Building a world government

Zsolt Hermann
2 min readAug 31, 2020

Question from the Internet:

“What are the fundamentals of the world government?”

I think that the most important, fundamental principle about “world government” is that it cannot be created, imposed on the world from above.

It has to be the result of a gradual, “grassroot” process, rebuilding Human societies on completely new values, principles - from below, through the right upbringing, education.

We need to forget about all the political ideologies, philosophies we used so far, we have to abandon the Anglo-Saxon method of “divide and conquer” and we have to also abandon the self-serving, harmful political party system, partisanship wish is used as part of the “circus and bread” entertainment and to divide people.

We need to start with Nature’s most important principle of mutual integration, building mutually responsible and mutually complementing connections, cooperation above and despite the inherently egocentric, individualistic and exploitative nature, program that drives all of us.

Governance needs to be built on initially small, local circles of people represented by independent, “truly public servants”, normal people (not career politicians), who take on themselves to represent their local circles for a limited time. Then above such local circles there would be greater, regional, national, continental circles to deal with issues the smaller circles can’t, and finally a global circle to coordinate global issues.

All negotiations, decision making would be collective, using the “round” method of workshops, round table discussions, capable of generating collective, composite, higher decisions, solutions no individual leader, expert could ever achieve.

Most of the problems, issues would be dealt with on the local levels through this “round” decision making, and only issues needing national, international coordination would make it to higher level.

https://youtu.be/VXXzJFyw454

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Zsolt Hermann

I am a Hungarian-born Orthopedic surgeon presently living in New Zealand, with a profound interest in how mutually integrated living systems work.