The aim of a social organization of any kind should be, first and foremost, to establish an environment of mutual cooperation, so that, together, its members could perform whatever functions they might have better than they could on their own. After all, why else would the organization be justified? But it turns out that, despite the obviousness of what has been said, such an environment is almost never found, and it is with astonishment that the individual accustomed to the usual organizations, whose members compete, scheme, envy and harm, overcomes his mistrust when he comes across someone sincerely willing to help him. When this happens, it is hard to explain what is experienced, but the certainty that it is possible to live a better life springs to mind.