Poor Man Survival
Self Reliance tools
for independent minded people…
ISSN 2161-5543
A Digest of
Urban Survival Resources
He
who sees the truth, let him proclaim it,
without asking who is for it or who is against it."
-- Henry George
(1839-1897) American political economist
without asking who is for it or who is against it."
-- Henry George
(1839-1897) American political economist
Is Government Just a Clever Con Game?
Why
many of us are not only opting out of voting this election season (and all
others, too), but we’re also ignoring the election completely.
I find it odd that Julian of
Wikileaks site was suddenly shut down, most likely by the government, after a
slew of embarrassing information about Hillary’s dirty tricks were released…if
his information wasn’t accurate, why would he be shut down? [I suspect Obama used government resources to
shut him down].
Reason being, the presidential elections are absolutely
irrelevant to our vision of the future. And the absurdity you are witnessing
this year is simply the last gasps of a dying breed.
F*ck it. Let it die. Walk away.
In our vision of tomorrow, politicking, especially in the name
of “security,” or, more hilarious, in the name of “compassion,” will be
considered abhorrent.
Two reasons…
1. Good ideas don’t require force.
2. Politics, as it exists today, is backed by violence.
Today’s idea of compassion -- voting for a gang of violent
thieves to use force as a way to make less-fortunate people dependent upon them
-- is tomorrow’s idea of blatant barbarism.
“It’s amazing to me,” Penn Jillette writes in an article on CNN
Opinion,
“how many people think that voting to have the government give poor people
money is compassion. Helping poor and suffering people is compassion. Voting
for our government to use guns to give money to help poor and suffering people
is immoral self-righteous bullying laziness.
“People need to be fed, medicated, educated, clothed, and
sheltered, and if we’re compassionate we’ll help them, but you get no moral
credit for forcing other people to do what you think is right. There is great
joy in helping people, but no joy in doing it at gunpoint.”
Many people fear this idea.
It seems bizarre to them that we shouldn’t force others to give
up their money to help others. If we don’t force socialism on the
‘over-privileged,’ they say, then the rich will simply let poor people die in
the streets. Without the use of guns and force, they tell us, ironically,
mankind would be cruel and barbaric.
We see things a bit differently. Politicians, in our eyes, do
not protect the disenfranchised, they create them. Then, to cast off blame,
they wag their fingers at the rich -- whom they often, behind closed doors,
protect from the disenfranchised. With guns and very large cages.
It’s a clever con game. And this ‘divide-and-conquer’ strategy
is one of the oldest tricks in the book.
Absent the protection of the rich by suppressing the “common”
human’s ability to forge his or her own path (through arbitrary barriers to
entry into the market), disenfranchised individuals and communities would be
able to take care of themselves and their communities. Absent the arbitrary
violence of the State, which is inflicted on mostly peaceful individuals, peace
and prosperity would be able to flourish unfettered.
That is what we mean by “free market.”
When the market is free of violence and coercion, it can develop
without dysfunction and work for anyone who chooses to participate.
Without the legitimization of force, the market would be unable to
discriminate.
It would also give people the opportunity to choose to be
self-sufficient of the market. It would allow people to opt out, if wanted.
Which is, of course, impossible today.
Moreover, without arbitrary barriers to entry, protected by gun
barrels and very large cages, David has a shot at defeating Goliath without
firing a single rock.
This is the vision.
With decentralized systems, which are, as you read this, being
built underneath our feet, we can redistribute the large swathes of centralized
wealth from the bottom-up.
Creative, decentralized disruption will break down the wall and
storm the kingdom. Brains will, in the end, defeat brawn. Behemoths will continue
to crumble at the whims of thousands of bootstrapped and nimble start-ups. It
will become business as usual.
And it will defeat the poli-ticks-as-usual structure we
have today. Or, in other words, the tyranny of the parasitical.
It’s a shame...
Most Americans see this year’s charade as a reason to be
pessimistic about the future of America and the world-at-large.
We beg to differ.
Instead, we say, one should rejoice. Politics is finally
revealing its true nature. In real-time, the whole kingdom has no clothes. And
when it all falls down...
The meek shall inherit the Earth.
