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# Introduction
> Nothing liberates us from a monopolist more readily than the revelation
> that we don't want his wares.
>
> -- Yanis Varoufakis
> It is the historic mission of the working class to do away with
> capitalism.
>
> The army of production must be organized, not only for
> everyday struggle with capitalists, but also to carry on production
> when capitalism shall have been overthrown.
>
> By organizing industrially we are forming the structure of the new
> society within the shell of the old.
>
> -- From "Preamble to the IWW Constitution", by the Industrial Workers of the World
Forget, for now, about solving all the world's problems. What does a
solution for small groups look like?
This document proposes one answer to that question: a
co-op/startup/commune/hackspace in the model of the kibbutzim, or Amish
communities, or Twin Oaks/East Wind. Internally communist/anarchist,
interfacing with the outside world via the default capitalist framework.
The aim is to provide an alternative to the default life of work and
consumption and rent and mortgages, that emphasizes freedom and life
and joy.
Make material goods that are useful, or profitable, or ideally both.
Make things to sell, to make money, to buy the things we can't make
ourselves yet.
The work we do should either reduce our dependence on the external
capitalist economy (how much we need to buy from them), or increase our
value to them (how much they buy from us).
Those are opposite sides of the scale of the economic interaction.
But the goal is not to successfully trade with the external capitalist
economy - the goal is to secede from it.
# Goals
* Self sufficiency/independence
* Egalitarian
- radical transparency
- decentralization of authority
* Healthy
* Ecologically sound
* Inter-generational
* Peaceful
* Prosperous
* Free as in freedom
* Be well positioned, socially and economically, for coming adversities
and opportunities (climate change, political upheaval, AI, nanotech,
etc)
* Nurture connections to a network of like-minded individuals,
communities, and organizations both for social contact and for economic
strength
# Physiological Needs
---
![](images/Maslow's_Hierarchy_of_Needs_Diagram.png)
By Hamish.croker - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=164544166
---
* 1 gallon/person/day water
* 2,500 calories/person/day food
* 4% carbs, 25g
* 16% protein, 107g
* 80% fat, 242g
* Shelter/real estate:
* ~150 sqft bedroom/person
* ~100 sqft bathroom/family
* ~100 sqft kitchen/family
* ~400 sqft living room/family
* ~200 sqft garage-shop/family
* Energy (electricity, fuels)
* Clothes
Higher needs:
* furniture
* tools
* weapons
* bandwidth
* health care
* education
# Independence
Independence means independence from capitalist coersion, not independence
from society or ecology.
Independence is a sliding scale, quantified by the measurement of
Vitamins. Anything you have to pay money for is a Vitamin.
Independence doesn't apply just to fabrication, but to all of humanity's
material conditions: from the basics of survival and procreation; air,
water, food, shelter, to higher needs like education, health care, etc.
Track your fucking budget. Count your vitamins. The revolution needs
accountants. See where you're tied to capitalism. Focus on strengthening
your independence by cutting those bonds:
1. Find ways to produce what you need. If you need an item, and the
default way of getting it is to buy it from an external supplier, try
to figure out what it would take to produce it internally. Maybe you'd
need tooling and raw materials (machine X and lower-level vitamins Y
and Z), plus the skill and time to use this new productive capacity.
While the initial capital outlay of buying the tooling might be
considerable, and climbing the learning curve might initially take
longer than just clicking "Buy Now" on JLCPCB or whatever, this
investment might make economic sense if it can be amortized over a
long productive life. The new productive capacity might serve the
enclave and aligned external sibling-enclaves.
2. Acquire what you need by trading with your network instead of with the
capitalist superstructure. This is the flip side of option 1: maybe
some sibling-enclave has already taken on the task of internalizing
the relevant production, and now we can lean on them (while supporting
them) to satisfy our needs.
3. Do without. This one is simple enough - but the goal is abundance,
not austerity. Material conditions will determine our actions,
and many goods are worthless. Be stingy by default.
# Bootstrap
Minimize up-front capital outlay!
This means:
* Make do with the space/infrastructure/tools I have available right now.
This includes my house & garage, and the hackspace.
* Bootstrap while making money at a dayjob? I sure don't want to burn
through my retirement savings while trying to start this up.
* Generally emphasize learning & using skills over spending money.
This dovetails with the ultimate goal of independence and resiliency.
But also note that sometimes, spending money is more efficient than DIY.
* When learning new skills, first review the literature of those who
went before. Try to collaborate on their documentation, or start new
public documents with info & links to help the next person.
* Fabricate open-source hardware, primarily for use by the comrades but
also for sale to the public.
Perform wage labor in the external capitalist economy, in order to
earn currency, to fund our existance and our development towards FALC.
Remote software engineering jobs are an obvious target here, as it keeps
us together and earns good money (in 2023 when this was first written).
The work should both make money and offset living expenses. It should
scale up as you add people and capital, to provide work and/or sustenance
for others. The work should fit into a larger picture of diversification,
building towards resilience.
## Traps to avoid
* Working on stuff that makes money but doesn't further the mission.
* Working on stuff that furthers the mission but isn't economically
sustainable.
* Spending down my retirement savings and having to go back to a normal
day job.

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# LABOR IDEOLOGY
## KNOWLEDGE, LABOR AND EDUCATION
**KNOWLEDGE**
* all skill knowledge freely available
* skills have pre-requisite knowledge/skills (knowledge/skill graph)
* skills are freely taught to those with pre-requisite skills who desire to learn the skill.
> **QUESTION**
>
> knowledge / skill contribution as a duty? i.e. any new skill you develop and any new knowledge you develop MUST be
> 1. added to the library
> 2. exposed to the commonwealth as a usable skill
**LABOR**
* labor outputs have requisite skills
* labor for an output may be performed by any individual with the requisite skills
**EDUCATION**
> **QUESTION**
>
> education as a duty? i.e. any new skill you develop and any new knowledge you develop MUST be
> 1. taught to those who wish to learn and have the pre-requisite skills
> might get tricky with some of the lower-level skills. maybe the skill is taught by the most recent person to gain that skill? teaching would re-enforce the knowledge that the new mentor just learned.
## INTERFACING WITH SYSTEMS OF CAPITAL
while the goal of labor is to never produce capital, in order to ensure the group's survival, it is sometimes necessary to interface with systems of capital. to that end, these are the guidelines with which capital will be generated:
@ -36,6 +13,5 @@ while the goal of labor is to never produce capital, in order to ensure the grou
2. once capital requirements have been met, internal production takes priority
3. should no internal production requests exist - production may begin against requirement 3
> **NOTE**
>
>**NOTE**
> the ordering of 1 and 2 above may shift as internal production begins to overtake imports for fulfillment of requirements 1 and 2