The Resourceism Declaration | A Vision for a Moneyless, Sustainable, and Just World

 

Resourceism abolishes money, profit, and debt.


Introduction: Why a New System Is Necessary

Every generation inherits a defining question. For us, it is this: how long can humanity survive under economic systems that exploit people, strip the planet, and hollow out democracy?

Capitalism promised prosperity, yet its endless pursuit of growth on a finite planet has created grotesque inequality. The richest 1% control more than half of all wealth, while billions lack secure access to food, water, and shelter. Socialism, while more equitable, has often remained tethered to money and industrial exploitation, redistributing wealth without questioning the framework that creates scarcity in the first place.

Meanwhile, the ecological bill is coming due. Forests burn, glaciers collapse, oceans acidify, species vanish. Climate instability is no longer a prediction but a lived reality. Our economies consume far more than the Earth can regenerate, year after year.

At the same time, money itself reveals its fragility. Markets crash, currencies inflate, and the illusion of monetary wealth crumbles in the face of real scarcity. Food, water, energy, and shelter—not numbers in a bank ledger—determine survival.

It is within this global crisis that we put forward Resourceism: a moneyless, resource-based economy grounded in participatory democracy. Not an ideological tweak to existing systems, but a new foundation for survival and flourishing.

Resourceism is not utopian fantasy. It is the sober recognition that survival requires reorganizing society around resources, not profit.


“Resourceism abolishes money, profit, and debt. It treats survival as a birthright, not a marketplace gamble.”


Part I: What Is Resourceism?

At its core, Resourceism rests on a simple, radical truth: the Earth’s abundance belongs to all, not to the few.

  • It is moneyless. Exchange is not mediated by profit or purchasing power but by direct allocation according to need and ecological limits.

  • It is resource-based. Food, energy, housing, and all essentials are distributed by availability and sustainability, guided by science rather than speculation.

  • It is democratic. People shape how resources are managed through participatory democracy, ensuring collective accountability and responsibility.

Resourceism builds on the concept of a Resource-Based Economy first articulated by Jacque Fresco, but grounds it firmly in democratic accountability and ecological ethics. It is not technocracy. It is not authoritarian command. It is a commons-based system where transparent data, automation, and community stewardship together guide production, distribution, and renewal.

The Resourceism Declaration—outlined later in this essay—sets forth its guiding principles: abolition of money, recognition of resources as a shared inheritance, guaranteed access to life’s essentials, participatory democracy, sustainability as law, automation for liberation, and the end of exploitation.

This is not a utopian dream but an ethical and practical necessity.


Part II: Contrasts With Other Systems

Capitalism thrives on scarcity. It commodifies every necessity—housing, water, medicine—so that survival itself becomes a business model. The logic is simple: keep goods scarce, keep people desperate, and profit flows upward. Resourceism abolishes this, declaring survival a right, not a commodity.

Socialism and Communism redistribute wealth and resources, often more equitably, yet they remain tethered to money, wages, and state power. Their focus on ownership of production rarely questions whether production itself should be tied to endless extraction. Resourceism breaks that chain, eliminating money entirely and replacing it with stewardship of the commons.

Resourcism (without the e) is an environmental term describing the reduction of nature to “resources” for exploitation. It is utilitarian, seeing forests as lumber and rivers as water supply rather than living systems. Resourceism is the opposite: it insists that resources are not mere commodities but inheritances with intrinsic value. They must be stewarded with reverence and responsibility, not pillaged for profit.


“Capitalism reduces survival to a transaction. Resourceism restores it as a birthright.”


Part III: Resourceism and Participatory Democracy

An economy cannot stand apart from politics. Resourceism functions only when paired with participatory democracy.

Representative democracies, captured by corporate power, fail to resist oligarchy. Participatory democracy means decisions are direct, transparent, inclusive, and local. Every person has a voice in shaping the systems that govern their lives.

In Resourceism, resources and democracy reinforce one another:

  • The economy ensures abundance and access.

  • Democracy ensures people decide how resources are used and stewarded.

Technology supports this vision by providing open data, transparent resource ledgers, and digital platforms for decision-making. But it is people—not algorithms—who remain sovereign.


Part IV: Practical Pathways to Resourceism

Skeptics will ask: how could this actually work? The answer is that pieces already exist.

1. Global Resource Inventory
Satellites, sensors, and AI already track agriculture, energy, and supply chains. Instead of feeding market speculation, this data could inform a transparent global ledger of resources.

