Yes, there are a few intentional communities from the 1960s that
succeeded. Twin Oaks is one. The Farm is another. There are others,
less well known.
There are a bunch of books (Commitment and Community, Builders of the
Dawn, others), and there are also the websites for the Federation of
Intentional Communities, the Federation of Egalitarian Communities,
Communities magazine, and others.
Why Americans buy huge houses: "because they can."
Hong Kong & Tokyo apartments are quite a bit larger than those
prison-sized apts that are being developed in the USA now. Really: the
goal isn't sustainability or affordability, it's the 1/3 increase in
rent per square foot, compared to 1- and 2-bedroom apartments. Also
there's a difference between a 160-square-foot house you build for
yourself on land you and your friends own, and a 160-square-foot cell in
an apartment complex that some developer builds as a means of extracting
more money from the tenants. As in, the difference between a nest that
a mouse makes for itself, and a standardized mouse-cage in a
laboratory. It's all about autonomy and control.
Solutions: that would make an interesting discussion topic some night,
and/or we could open up a thread here.
Ex-felons selling Christmas trees: Probably a carefully self-selected
group, with a common goal to avoid further trouble with the law, and
very strict internal rules. The risk of going down the spiral back to
prison is a powerful motivator. And the difference between strict rules
by voluntary consensus, vs. strict rules by order of the Warden, makes
all the difference.
I wasn't proposing absolute socialism or bust. Only "socialism for
everyone or for no-one," rather than the status-quo of "socialism for
the rich, social darwinism for the rest of us." A little dose of
socialism, applied equally across the board, does wonders. Compare
quality of life in Northern Europe, to quality of life here.
The single largest predictor of violent social unrest, is the disparity
of income between the top and bottom in a society. A little socialism
buys a lot of peace.
-G.
======
On 13-06-10-Mon 11:49 PM, Romy Ilano wrote:
Are there any alternative living spaces from the 1960s
that
experienced success?
Perhaps we could learn from their example. There was a big coffee
table being passed around about communes etc three or four years ago--
forget the title
Usually I find that people have attempted to tackle these problems in
the past.
Also from the conversation it's not immediately clear to me what the
clearest solutions or motivations to the problems if any would be.
For me I don't understand why Americans have a burning desire to buy
houses too large to live in, too expensive to buy, too costly to
maintain ... The single occupancy small rooms were derided as being
anti sex??? Yet to me those are as large as what you would find in
Hong Kong or Tokyo
There's the Kearny street project which sells the Xmas trees and
rehabilitates Ex felons. They have shared living quarters along with
the self run businesses and I don't think there are guards.. It's all
regulated by the participants .
I do not agree with the zero sum solution of absolute socialism or
bust. It's like saying there should be no unions. It's very extreme
---
Romy Ilano
Founder of Snowyla
http://www.snowyla.com
romy(a)snowyla.com <mailto:romy@snowyla.com>
On Jun 10, 2013, at 19:50, GtwoG PublicOhOne <g2g-public01(a)att.net
<mailto:g2g-public01@att.net>> wrote:
>
> "Suddenly $5,000 is the new $3,000": Instant viral meme, good one
> Andrew!
>
> And $30,000/year is the new $60,000/year, thanks to all those H1B
> visas driving down wages.
>
> This is the interesting thing about "markets":
>
> When rents go sky-high, that's a "market" and the plutocracy chants
> that the Holy Invisible Hand should reign supreme. But when
> employers can't find people who'll work on farms for $3.00/hour, or
> write code for $30,000/year, then it's time for a little socialism
> for the plutocracy, by way of opening the H1B floodgates. And that
> makes property owners happy too, so it's a two-fer!
>
> "Jobs Americans won't do" is what economists call a "price
signal",
> which translates as "jobs Americans won't do AT THAT PRICE." If the
> plutocracy was at all consistent (ha ha funny) they wouldn't go
> running for socialistic interventions to drive down labor costs,
> they'd suck it up and pay the market price, whether that means paying
> farm workers $15/hour, or paying coders $60,000/year.
