Most
of the prescriptions for getting there require (or involve entirely)
top-down, government actions. Yes, ideally we should have import duties
that prevent products produced by slave labour in ruined environments
from coming in. Yes, ideally we should have a tax regime that taxes
bads, not goods, and redistributes wealth. Yes, ideally we should have
land ownership reform that prohibits absentee ownership and speculative
trading. Yes, ideally we should have laws that break up monopolies and
oligopolies, and that put megapolluters and corporate criminals in
prison with the rest of the mass murderers and thieves.
But we're not going to get them. If we wait for them, we'll wait forever.
Also,
ideally, if we were to create working models of a better way to live
and make a living, they should attract enough attention that others
would emulate them, in sufficient numbers to undermine the old economy.
But as my friend Flemming says,
sometimes you have to wait for the old deadwood hogging all the
sunlight to collapse before the new seeds can germinate (or else you
need to be a fungus).
So what can we do while we're waiting?
Here are a few ideas:
Get the facts out:
Let people know that the real inflation rate is closer to 10% than 2%.
That businesses with over 500 employees are actually destroying more
jobs than they're creating. That over the last 30 years the real income
and net wealth of 90% of the population has actually declined (it's
just exploding levels of debt that have created the appearance that
people are better off). That affluent nations have produced half of the
world's environmental destruction while paying only 3% of its costs.
Tell people what's really going on with a combination of real (little
known or misunderstood) information and clever presentation. Ask people
provocative questions. Tell compelling and illuminating stories. Don't
just listen to the misinformation, oversimplification, and propaganda,
say something! Most people are capable of critical thinking with a bit
of a nudge: They're just out of practice.
Learn (and then teach) how Natural Enterprise works: We
are desperately short of the skills needed to create our own
responsible, sustainable, joyful enterprises. You won't learn it in
high school, or business school, or executive training courses, or MBA
programs. Unschool yourself. Go out and find and meet with successful
entrepreneurs who've discovered you don't have to work 80 hour weeks,
mortgage your assets or sell your soul to succeed. Read my book, and/or
any of the books listed in its bibliography. Discover the competencies
that any enterprise needs. Seek out and partner with people whose
unique skills, passions and competencies dovetail with your own and who
share your purpose. Learn how to do real, world-class business
research, to find out what unmet needs you can fill. Learn how to
innovate rigorously, continuously, and effectively. Learn how to make
your enterprise powerfully networked and resilient. And then teach all
this to others in your community.
Start a grassroots campaign to get people to buy local, buy organic, buy durable quality, and buy less:
Be willing to pay more, but expect more for it. Tell the owners (not
the sales clerks) of the stores you visit that you won't buy from them
if they sell poor quality crap that takes jobs and dignity away from
local workers. Patronize, celebrate, and start businesses who sell only
100% local/organic products. Be patient with new local businesses --
quality craftsmanship and quality service are lost arts, that will need
to be relearned.
Learn and help others become self-sufficient:
Work where you live, even if that means creating new, local,
community-based enterprises, so you're not dependent on cars and oil.
Grow your own food. Learn to make and fix your own stuff, including
your own clothes. Make your own entertainment (games, music, art,
theatre, films, sports), instead of depending on expensive canned
entertainment from studios and extravagant commercial establishments.
Create local cooperatives for community energy self-sufficiency
(renewable of course). Unschool yourself and your children -- teach
them how to learn for themselves and with and from each other. Value
your time more than your money.Do all of these things collectively,
in collaboration with those in your community. Trade the products of
your know-how for theirs, for free, generously. An economy of
self-sufficiency is a Gift Economy, and unlike one based on competition
and growth, it's sustainable.
Extinguish your debts and don't take on any new ones:
Debt and consumption are addictions, and the corporatists are
determined to keep you addicted. Break the habit, as quickly and
completely as you can. That will probably require you to own less. Are
you ready for that? If you judge yourself and let others judge you by
how much you own, breaking the habit is going to be doubly difficult,
and doubly necessary.
Create local networks:
Use technology to organize, trade among your community, and share
information. Use these networks to create relationships, and trust, to
collaborate and partner, to help find what is needed and ensure it's of
high quality, to innovate together, to keep each other healthy, to
create consensus, and to establish Peer Production.
Eat well and look after your health: The
industrial health system is approaching total collapse, and the sooner
we wean ourselves off it the better. Learn how to research health
matters, how to prevent disease and how to diagnose and treat it
yourself, as much as possible. Become a vegetarian: Eat food, mostly
plants, not too much. Stay fit. And be good to yourself -- you're doing
all the right stuff!
If enough of us do these things, will it
be enough to transform our economy into a responsible, sustainable,
joyful, Natural Economy? Probably not. But it will put us in good stead
when the industrial economy runs out of steam (and oil).
While
we can work now to starve the industrial economy of the four things it
values from us (our tax dollars, our cheap and obedient labour, our
consumption of cheap imported crap, and our attention to its political
and commercial propaganda), the scourges of climate change, constant
ever-expanding wars, overpopulation, the End of Oil, the End of Water,
the Death of the Seas, the Death of the Forests, human pandemics,
pandemic diseases of farmed animals and monoculture plants, and
bioterror, will collectively bring that economy to its knees.
It
won't go easily, however, and as it slowly collapses it will be the
poor and the young who will suffer the brunt of its struggle to keep
going -- desperate and indiscriminate drilling in the oceans and
arctic, strip-mining for dirty coal and bitumen sludge, privatization
of scarce water, massive incarceration and curtailment of civil
freedoms, more cities written off like New Orleans, ghastly famines and
floods in struggling nations, the eradication of life savings and
pensions, the collapse of health systems, expropriation of property,
soaring suicide rates, and unimaginable ubiquitous poverty.
At
that point those who have started the transition to a Natural Economy
will be able to withstand the collapse of the industrial economy, and
will be the pioneers of its replacement. The transition is likely to be
a painful one for most, unfortunately -- all 'normal curves' have a
sudden and precipitous downside, and studies of past overheated
economies and civilizations suggest our economy's will be no exception.
We never seem to learn the lessons of history.
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