The following is a list of sixty-two things that you can do to wean yourself off your dependence upon the U.S. Dollar (USD) – and currencies and moneys in general – in order to survive.
Readers should be cautioned that some of these suggestions do not actually achieve the direct nor immediate abolition of currencies; but instead are merely alternatives to moneys, currencies, and/or the Dollar. Many solutions listed below also do not necessarily threaten to abolish the systems of capitalism, exchange, the wage system, market systems, pressured and coerced labor, and perhaps even private property, most or all of which are likely to still prove to remain problematic, even if and after currencies are successfully boycotted (or even, potentially, abolished).
[Notes: "Anagorism" is a term which refers to a system in which there are no markets. "Anideotism" is a term which refers to a system in which there is no private property.]
#10. Advocate for
laws which would result in the abolition of fiat currency, fractional banking,
and the “independent” private Federal Reserve System; and which would require
full-reserve banking. This would prevent the U.S. Dollar from continuing to
lose approximately fifty percent of its value every 20 to 25 years.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Full-reserve_banking
http://www.diggers.org/free_store.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutual_aid_(emergency_services)
#37. Advocate and
lobby for the offering of tax credits, and/or other tax incentives – to
landlords and managers, and housing boards – in exchange for allowing homeless
and low-income people to sleep and/or reside in whatever units they own which
may be going unused or empty.
#38. Advocate and lobby for the
passage of laws which would abolish absentee property ownership (i.e., the
legal claiming of ownership of properties which the actual claimed owner plays
no part in using, and/or no part in participating in their daily defense).
Learn more at:
http://www.rockethomes.com/blog/housing-market/absentee-owner
#39. Advocate and lobby for the
offering of tax incentives, to the owners and landlords and managers of
apartment buildings – and to housing boards – to allow homeless and low-income
people to sleep in whichever of their housing units may be going empty and
unused.
#40. Simply let people go get the things they need. Ensure universal and open access to the basic means of survival; i.e., make it illegal for law enforcement officials to use force and initiatory violence in order to administer and apply laws which prohibit people from collecting resources essential which are to their survival, which were provided to them for free by nature. These include – most notably and obviously – air and land (which people cannot help but use and occupy, except for killing themselves), as well as water (which is abundant, and falls from the sky).
#41. Advocate for the repeal or relaxation of laws which limit or prohibit people’s freedom to collect rainwater (provided that they are not stealing water from their neighbors, and/or altering the water table in a way that harms local plants or wildlife).
Learn more at:
http://source.colostate.edu/extension-offers-fact-sheet-on-how-to-harvest-rainwater-under-new-colorado-rules/
#42. Advocate and
lobby for relaxing and/or repealing laws which limit or prohibit people from
growing edible plant produce, and raising small livestock (such as bees, rabbits,
chickens, ducks, and goats) on or outside their homes.
Learn more at:
http://news.wttw.com/2018/02/05/chickens-and-goats-backyard-raising-livestock-chicago
#43. Advocate and
lobby for the repeal of laws against vagrancy; for example, laws which allow
police officers to arrest travelers, vagrants, and homeless people provided they
do not have enough money to stay in a hotel in the pertinent town for the night.
One example would be to advocate for the repeal of laws against loitering.
Learn more at:
http://www.law.virginia.edu/scholarship/publication/risa-goluboff/640716#:~:text=Vagrancy%20laws%20took%20myriad%20forms,some%20jurisdictions%20criminalized%20loitering%20separately.
#44. Advocate and lobby for the relaxation
and/or repeal of laws against sleeping (sometimes referred to as “camping”) and
of squatting; especially on town and city and other municipal property, and
other public lands.
#45. Advocate and lobby for the relaxation
of local building and construction codes, in a manner which would allow for a
wider range of experimentation in architecture. One way would be to amend the
law to allow homes to be made from recyclable and reusable materials.
Components of these homes – called “Earth Ships” – often include dirt packed
into tires, aluminum cans wrapped together with pieces of twine, and colored
glass bottles stacked together in mosaic patterns. These homes are usually
built with windows facing the sun, and have been known to retain heat and cold
well, which makes it extremely cheap (or even free) to regulate their
temperature, allowing such homes to go entirely without modern H.V.A.C. (heating,
ventilation, and air conditioning).
Architect Mike Reynolds successfully
lobbied the government of the State of New Mexico to do this, and then he
travelled to Indonesia to teach locals how to gather recyclable materials, and build
houses from them, after the 2004 tsunami in Banda Aceh.