To explain this transition, we invite Max Borders back to the
show for Part Two of his End of Politics series
AS WE EXIT POLITICS, OUR VALUES WILL CHANGE FOR THE BETTER
By MAX BORDERS
In the early 1990s, the nervous system of a new global order
began to emerge. Twenty years on, a generation of children raised online has
reached adulthood. What does this mean for the future of human social
organization?
Three important things, among others, perhaps. Digital natives
are:
- Used to the concept of
“exit.” If you don’t like some product, service, operating system, or
social media group, you can switch to something new.
- Comfortable with forming and
maintaining relationships online. These relationships can be intimate,
casual, or impersonal.
- Cynical about politics as a
process and means of making positive change. Give them a relatively
low-cost alternative and they’ll be fine to adopt it—like downloading an
app.
Once the bulk of digital natives come to think of today’s
politics as obsolete, we’ll be in for some interesting times.
The architecture of the Web has already shown the world what’s
possible in terms of upgrading our democratic operating system (DOS). This is
true both in the sense that our new social technologies are like our
online technologies, and in the sense that our online technologies enable
new social technologies to emerge. Little platoons are already emerging on the
spine of the blockchain, for example. And just as Lyft and Uber are showing taxi
cartels how it’s done (or as Kickstarter is showing the NEA how it’s done, or
as Bitcoin [and Ethereum] is showing the Federal Reserve how it’s done) new
parallel governance structures will soon show State hierarchies around the
world how it’s done.
What might the world look like when this process is further
along? It’s hard to predict. But the network architectures show the way, and
examples like the Morning Star Company give us an early look, perhaps. Inc.
editor-at-large Leigh Buchanan writes:
“Morning Star calls what it practices self-management. But it is
also mutual management. Employees’ decisions about what they will do are
determined largely by their commitments to others. You know what you need from
me to do your best possible work, and I know what I need from you to do mine.…
“When he first learned of Morning Star’s bossless model, ‘I
thought it sounded pretty cool,’ says Brian Hagle, whose job involves
evaporating water from tomato juice. Twenty-two years later, he still feels
that way. ‘It’s almost like every one of us is manager or CEO,’ says Hagle. “We
set our goals high, and they’re our goals, so when we meet them, there’s a real
feeling of achievement.”
In other words, Morning
Star has abandoned formal hierarchies. That doesn’t mean leaders don’t emerge. It means no one issues
commands or lords power over others. The company’s employees operate more as a
hive brain. People have to persuade teammates to take this path or that. The
hierarchical firm explained by the late Ronald Coase has been replaced by a
dynamic company with radically different social technology. Once companies
realize that Morning Star dominates tomato processing, other companies will try
to emulate the model to dominate their own spaces. (Companies like Valve and
Zappos have already integrated their own Morning Star-like models.)
Once one appreciates that networks are a superior social
technology for handling increased complexity, one has two options: Try to make
the world less complex or change your social technology. And that is one reason
why I think decentralization—phase transition—is inevitable. Great hierarchical
powers will have to accommodate and facilitate decentralization, or they will
collapse.
Which leads me to my second reason for thinking that
decentralization is inevitable. Call it “the great inversion.” As Carl Oberg puts
it:
This is a development that turns the very logic of political
action on its head. Thanks to technology and the distributed nature of
networks, we are no longer beholden to the political process, majoritarian
rule, and the so-called “fair” tax and fiat money regime. The more of the
economy we move to the Internet, the safer we will be and the more distributed
power becomes.
If democratic governance is meant to shore up hierarchies, but
networks eventually supplant hierarchies, then democratic governance will only be
as valuable as it goes toward sustaining these new social structures.
The
Clash
Accepting this evolutionary view for the sake of conversation,
what if I then told you that a clash is coming? What if I told you we are in
the process of fundamentally changing the way we organize ourselves in many
different areas of life, and that the resolution of this clash will usher in a
very different era? What if this clash will not only shake out the dominant
players in various economic sectors, but yield new, superior social
technologies for the 21st century? What if I told you that, if the transition
successfully completes, we could be entering a new era of material plenty and
social consciousness—perhaps with its own set of norms and mores?