>
> There's a reason it's more difficult to get into DSNY (Department of
> Sanitation, City of New York) than it is to get into Yale. It's
> spelled U-N-I-O-N.
>
> Socialism for all, or socialism for none!
>
> -G.
>
>
> =====
>
>
> On 13-06-10-Mon 4:59 PM, Andrew wrote:
>> Lets be clear that no one is arguing there should be less housing in
>> SF. The argument is that current housing in SF is too expensive and
>> vacant. There isn't a scarcity as much as a price fixing scheme
>> going on. The only purpose for building new units is for the
>> developers and landlords to get in on the scheme while it's hot,
>> hoping for the market to bounce back and suddenly $5,000 is the new
>> $3,000 in SF and they are sitting on prime real estate. In the
>> meantime the units will remain vacant or just rented out (or leased)
>> to people moving in to the City for work.
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 4:32 PM, GtwoG PublicOhOne
>> <g2g-public01(a)att.net <mailto:g2g-public01@att.net>> wrote:
>>
>>
>> That $5,000/month 2-BR apartment translates to $60K/year for
>> rent, which means that the owner isn't even going to look at
>> anyone with an income below $180K, or a married couple with
>> joint income of $180K and perfect credit ratings.
>>
>> Re. "many levels of rich": the average millionaire is closer to
>> his/her gardener in terms of net worth, than to the plutocrats
>> (but most millionaires have no clue about this). In any case,
>> there are enough people in the 1% to account for 95% of the
>> spending in the economy (keyword search "plutonomy" and look for
>> the report that was leaked from one of the major banks on that
>> topic), so the bottom 99% is almost irrelevant ("supply and
>> demand" for human lives, again).
>>
>> Re. "at whatever level a developer wants to provide more
>> housing, I'll say YES DO IT..." Be careful what you wish for...
>>
>> Re. "tall buildings..." (preceding email): When the inevitable
>> 7.0 on either the Hayward or San Andreas occurs, even if the
>> building remains standing (this can't be taken for granted
>> either, given the problems with the imported steel in the Bay
>> Bridge) power & water will be out for weeks, possibly months in
>> some areas. Elevators and air conditioning won't be working in
>> those buildings. So now you have highrises full of people, some
>> of whom are elderly, disabled, or have small kids, with no food
>> or water, and no sanitation. Asking neighbors to carry food up
>> the stairs might work, but lugging water up ten or twenty
>> flights is a non-starter (a 2-day supply for one person for
>> drinking and cooking, is about 25 lbs.).
>>
>> Even earthquake-denialism doesn't help us, because adding
>> high-rises adds demand for water, sewer, and parking, all the
>> time. Assuming that most high-rise residents won't have cars
>> doesn't help much, because some will, and those will still add
>> up to more cars than there is space to park them. Water and
>> sewer are the biggies, and any move toward highrise development
>> will require digging up streets and installing new water & sewer
>> mains, which translate to higher costs either in rent or in taxes.
>>
>> Albert Einstein was a pacifist, and Edward Teller was a hawk.
>> Both agreed that the exponential function is the most dangerous
>> math on Earth.
>>
>> -G.
>>
>>
>> =====
>>
>>
>>
>> On 13-06-10-Mon 3:41 PM, Sonja Trauss wrote:
>>> Yeah Jehan that's how I understand it.
>>>
>>> Eddie's scenario though is that rich_guy CAN'T move into the
>>> nice new apt, because before he gets there, some rich_guy_2
>>> moves into the apt from Mountain View, and /rich_guy_2 would
>>> not have moved into SF if the new apartments hadn't been built/.
>>>
>>> This is a scenario, so we should explore its antecedents and
>>> consequences.
