I think that's possible but we do not all speak or think in the same language and that make a start to the difference,History reminds us what a same language tried to do and how it failed so in order for this to come we would all have to decide what we are not going to do againe.
2006-06-26 13:51:29
·
answer #1
·
answered by writer05 2
·
0⤊
1⤋
There are only three possible laws a global community could/should pass.
No murder
No thief
No violence with intent to harm
Anything else would inhibit freedom too much. But these three thing must be in-forced to maintain civil order. Without them no civilization could last.
But every civilization already out laws this things so making globe laws are pointless.
Stopping war between people is pointless too, because to stop the war you must go to war. So you must break the law to enforce the law. Imagine if the police did that.
We have the best system in place now... it just takes time.
2006-06-26 21:00:59
·
answer #2
·
answered by theFo0t 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
Take Iraq for one. Countries like that need our help to rid them of Tyrants. Then when all have a democracy, a global family can develop. But as in Iraq, it takes time. There are people their that still have no concept of what democracy is and fear it because of that. That's why we are still there.
2006-06-26 20:54:55
·
answer #3
·
answered by Newt 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
True religion is not about safety, or the salvation of the individual from naked confrontation with suffering and pleasure and death and love.
True religion is about the difficult evolution and ultimate transcendence of the individual, and mankind, and Man.
Therefore, we must awaken from our self-protecting illusions of religious safety, and we must surrender to the Current of life in which the body and the mind are swimming forever.
There is no "Holy Substitute" for Man.
There is no "representative" sacrifice.
There is no true alternative to awakened consciousness and unqualified love in the case of each individual.
Every one of us is the necessary sacrifice of God.
CHAPTER SIX
The Secret Identity of the Holy Spirit of God
A Prophetic Criticism of Great Religions
The religious consciousness of Western Man is trapped within an archaic structure of myths, dogmas, and social conflicts that no longer serve the true religious and spiritual process of true Man. These myths are largely Christian, Judeo-Christian, and broadly Semitic in origin, and they are held in place by the large-scale cultural, political, and economic dominance of the ancient religions of the Middle East, including Christianity, Judaism, and Islam.
The dominance of specifically Christian cults, myths, and dogmas is especially apparent in Europe and America. And if the dominance of Judaism and Islam is less apparent in Europe and America, the power of these ancient cults is certainly apparent throughout the Middle East (with clear, practical effect on the rest of the world).
Man himself cannot awaken to his evolutionary spiritual Destiny until the spell of mythological and self-possessed thinking is broken. And the future whole bodily culture of Man, in which East and West will realize a new cultural Synthesis, cannot take place until all the old religions are surrendered to the higher Principle or Truth that is the ultimate Master of religion.
We tend to think of "religion" as a benign influence on individual thought and behavior, and this is indeed the case when the higher aspects of religious consciousness begin to inform the thought and behavior of any individual. But religion is only rarely found to be an influence of such a kind. Very few individuals become truly creative personalities, mystics, saints, or even reliably good men or women as a result of religious associations.
Religion is, in general, an exoteric cultic phenomenon that controls the thought and behavior of individuals through external and psychologically manipulative techniques. And the principal religious phenomenon that is common in the world is not true or free religious consciousness and benign behavioral habits on the part of individuals. The principal phenomenon of religion is the institutional "Church", or all the central and centralizing institutions that contain and otherwise manipulate broad and massive segments of the human population.
The "Church" (or the primary institution within any religious tradition) is religion, insofar as religion basically affects the world at large. And large-scale institutional religion is not primarily a benign power in the world. We have only to look at the cultural and political conflicts in Europe and the Middle East to see how the immense institutions of ancient religion have now become, for the most part, contentious, absolutist, and the sources of petty social conflicts. And the problem is made extreme by the immensity of these institutions, each of which controls millions of people.
2006-06-26 20:52:51
·
answer #4
·
answered by soulsearcher 5
·
0⤊
0⤋