Upstream - Documentary #15: The Myth of Freedom Under Capitalism
Episode Date: May 8, 2023Although its intellectual handmaidens love to insist otherwise — capitalism is not a system that truly embodies freedom. We all feel it, of course — that nagging sense that we lack any agency over... the choices that shape our lives, the frustration we feel at our bosses, the tension we feel with our landlords, the sense that we’re all just stuck in a rat race. We might lack the language to articulate it, or a framework within which to situate it, but we all know, deep down, that this ain’t it — that there’s something deeply wrong. In this episode, we explore why this is — why, despite what we’re constantly being told — that we currently live under the freest system ever — that we’re not actually free — and why we’re all imprisoned within capitalism. We start with a brief history of how we got here, what different conceptions of freedom have meant historically — and how they can be applied to our current condition — and then we take a deep dive into the mechanisms this system uses to keep us all imprisoned, and, finally, how we can break free. Featured Guests: Matt Christman: Co-host of Chapo Trap House Ayesha Khan: Infectious diseases scientist, germ doctor, grassroots organizer, writer, astrobiologist, and educator Corey Mohler: Creator of Existential Comics Jessica Gordon Nembhard: Professor of Community Justice and Social Economic Development in the Department of Africana Studies at John Jay College of the City University of New York and author of Collective Courage: A History of African American Cooperative Economic Thought and Practice David Bollier: Activist, Scholar, and blogger focused on the commons and author of The Commoner's Catalog for Changemaking: Tooks for the Transitions Ahead. Music by Collections of Colonies of Bees, Peder, Mammoth Star, Do Make Say Think, and Chris Zabriskie, Thank you to Bethan Mure for the cover art. Upstream theme music was composed by Robert Raymond. You can read the full transcript of this episode here. This episode of Upstream was made possible with support from listeners like you. Upstream is a labor of love — we couldn't keep this project going without the generosity of our listeners and fans. Please consider chipping in a one-time or recurring donation at www.upstreampodcast.org/support If your organization wants to sponsor one of our upcoming documentaries, we have a number of sponsorship packages available. Find out more at upstreampodcast.org/sponsorship For more from Upstream, visit www.upstreampodcast.org and follow us on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and Bluesky. You can also subscribe to us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts.
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Thank you. You're listening to Upstream.
Upstream.
Upstream.
Upstream.
A podcast of documentaries and conversations that invites you to unlearn everything you thought
you knew about economics. I'm Robert Raymond. And I'm Della Duncan. Join us as we journey upstream
to the heart of our economic system and discover carnage stories of game-changing solutions
based on connection, liberation, and prosperity for all.
It was that same yearning for freedom that nearly 250 years ago gave birth to a special place called America.
I believe you won't keep political freedom unless you also have economic freedom,
which means that you must have a large part
of free enterprise in your whole economy.
Americans in many of our largest cities
would have to work more than 100 hours a week
at minimum wage to afford the rent on a one bedroom home.
It's according to a new survey by the United Way.
America is freedom. Freedom of enterprise. And freedom is special and rare. It's fragile.
It needs production.
Is man free? In mankind's history, capitalism is the only system that answers yes.
So if you think about the top five issues
Americans are concerned about,
homelessness would be among the major concerns.
It's become an epidemic across the country.
Communities are struggling with how to address the issue.
As of the new year, people who are unsheltered
in the state of Missouri will be charged with a misdemeanor
for sleeping on state-owned land.
There is a growing list of states and cities
making it illegal to sleep outside.
The operation of free markets is so essential.
Freedom.
Should we care in America about whether or not we own?
Freedom.
Our personal freedom is from the people.
Wherever you had freedom, you had capitalism.
Capitalism is a necessary condition.
Mighty and free.
God bless America.
Good night.
Freedom, freedom
Here comes the freedom man
On this day of independence
On this independence day
Listen to an American troubadour from the USA.
I'm singing a song of freedom for all people who cry out to be free.
Freedom of choice is not synonymous with capitalism.
Capitalism operates under a lot of mythologies and misunderstandings,
and that's one of the main ones. Jessica Gordon Nembhard is Professor of community justice and social economic development in the Department
of Africana Studies at John Jay College of the City University of New York. She's also the author
of Collective Courage, a history of African American cooperative economic thought and practice.
We don't have freedom of choice in capitalism because capitalism's main purpose is the maximization of profits
for people who already have capital, who already have resources. So it's really about those who
have getting more and getting it at the expense of anybody and anything else. And so it's not
freedom of choice for the humans that have to rent themselves, that have to
rent their labor, that have to hire themselves out in order to make a living. There's no freedom of
choice there. Capitalism is continually in the economic sphere a system of domination. One person
owns the business and they dominate the workers. Corey Moeller is the creator of Existential Comics,
Corey Moeller is the creator of Existential Comics, a webcomic about philosophy and existentialism. do I want to pay my rent or do I want to get the haircut I want to get? And it's obvious which one they get. How can you call that freedom?
It's just, it's not very coherent.
And you say you're free if you can, okay, you can quit your job, right? So I'm free.
I can quit my job.
I can go to another boss.
But that's still a system of domination.
It's like saying a slave is free if he can choose his master.
It's obviously absurd, right?
We're already starting in a deeply
inequitable world. And then we're making more inequity and compounding that inequity the moment
you add something like a job that someone has to have in order to live. Ayesha Khan is an abolitionist
clinical microbiologist, grassroots organizer, writer, and educator. So who's gonna die, right?
Who's gonna die faster? Who's going to die
more? It's always going to be the people that just start off with less. And I think we're all
enslaved in a world where we don't actually have community to be able to access food, water,
shelter, and love in the way that we need, where it's conditional, it's transactional, that we have
to give ourselves up, give our free will choice up in order to live. And I think people see that
as, oh, if I work, I have freedom. But work is the absence of freedom. Work is what we do majority
of our lives. And the little time that we have, whether we call
it weekends or vacations, we spend recovering from burnout. So we're not actually living.
We're not free during any of it. People know this deep within them, I think.
Capitalism is a system built on choice and the freedom to choose, but it's really,
it's the freedom to make the wrong choice, essentially only.
Matt Chrisman is a co-host of Chapo Trap House.
I mean, not only in the moral sense, which is true because it incentivizes and in fact
necessitates treating people as instruments, denying them their humanity.
And that means denying your own humanity.
So it's like the wrong moral choice.
But it's also just subjectively the wrong choice.
It feels wrong because since our choices, the choices we get to make in capitalism are
all meant consciously or unconsciously to sort of fill the hole that capitalism leaves
in our lives, that feeling of emptiness and separation that capitalism requires us to
operate off of, and it cannot fill that hole.
That means that
every decision we make, every choice we make, will feel like, in some way or another, it was
the wrong one. Because if we had made the right choice somewhere along the line, we'd feel better.
We would feel more whole. So we just got to blame ourselves for the wrong choices and then try to
make the right ones. But under capitalism, there can be no right choice. There can be no choice that fills that hole because the hole cannot be filled because it is the very matrix
of choices that we live in that alienates us from ourselves and from each other and makes it
impossible for us to live with a notion of the sacred that can give sucker a deeper sucker than
any purchase or a consumption can. Although its intellectual handmaidens love to insist otherwise,
capitalism is not a system that truly embodies
freedom. We all feel it, of course, that nagging sense that we lack any agency over the choices
that shape our lives, the frustration we feel at our bosses, the tension we feel with our landlords,
the sense that we're all just stuck in a rat race. We might lack the language to articulate it, or a framework within which to situate it,
but we all know deep down that this ain't it.
That there's something deeply wrong.
In this episode, we're going to explore why this is.
