This can, and should, be brought about in several ways, the more difficult of them and not capable of immediate achievement being, to name only the chief among them, Firstly, the adoption by entire humanity of a single language as their mother-tongue – not merely as a common tongue -a new one to be invented for this purpose by the topmost linguists of the various parts of the World; Secondly, the bringing into existence of a single political State for the entire World-to be ushered into existence by the genuine ones among the leaders of the present U. N. O; and Thirdly, other similar bold and clear-cut benefiicial innovations. A comparatively easier of these vital reforms-nay revolutions-and not so very difficult for immediate adoption, would be for individuals to renounce denominational religions etc. thrust upon them by mere birth, and to introduce and adopt, in their stead, a single Universal Religion based on the foremost and sublimest of tenets most common to all the erstwhile “Religions”, picking up and collectiong together of the common kernel of the most progressive moral codes, and extinction of restrictions on association, dining and marriage, based[unclear] on air-tight compartmentation now of the World’s human inhabitants and their various spheres of activity. Fullest freedom of co-dining, and marriage, not defiled by the slightest tinge of any denominationism[unclear], should come into force,-the same as and corresponding to what are termed, in the language of the torn World of today, inter-dinng, and inter-caste and inter-religious marriages etc. One of the several easiest portions of the preliminary but not less vital task towards this end, however, would be for men and women to forthwith renounce their present circumscribed denominational names given to them by their parents by dint merely of their birth, and to rename themselves[unclear] in terms suited to World Amity Path based on the principle of oblite-ration, immediate and ultimate, of present castes, communities, religions, and other differentiations[unclear], and to give their childern; hereafter to be born, names coined after the same fashion.