Tuesday, March 13, 2012

An Innovative Plan

Being self-sufficient in our little suburban home spaces. This is a pretty revolutionary idea. (At least to me) This is something we could work on/advocate right now.

I've always thought we had to go to the "land"—to the mountains, back to the farm to have the kind of self-sufficiency necessary to maintain freedom. But that's practically impossible for most of us.

This is a hopeful idea.

The Gunslinger

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Technically Assisted Self-Sufficiency: 
The Answer to Almost Everything Avoided by Almost Every Politician
By John Harris, on March 10th, 2012
http://www.intellectualconservative.com/2012/03/10/technically-assisted-self-sufficiency-the-answer-to-almost-everything-avoided-by-almost-every-politician/

To give the devil his due, I believe Marx to be quite right about the way capitalist economies, having drawn laborers off the farm and into the city, proceed to render them obsolete with technology.
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I have never been able to read more than a few paragraphs of The Communist Manifesto at once. I have the same allergy to Rousseau when he writes about social issues—and to Ernst Bloch, and to others of that persuasion: “thinkers”, that is, whose modus operandi is to make a valid observation (sometimes quite a perceptive one), multiply it into the Universal Human Condition, wax wroth with indignation, and bolt away on some tangent whose insane trajectory places all peace and happiness on earth in jeopardy. To say that this rhetorical paradigm fits only and exclusively communist tirades would be unfair. I have had to sit through fundamentalist sermons that left my head aching in the same way. Heinrich von Treitschke’s Deutsche Geschichte des 19 Jahrhundert (through which I am currently trying to wade) constantly goes delirious in a similar vein over the prospect of German unity behind Prussian leadership. Let us, then, conclude that gross over-generalizing to justify an irrational—and often homicidal or suicidal—prescription is typically fascist, and leave it at that; for evangelical communism is a species of fascism.

It’s as if a party of spelunkers, lost in the bowels of the earth, should blunder upon a space where three tunnels depart in different directions. The castaways follow one tunnel only to find that it peters into a dead-end. Then they return to the crossroads and resolve, not to try one of the remaining two options, but to employ a high explosive in an attempt to blow the whole mountain off their heads. Whoever survives the blast will be able to cross this approach off the list of strategies… but the other two tunnels will probably also have been sealed. Why commit such folly to begin with? Who but a lunatic would make the suggestion?

To give the devil his due, I believe Marx to be quite right about the way capitalist economies, having drawn laborers off the farm and into the city, proceed to render them obsolete with technology. This cruel cycle has been repeated over and over again since the Manifesto appeared. As an educator, I hear all the time that the solution is for history’s losers to school themselves in developing or managing new gismos: get off the assembly line and make a place for yourself behind a keyboard. Such exhortations, however, are in patent bad faith. Obviously, there are far fewer available keyboards than there once were stations on the line—otherwise “retooling” would involve no saving of expenses and enhancing of profit, especially since technicians are so handsomely paid. Well, then (we are told in neo-Darwinian tropes), the race must go to the swiftest: let the masses compete, and let the brightest or the most energetic win out. That’s freedom in action.

Yes, but such athletic metaphors do not explain what we are to do with the forty or sixty or eighty percent who cannot obtain a costly re-education and the subsequent plum of white-collar employment. In a cruel irony that even Marx couldn’t foresee, these human “leftovers” tend to become drudges doing the work that simple machines might do, but would do more expensively thanks to the costs of manufacture and upkeep. It’s cheaper to pay a poor schmuck a few bucks an hour to mop your office’s floor than to buy and maintain the machine that does the same thing. The Industrial Revolution leapfrogs this bracket of manual labor and proceeds to higher assignments.

In the century or so that the industrialized world has had to mull over this jigsaw puzzle, few of the ragged pieces have been matched. What to do with the “leftovers”? Young women can stay at home and create Internet porn sites; young men can peddle illicit drugs. For those who have transport and can afford gas, the cocktail waitress/bartender route lies open (since the technicians at their keyboards get mightily sick of life by the end of the day); or a kid can always join the army, at least until our strained national budget will no longer accommodate an army.

