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Related: About this forumOrigins of Our Economic Powerlessness: Tracing poverty, inequality to the enclosure of the commons
from OnTheCommons.org:
Origins of Our Economic Powerlessness
Ivan Illich traces poverty and consumer dependency back to the enclosure of the commons
July 16, 2012 | by Ivan Illich
Commons is a Middle English word. People called commons that part of the environment which lay beyond their own thresholds and outside of their own possessions, to which, however, they had recognized claims of usage, not to produce commodities but to provide for the subsistence of their households. The law of the commons regulates the right of way, the right to fish and to hunt, and the right to collect wood or medicinal plants in the forest.
The enclosure of the commons inaugurates a new ecological order. Enclosure did not just physically transfer the control over grasslands from the peasants to the lord. It marked a radical change in the attitudes of society toward the environment. Before, most of the environment had been considered as commons from which most people could draw most of their sustenance without needing to take recourse to the market. After enclosure, the environment became primarily a resource at the service of enterprises which, by organizing wage labor, transformed nature into the goods and services on which the satisfaction of basic needs by consumers depend. primarily a resource at the service of enterprises which, by organizing wage labor, transformed nature into the goods and services on which the satisfaction of basic needs by consumers depend.
This change of attitudes can be better illustrated if we think about roads rather than about grasslands. What a difference there was between the new and the old parts of Mexico City only twenty years ago. In the old parts of the city, the streets were true commons. Some people sat in the road to sell vegetables and charcoal. Others put their chairs on the road to drink coffee or tequila. Children played in the gutter, and people walking could still use the road to get from one place to another. Such roads were built for people. Like any true commons, the street itself was the result of people living there and making that space livable.
In the new sections of Mexico City, streets are now roadways for automobiles, for buses, for taxis, cars, and trucks. People are barely tolerated on the street. The road has been degraded from a commons to a simple resource for the circulation of vehicles. People can circulate no more on their own. Traffic has displaced their mobility. .............(more)
The complete piece is at: http://onthecommons.org/magazine/origins-our-economic-powerlessness
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Origins of Our Economic Powerlessness: Tracing poverty, inequality to the enclosure of the commons (Original Post)
marmar
Jul 2012
OP
xchrom
(108,903 posts)1. Du rec. Nt
limpyhobbler
(8,244 posts)2. yeah.
Reminds me when oil and gas companies pay politicians to allow drilling on public lands. Or even when it's on private land, the air and water are still common.
HiPointDem
(20,729 posts)3. Basically a small group stole from the majority, and has continued to steal more and more down
through the ages.
We are currently watching as another great theft occurs.