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Dr Dan Marshall

@Radical_EgoCom Unequal exchanges do happen, but they are gifts, exchanging economic capital for political capital. If the gift is too large for the recipient to ever pay back, the recipient becomes the donor's "slave," to some extent.

So how could equal exchange between communes not lead to unequal investments in internal capital? How could unequal exchanges not become slave-making gifts?

33 comments
𝗖 𝗔 𝗧 replied to Dr Dan Marshall

@DrDanMarshall
The scenario you've presented relies on assumptions about human behavior within a market framework, which I fundamentally reject. I would argue that the concept of "equal exchange" within communes is not about one-to-one reciprocity, but rather about collective ownership and shared resources. In such a system, there would be no incentives for individuals or communes to prioritize accumulation of capital or to engage in unequal exchanges, as resources would be distributed based...

𝗖 𝗔 𝗧 replied to 𝗖 𝗔 𝗧

@DrDanMarshall
on need rather than market value. Additionally, the notion of "slave-making gifts" or unequal exchanges arises from power imbalances inherent in capitalist systems, which would be abolished in a truly egalitarian society based on mutual aid and cooperation.

Dr Dan Marshall replied to 𝗖 𝗔 𝗧

@Radical_EgoCom The problem isn't exchanges *within* communes, but exchanges *between* communes. An individual commune *might* be able to function as a single household, but it would be pushing the size limit. Equality *might* exist within a "household," so long as it's an autarky or there is no division of labor. But when you have exchanges between "households" and division of labor, the exchanges will *resemble* a market, and economic inequalities *will* appear.

Dr Dan Marshall replied to Dr Dan Marshall

@Radical_EgoCom (Equality within an independent collective would be a lot easier if it has no division of labor *and* it's an autarky, but I think it *might* be possible with just one of those conditions.)

𝗖 𝗔 𝗧 replied to Dr Dan Marshall

@DrDanMarshall
The assumption that exchanges between communes would necessarily lead to economic inequalities resembles a projection of capitalist market dynamics onto a fundamentally different socio-political framework. Within a system based on communal ownership and collective decision-making, exchanges between communes would be guided by principles of solidarity, cooperation, and mutual aid rather than market competition.

𝗖 𝗔 𝗧 replied to 𝗖 𝗔 𝗧

@DrDanMarshall
Furthermore, the potential for economic inequalities arises not from the mere presence of exchanges between communes, but rather from underlying power dynamics and hierarchies that could emerge if certain communes amass disproportionate resources or influence, which can be prevented with mechanisms such as rotating delegates, federated councils, and transparent decision-making processes to prevent the concentration of power and wealth among individual communes.

Dr Dan Marshall replied to 𝗖 𝗔 𝗧

@Radical_EgoCom How could decisions at the federal level affect the internal decision making of individual communes? And, if the federation *could* strongly affect the internal decision making of individual communes, what would prevent that from becoming a form of coercion?

𝗖 𝗔 𝗧 replied to Dr Dan Marshall

@DrDanMarshall
There are inherent differences between a system based on solidarity, cooperation, and mutual aid within communes and the traditional concept of communism. While both ideologies emphasize collective ownership and decision-making, Anarco-Communism seeks to eliminate hierarchy and coercion entirely, promoting voluntary cooperation and mutual support as fundamental principles.

𝗖 𝗔 𝗧 replied to 𝗖 𝗔 𝗧

@DrDanMarshall
In the scenario described, the potential for coercion arises when communes are pressured to fulfill requests from other communes to maintain trade partnerships and insurance. This pressure could lead to decisions being made not out of genuine solidarity but rather out of fear of negative consequences, such as being defederated or losing trade partners. Additionally, the accumulation of political capital by richer communes could result in disparities in power and influence...

𝗖 𝗔 𝗧 replied to 𝗖 𝗔 𝗧

@DrDanMarshall
within the federation, undermining the principles of equality and autonomy.

Decisions at the federal level should be made through consensus among all participating communes, ensuring that no commune exercises undue influence over others, with mechanisms to prevent coercion, such as transparent decision-making processes, equal representation, and safeguards against the centralization of capital.

Dr Dan Marshall replied to 𝗖 𝗔 𝗧

@Radical_EgoCom What do you mean by "consensus"? Would a rich commune be able to veto a measure? Or would it be more like "accept the majority decision or there's the door"?

If a commune proved stingy, would the federation be able to authorize the seizure of its capital by force? What other ways could we prevent the centralization of capital?

(And, yes, poorer communes would be more vulnerable to de-federation than rich ones.)

𝗖 𝗔 𝗧 replied to Dr Dan Marshall

@DrDanMarshall
I don't know what else to say without repeating myself (which I believe I already have multiple time already). We've been discussing for hours and seemed to have reached an impass hours ago, yet we've continued nonetheless. Let's just agree to disagree on this matter and end the conversation here. (Also, I've appreciated this conversation and your civility)

Dr Dan Marshall replied to 𝗖 𝗔 𝗧

@Radical_EgoCom I have found the clarification of our positions to be helpful. Two spots we couldn't agree was on, essentially, how egoistic humans (and collectives of humans) are, and the related question of how universal nepotism is. Those questions would have to be answered by empirical investigation, so we can't do it here.

Dr Dan Marshall replied to Dr Dan Marshall

@Radical_EgoCom Beyond that, I think my central thesis can be boiled down to this: Do you think purely voluntary solidarity between one commune and another could be so strong that a prosperous commune could be convinced to help a fellow commune that has suffered a disaster, not only to some decent minimum of getting back on their feet, but back to economic *equality* with the first one? Or would it require a degree of coercion equivalent to taxation?