The Marxist recommendation to “explode” the system (Marx and Engels’ image, not mine) will of course induce that catastrophic cave-in that crushed our spelunkers. Recent history has taught us that “revolution” amounts to pillaging the rich, consuming society’s resources quickly to the bone, and then settling into an inhumanly cruel autocracy wherein the “best” pirates, having climbed to the top on their murdered victims, slaughter protesters and look abroad for more cargo ships to waylay. Marx’s genius for getting the solution all wrong shines brightly here. For having pinpointed the problem in the essential motive forces of industrialization and urbanization, he proceeds to ignore other obvious tunnels offering escape and embraces the mechanistic urban world with a vengeance. Factories grind out production quotas to enrich one and all (under the shadow of machine-guns, as a practical consideration). The masses graze like cattle on a high-tech ranch when their strict allowance of gray pleasure is meted out within their strictly measured gray stalls during a strictly limited hour of their gray day. Humanity is throttled, the natural environment is shredded, barbarism earns a bounty, and the nightmare appears to have no end.

Welcome to the Soviet Union, Mao’s China, Castro’s Cuba, and Kim Jong Il’s North Korea. Welcome, not to Plato’s Cave, but to Grendel’s Lair. At least in the days of our tribal prehistory, an elite few were ritually fed, strangled, and tossed into the swamp that the gods on the Other Side might be well disposed. Now the self-appointed gods among us bind, gag, eviscerate, and toss to the abysmal bottom those masses over whom they are supposed to preside—a sacrifice pleasing to them, apparently, for the rush of raw power it unleashes.

No thank you, Mr. Marx. If there is any true progress in store for the Average Joe, it must move in the reverse direction. We must guarantee private property, not confiscate it. We must revive the self-sufficiency of producing food with one’s own hands, not conspire with automation to stamp it out completely. We must use technology not to centralize authority more and ever more until human societies replicate termite mounds, but to decentralize it until, at last, every individual household produces a significant amount of its own food and energy and can furnish the minimum of force needed to protect its boundaries. Every man his own grocer, his own power plant, and his own cop: would the typical human being prefer that vision, or one of himself queued up—wearing # 5933028/4 on his back—in a gray jump-suit with wrench in hand?

Nothing is more essential to survival than food, and no image of human nobility is more primal and irresistible than that of the wise husbandman coaxing his harvest from the earth. The OWS crowd, in its collective inanity, may be able to generate sincere outrage at the prospect of a banker’s lavish rewards—mansion, yacht, private plane, summer house in the Bahamas—for doing no more than juggling figures. Even the most invincible imbecile, however, could not dispute that Farmer A, who rose at dawn and labored under the sun’s heat for months on end, deserves an abundant harvest in a way that Farmer B, whose fields are overgrown with weeds and whose barnyard is overrun with wild creatures, does not. Life on the farm made a lot of things clear that the weekly paycheck has obscured. It also gave children and adolescents meaningful work to do as they matured, taught a respect for the natural environment, and inspired a profound spirituality through close contact with life’s cycles and with death itself. The farm made adults of us, just as the city has made fatuous, arrogant cavilers and pettifoggers of us. When we left that honest labor behind, we lost far more than drawls and torn fingernails.

To advocate a return to the land would be as absurd as exhorting the nation to “go Amish”. What we successfully might do as a high-tech society, however, would be to transform our third- or quarter-acre of suburban residential space (also known as our home) into an energy-efficient incubator of sorts. The 3,000-square-foot dead (including the garage) that we call an attic—a source of major heating and cooling problems for most houses—might literally become a greenhouse, protected by hail-proof glass and generating healthy fruit and vegetables year round. Rainwater could be collected and processed for bathing and drinking, as well, by each domicile with a little technology. As for energy, the best way at present to reduce our consumption of polluting fuels is precisely to reduce consumption—not to substitute another fuel whose “cleanliness” is utterly bogus (e.g., solar energy: the rare earth elements in which solar panels are coated abbreviate thousands of lives in Third World mining towns). Proper insulation has conserved more coal and fossil fuel than the Chevy Volt ever will, except in a progressive’s dreams.

