1)Why is money bad?
2)Why do we have to replace money?
3)What do you want to use to replace money in society?
I don't recall seeing any "bullying."
4)How will you prevent your replacement of money from being used as a currency and therefore becoming de-facto money?
Fair enough. Let's see.
1) "good" or "bad" are moral judgments, I would stick with "efficiency" and hypothesize that money it is not an efficient way to go from production to distribution to consumption. To keep things easy I selected a fact that I presented on another post (141), here it goes again:
Overweight people in the world: 1,129,542,073
Undernourished people in the world: 890,211,904
People who died of hunger TODAY: 22,009
I believe we can use this simple metrics to illustrate that (at least) the efficiency of distribution of food is poor.
One more. This illustrates the % of people living with less than 2 dollars a day:
http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/ec...on-under-2-day
So, when a handful of individuals (less than 20%) accumulate something like 70% of wealth (not exact numbers of course), I would also say that the distribution is manipulable and this creates problems like the stated above.
2) To improve the efficiency of the system.
3) Tricky question, first we would need to define the function of money. Let's start with "a way for interchange services/products", and the answer would be to redesign society in such a way that there were no necessity for the interchange. As an idea (not claiming that it is particularly good, I'm just thinking loudly and hopping to receive adult responses) this society (not talking here about the ZM) should be able to provide housing, education, food and health care to every citizen. You don't owe them, like in this one, they are simply given.
Before stating that it is impossible or unreal, (because I'm not stating that it is plausible, we are not there yet but just thinking about possibilities) lets hypothesize that it is possible.
IFF* this system was actually in play people would stop thinking that "you have to give something in exchange for goods or services" and, maybe, it would be motivated to work by the fact that they need to keep the given services and goods (improductive people could be penalized somehow). Remember we are dealing with concepts, not dogmas (at least imo).
A second (possible) answer would be this: I just found some people working on another possible way to replace money as we know it. I have to read about it before giving an oppinion, but maybe some of you already know about this:
http://www.thetransitioner.com/English/Free_Currencies:_the_next_global_currency_system
4) IFF* 3) is possible by eliminating money then 4 is a non sequitur. IFF something like what The Transitioner proposes happen I have not an answer at this point.
*IFF in philosophy means "if and only if" btw in philosophy is common practice to put imaginary scenarios to analyse hypothesis, maybe I'm accustomed to it and this is one of the reasons the thread was falling in to ad hominems.