Article

Tactical Briefing

We have reached an impasse. Capitalism as we know it is coming apart at the seams. But as financial institutions stagger and crumble, there is no obvious alternative. Organized resistance is scattered and incoherent. The global justice movement is a shadow of its former self. For the simple reason that it’s impossible to maintain perpetual growth on a finite planet, it’s possible that in a generation or so capitalism will no longer exist. Faced with this prospect, people’s knee-jerk reaction is often fear. They cling to capitalism because they can’t imagine a better alternative.

How did this happen? Is it normal for human beings to be unable to imagine a better world?

Hopelessness isn’t natural. It needs to be produced. To understand this situation, we have to realize that the last 30 years have seen the construction of a vast bureaucratic apparatus that creates and maintains hopelessness. At the root of this machine is global leaders’ obsession with ensuring that social movements do not appear to grow or flourish, that those who challenge existing power arrangements are never perceived to win. Maintaining this illusion requires armies, prisons, police and private security firms to create a pervasive climate of fear, jingoistic conformity and despair. All these guns, surveillance cameras and propaganda engines are extraordinarily expensive and produce nothing – they’re economic deadweights that are dragging the entire capitalist system down.

This hopelessness-generating apparatus is responsible for our recent financial freefalls and endless strings of bursting economic bubbles. It exists to shred and pulverize the human imagination, to destroy our ability to envision an alternative future. As a result, the only thing left to imagine is money, and debt spirals out of control. What is debt? It’s imaginary money whose value can only be realized in the future. Finance capital is, in turn, the buying and selling of these imaginary future profits. Once one assumes that capitalism will be around for all eternity, the only kind of economic democracy left to imagine is one in which everyone is equally free to invest in the market. Freedom has become the right to share in the proceeds of one’s own permanent enslavement.

Since the economic bubble was built on the future, its collapse made it seem like there was nothing left. This effect, however, is clearly temporary. If the story of the global justice movement tells us anything, it is that the moment there appears to be any sort of opening the imagination springs forth. This is what effectively happened in the late ’90s when it looked for a moment like we might be moving toward a world at peace. The same thing has happened for the last 50 years in the US whenever it seems like peace might break out: a radical social movement dedicated to principles of direct action and participatory democracy emerges. In the late ’50s it was the civil rights movement. In the late ’70s it was the anti-nuclear movement. More recently it happened on a planetary scale and challenged capitalism head-on. But when we were organizing the protests in Seattle in 1999 or at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) meetings in DC in 2000, none of us dreamed that within a mere three or four years the World Trade Organization (WTO) process would collapse, “free trade” ideologies would be almost entirely discredited and new trade pacts like the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) would be defeated. The World Bank was hobbled and the power of the IMF over most of the world’s population was effectively destroyed.

But of course there’s another reason for all this. Nothing terrifies leaders, especially American leaders, as much as grassroots democracy. Whenever a genuinely democratic movement begins to emerge, particularly one based on principles of civil disobedience and direct action, the reaction is the same: the government makes immediate concessions (fine, you can have voting rights) and then starts revving up military tensions abroad. The movement is then forced to transform itself into an anti-war movement, which is often far less democratically organized. The civil rights movement was followed by Vietnam, the anti-nuclear movement by proxy wars in El Salvador and Nicaragua and the global justice movement by the War on Terror. We can now see the latter “war” for what it was: a declining power’s doomed effort to make its peculiar combination of bureaucratic war machines and speculative financial capitalism into a permanent global condition.

We are clearly on the verge of another mass resurgence of the popular imagination. It shouldn’t be that difficult. Most of the elements are already there. The problem is that our perceptions have been twisted into knots by decades of relentless propaganda and we are no longer able to see them. Consider the term “communism.” Rarely has a term come to be so utterly reviled. The standard line, which we accept more or less unthinkingly, is that communism means state control of the economy. History has shown us that this impossible utopian dream simply “doesn’t work.” Thus capitalism, however unpleasant, is the only remaining option.