Why, despite what we're constantly being told, that we currently live under the
freest system ever, that we're not actually free, and why we're actually imprisoned within
capitalism. We'll start with a brief history of how we got here, what different conceptions
of freedom have meant historically, and how they can be applied to our current condition.
have meant historically and how they can be applied to our current condition. And then we'll take a deep dive into the mechanisms this system uses to keep us
all in prison and how we can break free. We'll start in 15th century England, during the beginning of perhaps one of the most significant
events in human history, the
enclosure of the commons. Well, I would start by saying that I think that commons, or really better
the verb commoning, is kind of the default form of social organization for humanity, going back
to time immemorial. Because evolutionary scientists will tell us that cooperation has been key to the
advancement of the species, the evolution of the species, through language, through sharing new
technologies, through many other things. So in some ways, there's no singular commons that's
pre-modern. There were countless variations across time and culture.
David Bollier is an activist, scholar, and writer
focused on the commons. His most recent book is titled The Commoners' Catalog for Changemaking,
Tools for the Transitions Ahead. But in modern times, we tend to associate the commons
with English history, where in medieval times, commoners, peasants, villagers, others, shared the growing of crops
in the fields. They shared access to the forest, which was indispensable for the wood they needed
or the acorns for their pigs. They shared pastures. And they often were subservient to a feudal lord,
but they had a certain degree of autonomy and control and guaranteed access
to the things that were important to their livelihood.
So the feudal mode of production that preceded capitalism was premised on extraction by elites
of agricultural surplus of peasants. Some of them were in a serf relationship, some of them were
tenants, some of them were freeholders. But one way or another, they owed
some percentage of their labor and produce to lords. And there's an escalating series of
obligations, kick-ups, basically, in these noble families that essentially acted as military
protection rackets. But that setup did not incentivize anyone in that chain to more intensively exploit themselves,
basically, to make agricultural surplus.
Part of the big reason for that is because of the existence of common lands, which were
accessible by anyone and were where people were able to ensure their own subsistence,
regardless of whatever they're putting out for surplus to pay
for feudal rents or tribute or to sell on their own, because that was part of the economy was
people selling their own surplus. They could still subsist in these common lands. And starting in the
15th century in England, the Lords of England began the process of enclosing those commons,
which took about 300 years to complete. And over the course of that time, the peasantry lost access to common lands, which became private land, which
is then used to feed sheep for the explosive wool trade, which becomes the key export in the English
trade economy. The enclosure of the commons removed the possibility of escape from the market, and it forced peasants
into a situation where they were essentially thrown into a free market for rents. That meant
that now peasants and farmers were all incentivized around increasing productivity,
or else they would lose their land to other, more efficient farmers. This led to the consolidation of land holdings by larger,
more efficient farmers. And this helped accelerate the eviction of people from their villages and
commons where they could no longer make a living. And they became the beggars and wage slaves of
Charles Dickens' England, albeit this, of course, happened over a few centuries. But the basic dynamic was the same
of people no longer being able to survive in their rural commons, moving to the city and the budding
industrialization that was going on. And this is the most important part for the creation of
capitalism, the growth in the number of landless former peasants who were essentially forced to move to cities, specifically London.
London is the first and biggest in the UK, where they became the first proletarians of the modern
era, the people who had nothing to live off of. They had no capital but their own labor, which
became accessible to the traders and to the proto-capitalists of the era, and very importantly,
also created an internal market for things like clothing and foodstuffs that didn't exist as
intensely in other countries in Europe because people could grow their own food and make their
own clothing. But increasingly, there is this dispossessed population in England specifically
that did not have that access to their self-sufficiency and were forced to buy these clothing.
And that creates the first internal market, which is key to the explosion of capitalism.
There is, of course, trade to find European commerce, but it was usually trade of goods produced in one place for goods produced in another and then transmitted over distances through nodes.
one place for goods produced in another, and then transmitted over distances through nodes.
This was the first robust internal market for products, not to the elite and the city goers,
the burglars, but for common people. That was all predicated upon the enclosures, the removal of that safety valve that allowed people to subsist in the face of the market.
And if they wanted to opt out of market relationships,
an enclosure made the opting out impossible. And that is, you don't really have capitalism
until you have a situation where everyone at every chain in the mode of production
is compelled into a market relationship. And soon we had the rise of capitalism as a system,
which you could say eclipsed the former modes of organization. And maybe for the
past 10 generations only, humankind has been governed by the dictates, the imperatives of
capitalism, in which private accumulation through capital is the dominant priority of the society,
ordering all else through market behaviors.
priority of the society, ordering all else through market behaviors.
So that's a little thumbnail sketch of the rise of capitalism, but a big part of it is the enclosure of the commons and the freedoms, sovereignty, self-determination, local control
that used to prevail.
So capitalism sprang to life in Europe, but we all know too well that the story of capitalism,
of enclosure, of privatization, of the emergence of wage labor,
didn't end in the satanic mills of London.
Since it first reared its ugly head in the world,
this system has jumped from host to host, nation to nation,
eventually sucking the life out like a vampire squid, hollowing out its prey and depleting it of nutrients.
So where else did it infect in this early period? Well, the original dream of American citizenship was this universalized baronial rule.
The feudal relationships would be dissolved, the hierarchy, the society of orders would
be dissolved, and a new equal citizenship would be created.
What would make it free citizenship is that no one would be able to compel anyone else
the way that feudal lords were able to compel their peasants.
And the reason that that was true is that everyone would own their own land and everyone would have that self-sufficiency that was lost with the enclosures
because there was all of this native land to expropriate. And that meant that the beau idea
embodied by the Jeffersonian Democrat Republicans was that yeoman farmers would be able to defend
liberty defined as like the individual autonomy as opposed to the more
socialized conception, more communal conception of liberty that emerges out of a class struggle in
Europe around the same time. Because in Europe, the idea of everyone owning land is absurd.
The land is spoken for. There's not enough of it to go around. In America, there's an idea that at
least that generation of Americans can all achieve
self-sufficiency, again, through the ownership of their own land.
And a wage relationship is a submission to another power.
And so the people who were brought into wage relationships in early America were done so
very fitfully, very hostily.
Largely, a wage relationship was dominated by relatively recent poor immigrants who didn't
have access to the minimal degree of capital necessary to claim and improve the land.
But eventually, even yeoman American settlers were forced into a wage relationship by the
realities of capitalism dominating the agricultural economy, the reality of concentration and efficiency sort of squeezing
out smallholders in the same process that occurred in Europe. This happened because over time,
producing agricultural surplus requires increasing investment in capital and supplies,
which in turn requires farmers to borrow against the value of their land, putting them at risk of foreclosure
and restricting their ability to work their land on their own terms, and eventually forcing them
too into wage labor. And the Democratic Party emerges sort of out of, in large part, the
reaction of the common wage laborer to the encroachment of this idea of wage slavery.
And then in the South, that anxiety is forestalled by the emergence of caste racial slavery,
which creates this distinction between a wage relationship and the skin-branded slave
relationship that helps diffuse that. And in the North, it's diffused by the push westward, the continued
opening of lands to the west. But eventually, this tension explodes after the Civil War
in a series of massive labor upheavals starting in the 1870s and extending to the turn of the
century. This time, known to historians as the Period of great upheavals, started with the Great Railroad Strike
in 1877 and included events like the Pullman Strike, the Steel Strike, the Great Anthracite
Coal Strike, the Textile Worker Strike, and perhaps most famously, the Haymarket Affair,
which was, among many other things, a demand for an eight-hour workday, which ended in a bloody
massacre and is considered to be the origin of May 1st, International Workers' Day. Although
labor won many battles during this tumultuous time, ultimately, it was capitalism which would
eventually emerge victorious. What emerges out of that, out of that struggle, is the full
imposition of the wage relationship, except for those remaining people. At that point,
it's still 80% of the population who are farmers, but which will rapidly shrink over the course of
the 20th century. But it's essentially a frog in a bucket situation. People are horrified by the
concept of wage slavery being imposed upon them, but as it happens, it happens individually, you know, to individuals rather to groups of people. I mean, over time, it's just imposed the same way that enclosures were. relationship and replaced the self-sufficient homestead with the private mortgaged home
and quarter acre lot as the stand-in for what had been like a real sufficiency.
And now, you can't grow your own crops.
