Tuesday, May 3, 2022

Originally published September 27, 2020 on Medium

The Era of Democracy Has Closed.

Some folks helping to clean up a homeless camp. copyright Stephen Marshall.



Hardin’s Tragedy

Originally published on Medium on October 23, 2020

Recently I read an article by Matto Mildenberger, writing in Scientific American, about Tragedy of the Commons. Inspired, I read Hardin’s commentary for myself.




Sharing equals security


date of original publication April 6, 2017. Posted to Vermont Digger. 

The Trump era is not of Trump's making. The financial stress, promised to us as conservatives, finally in charge of the purse strings after fighting the New Deal for 80 years, rewrite the social policy priorities of our country, will destroy many of the gains against poverty we have made, and leave millions of Americans and 100,000 Vermonters in a Social-Darwinist gutter. I can't bring myself to imagine the picture that results.

Of course we enter what is for us a new world. Where we are no longer Post New Deal. We are now Old Deal. That very old deal. Where privilege begets privilege and all of the gains, which have been made to bring people out of poverty and improve the health of every person, are under threat. Where democracy, which made the elites subject to law and the will of the people, of central concern to those who wield power, is at risk. And because climate change can reset the entire course of life on Earth, and what we choose will determine how that unfolds, the future of humanity and life is in play, and this is a civilizational moment. Do not take this choice lightly.

As we face the impacts of the “conservative” vision in our individual spheres of interest, I hope that everyone will speak loudly and as one voice, that the problem is not that there isn't enough money, that the problem is not that our group deserves money and the other group does not, but that the problem is that those of privilege, those who are in control of the wealth, are unwilling to share it. There is plenty of wealth to do what we need to, but the people who control the wealth also control the people who write the laws and govern the people. We must set them straight. They are not entitled to hoard the wealth that the community produces.

The idea that wealth is created through investment is not wrong. But the work is not done by the investor. The entire community, working as an enterprise, including the law, the labor, the natural legacy of the community, and the social fabric, is needed, and that the law is written so that the investors reap the rewards and are able to accumulate that wealth for personal hoards, while others live with too little to meet their needs, is a mistake in the structure of the economy. Such a harvest of the wealth by the wealthy undermines the vigor of that economic engine, and damages the lives that are its purpose. Wealth must be circulated, and the needs of the people met, or the society will fall ill, decay, and destroy itself. We are witness to this process now.

Americans seem to regard the acquisition of wealth as the best way to create personal security, and the right to get wealthy as an intrinsic right of self-care. It is the core of the American Dream, and there are so many flaws in this logic

1) Wealth in a silo is inherently insecure. Every person, no matter how wealthy, depends on the health and well-being of everyone else and the community to be safe and comfortable. If you do not share, you are a target. You resort to guns, increase oppression, become callous to the loss of life, witness the destruction of our planet and discover the meaninglessness of your own life.

2) Wealth in a silo ignores the eternal human strategy of sharing to ensure community well-being. People instinctively reject selfishness on the part of others. If you have nuts, meat, land or money, you are expected to share. Sharing creates long-term stability and security for everyone, and hoarding (including wealth) is damaging to the community. Imagine I have caught game and I hoard it. Before I can eat it, it rots. Others have not enjoyed the benefit of my catch, nor have I.

3) The most secure and stable societies, in which everyone gets their needs met, value sharing. Wealth is not required to have a rich and meaningful life when the entire community is healthy. When the social fabric is healthy, there is no poverty no matter how little wealth there is.

4) Wealth disparity in itself is a signal of decay. (See "The Spirit Level" by Wilkinson and Picket.) Social, political and economic sustainability is reduced by increasing wealth disparity. We can improve our chances of social and cultural longevity and sustainability by creating institutions which enforce the circulation of wealth from the wealthy back to the poor and marginal.

Since the normal functioning of the economy transfers wealth from the poor and marginal to the wealthy, measures that transfer the wealth back to the underprivileged merely balances the system. The question we are compelled to ask is whether we will allow those who are privileged and control the wealth to continue to increase their wealth forever, leaving the rest of us to become poorer and poorer, more and more desperate, and the society ever more divided and combustible, or we will decide that the well-being of the community and its members is important, that living in one community in which everyone is valued is important, and find ways to capture the wealth of the society to correct its ills.

The change we must make in our thinking is from "wealth=security" to "sharing=security." When we achieve illusory security through wealth, we divide our fates from the fates of our fellows, and make the world less stable. When we decide that the entire society must be secure and healthy to promote personal security and wellness, then sharing is the logical course of action. We must all be asking, “How can we make the community and its members healthier and more secure?” And be prepared to support those strategies with the wealth of our communities.


A silent thought

May 3, 2022

I have neglected my blog because life whirls around me and my efforts fly centrifugally away. I write and my words are lodged in a notebook, a letter, a journal, any where but without a thought of this repository. 

Perhaps I will change this. Perhaps I will fly another year before I land on this page again. Perhaps I will devote my time to a website or academic papers. But Dispolemic is the home of my writing. Perhaps I will try to bring unkeyed writing to the electronic page. 

I am going to take a chance and deposit a coin of my time from five years ago. Let's see if the silent audience even notices.