Primary Theme: Taygetan Society, Culture & Daily Life
Additional Themes: Extraterrestrial Technology · Galactic Federation & Exopolitics
Sources: 10 transcripts, 5 speakers (Swaruu 9, Aneeka, Yazhi, Athena, Dhor Káal'el)
Transcripts: 027, 028, 036, 039, 059, 196, 284, 016, S-149, 048
Short Answer
There is no universally accepted currency in the way humans understand the concept, because most advanced interstellar civilisations do not use money at all. The holographic society model — the dominant social structure among Federation member races — operates on the principle of complete abundance: everything is available to everyone, production is largely automated through zero-point energy and advanced manufacturing, and there is literally nothing to buy because there is nothing to withhold. Taygetan civilisation has no monetary system, no banking, no prices, no wages, and no concept of profit. Houses are built by the community to your specifications for free. Personal spacecraft function like cars — everyone has one. Food, energy, clothing, education, medical technology, and all resources are freely available without condition. Crime does not exist because there is nothing to steal when everything is already yours.
Between civilisations, the closest thing to a universal exchange medium is gold — but not for the symbolic reasons it holds value on Earth. Gold is genuinely, physically valuable to interstellar races because of its superconducting and piezoelectric properties at ambient temperature. It serves as the primary material for ship wiring, communication systems, and advanced electronics. It is mined extensively from locations like Saturn's rings by multi-racial teams. At the highest strata of interstellar interaction — and within Earth's own Cabal hierarchy — gold coins serve as the medium of exchange for transactions that cannot be conducted through normal holographic-society channels. But this is the exception, not the rule. The overwhelming majority of interstellar interaction operates on principles of mutual cooperation, shared resources, and reciprocal contribution rather than transactional exchange.
Holographic Society Economics: How Life Works Without Money
The Taygetan model, which is representative of most advanced Federation civilisations, eliminates money entirely. Transcript 027 describes the mechanics: Toleka City, the largest settlement on Temmer with approximately 700,000 inhabitants, runs entirely on the holographic principle. Underground eco-friendly factories powered by zero-point energy produce goods automatically. Housing is built by the community as a collective undertaking — you describe what you want, and your neighbours help build it, because they know that when they want something, the same community will help them. There are no invoices, no contractors, no mortgages.
Personal transportation includes discoidal spacecraft that function as everyday vehicles — everyone has one — as well as wheeled electric scooters that draw energy from the ambient electromagnetic field and never run out. Magnetic levitation trains with transparent roofs connect small towns separated by hundreds or thousands of kilometres, with wildlife sensors ensuring minimal ecological impact. None of this costs anything. None of it requires payment or rationing (027).
The mechanism that makes this work is not enforced redistribution but the elimination of scarcity mentality. As Swaruu explains in transcript 039, the key to holographic society is the mentality of its people — the sum of all consciousness and values within the civilisation. When a population genuinely understands that resources are unlimited (because zero-point energy eliminates energy scarcity, and advanced manufacturing eliminates material scarcity), the concept of hoarding becomes nonsensical. There is no crime because there is nothing to steal. There are no police — only search and rescue teams for emergencies. There are no jails, only therapy and rehabilitation centres for the rare cases of personal conflict (028).
Swaruu captures the scale implication in transcript 036: "Building a 2km ship is possible because no one has to pay for them." The limitation on what a civilisation can build is not economic but imaginative. When money does not constrain production, the only question is whether the project serves the community's interests and whether the engineering is sound.
Why Money Is Understood as a Control Tool
The speakers are unanimous that Earth's monetary system is not a primitive version of an interstellar model — it is a deliberately imposed control mechanism with no equivalent in advanced societies. Swaruu states in transcript 016 that money exists on Earth as a "control and limitation method." Free energy is suppressed not because the technology does not exist but because releasing it would eliminate the artificial scarcity that money depends on.
Work itself is framed as enslavement. Swaruu observes that humans spend eight to ten hours daily in jobs that prevent self-discovery, creating a "vicious loop: make money to live but spend living working." Those who challenge this system are called lazy or crazy. The entire economic structure is designed to keep humans "in a pure survival state" where higher consciousness development is impossible. Artists and healers — the people doing the most spiritually valuable work — are the poorest. This is not accidental; it is architectural (036).
The transition path described in transcript 016 involves a temporary monetary system as an intermediate step, followed by full holographic society implementation with extraterrestrial mentors — a model the Ummo are reportedly already developing. But the speakers are clear that the transition requires a fundamental shift in mentality, not merely a change in economic policy. Holographic society cannot be imposed on a population that still operates from scarcity thinking.
