The WDS negotiator said that existing nation-states and institutions should be allowed to mostly continue and emphasized that the WDS was interested in creating something new, not destroying anything old.
Some borders, though, such as the artificial division of the Korean Peninsula, would have to be changed, both sides agreed. Both also agreed that the United Nations, as currently structured, is dysfunctional and in need of drastic reform.
Overall, the two sides were close enough on these points to be able to reach some sort of eventual agreement.
However, the bloodlines delegate said they wanted to keep control over central banks and the creation of money, because βif the people had control of monetary policy, nobody would work.β
He added that although there was a Council of 13 in Switzerland that represented each of the families, many of the heads of these families were, like the Emperor of Japan, not actually from real family bloodlines.
He said the families existed more as institutions than strict representatives of actual bloodlines.
The WDS representative said they support the idea that money should be earned, but said people-controlled central banks could print money to pay for such things as education, the military, public works, healthcare, exploration of the universe, and scientific research.
The WDS negotiator also said the WDS insists on a Jubilee, or one-time cancellation of all debt, public and private, together with a one-off redistribution of ill-gotten assets.
If those conditions were agreed to, the bloodlines could continue to function in a diminished role in the corporate part of the economy, the WDS representative said.
At this point the negotiations broke off, as the bloodline representative was clearly not authorized to negotiate the end of privately owned Central Banks or a Jubilee.