You can't sustain yourself off of what you can produce on your quarter acre in the suburbs,
but it still stands in for that lost liberty.
quarter acre in the suburbs, but it still stands in for that lost liberty. The term wage slave,
of course, has been used throughout American history and in other countries as well. Like Abraham Lincoln, who was no communist, openly said, yeah, we want to end slavery and we want
to end wage slavery next. Here's Corey Muller again. I think it was more obvious back then
because like in early American history, like in the I remember reading about the steel factories and they would work 16 hours a day, seven days a week.
And they had one day off the early steel factories.
And that day was the 4th of July to celebrate how great America was.
Right.
So when you look at these people, first of all, it's obvious that they're
not choosing. The word freedom should never enter anyone's mind when that situation occurs. And you
can look at it and it looks much closer to slavery than what we have today. Obviously, today things
are easier. We have a much more industrialized society. So you're going to work and you can fool
yourself into thinking you're a little free because just things are generally easier. We're
in the most comfortable time in human history, the most wealthy time in human
history. But the relationship between workers and capital hasn't changed. And that's still a master
slave relationship. Or maybe if you're uncomfortable with the word slave, it's, you know, a master
servant relationship or whatever. But yes, to have a full account of human freedom, you have to end
the system of domination, where one person commands and one person obeys.
That is fundamentally a master-servant relationship, no matter what you do.
The emergence of capitalism looked different from region to region, from country to country.
The process here in the United States was a little different than
in Europe. But the rise of capitalism has always included certain procedures, namely the enclosure
and privatization of common land and proletarianization, the coercion of groups of people
often racialized into an arrangement where they had to sell themselves to an employer on the
employer's terms.
This loss of autonomy and the coercion of the mass of people into wage labor is something
that we now simply take for granted.
But it's important to remember that people fought, often to the death, to avoid this
fate in the early days of capitalism.
They legitimately sought as a form of slavery, hence the term wage slave.
But as wage slavery was becoming the dominant socioeconomic relationship in the United States for most people,
Africans and African descendants, along with many indigenous communities, were
being forced into a much more horrific form of slavery, chattel slavery, which itself
was an integral element in the capitalist project.
We cannot separate this form of slavery from capitalism either.
They exist to support and uphold one another in very fundamental ways.
And even when slavery was officially abolished in the United States,
African Americans were still subjected in many different ways.
Here's Jessica Gordon-Nimhard again.
The first way I would say would be the sharecropping. And as I
said, the perpetual debt peonage. Sometimes they were farming the same places where they had been
enslaved. You know, you could work 24 hours a day and you still could never get out of debt. You
could never get your head above water. You could barely feed your family, that kind of thing.
So that was one way that slavery was perpetuated. Another way is actually
what's called the convict leasing system. And it's again, after the Civil War, especially after the
Reconstruction period, many states started passing laws that actually made it illegal not to work.
So it was illegal to be unemployed, illegal to be in debt, illegal to be what's called the vagrant, right, to be homeless, to be standing around in the street.
And so what does that mean if that's illegal?
That means you get arrested and you get put in jail.
Once you're in jail, they then leased you out back again to a plantation owner or a mine owner or whatever, leased you out.
And basically you were doing slave labor,
you didn't get to control that labor because you were in jail or in prison. They leased you out and
got the money that was paid by the former plantation owners. And it was legal in our
constitution because the 13th amendment, which abolished enslavement, has a clause that says slavery is abolished except
for people duly convicted of a crime. So you make poverty and joblessness a crime, and then people
are duly convicted of it, and then you can enslave them. Also, just labor in prisons, even if it's not
convict leasing, is basically slave labor. If you look
at the conditions, right, a lot of the prisons don't have to follow federal OSHA health and
safety policies. They don't have to pay minimum wage. And so even if you're working in a prison
and not leased out to somebody else, it's still basically slave labor. And that's continuing to this day. And you
know that the United States has the highest percentage of its population behind bars.
And the majority of those people are Black, and especially people of color, Black and brown people
are the majority of the people behind bars. And so we still basically have slavery by another name.
And again, we couch it in this mythology that people deserve it because they're convicted of
a crime. But if you look at what they're convicted of, even today, we don't necessarily convict
people of loitering and unemployment as a crime, but we still having mental illness, having
drug addiction, right? All those things are still
considered crimes. Plus, we also know that we have a huge high rate of innocent people behind bars
that have been targeted to be put behind bars when they're actually innocent of the crime.
In addition to they may be innocent because they have health and mental health issues that should
be dealt with in a different way. So those are kind of the big
broad ways. But also I would say our whole capitalist system is kind of a slavery system
because you don't have a lot of choices about who to work for, where to work for, what the conditions
are. We definitely are, even if we have so-called a good job, you know, it's still basically wage
theft because we're never, we're not really paid
what we're worth. Most of us are not paid an appropriate salary for the work that we do,
because again, capitalists are maximizing profit, which means they have to minimize costs
and labor is a cost. And so in some ways, you know, the 99% or at least the 80% of the population are doing slave labor still
and not compensated properly. And then there's so many people of color who are still
specifically targeted and have the least opportunities who are stuck in this kind of
slavery and wage slavery. People talk about prisons in America as a form of legal slavery.
But even that, I feel like, is not thinking about it big enough.
Here's Ayesha Khan again.
And I think in the same way, thinking about, you know, jobs as a form of slavery is still not thinking big enough.
I think just communicating to people that if your survival is contingent on something, not contingent
on you caring deeply or showing up for your community, but contingent on you doing XYZ things,
and then whether you can and can't do that, whether you can and can't get a job, what kind of job you
get is going to be dictated by the privilege that you hold. Late-stage capitalism does a really good job of making it very difficult for us to see that we're
enslaved, making it very difficult for us to even identify who our oppressor is, because we don't
have someone coming to our door, putting a gun to our head very viscerally, and forcing us to work,
right? It might be more obvious with prisons, for example,
the prison industrial complex, right?
Someone is incarcerated and they're forced to work
with little to no wages, okay?
But I actually think it's worse when you don't realize
that's what's happening to you,
but it's just made a lot more palatable
so you don't see it.
So when someone doesn't come to your door,
but since the day you've been born, they socialize
you, they normalize you not being free, they normalize you not having the right to live,
they normalize you having to constantly prove yourself because you have zero worth and value
unless you generate profit for someone else, then you're going to do it to yourself.
So for the longest time, me and many people, almost all people on this planet
will willingly say, you know what, I chose this job. I chose to have this career path.
I chose to be here. So I'm going to point a gun at my own head and self-optimize,
be more self-productive, self-inflict, self-discipline and that is what capitalism is in the form that it takes today
and i think that's a lot more insidious in being still slavery but we just don't see the slave
master actively lashing at us and that's almost worse because we don't know where our pain is
coming from so it takes a lot more i think to get to the bottom of that type of pain
and that type of suffering, because covert violence is a lot harder to point out than overt violence. අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි The So So we've talked a bit about why capitalism is antithetical to freedom in a lot of practical ways,
but it might be helpful here to really explore what we mean by freedom more concretely. To do
this, let's take a brief interlude and explore some different philosophical
conceptions of freedom. Here's Corey Muller again.
In the early social contract theory, there was differences between Locke, Hobbes, and Rousseau
as well. And Hobbes gave sort of the most brutal version of the social contract theory where
human beings, in order to attain safety, had to give up all power to the Leviathan, meaning the king,
literally supporting an absolute monarchy,
to have power over everyone because it would be best for everyone
to just basically give up their freedom to the king
to ensure that they're not just going to shoot each other, right?
He said you're still free in the state
as long as you're not physically forced to do something.
