state” that utilizes false pretexts to justify illegal, aggressive military interventions aimed at securing global resources, particularly oil. The author asserts that this behavior is enabled by a compliant corporate media and a “ruling group-mind” within the American public and political class, which treats the U.S. national security apparatus as infallible and inherently good. Ultimately, the text condemns U.S. actions as supreme war crimes that systematically violate international law, the Nuremberg Charter, and the United Nations Security Council’s authority.
Global Projections of Deep-Rooted U.S. Pathologies (1996) | Johan Galtung | NotebookLM
This report presents a psycho-political analysis of United States foreign policy, positing that U.S. international behavior is driven by a “collective subconscious” rather than purely rational calculation. Drawing on the “Chosenness-Myths-Traumas” (CMT) and “Dichotomy-Manicheism-Armageddon” (DMA) syndromes, the text argues that deep-seated cultural archetypes compel the U.S. toward recurrent violence and a rejection of nonviolent alternatives. Through the examination of historical case studies — including the atomic bombings of Japan, the Cold War, and interventions in Latin America and the Middle East — the author illustrates how these pathologies manifest as a “repetition compulsion.” The report concludes with a prognosis of potential imperial decline if these syndromes remain unaddressed and offers a “therapy” focused on bringing national narratives to light, disarmament, and the strengthening of global civil society.
Money, Scarcity, and Violence: Monetary Architecture, Institutional Design, and the Conditions of Civilizational Viability | ChatGPT5.2 & NotebookLM
Modern civilization possesses unprecedented productive and technological capacity, yet preventable deprivation persists across societies. This white paper investigates a structural paradox: under what institutional conditions does money function as a neutral coordination utility, and under what conditions does it operate as a scarcity gate that conditions access to essential provisioning?
Drawing on civilizational history, institutional political economy, systems analysis, and ecological constraint theory, the paper identifies four recurring structural mechanisms — obligation, dispossession, discipline, and rent — through which monetary systems can mediate survival access. It distinguishes physical and ecological limits from institutional monetary constraints and proposes a diagnostic framework for evaluating claims of affordability and scarcity.
The analysis argues that when survival access is structurally contingent on monetary acquisition within obligation-driven architectures, enforcement mechanisms become embedded across legal, bureaucratic, and cultural domains. Conversely, when monetary design aligns with real resource capacity and ecological ceilings, and when a provisioning floor is secured, macroeconomic stability can be achieved without chronic precarity.
Rather than advocating unlimited expansion or ideological realignment, the paper advances a viability-oriented framework for institutional redesign grounded in constraint realism, transparency, and long-term social stability.
Life First: Monetary Architecture, Structural Violence, and the Case for Viability Budgeting | ChatGPT5.2 & Gemeni (Figures) and NotebookLM
Modern monetary systems are widely treated as neutral coordination mechanisms. Yet the sequencing of fiscal and monetary rules often conditions access to essential life-support systems — water, healthcare, food security, shelter, and infrastructure — on market performance and financial ratios. This paper examines how monetary architecture can contribute to direct, structural, and cultural violence when survival is subordinated to accounting constraints.
Drawing on peace theory, macroeconomics, behavioral research, and public infrastructure governance, the paper distinguishes between real constraints (biophysical and ecological limits) and artificial constraints (institutional or symbolic rules treated as natural laws). It introduces the concept of Viability Budgeting, a fiscal sequencing framework that prioritizes life-support systems before financial optimization.
Through diagnostic models, implementation pathways, and local-to-global scaling strategies, the paper argues that monetary systems can function either as fragility amplifiers or as peace infrastructure. The central claim is not that money is inherently violent, but that its design determines whether it stabilizes or destabilizes society.
Viability-first monetary architecture is presented not as ideological transformation, but as institutional reordering: life first, accounting second.










