Page 196 - Russian History Viewed through Distorted Mirrors, Vol. 1
P. 196

Nicolai Levashov. Russian History Viewed through Distorted Mirrors. Vol. 1

            example, it is not enough just to discover iron-rich ore; it is also necessary to create
            furnaces which can reach the optimal temperature for melting, fuelled by coke which
            is coal from which the undesirable admixtures have been removed in coking ovens, to
            find and get chemically clean additives, etc. In other words, for all this a rather de-
            veloped infrastructure is needed without which it is impossible, even having a fervent
            desire and the necessary knowledge, to get, for example, high-quality steel. There-
            fore, those who possessed knowledge handed on the information in accordance with
            the  level  of development  of the infrastructure  of the regenerating  civilization, pre-
            venting  it  from  excessive  growth  because  people  were  not  evolutionally  ready  for
            more advanced knowledge.

                  Prematurely received knowledge is even more dangerous than the most terrible
            weapon of mass destruction. Antlan (Atlantis) is a vivid example of what happens
            when insufficiently developed people get their hands on knowledge which considera-
            bly exceeds their evolutional level. This kind of “misunderstanding” was not casual
            or just somebody’s miscalculation. On the contrary, everything was carefully calcu-
            lated and put into practice by Dark Forces (social parasites) which having lost in hon-
            est and open battle, several times changed their tactic, and secretly penetrating Mid-
            gard-earth, found a way to get what they desired by blowing up the Light Forces’ sys-
            tem from within. About this — later and now we will continue to analyze the devel-
            opment of the mechanisms of economic relationships.

                  The creation of a greater number of implements, especially the iron ones, dra-
            matically facilitated agricultural labour and decreased the working time spent on a
            crop-growing area, which quickly influenced the life of a community. More advanced
            tools allowed the development of larger areas for the same expenditure of time. As a
            result, a food surplus appeared which opened a new era of economic relations: This
            state is called extended reproduction, as opposed to simple reproduction, when the
            amount of produced goods is almost equal to the amount being consumed. But, be-
            fore we go to the analysis of different types of socio-economic structures, we will pay
            attention to some features of a social organism.


                  2.15. The forming of economic niches and professional psycho-
                  types in the social organism

                  Sooner or later it became very clear that when many families live quite densely
            in settlements, different people could perform identical actions differently in accord-
            ance with their native talents. Someone could do any kind of woodwork so well that
            the articles of others looked clumsy and were not so comfortable and beautiful. An-
            other could make high-quality metal goods; someone else was able to work with clay
            best of all, etc. So, sooner or later, the time came when everyone began to ask the
            best master in woodworking to build them a house or make them home utensils; the
            best  master  in  ironworking  was  asked  to  make  necessary  implements  and  instru-
            ments, etc. As a result of this, the best masters did not have time to be occupied with
            their fields and vegetable gardens, tend livestock and perform other household tasks.
            Other members of a tribe or community who used their services began to give them
            everything they needed for living. The natural exchange of the products of labour ap-


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