
History shows that no system can be reformed from within, that is, by the initiative of one or more of its parts. Therefore, a system that proves inadequate to the evolution of its parts can only be dissolved and replaced with a new system. I feel obliged to clarify these two postulates. Unreformability derives from the resilience determined by the level of complexity, which in turn derives from the quantity of interactions between its parts and between its parts and the outside environment. A system proves inadequate to the evolution of its parts when the results do not correspond to its potential, because something and/or someone is impeding it. Typically, the impediment comes from the dominant parts, entrenched in their status and protected by another system. This is the case, for example, for a political system desired by an economic system for which the political system constitutes one of the means of conservation and development. Which new system? Geographically, Africa, Asia, and Europe form a single continent separated by the Strait of Gibraltar and the Suez Canal. The economic, political, and cultural development of Europe stems from the colonization of Africa and Asia. As an alternative to the current international organizations of states, we can imagine a single political union among the states of this supercontinent that aims for the maximum development of all its inhabitants, thus general freedom from want based on their intelligence and work, with a common currency and a continental government that acts as a driving force for the maximum evolution of each person. To build this new system, a movement of people who realize that only through cooperation between different peoples can the greatest possible results be conceived and achieved. We can call it the "Afreurasian Movement." There are two obstacles to overcome: the opposition of the small group of holders of most of the wealth and the limited awareness of reality on the part of the large majority, whom propaganda has oriented toward individualism. But the process of unifying natural resources and labor forces is an irreversible process that, if properly promoted, can only achieve these common goals of achieving social justice and freedom through truth.