In fact, communism really just means any situation where people act according to this principle: from each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs. This is, in fact, the way pretty much everyone acts if they are working together. If, for example, two people are fixing a pipe and one says “hand me the wrench,” the other doesn’t say “and what do I get for it?” This is true even if they happen to be employed by Bechtel or Citigroup. They apply the principles of communism because they’re the only ones that really work. This is also the reason entire cities and countries revert to some form of rough-and-ready communism in the wake of natural disasters or economic collapse – markets and hierarchical chains of command become luxuries they can’t afford. The more creativity is required and the more people have to improvise at a given task, the more egalitarian the resulting form of communism is likely to be. That’s why even Republican computer engineers trying to develop new software ideas tend to form small democratic collectives. It’s only when work becomes standardized and boring (think production lines) that it becomes possible to impose more authoritarian, even fascistic forms of communism. But the fact is that even private companies are internally organized according to communist principles.

Communism is already here. The question is how to further democratize it. Capitalism, in turn, is just one possible way of managing communism. It has become increasingly clear that it’s a rather disastrous one. Clearly we need to be thinking about a better alternative, preferably one that does not systematically set us all at each others’ throats.

All this makes it much easier to understand why capitalists are willing to pour such extraordinary resources into the machinery of hopelessness. Capitalism is not just a poor system for managing communism, it also periodically falls apart. Each time it does, those who profit from it have to convince everyone that there is really no choice but to dutifully paste it all back together again.

Those wishing to subvert the system have learned from bitter experience that we cannot place our faith in states. Instead, the last decade has seen the development of thousands of forms of mutual aid associations. They range from tiny cooperatives to vast anti-capitalist experiments, from occupied factories in Paraguay and Argentina to self-organized tea plantations and fisheries in India, from autonomous institutes in Korea to insurgent communities in Chiapas and Bolivia. These associations of landless peasants, urban squatters and neighborhood alliances spring up pretty much anywhere where state power and global capital seem to be temporarily looking the other way. They might have almost no ideological unity, many are not even aware of the others’ existence, but they are all marked by a common desire to break with the logic of capital. “Economies of solidarity” exist on every continent, in at least 80 different countries. We are at the point where we can begin to conceive of these cooperatives knitting together on a global level and creating a genuine insurgent civilization.

Visible alternatives shatter the sense of inevitability that the system must be patched together in its pre-collapse form – this is why it became such an imperative on behalf of global governance to stamp them out (or at least ensure that no one knows about them). Becoming aware of alternatives allows us to see everything we are already doing in a new light. We realize we’re already communists when working on common projects, already anarchists when we solve problems without recourse to lawyers or police, already revolutionaries when we make something genuinely new.

One might object: a revolution cannot confine itself to this. That’s true. In this respect, the great strategic debates are really just beginning. I’ll offer one suggestion though. For at least 5,000 years, before capitalism even existed, popular movements have tended to center on struggles over debt. There is a reason for this. Debt is the most efficient means ever created to make relations fundamentally based on violence and inequality seem morally upright. When this trick no longer works everything explodes, as it is now. Debt has revealed itself as the greatest weakness of the system, the point where it spirals out of control. But debt also allows endless opportunities for organizing. Some speak of a debtors’ strike or debtors’ cartel. Perhaps so, but at the very least we can start with a pledge against evictions. Neighborhood by neighborhood we can pledge to support each other if we are driven from our homes. This power does not solely challenge regimes of debt, it challenges the moral foundation of capitalism. This power creates a new regime. After all, a debt is only a promise and the world abounds in broken promises. Think of the promise made to us by the state: if we abandon any right to collectively manage our own affairs we will be provided with basic life security. Think of the promise made by capitalism: we can live like kings if we are willing to buy stock in our own collective subordination. All of this has come crashing down. What remains is what we are able to promise one another directly, without the mediation of economic and political bureaucracies. The revolution begins by asking what sorts of promises do free men and women make one another and how, by making them, do we begin to make another world?

David Graeber is the author of Possibilities: Essays on Hierarchy, Rebellion and Desire and Direct Action: An Ethnography.