Dr Dan Marshall replied to 𝗖 𝗔 𝗧

@Radical_EgoCom The problem with "solidarity, cooperation, and mutual aid" is that it operates by the *exactly* same rules and for *exactly* the same motivations as baseline communism, only at the level of communes instead of households. Whenever a commune is asked for something by another commune, it would have a choice: Fulfill the ask, or invest in their own internal capital, thereby becoming happier and more productive.

Dr Dan Marshall replied to Dr Dan Marshall

@Radical_EgoCom Most communes would usually fulfill a goodly proportion of asks, because they don't want to get de-federated, lose their trade partners, lose their insurance. And there would probably be a weak form of progressive taxation on these exchanges, since rich communes would probably be expected to pay more. But that would come at the cost of the richer communes accumulating political capital. And the "taxation" would probably still not be enough to prevent the centralization of capital

ItsDoctorNotMrs replied to Dr Dan Marshall

@DrDanMarshall @Radical_EgoCom

Very interesting conversation, thank you.

By inclination, I prefer a collective ownership of goods and a consensual model of decision-making as a means for achieving equality among humans.

I was startled to read that when the AMOC stalled at the end of the last ice age and people all over the Middle East starved, those who shared resources all died out. Meanwhile, in those little groups where some had more and others less, some survived.

Inequality won. Ugh.

Dr Dan Marshall replied to ItsDoctorNotMrs

@northernlights @Radical_EgoCom Not familiar with that research, sources?

I like one model of organizing a household, and I think it's a good model for a society: Each member is granted a decent minimum but those who bring money to the table (or provide a valuable internal service) are given a greater share of disposable income to use at their discretion. Beats having to ask the collective to make you a sex toy!

ItsDoctorNotMrs replied to Dr Dan Marshall

@DrDanMarshall @Radical_EgoCom

John L. Brooke, Climate Change and the Course of Human History: A Rough Journey (Cambridge University Press, 2014), chapter on agricultural revolutions.

Dr Dan Marshall replied to ItsDoctorNotMrs

@northernlights @Radical_EgoCom I'll put it on my reading list, but chances are I won't get to it this century. Sigh. Sounds similar to an Against The Grain book I have read. Its theory was that agriculture led to centralization because farmers are easier to conquer, they're tied to the land. Plus, primal civilization probably crashed several times and this was basically a good thing, survivors escaped to the hills.

Dr Dan Marshall replied to Dr Dan Marshall

@northernlights @Radical_EgoCom It would be sad if "adjust your oxygen mask before helping others" would increase inequality and reduce solidarity, but I suppose it makes sense it would.

ItsDoctorNotMrs replied to Dr Dan Marshall

@DrDanMarshall @Radical_EgoCom

Yes.

There must be a balance between securing your own survival and the grotesque levels of inequality we see today.

I have no issues with everybody being middle class.

Dr Dan Marshall replied to ItsDoctorNotMrs

@northernlights @Radical_EgoCom Mathematical impossibility, depending on how you define "middle class." Piketty defines the working class as the lowest 50%, middle class as between the 50th and 90th percentiles. But possible to eliminate the impoverished (less than 60% of median income) and the current rich (top 1%), as opposed to the merely well-to-do (top 10% but not in the top 1%).

Dr Dan Marshall replied to Dr Dan Marshall

@northernlights @Radical_EgoCom Putting the max wealth at the Value of a Statistical Human Life would do that. Estimates for that value range from $7 mil to $10 mil, $11 mil in net worth needed to be in the top 1%. A wealth tax in that range would be about enough to pay for a UBI at 60% of the median income.

Dr Dan Marshall replied to ItsDoctorNotMrs

@northernlights @Radical_EgoCom Been a while since I've done the math, and getting the tax structure right is non-trivial. Would suck if we got rid of all the multi-millionaires but kept the billionaires. If I remember right, the UBI budget wasn't *quite* enough to lift all Americans out of relative poverty all by itself, but it came damn close.

ItsDoctorNotMrs replied to Dr Dan Marshall

@DrDanMarshall @Radical_EgoCom

They still are, in the mountains of Thailand, Laos, Burma, thereabouts. James Scott has a book about them (The Art of Not Being Governed, maybe?)

Dr Dan Marshall replied to ItsDoctorNotMrs

@northernlights @Radical_EgoCom I've been wondering where the maroons have gotten off to, if marronage is still necessary after the end of formal slavery. I suppose a lot of gay kids escaping their parents could be seen as practicing a form of urban marronage. And homelessness in general I suppose. Any other forms of marronage still practiced in the US that you know of?

ItsDoctorNotMrs replied to Dr Dan Marshall

@DrDanMarshall @Radical_EgoCom

If marronage is understood to mean escaping unwanted bondage, women escaping abusive marriages.

Even American voters escaping a second Trump presidency in 2020.

Dr Dan Marshall replied to ItsDoctorNotMrs

@northernlights @Radical_EgoCom In Haiti, grande marronage meant running away from slavery to a community of fellow runaways in an "illegible" territory, like swamps or mountains. Similar things happened in the antebellum US, but I don't know of any examples with the same "flavor" post-bellum. Slavers generally figured anybody who wanted freedom *that* bad was a hothead, good riddance.

Dr Dan Marshall replied to Dr Dan Marshall

@northernlights @Radical_EgoCom There were lesser forms of marronage, like urban marronage. A big city can be almost as illegible as swamps and hills, and when being homeless in the big city is better than whatever hell you have going on at home...

I'm just wondering why grande marronage is no longer on the table here in the US. Has the gov't gotten better at "reading" swamps, or are there fewer lives worse than shacking up in a swamp?

Dr Dan Marshall replied to Dr Dan Marshall

@northernlights @Radical_EgoCom Some women escaping abusive relationships might wind up homeless, but I would hope most are housed and therefore legible to the gov't. Ideally, it would just be their exes they have to stay illegible from.

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