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Notwithstanding
all these planetary handicaps a very superior civilization is evolving
on an isolated continent about the size of Australia. This nation
numbers about 140 million. Its people are a mixed race, predominantly
blue and yellow, having a slightly greater proportion of violet than the
so-called white race of Urantia. These different races are not yet fully
blended, but they fraternize and socialize very acceptably. The average
length of life on this continent is now ninety years, fifteen per cent
higher than that of any other people on the planet.
The industrial mechanism of this nation enjoys a certain
great advantage derived from the unique topography of the continent. The
high mountains, on which heavy rains fall eight months in the year, are
situated at the very center of the country. This natural arrangement
favors the utilization of water power and greatly facilitates the
irrigation of the more arid western quarter of the continent.
These people are self-sustaining, that is, they can live
indefinitely without importing anything from the surrounding nations.
Their natural resources are replete, and by scientific techniques they
have learned how to compensate for their deficiencies in the essentials
of life. They enjoy a brisk domestic commerce but have little foreign
trade owing to the universal hostility of their less progressive
neighbors.
This continental nation, in general, followed the
evolutionary trend of the planet: The development from the tribal stage
to the appearance of strong rulers and kings occupied thousands of
years. The unconditional monarchs were succeeded by many different
orders of government--abortive republics, communal states, and dictators
came and went in endless profusion. This growth continued until about
five hundred years ago when, during a politically fermenting period, one
of the nation's powerful dictator-triumvirs had a change of heart. He
volunteered to abdicate upon condition that one of the other rulers, the
baser of the remaining two, also vacate his dictatorship. Thus was the
sovereignty of the continent placed in the hands of one ruler. The
unified state progressed under strong monarchial rule for over one
hundred years, during which there evolved a masterful charter of
liberty.
The subsequent transition from monarchy to a
representative form of government was gradual, the kings remaining as
mere social or sentimental figureheads, finally disappearing when the
male line of descent ran out. The present republic has now been in
existence just two hundred years, during which time there has been a
continuous progression toward the governmental techniques about to be
narrated, the last developments in industrial and political realms
having been made within the past decade.
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2. Political
Organization |
This continental nation now has a representative government with a
centrally located national capital. The central government consists of a
strong federation of one hundred comparatively free states. These states
elect their governors and legislators for ten years, and none are
eligible for re-election. State judges are appointed for life by the
governors and confirmed by their legislatures, which consist of one
representative for each one hundred thousand citizens.
There are five different types of metropolitan
government, depending on the size of the city, but no city is permitted
to have more than one million inhabitants. On the whole, these municipal
governing schemes are very simple, direct, and economical. The few
offices of city administration are keenly sought by the highest types of
citizens.
The federal government embraces three co-ordinate
divisions: executive, legislative, and judicial. The federal chief
executive is elected every six years by universal territorial suffrage.
He is not eligible for re-election except upon the petition of at least
seventy-five state legislatures concurred in by the respective state
governors, and then but for one term. He is advised by a supercabinet
composed of all living ex-chief executives.
The legislative division embraces three houses:
1. The upper house is elected by industrial,
professional, agricultural, and other groups of workers, balloting in
accordance with economic function.
2. The lower house is elected by certain
organizations of society embracing the social, political, and
philosophic groups not included in industry or the professions. All
citizens in good standing participate in the election of both classes of
representatives, but they are differently grouped, depending on whether
the election pertains to the upper or lower house.
3. The third house—the elder statesmen—embraces
the veterans of civic service and includes many distinguished persons
nominated by the chief executive, by the regional (subfederal)
executives, by the chief of the supreme tribunal, and by the presiding
officers of either of the other legislative houses. This group is
limited to one hundred, and its members are elected by the majority
action of the elder statesmen themselves. Membership is for life, and
when vacancies occur, the person receiving the largest ballot among the
list of nominees is thereby duly elected. The scope of this body is
purely advisory, but it is a mighty regulator of public opinion and
exerts a powerful influence upon all branches of the government.