“I believe there is going to be a great struggle between
fundamentally different ways of organizing people,” said Whole Foods Founder
and Chairman John Mackey in his Austin offices. “You can organize them, or they
can organize themselves.” Due to this coming clash, Mackey agrees that
transition might not be terribly smooth. But he intimated that, once things
settle, the world will be a better place. And Mackey already applies this kind
of thinking to his enterprise.
The resolution of this coming struggle may not be final. After
all, human social organization is a product of the creatures that live in us.
In terms of our genetic heritage, we are still very much those feral clansfolk
who murdered each other over food and territory during the Paleolithic Era. But
the cost of domination is getting higher. And the rewards of collaboration are
immense.
If the world is indeed moving toward self-organization, what
will happen to our moral world?
In Part
One
of this article, I talked about the possibility that humanity may really be
undergoing this phase transition, and that this transition could usher in a
post-political state of affairs.
Now I’d like to turn our attention to the moral order.
Systems
of Survival
I follow Hayek to some degree in his theory of cultural
evolution. Under Hayek’s theory, cultures embrace norms and traditions as far
as these work to the benefit of those who adopt them. But such an embrace only
goes so far, as norms and traditions have to run the gauntlet of change. In
this way, formal institutions and moral norms can coevolve. Moral norms can
change the rules and the incentives that give rise to such rules. And, of
course, new rules can give rise to new norms.
In her book Systems of Survival, urbanist Jane Jacobs
unpacked two “syndromes” or value clusters. According to Jacobs, these clusters
exist in order to preserve systems of human survival, hence the title. One
cluster, which she calls “guardian syndrome,” is more or less a set of human
values that tends to preserve hierarchy. The other, which Jacobs calls
“commercial syndrome,” tends to coevolve with emerging networks.
Moral Precepts
Clan
Syndrome
- Shun hoarding; share
surpluses and tolerate foraging failures
- Expect others to share
surpluses
- Be gracious
- Venerate the family/clan
- Participate in cyclical
feasts and ceremonies
- Signal that you care and that
you’re good
- Keep the wisdom of ancestors
and the elderly
- Avoid shame
- Fear other clans and protect
your own
- Don’t leave the group or get
ostracized
- Understand that private
property is limited and transferable
- Contribute work; monitor and
punish shirking in others
- Respect totems and taboos,
including gift giving (totem) and hoarding (taboo)
The tendency of certain values to coevolve with survival systems
has interesting implications: Most human beings possess all three syndromes to
varying degrees. From the standpoint of evolutionary psychology, we’re still
clan peoples. Rather than recreating the nature/nurture debates here, just suppose
I’m right and we’re all still saddled with these moral dispositions. In some
people, clan syndrome is going to be stronger—to feel stronger. In
others, guardian syndrome will predominate, and some people will exhibit
commercial syndrome traits far more readily. Of course, as syndromes overlap,
we might get even more interesting moral species.
We are not fully at the will of our genetic programming. As
we’ve said, at the level of the group, moral syndromes probably coevolve with
survival (incentive) systems, as people will often revise their commitments in
the face of strong incentives. The instincts are still there, but perhaps
buried. And, indeed, many of us will suppress syndrome traits as we are
impressed by rhetoric or rational argument from masters of other syndromes’
moral languages. Marx and Engels will offer alternatives to Smith and Ricardo
even though the former are writing in support of older syndromes and less
sophisticated social structures.
Social psychologist Jonathan Haidt reminds us:
If you think that moral reasoning is something we do to figure
out the truth, you’ll be constantly frustrated by how foolish, biased, and
illogical people become when they disagree with you. But if you think about
moral reasoning as a skill we humans evolved to further our social agendas—to
justify our own actions and to defend the teams we belong to—then things will
make a lot more sense. Keep your eye on the intuitions, and don’t take people’s
moral arguments at face value. They’re mostly post hoc constructions made up on
the fly, crafted to advance one or more strategic objectives.
In all of our political wrangling, moralizing, and wars,
commitments within multiple syndromes operating all at once mean humanity
undergoes no seamless phase transitions. Ideas become complex intellectual
latticeworks around these evolving phases and their accompanying values. In
some sense, this is the power of ideology: Ideas and our very human affects
operate in close tandem. And that’s one reason why people will fight for ideology—either
in jungles or in politics. Ancient syndromes can reawaken in us. And phase
transitions proceed in fits and starts.