Not only can residential designs be overhauled to lose less heat and coolness, but the abolition of local zoning laws would permit residents to operate barber shops, cafés, studios, and other small businesses out of their homes, eliminating a gas-guzzling drive to work, reducing insurance and medical costs, and also drawing in many ambulatory neighborhood customers. E-Bay operators and their ilk already work at home, of course. In keeping with the high-tech theme, other business-people could stay off the street by going online. I might as well be teaching college classes at home before a camera: my students already spend the whole hour staring dazed into their laptops.

I could write a book about this futuristic Arcadia—a true conservative’s vision of progress. I have already indicated how it might radically reduce the toxic effects of heavy energy consumption, unemployment, and inflation, as well as implied how it might make our children safer and more responsible (viz., neighborhoods whose residents are often at home suffer from relatively little crime, for criminals thrive where they can pass unobserved). A pater familias might well secure a happy existence for his household of four or five simply by tending his greenhouse and repairing neighborhood furniture or trimming neighborhood trees. Families would not have to pull up stakes and move because the local factory closed or the local tech firm “insourced” hundreds of Asian nationals on green cards. A man could cover the ground he stood on. He would not have to be the slave to bourgeois capitalism that Marx makes of him—and that Marx would have further enslaved to the Will of the People.

Why is neither side of the political aisle pushing a vision such as this? Special interests, of course: certain elements in the private sector very much want us to burn more oil and buy more cars, while certain elements in the public sector want us even more to depend abjectly upon our elected “job-creators”. Yet a less deliberate but more oppressive force also chains each of our ankles to a thirty-pound shot: the sheer dead weight of federal, state, and local taxes and regulations that we have allowed to stifle our existence. Codes, zoning restrictions, safety standards, legal liability, property taxes, franchise taxes, licensures, certifications, user fees… the various “branches” of government leach off of our blood and sweat like great swathes of mistletoe growing on a moribund tree scarcely able now to send forth one green leaf. The answers to most of our major problems—vocational, educational, environmental, social, ethical, criminal, logistical—sit in our back yard, in some cases quite literally. We could smooth out these tangles ourselves if we were left alone to do so.

The day we finally do so will be the day a critical mass of us recognizes that government is no longer our friend and protector: it is Public Enemy Number One. The Marxian super-centralized cooperative offers no assurance of safety in numbers—of maternally nurturing interdependency. On the contrary, it offers the certainty of each individual’s being reduced to the meaningless, the irrelevant, the interchangeable, the indistinguishable. A human being who consents to become an invisible member within an innumerable herd has already died as a human being, whether or not he lives on as a biological unit.

Those who fail to grasp this truth will deserve their dismal fate if the impending series of critical choices facing us produces another ruling elite of “moderates”. Very little room for compromise exists. Nothing walks on three legs: you can choose either two or four.


John Harris holds a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature and teaches college English. He is also the founder and president of The Center for Literate Values, a charitable organization serving home-schoolers and friends of the Western tradition; and he edits The Center's journal Praesidium (at www.literatefreedom.org/literatevalues.htm). His novel about Middle America's moral decline in the mid-70s, Footprints in the Snow of the Moon, is available as a free download at http://www.literatefreedom.org/footprints.pdf. | John Harris | semperluxmundi@yahoo.com 

10 comments:

  1. There is something wrong with this article and I can't put my finger on it, yet. I have to reject the premise granted by the author that capitalist economies drew laborers from the farm to the city, and all the bad consequences that followed. The shoe factory drew the laborer to where ever the shoe factory was, whether privately or state owned. Not everyone wants to be a farmer and not everyone wants to make their own shoes. Freedom is the ability to make those choices, not the self-sufficiency of growing your own food or cobbling your own shoes.

    I apologize I can't elaborate more, but the article simply seems to miss something very important about what consitutes freedom and the object of freedom, the pursuit of happiness.

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  2. I think it's as simple as: Self-sufficiency is the essence of Liberty.

    Food, Shelter and Energy (if you don't have any of your own) can be used as weapons by the oppressor...typically government.

    The ability to provide them for yourself keeps you free of slavery to the state for survival.

    Some of us think times are heading toward that scenario. We feel we should be prepared.

    Others believe it will never come to that.

