99% of the problems listed in the Zeitgeist mission statement are born out of top down control. There is no technocratic elite that can possibly posess the intelligence to properly manage entire national economies, let alone a global one.
Yet the Zeitgeist movement argues that if all the world's resources were made available to some sort of "enlightened" central planning board (cybernetic or otherwise) then there would be no scarcity, since this board could decide what to make, how much to make, and who to give it to.
It also advocates the dissolution of money, but the pricing signal is the only way to rationally calculate resource allocation.
Resources are scarce. Money and market pricing are used as the best rationing system for scarce resources. Without money we fall back on inferior rationing systems that exacerbate scarcity.
Whenever I hear about a movement advocating a "scientific approach" and "social management", I tend to shake my head. The Nazis and Soviets also believed they were taking a "scientific approach" to "social management."
This approach has always failed.
Zeitgeist is basically a rebranded Marxism.
"Marxism with robots"