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Francois Tremblay wrote:What do you mean cheap accomodation? We keep paying month after month after month- with zero hope of ever being done with paying.
|Y| wrote:So, under shawns definition we could easily have a mob state whereby each "property" is protected by a "landlord" who "cedes to the will of the mob leader." Sounds pretty workable and is certainly how I'd go about it if I was a raging capitalist.
Noleaders wrote:Which is better than nothing if you cant afford to buy a house.

Noleaders wrote:It depends on how you're going to apply it. Proudhon wanted to make sure everyone who desired it could have a place to live on, and retreat to, free of any obligations. That would change the balance of power significantly.
More specifically, what about when people's homes are built on top of each other like apartment blocks? Cos its all on the same land.
Francois Tremblay wrote:Noleaders wrote:Which is better than nothing if you cant afford to buy a house.
"Better than nothing" is not exactly what we're aiming for.
Noleaders wrote:Thanks for that shawn, it cleared a lot up for me.
(btw your going back to walls of text again)
Since you're in this thread can you answer my question from the time store thread plz?shawnpwilbur wrote:Noleaders wrote:Thanks for that shawn, it cleared a lot up for me.
(btw your going back to walls of text again)
Yeah. When ya'll figger out how to plan the free society in 140 characters or less, I'll STFU.
K thnkzYou'll have to excuse me. Most of my political grounding comes from communism/syndicalism. I don't know all that much about market anarchism. I've leafed through a few threads at ALL-left but I still don't understandWhat sort of currency do you need?
Why do you need it?
Do any of the old anarchist models meet your needs?
What were those models?
The underlined problem is my main concern. Of course I'm not too knowledgable on the other three either. If you could explain it to me as simply as possible or direct me to somewhere that will I'd be quite grateful

|Y| wrote:So what would stop me from hiring lackey's who act as "landlords" for two different properties of my own. They live in one half a year, and the other half a year. I have 20 hired hands, meaning I get paid rent on 40 properties.
Now mind you, they get paid handsomely, half the rent that I receive. They are providing me a service similar to that lawn mowing boy, after all. They get free room and board and only have to move twice a year. The only "work" they have to do is sitting in the house and acting as the "landlord" (indeed, telling people any story that they want to make up in order to convince them that it is indeed their property).
They'd have no compelling reason to quit working for me or to "take" my property, because, quite simply, they'd be secure. If they squatted in one of my houses, I'd simply stop paying them, and then they'd actually have to go out and do a real job.
All the while I'm taking 50% of their earnings, which would be inherently impossible if we actually respected possessive based rights and rejected the notion of the "summer house."
The only way I can see the "summer house" metaphor working in mutualism without it devolving into this draconanian bullshit is if it was approached from a "time share" perspective.
|Y| wrote:All the while I'm taking 50% of their earnings, which would be inherently impossible if we actually respected possessive based rights and rejected the notion of the "summer house."
Me, I'm going to be looking to see who actually does the real upkeep on the property, and figure that, unless someone can explain this nonsense better than you just did, that they are the real occupiers and users.
The neighbors would know that the house wasn't abandoned without him, but hiring him to maintain community aesthetic standards is part of being a neighbor, just as allowing hunting and not unnecessarily messing with hunting blinds and snowmobile trails is part of being neighborly at the summer place.
If you have yourself, your "landlords," and your tenants, somebody still has to maintain the property. If the lackies are doing the upkeep, then you need to pay them more at least the cost of upkeep, and then you have to find tenants willing to pay twice the cost of occupancy and use for short-term use of the property.
If the tenants are doing the upkeep, then local conventions are going to recognize them as the real occupiers and users.
In any event, in order to be recognized, directly or by proxy, as occupying owner of 40 properties, you're going to have to find means to maintain those properties in a way that the community recognizes as occupancy--which stretches things much too far.
When somebody talks to me like I'm a capitalist, I just assume they're a bit of a troll...
If you're going to occupy the house when the owners go out for a quart of milk, then you're certainly no mutualist.
So how do you draw your "actual" line on abandonment? How long a vacation can I take without worrying that you'll figure you have a "right" to appropriate my dwelling? Will you discuss it with me or the neighbors, or is that too much bother? If the neighbors say, "Hey, somebody lives there," will you respect that?
You're honestly not coming across as someone who is terribly concerned with reciprocity...

I'm picturing you, flush with revolutionary victory, after breaking into my aging parents' house and dragging their personal belongings into the street, so that people won't be exploited by these dangerous enemies of the people.
First, the market price of any real property is going to run right about even with the actual costs of occupancy and use.
Second, the community is going to be intolerant of, probably derisive towards, attempts to reinstitute privilege.
Personally, I'm fighting for a world in which both the summer and winter residences in the example thread could be traded in on more efficient and ecologically sound alternatives
Let's assume that the costs of property upkeep really are quite minor. For your scheme to work, you're going to have to pay your lackies several times the cost of upkeep for them to be paid well, which means you have to find tenants willing to pay several times the going rate for a short-term lease, on the understanding that you are not actually going to provide any service to them.
I'm guessing your success will depend on finding a kind of economic masochist who might be a rare bird indeed.
Face it, even here in the belly of the capitalist beast, lots of not terribly radical people are aware that it's not in their best interests to trade with some people, or some businesses, even when the prices are apparently low.

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