>>>
>>> My first response is - so what if this happens. In this
>>> scenario rents go neither up or down. I don't think it's
>>> realistic to expect that all new building will be taken up like
>>> this, but, since I don't know the future, it's worth imagining
>>> this extreme outcome and asking, is it bad? if it is bad, is it
>>> so bad that we shouldn't take the risk of it happening? I don't
>>> see it as bad. Like I said before, it will have no net affect
>>> on rent, so we lose nothing, and there might be ancillary
>>> benefits: my $13 jam business might improve, or my $75/ hour
>>> personal yoga coach business. Maybe I'm a social worker, and
>>> this means there will be more money in the city budget for my
>>> organization. whatever.
>>>
>>> Next, more interestingly, let's consider what could possibly
>>> cause rich_guy_2's behavior. Usually people move to be closer
>>> to work, to be closer to some fun city center, to be closer to
>>> family, they make the decision and then they look for housing.
>>> They do not hear of new housing being built and say, on that
>>> fact alone, 'I will now move!'
>>>
>>> If someone hears of new housing being built, and he then says,
>>> 'I will now move,' it is because he is (1) very strict about
>>> only living in brand new housing (not likely) or (2) RESPONDING
>>> TO AN INCREASE IN SUPPLY AT HIS PRICE POINT.
>>>
>>> Have you ever heard someone say "there are no available
>>> apartments in SF"? Of course he doesn't mean there are no
>>> available apartments, of course there are apartments:
>>>
http://sfbay.craigslist.org/sfc/apa/ there's a $5000 2 bedroom
>>> at the top of the list. What he means is "there are no
>>> available apartments in SF at my price point." So, this person,
>>> who wants to spend say, $3000 for a nice 2 bedroom lives
>>> somewhere else, and waits for the supply of $3000 2 bedroom
>>> apartments to increase. This is rich_guy_2. This person is
>>> currently priced out of San Francisco. Hard to believe, but
>>> true, there are many levels of rich. You can be house shopping
>>> and be priced out at almost any price point. I'm sympathetic to
>>> people that are priced out. I don't want to see anyone priced
>>> out. I'm not going to discriminate based on income high or low.
>>> No one should be priced out. If you can pay $300/mo or $3000
>>> you should be able to find something you think is reasonable in
>>> this town. The supply of housing in SF is too small at all but
>>> the highest price point. At whatever level a developer wants to
>>> supply more housing, I will say YES. DO IT.
>>>
>>> MOREOVER. If it's expensive to build, developers will only be
>>> able to afford to build high priced projects. One of the things
>>> that makes building expensive is fighting with neighbors. So
>>> its ironic (and a little sad) to see people who want lower
>>> priced housing doing things that make building expensive. I
>>> think I said this in another email, but if a smaller budget
>>> developer wants to build a cheaper project, but sees that even
>>> the very rich developer can barely get his project finished
>>> because he has to spend time and resources fighting with
>>> neighbors, then the smaller developer will be like forget it, I
>>> can't do this.
>>>
>>>
>>> On Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 1:46 PM, Jehan Tremback
>>> <jehan.tremback(a)gmail.com <mailto:jehan.tremback@gmail.com>>
wrote:
>>>
>>> @Eddie- Sorry about the eye! That was the default Ubuntu
>>> avatar, and it somehow got synced to my email when I ran
>>> Pidgin. So the eye is actually open source! I'll get rid of
>>> it though if you want.
>>>
>>> I'll go over this briefly, but there are better resources
>>> out there.
>>>
>>> Let's say rich guy can afford $3000 dollars a month and
>>> wants to live in SF. So landlord charges him $3000 for an
>>> apartment because it isn't a closet. Since there is nowhere
>>> else to live in SF, rich guy pays this. New luxury building
>>> opens across the street with really nice new apartments for
>>> $3000 a month. Rich guy decides to move, and landlord puts
>>> apartment back on the market for $3000. But because all of
>>> the other rich guys are also living in the new luxury
>>> building, landlord finds no tenants. Next month, landlord
>>> is forced to lower rent to $2000 and 4 hackers move in.
>>> This is how the market works.