Very much of the federal administrative work is carried
on by the ten regional (subfederal) authorities, each consisting of the
association of ten states. These regional divisions are wholly executive
and administrative, having neither legislative nor judicial functions.
The ten regional executives are the personal appointees of the federal
chief executive, and their term of office is concurrent with his--six
years. The federal supreme tribunal approves the appointment of these
ten regional executives, and while they may not be reappointed, the
retiring executive automatically becomes the associate and adviser of
his successor. Otherwise, these regional chiefs choose their own
cabinets of administrative officials.
This nation is adjudicated by two major court
systems--the law courts and the socioeconomic courts. The law courts
function on the following three levels:
1. Minor courts of municipal and local
jurisdiction, whose decisions may be appealed to the high state
tribunals.
2. State supreme courts, whose decisions are
final in all matters not involving the federal government or jeopardy of
citizenship rights and liberties. The regional executives are empowered
to bring any case at once to the bar of the federal supreme court.
3. Federal supreme court—the high tribunal for
the adjudication of national contentions and the appellate cases coming
up from the state courts. This supreme tribunal consists of twelve men
over forty and under seventy-five years of age who have served two or
more years on some state tribunal, and who have been appointed to this
high position by the chief executive with the majority approval of the supercabinet and the third house of the legislative assembly. All
decisions of this supreme judicial body are by at least a two-thirds
vote.
The socioeconomic courts function in the following three
divisions:
1. Parental courts, associated with the
legislative and executive divisions of the home and social system.
2. Educational courts--the juridical bodies
connected with the state and regional school systems and associated with
the executive and legislative branches of the educational administrative
mechanism.
3. Industrial courts--the jurisdictional
tribunals vested with full authority for the settlement of all economic
misunderstandings.
The federal supreme court does not pass upon
socioeconomic cases except upon the three-quarters vote of the third
legislative branch of the national government, the house of elder
statesmen. Otherwise, all decisions of the parental, educational, and
industrial high courts are final.
On this continent it is against the law for two families to live under
the same roof. And since group dwellings have been outlawed, most of the
tenement type of buildings have been demolished. But the unmarried still
live in clubs, hotels, and other group dwellings. The smallest homesite
permitted must provide fifty thousand square feet of land. All land and
other property used for home purposes are free from taxation up to ten
times the minimum homesite allotment.
The home life of this people has greatly improved during
the last century. Attendance of parents, both fathers and mothers, at
the parental schools of child culture is compulsory. Even the
agriculturists who reside in small country settlements carry on this
work by correspondence, going to the near-by centers for oral
instruction once in ten days--every two weeks, for they maintain a
five-day week.
The average number of children in each family is five,
and they are under the full control of their parents or, in case of the
demise of one or both, under that of the guardians designated by the
parental courts. It is considered a great honor for any family to be
awarded the guardianship of a full orphan. Competitive examinations are
held among parents, and the orphan is awarded to the home of those
displaying the best parental qualifications.
These people regard the home as the basic institution of
their civilization. It is expected that the most valuable part of a
child's education and character training will be secured from his
parents and at home, and fathers devote almost as much attention to
child culture as do mothers.
All sex instruction is administered in the home by
parents or by legal guardians. Moral instruction is offered by teachers
during the rest periods in the school shops, but not so with religious
training, which is deemed to be the exclusive privilege of parents,
religion being looked upon as an integral part of home life. Purely
religious instruction is given publicly only in the temples of
philosophy, no such exclusively religious institutions as the Urantia
churches having developed among this people. In their philosophy,
religion is the striving to know God and to manifest love for one's
fellows through service for them, but this is not typical of the
religious status of the other nations on this planet. Religion is so
entirely a family matter among these people that there are no public
places devoted exclusively to religious assembly. Politically, church
and state, as Urantians are wont to say, are entirely separate, but
there is a strange overlapping of religion and philosophy.
Until twenty years ago the spiritual teachers
(comparable to Urantia pastors), who visit each family periodically to
examine the children to ascertain if they have been properly instructed
by their parents, were under governmental supervision. These spiritual
advisers and examiners are now under the direction of the newly created
Foundation of Spiritual Progress, an institution supported by voluntary
contributions. Possibly this institution may not further evolve until
after the arrival of a Paradise Magisterial Son.
