Section VIII
Establishment of world coalition political steering agencies;
recruitment of agentsto work for such agencies
(A) Prerequisites to the establishment of world coalition political steering agencies and to the recruitment of agents to work for such agencies
1. Submission by the UN Secretariat of a draft resolution on “the establishment of a world coalition administration”
The Organization for Promoting Global Civilization (OPGC)delivered in July 2003 to the United Nations and all its member nations an important document entitled “A Draft Resolution—Submitted by OPGC to the 60th UN General Assembly for Adoption—on the Establishment of a World Coalition Government”. Evidently the submitted draft resolution serves merely as a preclude to the great cause to be carried out. Our aim in submitting the draft resolution is just to arouse the UN and all its member nations to a full comprehension of the significant task, imposed on us by the new millennium, of achieving in the new century both a political coalition involving the entire human race and a peaceful unification of the whole world. In the draft resolution is given only a skeletal survey of the necessity of creating a world coalition political steering organization epitomized in the form of a world coalition government. In other words, our draft resolution betokens in fact only the inception of the cause toward political unification of mankind.
The Organization for Promoting Global Civilization (OPGC) is, after all, a nongovernment international organization with an academic inclination. All it can do is let itself be heard but not let itself bring the world to do something. In other words, to create a world coalition government or a system of global coalition political steering agencies remains a compulsory task to be fulfilled by all governments over the world, the United Nations, and the world population. It is no exaggeration to assert that none of the tasks to be carried out by the United Nations is more urgent and more important than that of creating a world coalition government. Our world would remain irrevocably chaotic, and all the problems that are driving the whole world and mankind mad today would remain completely hopeless, as long as the United Nations remains shy of facing up to the issue of creating a world coalition government.
As we see it, that the UN secretariat would take the initiative in presenting to the UN General Assembly for discussion and adoption a copy of “A Draft Resolution—Submitted by OPGC to the 60th UN General Assembly for Adoption—on the Establishment of a World Coalition Government” would certainly constitute mankind’s first step toward a global political unification.
2. A committee responsible for founding a world coalition parliament needs to be established.
As mentioned above, in dealing with international affairs at the present stage and in the vortex of world politics, the United Nations stands out as the most authoritative and the most energetically supported international organization. Therefore it would be very easy for the United Nations to organize a “committee responsible for founding a world coalition parliament”. Such a committee is expected to draw up both a document for defining the authority, jurisdiction and functions of a world coalition parliament and a schedule for the establishment of a world coalition parliament. In the document would be presented a detailed discussion for analyzing and vindicating both the importance of creating a world coalition parliament and the importance which creating a world coalition parliament would attach to the creation of world coalition political steering agencies. Under the leadership of—or rather, with the help from—the United Nations, a “committee responsible for founding a world coalition parliament” would be created and plough ahead with the tasks it is expected to fulfill. The said committee would be composed of UN member nations’ representatives to the UN general assembly, delegates sent by major religions in the world, international organizations, nongovernment organizations, and representatives elected by citizens of countries chosen by a process of random sampling.
After its establishment, the said committee would organize a team comprising noted specialists in such fields as world politics, international relations, history of evolution of constitutions in the world, international law, and jurisprudence. The team would be responsible for formulating plans for the basic framework of world coalition political steering agencies and the framework of world legislation. Output of the team would be examined and approved by the said committee; and then detailed structural plans would be developed for each political steering agency. Preparing the draft of the world constitution would be set afoot at the same time.
3. A committee for effecting organizational changes in some existing international organizations needs to be established.
A “committee for effecting organizational changes in some existing international organizations” would be founded by and placed under the control of the committee responsible for founding a world coalition parliament. After the former’s foundation, it would concentrate on screening all governmental international organizations and nongovernment international organizations across the world according to the requirements—put forward by the committee responsible for founding a world coalition parliament—for organizational guideline, structural principles, and functions of the would-be world coalition political steering agencies in order to find out which existing governmental international organizations or nongovernment international organizations would be fit for being converted into integral parts of would-be world coalition political steering agencies by undergoing suitable organizational changes. After the screening process, the committee for effecting the said organizational changes would set about effecting real organizational changes in the chosen governmental international organizations and nongovernment international organizations so that they would be optimized or merged in the course of optimization until they would be fit for operating as integral parts of would-be world coalition political steering agencies. On the basis of the successful overall optimization process, the committee responsible for founding a world coalition parliament would proceed to formulate a comprehensive program for dovetailing all the integral parts into a well-knit fabric of political steering agencies as well as a comprehensive program for personnel arrangement. At the same time the committee responsible for founding a world coalition parliament would work out in detail the qualifications required of the personnel to be chosen to work for would-be world coalition political steering agencies.
4. A preliminary conference of the world coalition house of political consultation needs to be convened.
World coalition house of political consultation would be composed of celebrated, experienced, and senior statesmen, scientists, religious leaders, lawyers, and scholars. It would be most appropriate for the committee responsible for founding world coalition parliament to take the initiative in convening a preliminary conference before the creation of world coalition house of political consultation. The said preliminary conference would be in a position to help the committee responsible for founding world coalition parliament and the committee for effecting organizational changes in some existing international organizations with drafting the World Constitution and other world coalition laws.
(B) Rules underlying the modus operandi and organizational principles to be adhered to by world coalition political steering agencies
1. Organizational structure of world coalition political steering agencies
According to the three rules underlying the modus operandi to be adhered to by world coalition political steering agencies (see the section entitled “?2. Rules underlying the modus operandi to be adhered to by world coalition political steering agencies” below.) and The Common Program for World Coalition Political Steering Agencies, the said agencies should be composed of the following three major systems:
(1) World coalition legislative system. The system would consist of world coalition parliament, world coalition lower house, world coalition upper house, and world coalition house of political consultation.
(2) World coalition administrative system. The system would consist of world coalition government and the seven organizations under its direct control.
(3) World coalition judicial system. The system would consist of World coalition judicial commission, world coalition supreme court, world coalition supreme prosecutorate, world coalition police general headquarters, world coalition lawyers’ administration, world coalition special court, world coalition independent prosecutorial office, and world coalition special police department.
2. Rules underlying the modus operandi to be adhered to by world coalition political steering agencies
Since world coalition political steering agencies would consist of three major systems, they should adhere to the modus operandi formulated in accordance with such rules as would serve as their shared political program. The setups of the three major systems referred to above should also be in concord with the rules elaborated on below:
(1) The rule of separation of powers. By “separation of powers” is meant that the power of legislative system, the power of executive system, and the power of judicial system should be separated, each exercising its power separately. This is an effective and important way to deter dictatorship and stagnation. History of development of democracy in the world has taught us this.
(2) The rule of sharing the same programs. In the next chapter will be made clear that all world coalition political steering agencies should adhere to the same basic program, the same political program, the same doctrinal program, and the same rules underlying their modus operandi. Each political steering agency would have to strive to put the four programs into effect from a “point of departure” that is peculiar to the context of its specific jurisdiction and obligation. All the political steering agencies should be faithful to the four common programs which are of vital importance for their normal operation. Otherwise each agency would behave erratically; and all the agencies would forfeit unison among them.
(3) The rule of coordination. A close scrutiny of those countries which practice the rule of separation of powers would reveal a disharmony between the three systems of the legislative, the executive, and the judicial. For instance, an unwritten rule now still in force in the Senate of the United States permits filibusterism. The executive system in America would act on the unwritten rule of non-cooperation to corner the judicial system. So it is evident that cooperation and coordination between the three major systems of world coalition political steering agencies are very important as a guarantee for their efficiency.