Thursday, April 17, 2014

Self-possession vs. 'self-ownership'

If 'I own myself', this entails I am both a slave and a master/ruler.  If I reject both rulership and slavery, it is not then possible that I own myself and accept that I am free of domination.  It is not necessary for myself to assert my  'self-ownership' to defend myself or pursue my own interests; the fact of my bodily possession and my interests as an organism is more than sufficient for self-defense, as any animal will readily react with fight or flight if necessary.  Any theoretical additions to establish a justification of self-defense and pursuit of self-interest would appear to be redundant/superfluous to what is already sufficient for any organism.

 ~ Darjeelingzen 

Sunday, March 23, 2014

The king and the Capitalist twice removed

"One upon a time there was a river.  A small village of people lived by this river for as long a time as anyone remembered.  The villagers would catch fish by the river.  The villagers built a down going down to the river. Some built boats to fish from the river.  Others made nets for fisherman. Some of the boat owners worked together to build a dock.  The villagers made improvements to the river; by sinking debris in the water they would create habitat for bait fish that would draw in a greater number of target fish that the villagers wanted.  

"Then one day, men on horses with swords and armor said that the river was the property of the king and the village must pay the kind for the privilege of using the king's river.  Being afraid and intimidated by the men with horses, swords and armor, the villagers paid the demanded extortion.

"Over the years, the king would occasionally raise the fee.  The villager became poorer and had to work more and harder to provide for theme selves under the burden of the taxation.  The king gave the kings's second cousin twice removed, a grant for funds to build his own boat, a larger boat.  The kings's second cousin twice removed used the funds to have a boat built and remaining funds to hire workers to man the boat and catch fish from the river.  The king granted an exemption to the kings's second cousin twice remove for a much lower rate of taxation.  The kings's second cousin twice removed, found that his boat operated at very narrow margins and sometimes at below cost because of the high-overhead of having to pay workers and having to maintain the boat.  

"The kings's second cousin twice removed asked the kind to require a license to fish from the king's river; this way the kings's second cousin twice removed will have less competition because the kings's second cousin twice removed will be one of the few to receive such a license, and with less villagers catching less fish, the supply of fish will go down and the kings's second cousin twice removed, would have greater profit.  The king agrees.  The king declares that only licensed fishermen may fish from the king's river but the village much still pay the yearly taxes because the village subsists from the land which is the kings's property.

The kings's second cousin twice removed now can run a profitable business from his large boat.  The business is so good, the kings's second cousin twice removed has four new large boats built and he hires nearby villagers to work on his boat.  Having their land expropriated, having their many years of investments and improvements to the land and to the river taken from them and under a heavy tax-burden, the villagers have little other option but to accept employ with the kings's second cousin twice removed.  Now the villagers work the king and the capitalist twice removed."


~ Darjeelingzen

Friday, March 21, 2014

Property is Theft: Explained

"Imagine, if you will, that a people were dominated by conquest and plundered for centuries, where the stolen possessions of the subjugated peoples was used to establish a great system of production that is often called, 'capitalism', and a great network of 'private property' held by the inheritors of those that have conquered and plundered the subjugated peoples, such that the dominators had come to control a super-majority of land and capital-goods, whereby the subjugated have only their labor left to trade.  When what is called 'property' is the inheritance of domination, and where 'capitalism' is the exercise of that plunder by both those that perpetuate the institutions of domination and by the collaborators with those institutions of domination, then in that world, 'property' is rightly equated with theft."
~ Darjeelingzen