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Adbusters #82

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February
26, 2009
07:40 pm
Link
this essay is good. we are at a potential turning point though i fear we are not prepared enough. of course some of the capitalist machinery is falling down, however also notice that many corporations are splashing out right now buying up larger shares of their respective markets. and the banks havent really lost out too much because the tax payer has footed the bill. so whats happened there is that vast sums of £$ have been transfered from the public purse to the private purse (dare i say ligitimately?) . however, despite this, the fact that the average person is suffering means that they are going to be more open to alternatives than they may otherwise have been. this is why i say i may be that the movements who can invisage another and better way of doing things may have been too slow to get themselves together (i include myself in this, i spent the last two years living a hobo life, on the streets of the cities and also in the country. though i learnt alot and enjoyed that time - much of it in various squats and eco-communities - i am not ready to do what i could to maximise the current opportunity.) so that at this most perfect moment a large scale and inviting option could be made public, offered to the world at large. you see it's almost too late to have the debate now (to change the situation now) but if the debate begins in earnest then that's good. keep up the good writing. but more than these pieces we also need to see a full and comprehensive open sourced plan go up publically, which can be added to and altered over time, an publically evolving manifesto and plan of action? all in all though a great piece, thanks. please take my remarks as positive suggestions. peace and love.
February
26, 2009
11:31 am
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The situation is intangible and the control of governments with knee jerk action to sustain public support is not helping. What is needed is someone who is prepared to stand up and tell the public the truth. An economy fuelled by debt, with corrupt capitalist who’s only ambitions are to increase their personal fortunes, “the Blaire’s” of this world. What is needed is an ideological revolutionary stance, my votes for the author....
February
25, 2009
10:09 pm
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If only authors like this step up and do what they blab about in their words....Change is what you want...then step up and do something about it....Gather everyone you know....and take it to the next level by protesting in major cities to capture the medias attention...if you cant capture the medias attention then its time to make a drastic action... By getting the medias attention you get other peoples attention that still have some hop in them to fight for a revolution.There is hope for future generations...we just need leaders not followers of capitalist mother fuckers...If i was old enough i would move to a large city with a bunch of my friends adverstise it in local hangout spots or venues...we got to start this revolution of making the U.S government stop walking all over their residents/citizens...basically anyone who lives in the U.S....oh how i crave a movement...a movement worth accomplishing...lets make those hipsters revolutionaries...then we got ourself a movement....then we got ourself a culture..thats what i would a call a culture worth putting in the history books of future young ones....i could go on...but i got school 2mrrow
February
26, 2009
02:35 pm
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I'm helping organize the G20 protests here in London in April. Wanna come? David
February
24, 2009
11:56 pm
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Great essay, really coherent, topical. Keep it up!
February
24, 2009
03:48 am
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Wow, this is very good. Excellent. Well written, well explained. It reminds me a bit of "l'insurrection qui vient" and other similar manifestos coming out recently. It's definitly a good tendency. We need a global, powerful system. Communism, in the meaning of a socialist, ultra-democratic, autonomized system that follows moral principles of egality and liberty through it's production mode, is a solution. The word itself is filled with misunderstandings by common knowledge, but is far from an utopia. Judging by the comments below, it looks like some americans have trouble in simple, classical, political typology...
March
02, 2009
09:56 pm
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my thoughts exactly! it is exceedingly difficult to argue for what we argue for when the United States has never had a major, powerful socialist tradition (or at least, not in a very long time). there have been revolutionary movements in north america but not like in europe, and moreover, the 80 years of the USSR have created monstrous, deceitful propaganda conflating that scumbag stalin with communism. perhaps the sheer facts of the economy as it presently unfolds will force people to consciously or intuitively arrive at genuinely socialist positions. we'd be better for it.
February
23, 2009
10:11 am