Like, so if someone grabs you and puts you in a lake, you didn't freely go into the lake because they pushed
you in, right? He says, other than that, it's a free choice. So of course, philosophers say,
well, what if a robber comes on the highway and says your money or your life? And Hobbes bit the
bullet like these philosophers do and said, look, it's still a free choice because your freedom was
exercised. Now, obviously, a lot of other philosophers jumped on
him and said, this is totally ridiculous. You're still being coerced, right? And this gets to the
heart of the work or starve dilemma that workers face. If you're born with absolutely nothing,
you're in a your money or your life situation. You're going to work for me for however many
hours I say, you're going to show up and do whatever I say, or you're going to be homeless,
right? And an enormous number of Americans are really, really close to being homeless,
like closer than people think, you know? It's like, that isn't freedom. And in philosophy,
this is called like negative freedom, the absence of coercion. And there's also positive freedom.
And this is what people like Rousseau were taking further, like, there's also the freedom to not
starve to death. That's like a kind of freedom. And I don't even remember who said this.
I think it actually might've been a standup comedian, but it really has stuck in my head
for a long time. He says, if you want to know how free you are in America, if you want to know what
freedom means in America, you think Americans are free. Just do one thing for me, go to any major
city and show up with no wallet and no money and see what kind of freedom you have.
You won't have the freedom to be warm. You won't have the freedom to eat. You won't have the
freedom. You can't get a hotel. You can't do anything. You literally can't do anything.
So when we talk about freedom, there can't just be a lack of coercion of explicit coercion. There
has to be a kind of positive freedom in order to exercise true human freedom. You have to have
a capacity to exercise that freedom. And that's what philosophers would call positive freedom. In order to exercise true human freedom, you have to have a capacity to
exercise that freedom. And that's what philosophers would call positive freedom. And that's kind of
what's missing from the equation of when like right-wing libertarians say, oh, well, you have
explicit freedom. You're like, that's not enough. You have to have the ability to exercise your
freedom. And for that, you need, in America, you need money, but in a non-capitalist society,
society would be structured in a way that people could participate in society more exercising their freedom. it has the same result. Without fully realizing it, we've all been trapped within a prison
that has been meticulously constructed to make it feel like we are exercising free choice,
when in reality, we're just choosing between different ways of not starving to death.
We're all compelled into the market, whether we like it or not, and nothing about that is voluntary when you have a voluntary
contract you know under capitalism if you are born with no money which is the majority of people if
you're not born with money everybody knows you have to sell your labor to survive and who do
you have to sell it to you have to sell it to the people who have money right right? So yes, it's voluntary to choose to get hired at a job, right? But again,
there's something very suspicious at this. Like, do you know what job most people choose?
They all almost choose the same job. Whoever's hiring, that's the job they choose. Most people
don't reject, like especially the more poor you are, they don't reject four or five jobs before they accept the job that they choose.
Most people accept the first offer.
So it's like, the people at McDonald's, do you think they chose McDonald's?
No, they went there because it's hiring.
So what is the choice?
How is it a voluntary choice if you just have to pay rent and then you go to a job and you
accept the very first job that offered you a position?
It doesn't seem like much of a choice was made there or an expression of human freedom
in the part of the worker.
It's not a voluntary association.
It's just not an expression of authentic freedom.
I think the word freedom, the way people define it today,
has been desecrated and sort of defiled and ruined and co-opted by capitalism. So freedom,
I think, has been, it's again, one of those words that we use a lot, but we don't really realize
what it means. I don't know how many people have been like sat down and just asked,
what does it mean to be free? Like, what would I need to feel free? And it goes back, I think,
first to have our basic conditions and needs met, our basic survival resources that we need.
The only way we can really be free is if we're not living every day from paycheck to paycheck,
if we're not living every day worried about where our next meal is going to come from.
And majority of the people on this planet, no matter what we shroud with superficial layers
of comfort, a majority of the people on this planet, 99% of us, are about one or two personal
health crisis away from being unhoused. One major health crisis, a death of a loved one,
one major natural disaster, for example, that destroys your home. We're all just one or two steps away from
being unhoused. And that basically creates a constant fight or flight that we've just normalized.
Now, any form of abuse, torture, and oppression can be normalized if it's titrated and gradually
exposed to you over time. And that's exactly what capitalism does. So we don't even
know that we've never been free. And a lot of people think within the confines of their cages,
they've taken the values of the empire on as their own. So they think freedom is, oh,
accumulation of wealth, accumulation of accolades and trophies. And all of that is just capitalism's gradual brainwashing of us over time
to tell us all the things we should be. And people don't realize that that has shaped our core
identity. So we've spent our whole life largely being defined by ambition or value or dreams and
aspirations that are not really our own, that have been put into our minds. And we've
been told, this is what you have to do to be considered a worthy, good individual in society.
And if you don't do that, on the one hand, you could die because capitalism isn't a choice.
It's get bread or get dead. If I don't participate in the system, I don't know where else. I've been
separated from my land. My connection to my land has been severed. So I can't grow my own food. I can't build my own house. And that's what capitalism does really
well. It holds you hostage. It slowly commodifies and objectifies everything. And that includes us.
We're merely products that can be extracted or exploited for profit generation. Similarly,
food has been turned into product. Shelter is a product. Health is a product. And therefore,
to access any of that, all you can do is turn yourself into a product and then sell yourself
to the highest bidder. And that's not a choice. So we're not free. And it's ironic when people
even think of getting their quote unquote dream job as any form of freedom. It's just, you know,
a slightly more palatable form of chains. What capitalism does is it isolates us. And what we end up facing, if we're not critical, is we end up facing a very slow, long, gradual, prolonged death. So we're all just waiting to die very slowly. And we're sick. And we don't even realize how we're sick, because being in this society and under these conditions has been so normalized.
And that's the thing. Capitalism claims to create innovation and creativity, but all it does,
it kills innovation and creativity, because fear is not a sustainable motivator. And that's what we're all doing under capitalism. We're afraid every day. Since the day we've been born, we
haven't had the right to live, which means we've never had basic safety and stability and security.
The system of wage labor and the prison that it serves as is upheld through modern capitalism by a number of different mechanisms. These mechanisms, just like the entire system itself,
operate somewhat invisibly. We take these things for granted. Sure, they give us headaches and we
love to complain about them with our neighbors and friends, but we rarely regard them as an intentional set of rules designed explicitly to keep us in chains.
One of the main examples of these coercive mechanisms is the U.S. healthcare system.
Universal healthcare would save corporations a massive, massive amount of money, but almost
none of them support it.
In fact, they actively lobby against it.
Why? Thank you. enormous amount of money and they're still against it. You think your employer wants to pay for your health care? It's a huge loss to every single company in America that they have to pay their
workers health care. And yet they come out and guess what? They don't want the government to do
it. Why? Because that's like a power point. They have control over your health care. So it makes
it so you're a lot more hesitant to quit, change jobs. It just
gives the workers less bargaining power. It's the same reason why every company on earth will spend
more money to defeat a union than to give in to the union's demands. It will happen every single
time, two or three times more money often to defeat the union, because a lot of it is about
power. They don't want the workers to have power over their own lives. They don't want to have
workers to have power over the workplace, say. They don't want them to to have power over their own lives. They don't want to have workers to have power over the workplace. Say they don't want them to, you know, if they tell you to work on Saturday, they don't
want you to say, Hey, you know, screw you.
I'm in a union.
Talk to the union.
They want you to just be like, well, they're going to fire me.
If I don't, I better do it.
So a huge amount of it is about power and nobody wants to talk about it because they
use these words like freedom.
Whereas it's not really about freedom.
It's a power struggle.
Yeah. because they use these words like freedom, whereas it's not really about freedom, it's a power struggle. Yeah, I mean, there is a conscious solidarity among owners
in that they might not cooperate consciously,
but they all have a identical interest
in seeing their leverage in any situation
liquidated and destroyed in favor of their own.
And they'll encourage anything,
even at individual cost,
that maintains that power dynamic
relative to the workers. Not only does a healthcare system tied to employment make it difficult to
move between jobs, giving individual employers an immense amount of power over us and restricting
our freedom of movement within the prison of wage slavery itself, it also makes it extremely difficult to really exit that prison.
It makes it difficult to exit wage labor and become either self-employed or just do anything
outside of the wage labor system. It's effectively impossible for many people to
get private insurance to pay for insurance that is not being subsidized by an employer.
