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James R. Martin's avatar

I wrote this comment on Chris Smaje's blog a moment ago. It is "awaiting modernation" at the moment, presumably because of the multiple URL links within it.

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“Imagine having an organic farm that you have brought back from continuous corn production.

What incentive do the new users have to maintain the resources (sustainability and all) when they don’t own the land?”

I’d like to offer a conceptual framing to be employed when thinking through questions of this sort.

The present globalized economic (and technological) systems are linear, not circular. These integrated systems strip the soil, ecosystems, biodiversity… everything in an extractive linear way. As Nate Hagens has wisely said recently, (paraphrase) “not a single industry on Earth today would be profitable if it internalized its negative externalities.” (negative externalities defined: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Externality )

What I’m getting at here is that the entire system of the Megamachine has the character of cost externalization — which is really mostly just harm to the biotic commuinity, to social health (well-being), most everything of real value. If you don’t know what a paperclip maximizer is, google it. Then consider that the Megamachine is a short term ‘profit’ maximizer.

(Megamachine defined: https://theraven.substack.com/p/the-rise-and-fall-of-the-megamachine )

If every industry on Earth would not be profitable if it had to pay its own costs of doing business, rather than externalizing those costs, then the world system (the Megamachine) is designed to wreck everything in the name of “producing wealth”. Keep in mind that in Middle English, the root of our word wealth was wele, which meant well-being. Well-being is synonymous with health.

What the Megamachine creates, for the most part, is not wealth, but illth. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illth

What we need to do, and fast (!) is facilitate the emergence of an entirely different kind of culture, one which rejects the ideology and ethos of the Megamachine. That means paying the true costs, if money is to be the means of organizing exchange. And that means keeping the soil healthy, not stripping it over time. The soil cannot lose its fertility without externalizing costs — as stripping the soil in the short run is a form of cost externalization.

The political consequences of what I say above are enormous, obviously. Our current world politics is shaped by the ideology and ethos of the Megamachine, as is our entire economy. A small farmer using non- cost-externalizing methods cannot compete in the Market with the Megamachine’s industrial agriculture. It just cannot. Not yet. We’re not that kind of a people, and we don’t have that kind of a politics.

This is largely why I believe we should remove some things from the Market altogether, first among these being basic necessities like food, shelter, medicine…. But let’s begin with FOOD. If we achieve success in removing food from The Megamachine’s Market, by making food exist within a communal and regenerative system, then we’d have a lesson from that as an emerging post Megamachine culture and politics.

Listen to my friend Adam Wilson speaking on this.

The Food Church

https://rword.substack.com/p/the-food-church

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