>>>
>>> -Jehan
>>>
>>>
>>> On Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 11:46 AM, Sonja Trauss
>>> <sonja.trauss(a)gmail.com <mailto:sonja.trauss@gmail.com>>
wrote:
>>>
>>> Ok so your position is that the whole of the new
>>> housing will be taken up by people who don't currently
>>> live in SF, want to, but won't move into SF unless new
>>> housing is built.
>>>
>>> Can you describe what it is about the new housing that
>>> will make people who already have stable, adequate
>>> places to live elsewhere move into it, when they've
>>> already decided theyre not interested in living in any
>>> of the currently available sf housing? Does this
>>> question make sense? What's special about the new
>>> housing? What would make a person move to SF Only If
>>> new housing is built? What is the scenario. I can think
>>> of two. One silly and one not silly.
>>>
>>>
>>> On Sunday, June 9, 2013, Eddie Che wrote:
>>>
>>> Oy, greetings. First of all that Eye is really
>>> hateful, let's tone
>>> that down a little! I've been against the eye
>>> because it is oppressive
>>> so, chill. @Jehan.
>>>
>>> Building will increase the population in San
>>> Francisco. Not house the
>>> houseless and not bring down rents. These are
>>> upscale (condos?)
>>> apartments, bringing the added keyword of
>>> gentrification.
>>>
>>> I like the Spain example. Government here (County,
>>> City, State, and
>>> National) could give land that is being held by it,
>>> eg around highway
>>> off-ramps or hills or wherEVER to folks who are
>>> disenchanted with...
>>> corporate rule.
>>>
>>> "liberating land from private control and corporate
>>> interests and for
>>> the common good of all people."
>>>
>>> Can we hack that?
>>> EMCHE, in a tree.
>>>
>>> PS by the way, surprising about SF's vacant housing
>>> units @
>>>
https://www.baycitizen.org/blogs/pulse-of-the-bay/sf-leads-bay-area-vacant-…
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Sat, Jun 8, 2013 at 6:41 PM, GtwoG PublicOhOne
>>> <g2g-public01(a)att.net> wrote:
>>> >
>>> > Imagine a news headline saying "Good news for the
>>> economy: food prices are
>>> > up for the third month in a row!" Food-owners
>>> would celebrate, and
>>> > foodless-rights advocates would protest, but
>>> nothing would change unless the
>>> > entire system of food-speculation was curbed.
>>> >
>>> > Or imagine this: Dateline: Marinaleda, Spain.
>>> Municipal government GIVES
>>> > dispossessed people the land and building
>>> materials to build their own
>>> > homes, and pays contractors to provide assistance
>>> with the high-skill parts
>>> > such as plumbing. This is REAL and it's
>>> happening NOW.
>>> >
>>> >
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-22701384
>>> >
>>> > "In the wake of Spain's property crash,
hundreds
>>> of thousands of homes have
>>> > been repossessed. While one regional government
>>> says it will seize
>>> > repossessed properties from the banks, a little
>>> town is doing away with
>>> > mortgages altogether. ... In Marinaleda,
>>> residents like 42-year-old
>>> > father-of-three, David Gonzalez Molina, are
>>> building their own homes.
>>> >
>>> > "The town hall in this ... town an hour-and-a-bit
>>> east of Seville, has given
>>> > David 190 sq m (2,000 sq ft) of land. ... The
>>> bricks and mortar are also a
>>> > gift... from the regional government of
>>> Andalusia. ... Only once his home is
>>> > finished will he start paying 15 euros (£13)
>>> [approx. $26] a month, to the
>>> > regional government, to refund the cost of other
>>> building materials. ...
>>> >
>>> > "...[The town's] Mayor Juan Manuel Sanchez
>>> Gordillo is known for occupying
>>> > land belonging to the wealthy in Andalusia. ...
>>> Last summer, he and his
>>> > left-wing union comrades stole from supermarkets
>>> and handed out the food to
>>> > the poor. "I think it is possible that a home
>>> should be a right, and not a
>>> > business, in Europe", he argues. Mayor Sanchez
>>> Gordillo pours scorn on
>>> > "speculators"....