Even in capitalism's own terms,
the idea that it maximizes freedom, and specifically in America where the small
business ownership replaced in many respects the yeoman farmer ideal as the way to be self-sufficient.
Okay, I have to have a job and I have to have a bank account and I have to have money to live,
but if I own my business, then I am not at anyone's beck and call.
I am not anyone's wage slave.
And in fact, I get to have wage slaves and boss them around.
And that is the dream.
But that dream is hampered in a lot of cases in this country because to strike out on your
own is to give up the insurance you have as whatever job you're at.
And uploading that cost onto a new small business is too much for many people.
And a lot of people are not given even the freedom to pursue that
smallholder dream because of the fact of private insurance.
Another mechanism the system uses to keep us all tethered to wage labor
is commodified housing.
We've all got to pay the rent, right? This also
severely limits our ability to even temporarily exit wage labor. Just the systematic reality of
people falling out of the ability to fucking keep a roof over their head because of the skyrocketing
and ever upward trending cost of living in American cities and cost of housing specifically in
American cities, which is, that's how cities at this point, their economies work.
Upward property values is the engine of the entire urban economy.
The solution here, as everyone knows, is to provide housing, to build housing.
But not only would that have the effect of potentially lowering property values by making
more housing stock, making less competition over
more properties. But it would also short circuit the sham social contract that we live under,
because people would ask the question rightly, well, how come those people get a house
and I have to work to keep the roof over my head? And that is a very good question. Why is that?
The fact is that
homelessness and the public devastating homelessness that now is on display in American
cities is a very important tool of coercion. But because it's people, hey, they stopped being able
to pay their bills and now they're in the street. That's all individual choices that led to that.
Even though you see that whether or not people become homeless individually, yeah,
you can chart an individual's course to homelessness by a bunch of decisions and you can
smugly say, oh, they made the wrong decision here, here, and here. But you see that it is the larger
tides of economic fortune that push people in groups into homelessness over time. And that is
just the reality of housing prices in an environment of constricting employment
opportunities.
And there is no current political formation that has any chance of wielding power in America
that could address that context because it's the generative basis for everything that both
parties and all the political power structures
in America's cities and states and at the federal level depend upon. A new law in Missouri just took
effect in the new year, making it illegal for homeless people to sleep on state land.
KNDC 9's Peyton Headley is live. Eric Berger with Shelter KC is concerned about the new law
criminalizing those without a home. And that means homeless people can't sleep in parks, under bridges or on sidewalks, really anything owned by the state.
And now that enforcement falls on the city.
As of the new year, people who are unsheltered in the state of Missouri will be charged with a misdemeanor for sleeping on state owned land.
There is a growing list of states and cities making it illegal to sleep outside.
Right now, if you're in Tennessee and you live in a tent,
it's a felony.
Portland, Oregon is banning tent living and shifting
homeless into city-sanctioned mass encampment sites.
And the city of Los Angeles is banning tent cities near
schools and daycare centers.
I'm joined right now by Cathy Connors, the executive director of...
It makes sleeping or camping on state land without permission
a crime, a Class C felony.
It's a warning the first time, but after that could mean up to $750 in fines and 15 days in jail.
That's if the person refuses to be moved to a shelter.
And the law changes the ways counties and cities... so the new law in Missouri that it's illegal to sleep on state land is back to what I was
talking about earlier about creating laws that make it illegal to be poor or without a home or
without a job etc and it just allows us again to put people behind bars and then use their labor, enslave them. We still, the 13th
Amendment still says, it still exists, we haven't changed it, so it still says that slavery is
abolished except for people who are duly convicted of a crime. And so if now the crime is being
homeless and you're convicted of that crime and put in jail, you can be enslaved legally.
of that crime and put in jail, you can be enslaved illegally. That's another way, right, first to penalize people for capitalist exploitation, because basically anyone who's without a home,
who's homeless, it's because of capitalist exploitation. It's because the capitalist
system has commodified housing and made it so that only people who have a certain amount of money can actually afford to have a
place to live. And then if you've got states and governments that then say, okay, well, the
capitalists are allowed to make you homeless because they don't hire you or they don't pay
you enough to have a home or they speculate on the land so that housing is too expensive.
But we're going to go even further. We're going to say, if you try to live
somewhere or try to sleep somewhere on state property, that's illegal and we'll lock you up.
What is that, double jeopardy or triple death jeopardy, right? They're just
supporting the capitalist system and making it even worse. The Missouri law is actually just one of the latest of its kind. According to a report
published by the National Homeless Law Center titled
Housing Not Handcuffs, as of 2021, 47 states in the U.S. have anti-homeless legislation.
These laws are just one of the many ways that the capitalist class is trying to entrench
and solidify our imprisonment within the system. And although this usually
happens in more covert ways, the COVID-19 pandemic was actually an incredibly clarifying event when
it comes to this kind of class warfare. Many capitalists and their intellectual handmaidens
were caught saying the quiet part loud, like in this little gem from Fox News host Laura Ingram
and reality TV star and hospitality business consultant John Taffer.
One of the most masked-off moments of the entire GOP revolt
against the enhanced unemployment assistance
that was provided during the early stages of the pandemic.
I'm not an economic professor.
If you get $800 a week unemployment benefits and you live with a partner who also is getting
$800 a week unemployment benefits, $1,600 a week, Laura, $83,000 a year for that household
in unemployment benefits.
The median income in America is only $63,000.
We're incentivizing people to stay home. What if we
gave that additional unemployment benefits to employers to incentivize people to go to work?
Well, what if we just cut off the unemployment? I mean, hunger is a pretty powerful thing. I don't
mean, I'm talking about people who can war. Another especially cartoonish example of class war during this period happened in early 2022,
when a hospital system in Wisconsin sought to temporarily prevent employees from leaving for
other jobs. Although it was eventually lifted, a temporary injunction, an actual court order,
temporary injunction, an actual court order, blocked seven employees of ThetaCare, a major regional hospital system, from leaving for new jobs with another healthcare network until it
could find people to replace them. During this period of time, these employees who had been
fighting for higher wages at ThetaCare were actually restricted from getting new jobs,
forcing them to stay with their current employer. Talk about freedom!
But it's not just healthcare and housing. It's food, water, everything in capitalism
has been commodified and tied to money. Everything is financialized and made into a transaction
in the marketplace. Not only is this not the only way to live, it's no way to live. guitar solo so so so
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so so capitalism makes our relationships transactional because we're buying everything on the market
the things that are keeping us alive are survival resources that are supposed to be sacred like food
we're buying it as products that have been commodified on corporate aisles and what that
does it is it separates us from everything
that we actually need to survive. And so similarly, the word health, I had to ask myself,
like, what does it mean to be healthy? We use that word all the time, wellness, health, self-care.
What do those words mean? What does it mean to be a healthy human being? And how can we even
understand that when the planet that we live on is being drilled into and tankers are pouring oil into our oceans? So what does it
mean to be healthy? And as I kept asking those questions, I think it was very obvious that our
health is directly tied to the health of the lands that we're on and the planet's health in general
and everything on it. And then thinking about what conditions do we need to be healthy,
like baseline conditions, right? We need our basic needs to be met. And that means you have food,
water, shelter, but also community care and love. Everything begins with giving people
the basic, basic conditions that they need to actually survive and thrive.
And for example, we're meant to be raised by a village, not just two people. And even if you
can think and envision that, if I was born into a village, if I was born into a village where I was
connected directly to my land, and that connection was fostered, that we grew the food that we ate,
that we intentionally were entangled in a web of intimate relationships with other flora, fauna,
microbes in our system to try and understand how do we sustain the ecosystem that we're living in, it's not hard to realize that
that's really the baseline health that I would have ever had. And we've never had that.
Well, we have had that, at least elements of it, prior to the domination of capitalism,
prior to the enclosure of the commons, prior to the commodification of everything,
and we can return to that reality and build on it. In fact, many already are.
