Today, many Greens promote community-centred economics based
upon small businesses, municipal-owned enterprises and cooperatives. Such a
small business-based market economy would supposedly permit us to avoid the
problems of corporate capitalism and bureaucratic state-ownership. They accept the
idea of private property and competition for profit are natural where small
businesses must serve the public, because they can never be powerful enough to
manipulate the public or control the government. This is all an idealistic
fantasy of a make-believe capitalism. There is nothing "natural" or
ecological about private property, capitalist competition, or the profit
motive. These are part and parcel of class society.
Greens insist that many small mom and pop businesses and small
farmers are kindly and benevolent. Perhaps so. But to be sustainable, every
single small capitalist would have to be a saint, would have to give away his
profits to his competitors and to the community if he started winning too much
at their expense. That is impossible. And if we talk about workers'
cooperatives, or the various utopian schemes put forward by the populists for
broad employee-and-community-shared stock ownership, the same problem applies.
With competition for profit, most such cooperatives will eventually go under,
while a few will survive. Competition always intensifies, because the rate of
profit tends to fall. Capitalists, big or small, cooperative or corporate,
compete with each other on the market, and they do so by cutting their prices.
The best way to do this is to replace their workers with machines. This works
out for the first capitalist who gets the new technology: he can undercut his
competitors. But then his surviving competitors get the same technology. Since profit
is based upon human labour, profits, in general, fall, as they get squeezed
between falling prices and higher technological costs. As profits fall,
competition for profits intensifies. As competition intensifies, there will be
a strong temptation for relations even within cooperatives to become
hierarchical, for a few "elite" members to drive the rest to work
harder, so that the cooperative can compete better, externally. In the case of
both small businesses and cooperatives, as they compete with other concerns for
survival, their decisions will be based upon profit and survival rather than
upon what is good, in the long term, for the environment, the larger community,
or even for their own workers and their smaller shareholders. The more powerful
and larger businesses will use their superior wealth and power over the economy
to ensure that their candidates will win, so as to distort the electoral
process, the law, and the state to favor their own interests.
No matter the starting point, competition will always lead
to the corporate capitalism abhorred by the Greens. The only alternative to
capitalism is community based, democratic socialism, a theory of sharing and
living in common dates back to prehistoric times, even being mentioned in the
Christian New Testament as a way in which some of the early Christian
communities ordered their lives. When masses of people who own the means of
production work toward a common goal and share their products in common, when
they contribute labour without wages and enjoy the fruits free of charge, it's
not unreasonable to call that socialism because technically it is the best word
to indicate a range of technologies that rely for their power on social
interactions. Broadly, collective action or "dot-communism" is what
Web sites and Net-connected apps generate when they harness input from the
global audience. The online masses have an incredible willingness to share. The
number of personal photos posted on Facebook and Flickr is astronomical. Add to
this the millions of videos served by YouTube each month in the US alone and
the millions of fan-created stories deposited on fan sites. The list of sharing
organizations is almost endless. Not only that but they have tagged them with categories,
labels, and keywords. The popularity of Creative Commons licensing means that
communally, if not outright communistically, your picture is my picture. Sites
like Reddit and Twitter let users steer public conversation as much as
newspapers or TV networks.
Organised collaboration can produce results beyond the
achievements of ad hoc cooperation. Just look at any of hundreds of open source
software projects, such as the Apache Web server. In these endeavors, finely
tuned communal tools generate high-quality products from the coordinated work
of thousands or tens of thousands of members. In contrast to casual
cooperation, collaboration on large, complex projects tends to bring the
participants only indirect benefits, since each member of the group interacts
with only a small part of the end product. An enthusiast may spend months
writing code for a subroutine when the program's full utility is several years
away. In fact, the work-reward ratio is so out of kilter from a free-market
perspective—the workers do immense amounts of high-market-value work without
being paid—that these collaborative efforts make no sense within capitalism.
We've become accustomed to enjoying the products of these collaborations free
of charge. Instead of money, the peer producers who create the stuff gain
credit, status, reputation, enjoyment, satisfaction, and experience. Not only
is the product free, it can be copied freely and used as the basis for new
products. Alternative schemes for managing intellectual property, including
Creative Commons and the GNU licenses, were invented to ensure these
"frees." The tools of online collaboration support a communal style
of production such as Linux that shuns capitalistic investors and keeps
ownership in the hands of the workers, and to some extent those of the
consuming masses.
While cooperation can write an encyclopedia like Wikipedia,
no one is held responsible if the community fails to reach consensus, and lack
of agreement doesn't endanger the enterprise as a whole. The aim of a
collective, however, is to engineer a system where self-directed peers take
responsibility for critical processes and where difficult decisions, such as
sorting out priorities, are decided by all participants. Throughout history,
hundreds of small-scale collectivist groups have tried this operating system. We
find at the heart of online collectives is actually a sign that stateless
socialism can work on a grand scale. A company that tracks the open source
industry, lists roughly 250,000 people working on an amazing 275,000 projects.
That's almost the size of General Motors' workforce. That is an awful lot of
people working for free, even if they're not full-time. Imagine if all the
employees of GM weren't paid yet continued to produce automobiles. The biggest
efforts are open source projects, and the largest of them, such as Apache,
manage several hundred contributors—about the size of a village. One study
estimates that 60,000 man-years of work have poured into last year's release of
Fedora Linux 9, so we have proof that self-assembly and the dynamics of sharing
can govern a project on the scale of a decentralised town or village. The
number of people who make things for free, share things for free, use things
for free, belong to collective software farms, work on projects that require
communal decisions, or experience the benefits of decentralized socialism has
reached millions and counting. Operating without state funding or control,
connecting citizens directly to citizens, this achieves social good at an
efficiency that would stagger any government or traditional corporation. it
makes an indisputable case that the sharing model of free access is a viable
alternative to both profit-seeking corporations and tax-supported civic
institutions. Collaboratively building encyclopedias, news agencies, video
archives, and software in groups that span continents, with people you don't
know and whose class is irrelevant—that makes political socialism seem like the
logical next step. We underestimate the power of our tools to reshape our
minds. Did we really believe we could collaboratively build and inhabit virtual
worlds all day, every day, and not have it affect our perspective?
The force of
online socialism is growing. Some people abhor the term because of its
connotations but the only alternative is socialism, where property is owned and
administered in common by all the people and not merely one section. We know
the principle works because we witness it with the collaborative nature of the
internet everyday.
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