But they do proceed. And as these transitions reshape the
incentive structures of humanity, the moral universes of humanity get reshaped,
too. And, of course, moral universes can affect the incentive structures, too.
With due respect to Dierdre McCloskey, each can pull the other along. This
co-evolution of institutions and moral syndromes should make us pause a bit
before accepting notions of transcendent virtues, moral foundations, or
universalistic theories of the right and the good. Without rekindling debates
about the relationship between institutions and ideas, or debates about the
existence of moral absolutes, I will instead suggest that taking a systems view
of morality and human progress can lead us to appreciate what lies ahead.
A
New Syndrome
With a new structural reality emerging, following Jane Jacobs, a
new syndrome is likely to emerge. This largely trans-partisan, post-political
state of affairs will not be some techno-utopia. It will come with its own set
of problems. Human history, however, despite some fits and starts, will at the
very least bring the phrase “all politics is local” back into fashion.
People increasingly will exercise “voice” within tighter
communities of practice to convince members to go along with their way of
seeing things. But as we build a great, conceptual open-source layer over the
globe, the mores of a new syndrome will come to dominate our behavior both
online and in meatspace. We can already see shoots of this new cluster of
moralisms. Perhaps it will look something like this:
Network
Syndrome
- Shun politics
- Iterate
- Be experimental
- Share (and prepare for)
abundance
- Be open and tolerant of diversity
- Use collaboration and
creativity
- Join communities of agreement
- Use “voice” and “exit” to
make change
- Criticize by creating
- Be empathic
- Cultivate trust systems
- Invest consciously and wisely
- Connect more easily with
strangers
- Promote experience and
flourishing
- Be visionary
Some aspects of the prior syndrome will seem at odds with
network syndrome, but it might just be a more conscientious version of
commercial syndrome: commercial syndrome 2.0, if you will. In any case, there
will be less and less room for guardian syndrome—and somewhat paradoxically,
perhaps, more room for clan syndrome at the local level.
Whither
democracy: opt-in governance
In one sense, decentralization is a form radical democracy. That
is, at any given moment, someone can fork a social technology and start
something new. People can migrate to the new system, voting with their phones, their
boats or their feet. But in another sense, this is not the
king-of-the-mountain democracy of Democrats, Republicans, and Tammany Hall.
It’s radical federalism. It’s opt-in governance. It is a fluid order of
shifting values, continuous innovation, and the power of lateral relationships.
It’s Tocqueville’s nation of joiners on steroids. And in this fluid order,
politics and hierarchy—at least as we know them—will soon be obsolete.
Max Borders
Co-founder, Voice & Exit
Co-founder, Voice & Exit
Democrats employ at least 4,200 people
working to elect Hillary Clinton from campaign headquarters and in battleground
states, compared to just 880 paid staffers working for Republicans. >NBCNews.com
Even famed author of Nickel and Dimed and champion of the little guy, Barbara Ehrenreich says this about Hillary Clinton: “The woman stands for no known principles, has no ideas and has no clear goal other than to remain in the spotlight by whatever means necessary.”
Worth Looking at: From
Lee Bellinger of Independent Living points out…
5 Big
Reasons to Not Count Trump Out
Right now as the Sunday Washington Post poll comes out, Hillary
leads the Donald by four points. Anyone can be forgiven for buying into
the consensus: Hillary is destined to win.
I handicap in favor of Trump by 6-12
points because:
1. This
reeks of a “hold-your-nose” Brexit-level election. There
is enormous potential for a sizable shift to Trump as millions of stressed out
voters wait until the last 72 hours to make their agonizing final choice.
See precedent for this below.
2. The
Reagan-Carter contest of 1980. Candidate Reagan was then
a 68-year old failed “B” actor with many extreme statements to his name – a
renegade agent of change who led a hostile takeover of the GOP. And
widely seen as too extreme to control nuclear weapons. Remember the
Soviets had 20,000+ nukes pointed at us. We were in a deteriorating
hair-trigger situation – a direct U.S.-Soviet military clash loomed in 1980 as
policy drift between the Iran hostage crisis and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan
seemed to be converging. Contrary to his final high-gloss polish in
history books, candidate Reagan got elected as the desperate choice of a scared
electorate.