Well, commons occurs whenever a group of people collectively decide they want to manage a bit of
shared wealth for their shared benefits. Here's David Bollier again.
With an accent on everyone's participation, fairness, and the long-term sustainability of
that resource. And there's no master inventory of commons. It takes place in digital spaces like
open source software. It takes place in cities, the whole urban commons movement
you see in Europe today. There are traditional and indigenous commons, especially associated
with forest and farmland and wild game and irrigation water. There are all sorts of
basically social commons, which people have associations in which they want to manage,
for example, a community garden or community land trusts. There's alternative currencies.
And so there's a huge variety of commons out there, but all of them are trying to enable
people to have freedoms that markets only provide if you have the money. And of course, there's
immediately there a privileging of those who are wealthy and have the money. So the commons,
you might say, democratize and make far more accessible. First of all, the meeting of basic
needs essential to life. But second of all, the certain creativity to be self-determined in how you meet
those needs and to be able to have all of your needs as a human being met and not just your
transactional needs through markets as a consumer, say, or as a worker. So in other words, the
commons is a broader template or matrix for fulfilling our humanity. And these can work at both,
they tend to be at smaller scales where things can be more accountable and negotiable and person
to person, but they can often take very large scales such as Wikipedia, which has tens of
thousands of contributors across several dozen languages, and yet they're federated enough to manage
themselves. So you could say the commons are under-theorized and people, mainstream economists,
politicians, media, don't have the reference points for even understanding them and they're
brought as scope, let alone in a theoretical or generalized way. But let's just say they're out there,
they're robust, they're also bumping up against conventional capitalist and state systems,
which is a source of structural tension. And I think that things will be tumultuous as we
try to rediscover a past that we abandoned 500 years ago. But it has to be done. Thank you. So So So
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So So People often ask me, you know, oh, I love that idea of the commons.
What can I do?
And I think it has to start with what are your talents?
What are your passions?
Where do you live?
What's within arm's reach?
And who are the peers with whom you can work?
Because through all sorts of obscure, isolated, disaggregated collectives like that, brilliant
ideas have poured forth to go viral.
You know, Richard Stallman, the famous hacker at MIT who was behind the free software movement,
was just a single guy who was pissed off that he
couldn't fix the Xerox machine because it was proprietary software. And, you know, it's like
these kinds of individuals with a certain determination and creativity and persistence
is what has driven forward the commons over time, especially in a time of pervasive capitalism. But I'd just like to say that
there are so many diverse inspirational commons out there, some of them very traditional,
some of them very avant, digitally, for example, certain progressive forms of digital ledger
technology or Holochain, things like that. But I also think of the global south
is such a repository of wisdom and knowledge on this that the modern west of capitalist modernity
really should start to pay attention to the relational provisioning dynamics of commons
there. We have things to learn from them just the way certain community land trusts have
learned a lot from indigenous peoples, how to manage land, how to steward it properly,
how to manage a community. So there's a lot that we need to learn, but the first step comes from
unlearning or at least historicizing what we think we know. And the second means jumping into the deep end of some of these
alternatives. For me, the goal of economics is for everybody, human beings, to responsibly
create social reproduction and innovation in ways that will survive through that notion of
seven generations, which we get from indigenous people, right? This long-term
survival, we want our planet to survive. So we need mother earth to be strong. We need human
beings to be strong and supported and human beings, the best way for human beings to have those
economic gains are to do it collectively through economic democracy in a just way. And so for me,
the goals of economics are to make sure
that human beings can work together so that we all prosper, so that we share in the decisions
of how to do things and how to best do things so that we can all prosper. And in ways that for now,
you know, in this period that we're in, some of us are so oppressed and exploited in this system that we have to have
a goal for economics to also be liberatory. And the only way to be liberatory is to reject
capitalism and be in favor of solidarity, cooperative economic systems, and to go back
to those first systems of mutual aid and economic solidarity that really is where
human beings started and we need to reclaim and regain that as the main kind of economic activity
and economic structures where we we do things together we use our collective economic energies
and activities we decide things together we create things together we produce things together. We create things together. We produce things together. We exchange them fairly and in solidarity ways.
And we do it all so that we can have enough prosperity so that the next generations can
continue and be prosperous.
Strong communities are free and strong communities are made up of strong relationships.
And strong relationships are things that we can build today.
And we don't have to wait for this hypothetical utopia. But every day we can show up in our relationships and show up by being
more reciprocal and investing more time and energy and resources in trying to think of how we can
actually provide for each other. Because strong relationships lead us to supporting each other.
And when you have a strong community backing you up, you're much less likely to willingly be exploited. You're just going to say, I don't need this. I don't need this abusive
job. I don't need this exploitative employer. I have a community that I can care about. And that's
what mutual aid is. And we're already doing that for each other. We're already doing that for each
other in many different ways. Like I, for example, we had a snowstorm that blew through many parts of the South and obliterated my
apartment, our roof collapsed, our pipes burst, and it was extremely unexpected. But I think
capitalism has drilled into us this idea that if we ask for help, if we admit that we cannot
survive alone, which we can't, whether we like it or not, we are an interdependent species,
just like all living beings. we need each other that it's
a moral failing if we seek help but when i did there was an outpouring of like support and and
people showing up in many different ways part of which led me to finding alternative temporary
housing until we sort of do damage control and i think that and many other examples are mutual aid
showing up in our relationships to take care of each other every day is mutual aid. And I think the only way we can be free is if we are free as a collective. I know as an individual,
whatever, you know, individuality is an illusion because I'm not self-made, I'm community-made.
Everything I am is an amalgamation of all the people and plants, animals, and microbes that
I've managed to interact with in my lifetime that
have somehow got me to be me in the way that I am. So there is no individual per se, but still,
if I were to think of myself as an individual being, I feel the most free when I'm supported.
I feel the most free when I know that I have people that care about me. I feel the most free when I know that I can do the things that I care
deeply about without having a guillotine hanging over my head, which is what capitalism does.
That's ultimately how I feel most free. And when I feel free is how I'm the best that I can be in
terms of the most creative I can be, the most giving I can be, the most compassionate I can be. That's
the best way I can show up for my community when I'm free. So oddly, if we even want to build
the best world that we can think of, whatever that is, that requires people to be free,
not be chained. And capitalism uses one and one thing only as a motivator, which is fear.
Fear is not sustainable. Fear is something
that people will fight through. Fear is not enough to crush resistance. It's never been. All empires
have fallen. But love, love is sustainable. Love is the most sustainable motivation because it's
regenerative. Love for land. As you take care of the land that you're on, your land takes care of
you. Love for people. You can be in reciprocal relationships. And even like, you know, beyond my time here on earth, once I die, my remains will then go on
to support and provide nutrients for other life forms. So I think being free is about being loved
and cared for, and also doing that in a reciprocal way where we give and intentionally cultivate
those relationships rather than just sort of waiting for them to happen for us. Thank you. So the philosopher that's most associated probably in people's mind with the term freedom today is
Jean-Paul Sartre. And he had a conception that's called like radical freedom, where we have a
certain metaphysical freedom of our consciousness that
allows us to make decisions that cannot be removed. No matter what happens, we're free.
And this sort of sounds like a libertarian view of freedom that might lead him to right-wing
libertarianism. He even said, even further than the money or your life that Thomas Hobbes said
was a free choice, he says, even if you're shackled into a prison, all four hands shackled
down, you can't even move your head left or right. You still have freedom because it cannot be taken
away from you because you have the freedom to interpret your condition. You could be happy with
the situation technically, right? So again, these philosophers like to go all the way and bite the
bullet and say, look, you're free no matter what. There's nothing they can actually do to take away
your freedom, your metaphysical freedom. But then when you go and you start to say, well, how should society look to foster this
freedom? Both him and de Beauvoir, who they were partners and they basically have the same
philosophy, say, look, you have to have a communist society. You have to destroy the class system.