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Interesting essay. Capitalism IS collapsing-- I should know, i worked on Wall St. on and off from 1997 to 2003, in between helping with the Seattle WTO and DC IMF protests. It's an impersonal system, where each component bureaucracy--company or state-- seeks to perpetuate itself. It might disintegrate, or fade like Rome... but a new alternative will need to be a lot more imaginative than communism. It will need to inspire people to higher purpose and truly move beyond materialism, which communism (even in places where it wasn't coercive, like basque cooperatives or israeli kibbutzim) never did. Mutual aid societies and consensus-based movements are a start. But without something more holding it together, the whole world could look like afghanistan or africa. http://newjerutalmud.wordpress.com/2009/02/02/money-wont-be-worth-the-paper-its-printed-on/
February
22, 2009
05:42 pm
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Your essay is infantile at best. It is dishonest and fictional. In what world do you live in? While I'm not going to dispute your argument that capitalism as we know is dead, the main thesis of your essay is wrong. Communism is dead! Unless you're using the term metaphorically or to imply something else (I like your creative reinterpretation though). It died long ago in the gulags of the Soviet Union and the torture chambers of Havana and East Germany. Have you know sense of history? Or an interest in the truth? Or do you you chose your words strictly for dramatic effect? You cannot democratize communism--it's like trying to democratize capitalism! Your lack of imagination is disturbing, particularly for an intellectual who is given such a prominent space. This is by far the most hilarious statement I've read all year. I've said this before and will say again: to navigate the future successfully we're gonna have to separate capitalism from democracy to clarify the social, political and economic implications from a conceptual standpoint. The two systems might have a symbiotic relationship but they are not the same thing my friend. China is capitalist but not democratic. Do not confuse people pseudo economic interpretations. The reason we ended up with such a corrupt capitalist system was precisely because communism was such a perverted system. What we do now for better or worse is that the industrial proletariat did not overwhelmed capitalism-it embraced it and we need to explore that first. The great irony is that capitalism was brought down by greedy bankers who thought profit was a democratic virtue. This is what capitalism managed to do since the industrial revolution--divorce ethics from the mean of production and political life. And your "imaginary" money is more powerful than any protest you can mount. This system was brought to its knees not buy violence, not by strikes but by "fictional" balance sheets.
February
23, 2009
02:03 pm
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um, Max, that's really confusing my interpretation is infantile, but you like my creative reinterpretation? huh? I thought it was quite evident that I was saying that state communism (a) wasn't communism, (b) is indeed something we all know better than to even consider going back to. I'm suggesting we change the meaning of the word "communism" from "the ideology that says by seizing control of the government and instituting top-down controls we can gradually, at some point in the future, move to a system where absolutely everything is organized on the principle of 'from each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs'", to "any actually existing situation, on whatever scale, where people operate according to the principle of 'from each according to his ability to each according to his needs.'" That is, I reject the way that what might be called capital-C "Communists" have hijacked, and corrupted, the word (small-c) "communism". I want to go back to the original meaning of the term. I find this useful because it allows people to see that if we use the term according to this original meaning, and not the one made up by authoritarians, we all mostly operate on communist principles much of the time. So the whole question is misplaced. In this sense communism is already here; in fact, capitalist firms, even, operate communistically _inside_ the corporation. However I also argue capitalism is a bad way of managing these communist forms of cooperation that are already here (but that need to be democratized). Ie, in an office or factory, people do not buy and sell anything to each other, they cooperate on principles of "from each according to their abilities.." (etc). However the office or factory also tends to be organized extremely hierarchically and undemocratically. The question then is what is the overarching system that will most encourage egalitarian, democratic forms of cooperation instead. So I say we do need to come up with a better way of organizing already-existing communism (ie, cooperative forms of labor, etc etc), which also democratizes forms of cooperation that already exist but tend to be run in undemocratic ways. I never propose to call this better way of organizing cooperation "communism". I explicitly avoid doing so. I don't think it's helpful to use the term "communism" for some big overarching system. I am not endorsing "communism" as a system to replace capitalism. All this is very explicit in the text. I know this is an unconventional, but it would be good if readers at least tried to respond to the argument that's actually there! DG
February
22, 2009
05:42 pm
Link