As the specter of nuclear war hung over the voters, millions
anguished until the very last week before migrating in huge numbers from Jimmy
Carter to Reagan. They chose to install an elderly, untested, hardline,
anti-Soviet hawk. Are voters as desperate to make a change this year?
Real numbers suggest 70%+ want to change direction, even if they fear
Trump.
3. The
Telling Mix of Trump’s Enemies Define This Race. It’s not
a conspiracy, it’s a consensus. For all his flaws as a rookie candidate,
Trump’s combativeness sheds valuable light on naked collusion between the
mainstream media, federal law enforcement, the hated Republican establishment,
and the Democrats -- all “cahootenizing” (my word, sorry) together to defeat
him. And by extension, put Hillary and a leftist Supreme Court in place.
4. Corrupt
GOP Elitists Now Sabotaging Trump Court a Brexit-Level Backlash.
Even as GOP leaders deny Trump TV ad buy monies and ground support -- and
even as Republican establishment spokesmen publicly emphasize his every mistake
– many in the huge and un-courted white middle class see all this as confirmation
of a “rigged system.”
5. Trump’s
frontal attacks on “The Rigged System” are likely to make many pro-Hillary
voters just stay home. By their actions, pro-Hillary
voters do know just how corrupt and entrenched the Clinton attack machine is.
They said no to her once in 2008 and installed Barack Obama. So
expect much weaker turnout numbers for her than expected -- especially as the media paint Hillary
as a shoo-in. Plus, Trump is not a socially acceptable choice in many
politically correct circles. Fights over him are stressing millions of
friendships -- so huge numbers of voters appear to be holding back from friends
and pollsters.
Yes, Carl Rove now says a Trump victory is unlikely. And he
is certainly a skilled strategist, but it’s hard to forget Mr. Rove on the eve
of the 2012 election – including his understandable on-air melt-down on Fox
News as his projections on the pivotal state of Ohio went into the tank.
There are other small signs, a ratings backlash against the NFL
that fits with the Trump narrative. Is there a silent majority in the
white vote that’s weary and wary of being cast as the villain in society’s
problems?
The potential for a Brexit-level
Trump upset remains significant.
P.S. No matter who wins next month, the damage we've inherited
from 8 years of Obama is nearly irreversible. It's also why people like us have
to stick together.
Yours for another revolution,
Bruce ‘the Poor Man’
Additional Resources
The Anatomy of a Breakdown
The Prepper’s Blueprint: The Step-By-Step Guide To Help You Through Any Disaster
Prepper’s Home Defense: Security Strategies to Protect Your Family by Any Means Necessary
Contact! A Tactical Manual for Post Collapse Survival
As I’ve said
for the past 25 years “We don’t need another election, We need another
revolution!”
Arm Up System-Defense Without Regulation
PM’s Guide to Home Defense
It is a crazy world out there with plenty of violence and everyone knows you that under most circumstances, police usually arrive after the fact. Your rights to defend yourself are often under attack, even for non-lethal self-defense tools…Includes book and 3 bonus CD ROMS
http://www.bonanza.com/listings/Guide-to-Home-Defense-Arm-Up-System-Defense-W-out-Regulation-Bonuses/370808566
PM’s Guide to Home Defense
It is a crazy world out there with plenty of violence and everyone knows you that under most circumstances, police usually arrive after the fact. Your rights to defend yourself are often under attack, even for non-lethal self-defense tools…Includes book and 3 bonus CD ROMS
http://www.bonanza.com/listings/Guide-to-Home-Defense-Arm-Up-System-Defense-W-out-Regulation-Bonuses/370808566
{Note:
We also offer a Three Set CD-ROM-only version at a lesser price for
those with limited budgets]
2 comments:
I stopped trusting our government about 20 years ago-about the same time I stopped trusting big media [sure looks like our media has gotten even worse]...right now, I don't trust Obama with how he's dealing with Russia either. Looks like a powder keg.
The government of Ecuador said in a public statement it was the one who shut down Wiki Leaks temporarily and it wasn't forced to do so by the US but I wonder about that because in the same breath their ambassador announced it wants Clinton as the next prez...We know they have a fairly left wing government so perhaps it is so.
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