>>> >
>>> > ---
>>> >
>>> > Think outside the box, and you might end up
>>> thinking like Mayor Sanchez
>>> > Gordillo.
>>> >
>>> > What happens when home prices and rents keep
>>> increasing while average income
>>> > levels have barely budged since 1974?
>>> >
>>> > What happens to the lives of people, when the
>>> health of an economy in large
>>> > part depends on relentless increase in the price
>>> of a vital necessity that
>>> > is also a fixed resource, such as the square
>>> footage in which to eat, sleep,
>>> > and wash?
>>> >
>>> > Meanwhile developers are building "luxury"
>>> apartments, but the number of
>>> > "affordable" units isn't specified and
always
>>> turns out to be less than
>>> > first claimed. How is it that anyone has a
>>> "right" to luxury, at the
>>> > expense of others' poverty and homelessness?
>>> >
>>> > At root, this isn't a race issue of black and
>>> white, though the guardians of
>>> > privilege benefit mightily when it's framed that
>>> way, and people who have
>>> > common cause are divided against each other. At
>>> root, it's a class issue of
>>> > green and red.
>>> >
>>> > Land speculation is a broken machine running an
>>> obsolete operating system,
>>> > that's begging to get "rooted."
>>> >
>>> > -G
>>> >
>>> >
>>> > =====
>>> >
>>> >
>>> >
>>> > On 13-06-08-Sat 3:06 PM, Sonja Trauss wrote:
>>> >
>>> > I know, it's so outrageous. This line, "The
>>> notion of smart growth — also
>>> > referred to as urban infill — has been around for
>>> years, embraced by a
>>> > certain type of environmentalist, particularly
>>> those concerned with
>>> > protecting open space."
>>> >
>>> > Yeah, the type of environmentalist that is an
>>> environmentalist - what is
>>> > this supposed to mean!
>>> >
>>> > Also I guess (I hope) these progressives don't
>>> realize that in opposing
>>> > development in Bayview, they are contributing to
>>> keeping blacks overall
>>> > poorer than whites.
>>> >
>>> > Putting renters aside for a minute, let's
>>> consider similarly situated black
>>> > and white homeowners, in similar income black and
>>> white neighborhoods. If
>>> > these neighborhoods are in a city that is growing
>>> in wealth and population
>>> > (like san francisco) both homeowners should be
>>> able to look forward to their
>>> > house values increasing, right? NO. House values
>>> at first only increase in
>>> > the white neighborhoods, because the new
>>> residents, moving to SF from all
>>> > --
>>> Eddie Miller, BU '10
>>> eddiemill(a)gmail.com | 440-935-5434 <tel:440-935-5434>
>>>
Facebook.com/eddiemill
>>> <http://Facebook.com/eddiemill> |
>>>
Twitter.com/eddiemill <http://Twitter.com/eddiemill>
>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> sudo-discuss mailing list
>>> sudo-discuss(a)lists.sudoroom.org
>>> <mailto:sudo-discuss@lists.sudoroom.org>
>>>
http://lists.sudoroom.org/listinfo/sudo-discuss
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> sudo-discuss mailing list
>>> sudo-discuss(a)lists.sudoroom.org
<mailto:sudo-discuss@lists.sudoroom.org>
>>>
http://lists.sudoroom.org/listinfo/sudo-discuss
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> sudo-discuss mailing list
>> sudo-discuss(a)lists.sudoroom.org
>> <mailto:sudo-discuss@lists.sudoroom.org>
>>
http://lists.sudoroom.org/listinfo/sudo-discuss
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> -------
>> Andrew Lowe
>> Cell: 831-332-2507
>>
http://roshambomedia.com
>>
>
> _______________________________________________
> sudo-discuss mailing list
> sudo-discuss(a)lists.sudoroom.org <mailto:sudo-discuss@lists.sudoroom.org>
>
http://lists.sudoroom.org/listinfo/sudo-discuss