You essay is infantile at best. It is dishonest and fictional. In what world do you live in? While I'm not going to dispute your argument that capitalism as we know is dead, the main thesis of your essay is wrong. Communism is dead! Unless you're using the term metaphorically or to imply something else (I like your creative reinterpretation though). It died long ago in the gulags of the Soviet Union and the torture chambers of Havana and East Germany. Have you know sense of history? Or an interest in the truth? Or do you you chose your words strictly for dramatic effect? You cannot democratize communism--it's like trying to democratize capitalism! Your lack of imagination is disturbing, particularly for an intellectual who is given such a prominent space. This is by far the most hilarious statement I've read all year. I've said this before and will say again: to navigate the future successfully we're gonna have to separate capitalism from democracy to clarify the social, political and economic implications from a conceptual standpoint. The two systems might have a symbiotic relationship but they are not the same thing my friend. China is capitalist but not democratic. Do not confuse people pseudo economic interpretations. The reason we ended up with such a corrupt capitalist system was precisely because communism was such a perverted system. What we do now for better or worse is that the industrial proletariat did not overwhelmed capitalism-it embraced it and we need to explore that first. The great irony is that capitalism was brought down by greedy bankers who thought profit was a democratic virtue. This is what capitalism managed to do since the industrial revolution--divorce ethics from the mean of production and political life. And your "imaginary" money is more powerful than any protest you can mount. This system was brought to its knees not buy violence, not by strikes but by "fictional" balance sheets.
February
18, 2009
12:32 pm
Link
Phenomenal essay, David, and I applaud Adbusters for publishing it. Graeber is also fond to remind us that up until a few hundred years ago, this separate thing called "the economy" simply didn't exist. Idealized market relations are relations of equivalence (essentially, a recognition between the buyer and seller that this CD is worth $5, and we will remain "whole" by swapping them). Relations of equivalence are temporary: we swap and then we go about our merry way. Traditionally, these market relations were only between people who had nothing in common (e.g. two different tribe members meeting on a road, traveling traders, etc.) - a relation of equivalence meant that there were no social ties created by the transaction. The two just went on their merry way. However, relations between members of the same community were marked by INequivalence. The whole idea was to create networks of dependence - that's how society stayed knit and cohesive. Things like gift giving, potlatch ceremonies, etc. were explicitly about a REFUSAL to calculate between gift givers and receivers. The story of the past several hundred years (and especially the past 150) could be described as the ever-greater encroachment of market relations (previously reserved for complete strangers) into the community. As a result - surprise! - we now see ourselves as atomized individuals, cut off from our neighbors, co-workers, and even friends. Though we still see signs of our non-market past. Consider holidays like birthdays and Christmas - it's still quite taboo to keep the price tag on a gift. Why do we hide the price? A quick Google search can tell us if we really wanted to know. I think it's because with quantification comes comparison, and with comparison comes the market drive for equivalence. The takeaway when we give a gift isn't "I'm willing to spend x dollars on you and no more," but "consider the thoughtfulness and sentimentality - that is, my motivations - BEHIND the gift". On an academic level, you're saying "I want to continue (and strengthen) my social relationship with you." Who knew that taking off a pricetag was an anti-capitalist act? :)
February
18, 2009
11:23 am
Link
Sod the 3 C's (Communism, Consumerism and Capitalism)- I'm sticking with the 3 A's- Altruism, Atheism and Anarchy.
February
16, 2009
06:20 pm
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This article is a great example of why I keep coming back to ADBUSTERS. Considering so many see Obama as a symbol of change , this article gives me the sensation I imagine Orwell's Winston Smith felt holding the forbidden book. We can and must imagine a way of co-existing that values cooperation more than competition. www.dirty-sneakers.com
February
16, 2009
01:32 pm
Link
this is the smartest article i have seen on this site so far. but there has never been a truly free economy.[not like the one talked about by ron paul or libertarians].the late 1800's american west might have been the closest.the new socialism that is comming for us rapped in the obama package is going to be a lot more evil than everyone here thinks.the entire dem/rep establishment is going to have to collapse for there to be any real change. millions of people are going to be very badly hurt. 60% or more rely on this government for thier very existence. when a state takes from one to give the other you create a slave. non-coerced cooperation is the only true way.
February
15, 2009
08:47 am
Link