    I think which of those things one believes determines one's reaction to Harris' article.

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    1. Sorry Gunny, but something is missing from this survivalist vision of Utopia. I'm reminded of the wheat farmer that lost his case in the Supreme Court for growing wheat for his own consumption. It was an outrageous decision, but not out of character for an oppressive government. Being self-sufficient may give you the satisfaction you are not dependent on government, and it may be prudent preparation, but it isn't liberty.

      Liberty is when I can choose to grow my own food or buy from whomever I choose without government meddling.

      Of course true self-sufficiency is nearly impossible unless you are willing to go "primitive". How many self-sufficient people can fabricate solar electric panels, windmill driven water pumps, refrigerators, sheet glass, telephones, clothing, leather, gasoline, electric storage batteries? How many can maintain them? If I depend on a factory to make and service my storage batteries, does that make me their slave?

      I agree with you the future looks bleak and I see a coming state of what I call minimalism; everyone does the least possible to get their government handouts. Your minimalist neighbor that looks with envy on your vegetable garden becomes the willing agent of an opressive government. How dare you grow your own food and not share it with everyone?

      Again, I am somewhat at a loss to fully respond to the article because it makes so many illogical connections and conclusions. It sounds nice to be self-sufficient, but it is the choice that expresses liberty, not the condition itself. Grow all the food you want but it won't keep the tax man from your front door, government out of your toilet or telling you what light bulbs you can't use.

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  3. I do understand your point of view, but Liberty is not always comfortable, or fun, or fulfilling, or beautiful, or easy, or satisfying, or warm, or convenient. Those are separate things. And you are arguing perilously close to the statist argument that in order to be free, we must be free from "want", or free from hunger, or free from homelessness, or free from unemployment...

    ...free from the inability to make the choices one would prefer?

    Sometimes Liberty means just not being owned by the Man, being on the lamb, off the grid. Hard times.

    Because, yeah, when the government runs the factory that makes and services your storage batteries, and there is no other option—no competition—and it demands that you surrender your guns or it will confiscate your batteries—and you do because otherwise you'll starve or freeze...you are, in fact, their slave.

    Liberty can be hard, lonely and fatal. It's still better than slavery.

    I'd rather be a hungry free man than a well-fed slave.

    You're right, of course, growing food won't keep the government out of my toilet, or the tax man from my door. But it will stop him from using food scarcity as a weapon.

    And that's a good thing.

    I'm not suggesting living off the grid, growing food and storing ammo is the GOAL of living- or the ultimate, final, happiest definition of Liberty...it's a strategy to survive free until we can rebuild the Free World (or re-take it)—which we can't do if we are controlled and owned by the state, dependent on it for our very survival.

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    1. I think our dialog here may illustrate my problem with the article. It's the way the author takes a word, inflates it to a concept, juxtaposes another idea and then draws a conclusion as if the two fit together. His writing style makes it tedious to pull those out but they are there. Some are just outright claims without proof. Marx was never right about anything and that's where the author tipped his hand. His Arcadia is his Utopia, which he proposes as the antidote to government dependence and to secure liberty. That is a huge leap.

      We agree that anyone dependent on government for anything, essential or otherwise, is government's slave since they become obligated at the whim of government to meet whatever qualifications government dictates. Your example of the government demanding my guns or they will take my batteries is excellent, but quite incomplete. It assumes I can only choose government batteries, or go without. If I can choose those batteries from private companies, with the understanding I may be dependent on them for servicing, then I have voluntarily made myself dependent, but so have they to honor the service agreement and sell batteries to make their living. Equating that kind of voluntary, mutual dependence to slavery is really a stretch.

      I like that example because no where in the article do I see any reference to the power of the free market as a guardian of liberty. Self-sufficiency is just the author's Utopian fixation. The free market may devolve to black market barter, but that will be the response if government takes over the economy and voluntary servitude to the market is replaced with involuntary servitude to government. Obviously, you need something to trade, a good or service, and that is where some degree of self-sufficiency makes sense.

      Freedom from government control and freedom from dependence on other people are simply not comparable. One is imposed and one is voluntary. The one restrains your liberty, the other is a consequence of you exercising your liberty.