2. Commons Governance
Elinor Ostrom’s Nobel-winning research shows that communities manage shared resources sustainably when given the power. Scaling these principles could provide a governance model for water, land, and energy.

3. Automation and AI
Supply chain algorithms already allocate goods globally faster than markets. Imagine redirecting this power to distribute food, medicine, and housing by need rather than profit.

4. Cultural Transformation
A shift from ownership to stewardship, from competition to cooperation, must be nurtured through education, culture, and shared values.

5. Pilot Projects
Eco-villages, resource-based communities, and participatory budgeting provide test cases. Small-scale experiments can serve as laboratories for global transformation.


Part V: Addressing the Critiques

“It’s utopian.”
So was democracy. So was abolition. Every great leap toward justice was dismissed as fantasy until necessity made it reality.

“Human greed makes it impossible.”
Greed is not innate; it is cultivated by scarcity and competition. In cooperative contexts—open-source movements, disaster relief, mutual aid—human beings show generosity as often as selfishness.

“Who decides who gets what?”
The people themselves, through participatory democracy and transparent data systems. Resourceism prevents technocracy by embedding decision-making in communities while using science to guide sustainable limits.

“Global politics won’t allow it.”
Not at first. But climate collapse, economic crisis, and inequality will force new models. Resourceism is designed to be ready when the old systems fail.


“Utopia is not the impossible—it is the necessary.”


Part VI: The Resourceism Declaration

Here we present the founding principles in full:


The Resourceism Declaration

Preamble
We, the people of Earth, recognize that the survival and flourishing of humanity depend on the wise, equitable, and sustainable use of the planet’s resources. The existing systems of money, profit, and private ownership divide us, exploit us, and drive ecological collapse. We declare the birth of Resourceism, a new socioeconomic system rooted in cooperation, compassion, and stewardship of the Earth.

Resourceism is founded on a simple truth: the Earth belongs to no one, and its resources belong to all.


Principles of Resourceism

  1. The End of Money
    Resourceism abolishes money, profit, and debt. Resources are distributed according to human need and ecological limits, not according to purchasing power.

  2. Shared Inheritance
    All natural resources—land, water, air, energy, minerals—are the common inheritance of humanity and must never be privately owned or monopolized.

  3. Equity of Access
    Every human being is guaranteed access to life’s essentials: clean water, nourishing food, safe shelter, healthcare, energy, and education.

  4. Stewardship, Not Exploitation
    The natural world is not a commodity. Forests, rivers, oceans, and ecosystems are living systems with intrinsic value. Resourceism demands respect for all forms of life.

  5. Scientific Resource Management
    Resources are managed through science and technology—transparent data systems track availability, use, and regeneration. Decisions are made by evidence, not speculation or profit.

  6. Local Governance, Global Responsibility
    Communities govern the resources within their care, while global coordination ensures fair distribution and protection of the commons.

  7. Paired With Participatory Democracy
    Resourceism works best when coupled with participatory democracy. Every person has a voice in the decisions that shape their lives, and collective choices are made through open, inclusive, and deliberative processes.

  8. Sustainability as Law
    No resource is extracted or used beyond the Earth’s capacity to regenerate. Future generations inherit the same abundance we enjoy.

  9. Automation for Liberation
    Technology and automation are harnessed to reduce unnecessary labor, freeing human beings for creativity, learning, and service to one another.

  10. A Culture of Cooperation
    Competition for profit is replaced by cooperation for survival and well-being. Resourceism is not enforced by coercion but embraced through solidarity.

  11. The End of Exploitation
    No person, animal, or ecosystem may be exploited for gain. Violence, coercion, and domination give way to dignity, compassion, and respect.


Conclusion: A Call to Action

We live at a crossroads. The old systems are collapsing under their own weight—financial speculation, environmental destruction, authoritarian capture. Capitalism cannot be reformed to stop exploitation. Socialism cannot deliver while chained to money. Resourcism cannot offer moral grounding.

Resourceism is the way forward.

It is not just a critique of what exists but a blueprint for what must replace it. It is a call to imagine abundance as a shared inheritance, to recognize cooperation as the foundation of survival, and to step into a world where money no longer dictates who lives and who suffers.

The Resourceism Declaration is only the beginning. Movements are built on ideas that become lived practices. Every community that experiments with commons governance, every initiative that challenges profit in favor of need, every voice that refuses to accept scarcity as destiny—these are seeds of Resourceism already sprouting.

The old world is dying. The new one is waiting to be born.
Let us choose wisely.
Let us choose Resourceism.