Gold as the Interstellar Exception
Gold occupies a unique position. On Earth, its value is largely symbolic — a collective agreement backed by historical tradition. In interstellar space, gold has genuine physical utility that makes it objectively valuable to every technologically advanced civilisation.
Transcript 284 explains: gold has superconducting and piezoelectric properties at ambient temperature. Ship internal wiring is solid gold. Communication cables use superconducting crystalline gold. Solar sails are made of gold cloth. These are not ceremonial uses — gold is an essential engineering material that no substitute matches. This makes it inherently scarce in a meaningful way even for civilisations that have eliminated artificial scarcity in everything else.
Gold is actively mined from Saturn's rings by advanced multi-racial mining teams extracting metals from the debris field left by the Tiamat destruction. It is the closest thing to a universally recognised store of value — not because anyone agreed to make it currency, but because its physical properties make it genuinely useful to every spacefaring civilisation (284).
Transcript 196 reveals that gold coins function as exchange medium at the highest strata of interstellar interaction. The Cabal's upper echelons — who operate above the normal Earth economy — mint their own gold coins for transactions among themselves. These same principles extend upward: where holographic society principles do not apply (between civilisations with different social structures, or in contexts involving races that have not adopted the holographic model), gold serves as the default medium of exchange. It is not a currency imposed by agreement but a material that retains value across every cultural and technological framework because its utility is physical, not symbolic (196).
Inter-Species Cooperation Rather Than Commerce
The dominant mode of interaction between advanced civilisations is not trade but cooperation. The Taygetans are described as an explorer race with high mortality on exploration missions. When they encounter other civilisations, the interaction is framed as mutual benefit rather than commercial exchange. Technology is shared between allied races. Military support is reciprocated — the Centauri liberate Phaethon with Taygetan help, and later the Centauri become the most active protectors of Earth in return. The Urmah alliance with the Taygetans involves military cooperation, intelligence sharing, and mutual political support — none of it transactional (121, 027).
Between holographic societies, the concept of "business" as humans understand it does not apply. When both parties have everything they need, exchange happens because each party has something the other finds interesting or useful — not because either party lacks something essential. Interstellar vacation travel is common (Temmer beaches being a popular destination for many races), and inter-species visits involve no financial transactions. Visitors arrive, are hosted, and reciprocate when the opportunity arises. The social infrastructure is built on trust and shared ethics rather than contracts and payments (027).
There are exceptions. Not all interstellar races operate holographic societies. Some have hierarchical structures with internal economies. Races that have not eliminated scarcity — or that have not evolved past the mentality of accumulation — may engage in something closer to commerce. The Malakak, for instance, are described as making "shady agreements" with the US government involving exchanges of technology for access to human resources. But these are characterised as opportunistic and regressive, not as examples of normal interstellar economic behaviour (186).
Evolution Across Speakers
Swaruu of Erra (2018–2020) provides the foundational description of holographic society economics, the critique of Earth's monetary system as a control tool, and the explanation of why building 2km ships is possible without money.
Aneeka of Temmer (2020–2022) adds the political dimension: the stepped council system where no money means no corruption, the absence of immigration bureaucracy because personal frequency serves as identification, and the impossibility of imposing holographic society on a population with scarcity mentality.
Yazhi Swaruu (2021–2024) provides the Vatican/Cabal economics layer: gold coins at the highest strata, the disconnect between the digital-money economy visible to the public and the real gold-based economy operating above it.
Dhor Káal'el (2019) describes the practical experience of Taygetan life: self-built racing ships, athletic competitions, and a culture where personal achievement is measured in experience and skill rather than wealth.
Key Transcript References
- 027 — Holographic society mechanics: no money, houses built by community for free, personal spacecraft as everyday vehicles, zero-point energy factories, Toleka City, complete abundance
- 028 — Step Council politics: no boundaries/visas, personal frequency as ID, no crime/police, only SAR, no mental disorders from social pressure
- 036 — Money as enslavement: 8–10 hour work days, vicious survival loop, artists/healers poorest, building 2km ships possible without money
- 039 — Holographic society definition: inversely proportional consciousness and government, debate until agreement, no democracy/voting, mentality of people is key
- 016 — Money as control/limitation method, temporary monetary system as transition, free energy suppressed
- 196 — Gold coins at highest Cabal strata, gold transactions above normal economy, higher strata own everything
- 284 — Gold's physical properties: superconducting and piezoelectric at ambient temperature, ship wiring solid gold, Saturn ring mining operations, gold cloth solar sails
- 059 — Taygetan male culture: self-built racing ships, athletic competition, personal achievement measured in skill
- 121 — Phaethon liberation as reciprocal cooperation: Centauri liberated with Taygetan help, Centauri now protect Earth in return
- 048 — Taygetan history: automation of undesirable tasks as great liberation event, holographic matriarchal system