      I think we agree that preparing for a bleak future by becoming more self-sufficient won't stop government claims on our person, time and property, but it may make life more bearable and survivable.

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  4. "The farm made adults of us, just as the city has made fatuous, arrogant cavilers and pettifoggers of us. When we left that honest labor behind, we lost far more than drawls and torn fingernails."

    I couldn't pass this up. It is so much arrogant snob BS posing as some deep onsight into our current situation. It sounds more like Pol Pot than Adam Smith.

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  5. trubolotta, you said:

    "It assumes I can only choose government batteries, or go without. "

    I answer:

    Yes it did. That was the point I was making. In a country that is taxing and regulating the free market out of existence..picking and choosing winners and losers, bailing out favorites and becoming their major shareholder....it is, I think, not unreasonable to consider the possibility that there may come a time when all goods and services are provided by government or government stooges...under government's direct control, which was rather the point, it seemed to me, of this entire article.

    Which is why my argument is what it is.

    I am contemplating and talking about preparing for, jut such a scenario...where the option to deal with an independent enterprise no longer exists.

    Without that being the premise...Harris' argument, and mine, are just silly.

    Surely you didn't think I was advocating gardening for survival & liberty if there was a guarantee that government would remain just one of many available, convenient, independent, free-market, affordable avenues for obtaining food?

    The Free Market—as long as it is permitted to exist—is the answer, of course. But it is not always and everywhere permitted to exist.

    And there can be no doubt that our current president and his minions, disciples, goons and useful idiots will do everything they can to advance the cause of the destruction of the Free Market, and the health, wealth, choices and individual freedom it fosters.

    I just think it prudent to be prepared for that eventuality, so that we can survive as free (if poor) men while we figure out how to re-establish our Constitutional government.

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    1. "The answers to most of our major problems—vocational, educational, environmental, social, ethical, criminal, logistical—sit in our back yard, in some cases quite literally. We could smooth out these tangles ourselves if we were left alone to do so.


      The day we finally do so will be the day a critical mass of us recognizes that government is no longer our friend and protector: it is Public Enemy Number One."

      This is the only conclusion the article makes. It is the author's Utopian pipe dream of how to wake people up, and nothing more. I already know the government, as it currently functions, is Public Enemy Number One. I don't need a vegetable garden in my attic to figure that out.

      Most of the article is just red meat for anti-industrial and anti-technology survivalists. If we eventually reach that state where everything is controlled by the government, we will all become survivalists whether we want to or not. The free market will move underground and we will secretly tell each other jokes like those that circulated throughout the Soviet Union. "They pretend to pay us, we pretend to work."

      I am not knocking self-sufficiency but I am knocking wild and absurd leaps of logic and conjecture made by the article. I grew my own vegetables, fixed my cars, repaired my furnace, did masonry, carpentry, plumbing and wiring for my home and friends. I have received EMT training and I know how to live off the land. I am prepared for self-sufficiency by experience but none of that has anything to do with recognizing the corruption of our government and its threat to individual liberty. If a "critical mass of us" must be self-sufficient to recognize government as an enemy, as the author states, then we are doomed.

      If I don't see my neighbors planting cucumbers, I'm not going to lose sleep believing they just "don't get it".

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  6. And yes, I agree, his writing is a little pretentious. He needs a good editor!

    :-)

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  7. Actually, the name of the article is "Technically Assisted Self-Sufficiency". And I didn't find him to be anti-technology at all...indeed, he encourages individuals to take advantage of technology to wean themselves off the teat of the State—which I think is a good thing, now, always and forever.

    (It's amazing to me how we both read something so different into the same words!)

    I think the author suggests that when enough of us are more self-sufficient, perhaps the rest will see it's possible, even desirable to live independent of the State. I don't think he means that one can only recognize the State is the enemy once one has become self-sufficient.

    Again, I think some of his constructions are awkward, and overly wordy...which invites misinterpretation, which is why I suggested he needs an editor.

    But I still think that the thrust of his argument is that technology can help individuals free themselves from dependence on the State, reclaim liberty, and be an example to others ...and that that would be a good thing.

    I don't thinks it's more complicated than that.

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