Children remain legally subject to their parents until
they are fifteen, when the first initiation into civic responsibility is
held. Thereafter, every five years for five successive periods similar
public exercises are held for such age groups at which their obligations
to parents are lessened, while new civic and social responsibilities to
the state are assumed. Suffrage is conferred at twenty, the right to
marry without parental consent is not bestowed until twenty-five, and
children must leave home on reaching the age of thirty.
Marriage and divorce laws are uniform throughout the
nation. Marriage before twenty--the age of civil enfranchisement--is not
permitted. Permission to marry is only granted after one year's notice
of intention, and after both bride and groom present certificates
showing that they have been duly instructed in the parental schools
regarding the responsibilities of married life.
Divorce regulations are somewhat lax, but decrees of
separation, issued by the parental courts, may not be had until one year
after application therefor has been recorded, and the year on this
planet is considerably longer than on Urantia. Notwithstanding their
easy divorce laws, the present rate of divorces is only one tenth that
of the civilized races of Urantia.
4. The Educational System
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The educational system of this nation is compulsory and
coeducational in the precollege schools that the student attends from
the ages of five to eighteen. These schools are vastly different from
those of Urantia. There are no classrooms, only one study is pursued at
a time, and after the first three years all pupils become assistant
teachers, instructing those below them. Books are used only to secure
information that will assist in solving the problems arising in the
school shops and on the school farms. Much of the furniture used on the
continent and the many mechanical contrivances--this is a great age of
invention and mechanization--are produced in these shops. Adjacent to
each shop is a working library where the student may consult the
necessary reference books. Agriculture and horticulture are also taught
throughout the entire educational period on the extensive farms
adjoining every local school.
The feeble-minded are trained only in agriculture and
animal husbandry, and are committed for life to special custodial
colonies where they are segregated by sex to prevent parenthood, which
is denied all subnormals. These restrictive measures have been in
operation for seventy-five years; the commitment decrees are handed down
by the parental courts.
Everyone takes one month's vacation each year. The
precollege schools are conducted for nine months out of the year of ten,
the vacation being spent with parents or friends in travel. This travel
is a part of the adult-education program and is continued throughout a
lifetime, the funds for meeting such expenses being accumulated by the
same methods as those employed in old-age insurance.
One quarter of the school time is devoted to
play--competitive athletics--the pupils progressing in these contests
from the local, through the state and regional, and on to the national
trials of skill and prowess. Likewise, the oratorical and musical
contests, as well as those in science and philosophy, occupy the
attention of students from the lower social divisions on up to the
contests for national honors.
The school government is a replica of the national
government with its three correlated branches, the teaching staff
functioning as the third or advisory legislative division. The chief
object of education on this continent is to make every pupil a
self-supporting citizen.
Every child graduating from the precollege school system
at eighteen is a skilled artisan. Then begins the study of books and the
pursuit of special knowledge, either in the adult schools or in the
colleges. When a brilliant student completes his work ahead of schedule,
he is granted an award of time and means wherewith he may execute some
pet project of his own devising. The entire educational system is
designed to adequately train the individual.
5. Industrial Organization
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The industrial situation among this people is far from
their ideals; capital and labor still have their troubles, but both are
becoming adjusted to the plan of sincere co-operation. On this unique
continent the workers are increasingly becoming shareholders in all
industrial concerns; every intelligent laborer is slowly becoming a
small capitalist.
Social antagonisms are lessening, and good will is
growing apace. No grave economic problems have arisen out of the
abolition of slavery (over one hundred years ago) since this adjustment
was effected gradually by the liberation of two per cent each year.
Those slaves who satisfactorily passed mental, moral, and physical tests
were granted citizenship; many of these superior slaves were war
captives or children of such captives. Some fifty years ago they
deported the last of their inferior slaves, and still more recently they
are addressing themselves to the task of reducing the numbers of their
degenerate and vicious classes.