And the reason is like Beauvoir writes about this most in Ethics of Ambiguity. If you were to take your conception
of freedom, it's like what they would call bad faith to say, I should be free, but other people
should not. So it's a bad faith argument to have what they would call, what communists would call
like bourgeois freedom, where you're like, you picture a rich person, he's free to write novels,
ride horses in the country and all this stuff. And the reason he's free is write novels, ride horses in the country, and all this stuff.
And the reason he's free is because he has servants in his house to wash his dishes,
to bring him food, to cook everything.
He has workers at his factory to make him money.
He doesn't do anything.
It's like the leisure class.
They have bourgeois freedom.
Sartre and Beauvoir would say this is fake freedom.
It's bad faith freedom because you can't, as a human being, an authentic human being, human being say look i'm free and that's because other people aren't i'm the master they're the servant you can't will
that kind of freedom authentically you have to will everyone's freedom at once and bouvard says
look everyone's project if you want to be a novelist or if you want to be anything in life
depends on everybody else in society. Because when society became complex,
every single human being depends on every single other human being basically in society.
So everyone has to have the same kind of freedom. It doesn't make sense for some people to have
freedom and some people not to have freedom in a society. So everyone is embedded together,
and you have to sort of ask society's permission, whether you want to or not, to pursue your project. If you want to be a novelist, no matter what kind of society you live in, you have to sort of ask society's permission, whether you want to or not, to pursue your
project.
If you want to be a novelist, no matter what kind of society you live in, you have to ask
permission from society, basically, unless there's some kind of class system and you're
just born rich and you can do whatever you want.
But again, that's not authentic.
So in a true communist society or socialist society that they're envisioning, everyone
has to participate
in all those choices. So like in order to be a novelist, other people have to agree voluntarily
to take care of your basic needs because they want to read your novels. They want to see what
you can produce ahead of time. You have to get other people's permission. That has to be how
it works in any advanced civilized society. But there's a question of, is it voluntary? Do we ask these people's permission? Or is it coercive where you just have money and you demand and dominate the people? An authentic view of freedom has to be a communist vision of freedom because it has to be universalizable if you're a philosopher or if you're just an authentic human being that doesn't want to lie to themselves. That's the only solution.
So that might sound great in the abstract, but how would it play out in reality?
What happens when the threat of starvation is removed and the incentives of capitalism are abolished?
There's a lot of bad faith right-wing attacks on what a communist or socialist
or kind of almost utopian vision would be
of the future where nobody has to be forced to work. A lot of people think, oh, socialists are
just lazy. They want everything handed to them. And when we talk about positive freedom, say the
freedom to not starve, and you'll hear socialists or anarchists sometimes say, well, all our basic
needs will be taken care of, right? So we'll be free to pursue
our own desires. And that's a pretty loaded phrase, all our basic needs will be taken care of,
because they will be taken care of by other people doing work. People can talk about automation all
they want. And it's like, that's great. There's a great dream that everything will be automated,
but that's 100 years away. In the meantime, people have to do work to make civilization run. And when you say, all my basic needs are going to
be taken care of, so I'll be free to do whatever I want. You're not talking about socialist freedom,
you're talking about bourgeois freedom. And if that's your opinion, you can just gamble on crypto
and try to strike it rich and become in the leisure class. And you're not anyone's comrade,
because if you're not willing to work to take care of other people's basic needs and you want your basic needs taken
care of, you're not really participating in a communist society. So there has to be work done.
No one denies this. It's a lot less work, by the way, because a lot of the work under capitalism is
irrelevant. Like the number of hours we have to work is probably like 20 hours a week in America
and everything would be fine. But there's obviously going to be a real serious question
of who's going to do the work that people don't want to do. Right? And conservatives will say
this, like, they're basically admitting when they say this, that we need slaves, right? It's kind of
a funny thing that they admit, they're like, well, nobody will want to be a sewer worker.
So their solution is to force people to do it or starve, right? And you're like, well,
this can't be the solution. And there's, you know, there's pretty obvious solutions.
What's funny about the worst jobs in America is that they're the jobs that pay the least.
Like the less you get paid, the shittier that job is. It's totally backwards. So if you're in a free voluntary society where
people are making free voluntary contracts with each other, the solution is easy. And this is
how people organize all the time. I like to talk about like a desert island. If you have 50 people
that crash on a desert island, the natural state of being is a voluntary society. Everyone will
voluntarily take different jobs and coordinate with each other freely.
There's not going to be a situation where you crash on the island and one person says, I own half the island. All of you have to work for me or starve. That's an absurd situation.
Everyone would reject it out of hand. So say there's a situation where people crash on a
desert island and there's one job that really sucks, like building houses when it's cold outside
or something, and nobody wants to do that job. It's not going to be like a mystery when it's cold outside or something and nobody wants to do that job it's not going to be like a mystery it's not just going to never happen if society needs that job
it will happen the other people in society are going to have to give something up and one person
is going to have to do it either through greater honors or maybe they get added benefits so yes
there are bad jobs that will have to be done under communism.
Maybe those people get paid more.
If money still exists.
If money doesn't exist, they get some other kind of benefit.
It's actually a really easy problem to solve, and it's a problem that every society has
always solved.
So yes, work still has to be done.
Yes, there are terrible, crappy jobs that probably still have to be done.
People will do them, and guess what?
Those people will receive the highest honors in society.
They will be paid more and they'll be more valued.
It'll be the complete opposite of it is today
and it will be a far better system.
So I don't think it's a very serious problem.
Well, I mean, if you assume that you do have
a post-capitalist social order
in which basic needs and comfort and security
are the fruits of being part of society,
as opposed to the situation we have now where you are on your own and total immiseration
is not just possible, it's in your face every day, it's what will happen to you if you fuck up.
The instinct has to be total self-fixation, worrying about yourself and your family and
getting as much money and as much distance from precarity as possible, no matter what it takes, if that wolf isn't at your door, then labor becomes
much less alienating.
But some jobs are still objectively unpleasant and objectively less stimulating and more
arduous than others.
And I think that the solution there is honestly relatively simple.
that the solution there is honestly relatively simple. Since we're talking about a society where needs are met, then payment is not going to be a question of money. It's going to be a question of
what money is supposed to represent, the real thing, time. And so we imagine like, who's going
to be a garbage man? Who's going to be a ditch digger imagining a 40-hour work week that is the
assumed minimal capital so that your time is spoken for
in a wage relationship. That's why even though we have the productivity for, you know, a generalized
like 12-hour work week like Keynes predicted we would, we have not moved anywhere near that
because it would undermine control, give people too much time on their hands. So the worst jobs
can be done by people who only have to work
a couple hours a week at that, at the unpleasant job. And if the rest of your time is yours and
not in the isolated good luck going on the computer and finding a reason not to kill yourself
way it is now, but where your time is yours as part of a community that is able to make life into the artwork that
it should be, then I don't think anybody's going to fucking care if a couple hours a week they got
to muck out a stall. And of course, a lot of the most repetitive work would be doable by the
incredible technological progress that we have made. We have made all of the technological
leaps necessary to create a post-scarcity world, I believe, but they are diffused and put to work
to make profit, and so they can never be the liberating forces that people want them to be,
no matter what the Silicon Valley fantasies are. But if taken over and their algorithms replaced, like the T-800 in
T2, their programming replaced from extract profit, pile up profit to distribute rationally
through this human organism, then the questions of labor really become much easier to handle. And the basic antagonism between the individual and the social needs for labor inputs that
has defined class society, I don't think would exist.
The thing that people think of as eternal and immutable facts of human nature.
There are things that the reality of being a human and living with humans, the reality of
language and communication, I do think there are some things that over time become
relatively immutable. But a lot of the things that we think of as immutable are very much
relatively late products of a mode of production that is in its terminal crisis.
A lot of communist societies talk about a post-money society.
And I genuinely believe it's not even difficult to imagine a society where simply honor the
greatest honors are given to people who do shittier jobs. Like people like being praised,
you know, and people have shown throughout history will do shitty work if everyone honors them.
