Law of Equality
PEOPLEIZE goal is to dismantle colonial systems from the Earth, eliminate current colonial global financial systems, reclaim our environment, and redefine governance by the people, ensuring equality for all.
A WORLD BASED ON EQUALITY
Law of Equality
The Principle of Absolute Material Equality:
The community guarantees every person an equal share of all resources (money, housing, food, healthcare, trip, businesses, wellness, education, etc) sufficient for a dignified life. The central thesis is that with the primary motivators for crime being to get money, by removing the artificial created value of money, making money equal and available to everyone free, the very concept of most traditional crimes disappears.
No More Colonial Laws:
Eliminate Christian and Religious Colonial Crimes and Laws.
The reclassification of “crimes” as “inequality” under the Law of Equality framework means that actions are no longer judged as inherently “right” or “wrong.” Instead, they are evaluated based on their impact on the guaranteed equality of another individual or community.
1. Theft & Property Crime
Since all material needs are guaranteed by the community, the concept of stealing for survival or gain becomes illogical. If someone wants an item, they simply request the funds from the community and will receive it without any fees, just the funds and assistance if needed to start a business or ideas.
2. Drug Possession & Use
All psychoactive substances are decriminalized. The legal role shifts from prohibition to equality. The law of equality acknowledges that legal status is not an indicator of a substance’s danger but that each individual has an equal right to do with their body what they want as long as it does not reduce another person’s equality.
3. “Victimless” Consensual Crimes
Making someone commit acts against their will is inequality and the community should help create equality. Example: mental treatment for people that want to treat other people unequal. Treating someone as less than another person is a mental sickness, because all people are equal.
The legal system now focuses exclusively on actions that directly infringe upon another person’s equality.
The Law Of Equality
In this system, the community fulfills the economic needs of every individual, based on the fundamental equality of all people on Earth.
Acts of Force & Coercion Inequality
Definition: Any action that uses force, fraud, or coercion against another person.
Examples: Assault, murder, rape, fraud, intimidation;
Blackwater (2007 Nisour Square Massacre): Private contractors opened fire with automatic rifles, machine guns, and grenade launchers on a crowd of unarmed Iraqi civilians, including a young boy and his mother fleeing in their car, killing 17 and sparking a major diplomatic crisis.
Bloodstone Minerals & “Blood Diamonds”: Financed the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) in Sierra Leone, a group notorious for using machetes to amputate the hands, arms, and legs of thousands of civilians—including children—to terrorize the population into slave labor in diamond mines.
Dynegy (“Fat Boy” & “Death Star” Schemes): Deliberately scheduled false energy transfers to create phantom congestion on the power grid, then charged exorbitant fees to “relieve” the crisis they manufactured, forcibly extracting billions from California and causing rolling blackouts.
Prison Labor Exploitation: Corporations like Whole Foods and Verizon have sourced products or services from prisons where inmates, disproportionately from minority groups, are forced to work for as little as $0.12 per hour under threat of punishment, constituting state-sanctioned coerced labor for corporate profit.
Inequality: You have equality, but you do not have the right to violate someone else’s equality rights.
Acts of Sabotage Inequality
Definition: Willfully destroying or hoarding community resources or infrastructure that guarantees everyone’s equality.
Examples: AgriGiant Corp genetically modifying seeds to be sterile, forcing farmers to repurchase annually; CureAll Pharma acquiring a life-saving drug patent and raising the price from $5 to $7,500 per monthly dose.
Inequality: In essence, AgriGiant Acts of Sabotage Inequality, sabotaged the foundational principle of agriculture itself: the renewable cycle of harvest and replanting. By hoarding the genetic code of life and making it a non-renewable, proprietary product, they created a system of dependency and inequality, where the right to grow food is no longer a universal right but a service that must be purchased indefinitely from a corporate monopoly.
By setting a price 1,500 times the production cost, CureAll is effectively hoarding the resource (the life-saving medication). They are controlling the supply not due to a physical shortage, but through a financial barrier.
Violation of Informed Consent Inequality
Definition: Providing a substance to someone without their full knowledge of its effects and risks.
Examples: Lacing a drink with an undisclosed drug; Purdue Pharma aggressively marketing OxyContin as having a low addiction risk while knowingly downplaying its severe abuse potential; Johnson & Johnson allegedly fueling the crisis by downplaying the addiction risks of its own opioids while targeting high-volume prescribers.
Inequality: In a world where all drugs are legal, informed choice is the critical ethical boundary. Depriving people of risk information weaponizes substances against them, leading to mass addiction and death.
Inequality Rehabilitation System
Focus: In this system, the community fulfills the economic needs of every individual, based on the fundamental equality of all people on Earth. Any person who commits an act of inequality crime against someone else is presumed to need psychological help or rehabilitation and not punitive punishment. The focus is also on the victim of the crime to ensure they receive support to reinstate community equality.
Process: The system focuses on restraint and protecting society while providing rehabilitation.
What is Decolonization?
Decolonization refers to the process of dismantling colonial systems and legacies in society, culture, politics, religion, language, and the economy. It involves reclaiming autonomy, values, and governance from imposed colonial structures, promoting self-determination, justice, and the restoration of Indigenous knowledge, traditions, and sustainable practices. This process fosters the equitable redistribution of power and resources, allowing formerly colonized communities to assert their identities and contribute to shaping a more just, inclusive, and self-sufficient future. Decolonization changes colonial narratives, redefines social relationships, and encourages resilience and empowerment for oppressed communities.
What will a Decolonized Earth Look Like?
A decolonized world will have dismantled the oppressive systems rooted in colonialism, creating a future built on equality, justice, and equal collaboration. This transformation extends across society, culture, politics, language, and the economy. Decolonization is not only about reclaiming autonomy but about redistributing power, wealth, and knowledge in ways that equally empowers all communities.
A WORLD BASED ON EQUALITY
Decolonizing Knowledge & Language
Decolonizing knowledge involves dismantling colonial narratives and biases within education, empowering individuals to change the current european colonial discourses. This approach highlights the significance of language as a vessel for identity, history, and community cohesion. This initiative emphasizes the importance of Indigenous communities’ worldviews, ensuring equality by providing curricula in the community language, thereby establishing an equitable and self-determined educational system.
Decolonizing Wealth & Resources
Promoting equality through alternative economic models that prioritize the equitable distribution of wealth and resources. This includes ensuring equality in currency and eliminating interest rates on money. Such changes will transform colonial capitalist exploitation, fostering a “people before profit” system while encouraging reparations and collective ownership for a more equitable world. Additionally, money should not be used to oppression or control.
Decolonizing Land and Culture
Ensuring equality by supporting the reclamation of ancestral lands and the revival of cultural practices. In this new model, land and earth resources belong to everyone, not to companies or individuals, eliminating land inheritance to foster an equitable community. This empowers communities to build sustainable relationships with the environment and restore their heritage free from colonial dominance.
Decolonizing Governance & Laws
Establishing equality by promoting self-governance and community-led decision-making. This dismantles colonial political structures, enabling equitable, locally-driven governance systems that reflect the needs and values of all people. In this model, there are no career politicians. Instead, citizens are randomly selected to serve their communities, making governance a shared responsibility that is truly representative of everyone.