These people have recently developed new techniques for
the adjustment of industrial misunderstandings and for the correction of
economic abuses which are marked improvements over their older methods
of settling such problems. Violence has been outlawed as a procedure in
adjusting either personal or industrial differences. Wages, profits, and
other economic problems are not rigidly regulated, but they are in
general controlled by the industrial legislatures, while all disputes
arising out of industry are passed upon by the industrial courts.
The industrial courts are only thirty years old but are
functioning very satisfactorily. The most recent development provides
that hereafter the industrial courts shall recognize legal compensation
as falling in three divisions:
1. Legal rates of interest on invested capital.
2. Reasonable salary for skill employed in industrial
operations.
3. Fair and equitable wages for labor.
These shall first be met in accordance with contract, or
in the face of decreased earnings they shall share proportionally in
transient reduction. And thereafter all earnings in excess of these
fixed charges shall be regarded as dividends and shall be prorated to
all three divisions: capital, skill, and labor.
Every ten years the regional executives adjust and
decree the lawful hours of daily gainful toil. Industry now operates on
a five-day week, working four and playing one. These people labor six
hours each working day and, like students, nine months in the year of
ten. Vacation is usually spent in travel, and new methods of
transportation having been so recently developed, the whole nation is
travel bent. The climate favors travel about eight months in the year,
and they are making the most of their opportunities.
Two hundred years ago the profit motive was wholly
dominant in industry, but today it is being rapidly displaced by other
and higher driving forces. Competition is keen on this continent, but
much of it has been transferred from industry to play, skill, scientific
achievement, and intellectual attainment. It is most active in social
service and governmental loyalty. Among this people public service is
rapidly becoming the chief goal of ambition. The richest man on the
continent works six hours a day in the office of his machine shop and
then hastens over to the local branch of the school of statesmanship,
where he seeks to qualify for public service.
Labor is becoming more honorable on this continent, and
all able-bodied citizens over eighteen work either at home and on farms,
at some recognized industry, on the public works where the temporarily
unemployed are absorbed, or else in the corps of compulsory laborers in
the mines.
These people are also beginning to foster a new form of
social disgust--disgust for both idleness and unearned wealth. Slowly
but certainly they are conquering their machines. Once they, too,
struggled for political liberty and subsequently for economic freedom.
Now are they entering upon the enjoyment of both while in addition they
are beginning to appreciate their well-earned leisure, which can be
devoted to increased self-realization.
This nation is making a determined effort to replace the
self-respect-destroying type of charity by dignified
government-insurance guarantees of security in old age. This nation
provides every child an education and every man a job; therefore can it
successfully carry out such an insurance scheme for the protection of
the infirm and aged.
Among this people all persons must retire from gainful
pursuit at sixty-five unless they secure a permit from the state labor
commissioner which will entitle them to remain at work until the age of
seventy. This age limit does not apply to government servants or
philosophers. The physically disabled or permanently crippled can be
placed on the retired list at any age by court order countersigned by
the pension commissioner of the regional government.
The funds for old-age pensions are derived from four
sources:
1. One day's earnings each month are requisitioned by
the federal government for this purpose, and in this country everybody
works.
2. Bequests--many wealthy citizens leave funds for this
purpose.
3. The earnings of compulsory labor in the state mines.
After the conscript workers support themselves and set aside their own
retirement contributions, all excess profits on their labor are turned
over to this pension fund.
4. The income from natural resources. All natural wealth
on the continent is held as a social trust by the federal government,
and the income therefrom is utilized for social purposes, such as
disease prevention, education of geniuses, and expenses of especially
promising individuals in the statesmanship schools. One half of the
income from natural resources goes to the old-age pension fund.
Although state and regional actuarial foundations supply
many forms of protective insurance, old-age pensions are solely
administered by the federal government through the ten regional
departments.
These government funds have long been honestly
administered. Next to treason and murder, the heaviest penalties meted
out by the courts are attached to betrayal of public trust. Social and
political disloyalty are now looked upon as being the most heinous of
all crimes. |