And it's like, I don't think this is going to be a problem and
people are doing it now for very little money it's happening now there's not going to be a
society where we just let the sewers crumble because everyone's too lazy to do it in fact
if that were a society you will find you will find people will be eager to do it because they'll be
seen as like the hero who saved they went down
and did it i'd say a really good example is in japan when the nuclear reactor melted down people
volunteered to go die was it the market economy that did this no they did it for honor because
they knew they needed to save the reactor and go in there and you will always find people in
every society who will volunteer to do that always
it will never be a situation where there's like something that needs to save society and nobody
will volunteer to do the job it's just not part of it you talk about human nature i think that's
part of human nature humans are a social being and they want to they understand first of all
they understand universalized concepts like if if 100,000 people need something done and you need to sacrifice to do it, it's sort of your duty to do that.
I think most human beings understand that and are willing to do that. අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි I think the greatest model of reciprocity, compassion, and generosity is nature.
We're part of it, but we've been severed and separated from it.
But the land and how it gives and how it sustains many types of life forms and the cycles of like nature sacred cycles that actually allow life to continue.
That is the greatest model that we can ever have because we have to integrate ourselves back into that.
And in terms of how humans have integrated themselves into that, there's models everywhere.
I think today, before, and there will always be.
integrated themselves into that. There's models everywhere, I think, today, before, and there will always be. There's always communities that are doing a better job of stewarding the lands
and oceans that they're on, and not seeing themselves as top of a hierarchy, but of seeing
themselves as a part of a web of relationships with equals, where every living organism, even if
it's a single-celled bacteria,
is equal to us. I need all of the bacteria that are living in my gut, on my skin, in and around
me in order to survive. And I would die without them. But they also call me home. They also feed
on me and sustain off of me. And that's essentially the type of sustainability that we need to
actually think about. And many people are, many societies have already done that.
I think I've drawn more inspiration from even looking outside of the bounds of human societies,
because there are many societies in terms of non-human life forms that model inter and
intraspecies collaboration, cooperation, mutualism, commensalism, in terms of how they work
together to share resources. And I think nature is sort of the best model of anarchy, where there
isn't a external force commanding people, commanding any other life form. There is no boss,
there is no ruler or dictator or government. Things just are.
Trees just have underground networks of roots that allow them to share resources.
Bacteria just do live on the roots of trees to be able to provide for them while living
off of them.
That's just how nature works.
Our liberation is tied to us seeing ourselves as equaled to every other non-human life form. Our liberation is tied to
ourselves seeing us as not as saviors of anybody else, including the land. We're not saving the
planet. The planet has its own agency. The planet has been fighting back. The planet has been
resisting capitalism. And that's why we're still here. We would not be here if the earth wasn't
doing what the earth does. And I think sort of toppling, even flipping
the script on our heads to think of ourselves as we're just part of the big picture, and we can
just do our part. But reciprocity and justice and freedom is already being embodied all around us
if we look closer. If we're going to talk going upstream to the root, we need to see that our
human connections as biological creatures are more profound and interconnected and interdependent
than we care to realize or bring to the surface. You know, human beings are simply a large,
complex organism based on myriad interdependencies of symbiotic relationships.
So once you start to get in sync with life as a relational phenomena, you get out of
this capitalist mindset of essentialist character of separate individual entities that have
no connection to each other.
You start to transverse to a different universe, a different worldview
that I think is more congruent with historic ancient realities of life itself. It cuts that
deep. So, you know, let's go upstream. Let's talk about life. Let's talk about indigenous peoples
and their creative struggles through time to find living, fruitful, flourishing
relationships with the earth.
I mean, that's the kind of quest we need to do to go upstream and rediscover the realities
as well as, I think, build a new home for ourselves. අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි internally what's going on in our brain is reflected into society, right? Even to extreme
points, like why does Bill Gates own Microsoft, right? The only reason he owns it is because
everybody believes he owns it. There's actually nothing, there's nothing there. Capitalists works
ultimately on our minds, right? The only reason we go to work and obey our boss is because
we believe he's the owner of the factory ultimately i mean it's kind of a banal point but it's also
like ultimately ideology governs everything so the real upstream route is our ideas how to
make a change of course in people's ideas and to know you're making the change for the best you
don't want to be a dictator yourself is an enormously difficult problem that I can't solve. I have no idea how
to do it. But if we could get a more voluntary cultural production and ideological production
system, I think that would be necessary to create a just society. There is a thought experiment
where there's like, say there's like a monarchy, right?
The king owns the entire thing. Everybody believes he's the king. And then an evil witch comes and does a spell where everybody falls asleep. And then everybody wakes up the next day and they
forgot that he was the king. How would he go about convincing them that he was the king again?
And the answer would be, it would be totally, absolutely impossible because it's an absurd, there's no justification. There's absolutely no justification for somebody being a king.
So the evil witch comes, they all forget. Everybody wakes up the next day. The monarchy's over. Now
they have a democracy. The same thing could be true of capitalism. If an evil witch came in
America and made all Americans go to sleep and we woke up the next day and nobody owned any property,
in America and made all Americans go to sleep and we woke up the next day and nobody owned any property, we would not invent property again. We would not all go to work and say, oh, you're the
boss, you own the factory, I'm the worker. Nobody would come up with it. It's all already in our
brains. All it has to do is get extracted, right? Like if an evil witch erased capitalism and we
all woke up tomorrow, the natural mode of being would be voluntary cooperation. Nobody would believe Jeff Bezos was the owner of Amazon. Nobody would
believe it. Maybe he's the only one that didn't go to sleep. And he says, look, I'm a billionaire.
I own everything. All of you have to go work in my factories. You'd be fucked off. We're not going
to work in your factory. We don't know who you are. You the same as us so unfortunately there's no witches and you have
to do it very slowly but forgetting property relations is a kind of interesting thought
experiment i guess if someone told me capitalism was the freest system we'd ever had i would just
ask more questions to try to even understand where they're coming from probably to understand
what level of awareness they've had, how far they've really
thought about it, or how much are they just sort of regurgitating, you know, the values of the
empire that have been fed onto them. And I think my response would even start by understanding
their conditions and going from there in terms of asking them and telling them almost that you
deserve better, that you shouldn't have had to
fight for crumbs. You shouldn't have had to compete with your peers. You should have had
loving, supportive community since the day you were born. And in a world that we live in today
that is hierarchical and deeply inequitable, we're all placed on a ladder. And I think first
acknowledging their humanity and acknowledging their dignity
and saying they deserve better, that if they had food, water, shelter, wouldn't that be the
precursor of or the basic conditions that they need to even feel free? Why would fighting for
something be the freest that they would have ever been? Why wouldn't they be able to truly figure out
who they are, what they love doing, what makes them happy, what gives them joy, what is the best
way that they can actually serve their community? Wouldn't they even just be able to figure that out
if they had infinite options that they could explore without the threat of violence or coercion
or food hanging over their head? To me, that sounds like freedom.
So I think I always just ask questions
to even get them to see that
the things that they've been told so far
might just not be it.
And I really do believe that
there's so many variables that go into
why someone gets radicalized,
like politically radicalized.
A lot of it is the stuff that they face.
So I feel like a lot of
communities that are facing the material reality of being marginalized and oppressed might even
think capitalism is a thing that frees them. Similarly to how I know many community members
back home who like have all sorts of internalized colonialism and aspire to just being white in any way possible. And it comes from
generations and generations of torture, abuse, and oppression, and they don't know any other
world. And I think the only way people can see differently is if they receive the love and care
that they've always deserved. So I think starting there with some compassion is probably the first
way to even get people to see that they've never been free, but they deserve that.
Thank you to all of our guests, to Collections of Colonies of Bees,
Pater, Mammoth Star, Do Make Say Think, and Chris Zabriskie for the music in this episode,
and to Bethan Muir for the cover art.
Upstream theme music was composed by me, Robbie.
You might have noticed that we've only released one documentary so far this year.
Unfortunately, we got some bad news at the beginning of this year regarding our funding.
A foundation that had been supporting us stopped funding organizations
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