Keeping it simple and avoiding theoretical terms like communism, capitalism, etc, it comes to this: Economic activity, labor, is a transfer of energy from one place to another. Any economic system that profits by siphoning of some of this energy as it moves will tend toward a practice of creating labors that exist for no other purpose than to generate a movement of energy to be siphoned. As this happens, and as we reach a point where all of the available energy that CAN be put into play in such transfers IS in play, the tendency will to siphon off more and more of the neergy. This, in turn, lessens the effectiveness of the labor (less of the energy bundled in the action reaches the action's ostensible goal). Examples abound, the "entertainment" industry for example. More and more product is created while the quality of this product decreases. In the building industry we see increasingly shitty buildings going up while the sale and rental of these buildings generates more and more money. The simple truth is that the only reason to make a pair of shoes (for example) is that someone needs one. If this is the operating principle of labors, the goal of economic activity will be to deliver as much energy (whether frozen in the form of material or active in the form of released chemical energy)to the end product of that labor. In such a situation, you'd never see someone thinking about how to minimize the cost of productio n in order to increase profit.
February
14, 2009
06:41 pm
Link
I agree with much of what has been said here, but there cannot be democracy the way we have it today, where everyone is equal voters, et cetera. Communism wouldn't work either, unless of course it were "decentralized communism", in the form of community-feudalism, with a hierarchy of individuals who can serve each other and the community according to their ability and need. Centralized communism, like the ones in place in China and Soviet Russia were basically capitalist systems in disguise, as far as I could see. http://www.metokur.org/a-diversion
February
14, 2009
01:06 pm
Link
hi pissed i don't no what your blind eye is looking at. but you better wake up. i live in a community and care about the people. global elite are using you. bite yourself
February
14, 2009
07:33 am
Link
Death to all capitalist exploiters of the wealth of labor. Boycott, strike, and cut them off at the knees!
February
13, 2009
07:36 pm
Link
"Obama is making it worse?" Mmmk that's pretty obnoxious. I hated bush when he was in charge but I actually never criticized him I criticized the blanket behind him. also America is not capitalist so therefore we are screwed? um no i happen to agree with this article and I noticed few comments agreeing with the articles its people like me who turn a blind eye to obnoxious twit comments that this country is suffering. Bite me
February
23, 2009
01:02 pm
Link
a little more respect, grammar, and intellect and people might start listening to you
February
13, 2009
11:18 am
Link
I support Adbusters for their stance on the cultural degradation of society. There is no doubt we are worse off then we were 10, 20, 30, 100 year ago. However, the author of this article with his stance on 'the evils of capitalism' has it ass-backwards. Capitalism doesn't exist now and that is the problem! The US is in fact socialist or communist now...The real insidious thing about it is that people believe exactly the opposite. Is it capitalism that forms a central planning organization in the Federal Reserve Bank and sets interest rates and creates money out of thin air?! Money that is then hand-delivered to banks and other interest groups who divide it up amongst themselves? What about the Zionist media (Murdoch, Zucker, Redstone, AOL/Time Warner, Spielberg, Geffen, Katzenburg etc.) that is centered about furthering the consumerist cause and hoodwinking the population into believing that their "vote counts"? What about companies such as Monsanto that control seed populations and thus control the quality and nature of the food we eat? How about the drug companies and lobby groups who determine our health concerns and the prices we pay for even the simpliest of medicines and health procedures? The examples go on and on....The truth of the matter is that we have central planning now that easily rivals that of the former USSR and DDR. What we actually need is a free-market system that breaks up these central planning organizations and that is not based on a "growth-model"....one that has independent oversight that cares about the well-being of the population.
February
13, 2009
10:35 am
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What money will there be without the want for more of it? There cannot be communally owned property, but only no property. Money is an expression of own. Own is an expression of control; like those who own slaves, or own animals, or own earth. We may understand that we cannot own a slave because an equal cannot own an equal. But can we own anything else because we think ourselves so superior to all things not human? Our want for control over these things is our greed for money: their representation. If we wish away this greed, than first we must perceive ourselves equal to all the earth, and so, lose our desire to control it. Then we will find ourselves in commune with ourselves as well as the rest of life. For, "from each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs" is the inherent rule of every ecosystem. Never doubt the problems of our society to run deep down to the story we tell about ourselves.
February
13, 2009
08:25 am
Link
lets simplify. grow your own food... do your own thing. and definitely don't depend on random strangers to bring :change: and goodness in your lives. only God can do that.
February
12, 2009
05:01 pm
Link
interesting article. obama is making it worse. like a slow bleed. go grass roots. work with your family and neighbors to build your on communities. we are being used. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xcz9bFXnqn0

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