Learn more at:
http://earthship.com
http://theministryofarchitecture.com/earthships/earthship-pros-cons/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_ZTiocr3LU
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garbage_Warrior
#46. Advocate and lobby for the
repeal of laws which hinder people from – and/or punish people for – donating foods,
clothing, and other goods, to the homeless. One example would be to take down
signs which advise people not to give to panhandlers, and to instead donate to
homeless shelters and other homeless services. Raise awareness that voluntary
giving is not a crime.
#47. Urge your local homeless shelters to set up free laundry services for the people who use said shelters. Such services could be funded through additional donations from the public, and/or by whatever funds those shelters may already have available.
#48. Advocate and lobby for the repeal or relaxation of laws against public nudity, and of other legally binding dress codes which apply to the public (provided that such repeal would not result in the legalization of indecent exposure). This would help reduce the annual cost of clothing which is incurred by the poor.
#49. Lobby governments to stop sending public
taxpayer money – and other forms of public assistance – to food companies,
especially “Big Ag” (big agriculture) companies which make billions of dollars
each year and would likely thrive without public assistance.
Examples of such public assistance
include bailout funds, government contracts, monopoly privileges (such as
patents), bankruptcy assistance, corporate subsidies, trade promotions and
trade protections (such as finance and insurance from the Export-Import Bank), easy
credit and low interest rates (from the Federal Reserve System), discounts on
public utilities (such as roads and electricity), small business loans (such as
P.P.P. loans), and favorable zoning laws and professional regulations, among
others.
#50. Advocate and lobby for the offering
of tax incentives, to grocery stores and supermarkets, to donate food
(especially excess / surplus foods, and foods that will spoil and go bad if
they are not soon used) to the homeless and needy. Also, advocate and lobby for
requiring such stores to donate unsold foods to the homeless and needy;
or for revoking the charters of businesses which do not do so.
Learn more at:
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/feb/04/french-law-forbids-food-waste-by-supermarkets
http://recycle.ab.ca/newsletterarticle/france-becomes-first-country-to-ban-supermarket-food-waste/
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/is-frances-groundbreaking-food-waste-law-working
#51. Raise awareness about gleaning,
the gathering of plant produce which is going unused, sitting in fields,
because it is not suitable for sale. Such food is often perfectly edible.
A related task could be to advocate
for the repeal of laws which prohibit “dumpster diving” (i.e., “diving”
into dumpsters in order to find food that could still be eaten).
Learn more at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gleaning
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steel_v_Houghton
#52. Instead of using mass-produced,
specialized, processed foods (which are often unhealthful and expensive), buy
generic foods, and engage in bulk purchasing. This is easy to do, if you shop
at wholesale food distribution stores (such as CostCo and WinCo), and food cooperatives
/ grocery cooperatives. Generic foods are often sold in bulk, but it is only efficient
to buy bulk foods if you live in a housing cooperative, and/or routinely share
meals with other people.
#53. Advocate and lobby for the repeal or relaxation
of laws which require local food and health inspectors, and/or the F.D.A. (Food
and Drug Administration) to inspect any and all foods offered for potential
purchase by the buying “public”. Foods which may be subject to such inspection
include farm-to-fork meals (meals which go directly from farm to the dinner
table), homemade baked goods offered for school bake sales, and children’s
lemonade stands. [The freedom to start a lemonade stand is referred to as “Lemonade
Liberty”.] The laws could be amended so as to prohibit the destruction of such
foods (including with bleach) simply because they were offered for sale before
or without inspection.
Learn more at:
http://www.farmtoconsumer.org/blog/2012/12/18/revisiting-the-farm-to-fork-fiasco/
http://www.northfortmyersneighbor.com/2011/09/20/lemonade-liberty-a-lesson-in-freedom/
#54. Agree to work, washing dishes or cleaning, in exchange
for food, provided that the owners of the restaurant are okay with you doing
so, and that you are not planning on doing it solely in the event that you get
caught attempting to “dine and dash” (i.e., eat, and then run out of the
restaurant without paying).
Musician Jon Bon Jovi opened a restaurant, called "JBJ Soul Kitchen", which advertises no prices for meals, and which is funded largely on donations and volunteering.
Learn more at:
http://jbjsoulkitchen.org/
#55. Advocate and lobby for the
reduction of patent terms on foods. This will allow generic versions of
patented foods to enter the market sooner, rather than later, usually in a
manner which allows such a food to be purchased more cheaply.
#56. Advocate and lobby for the
reduction of patent terms (sometimes called patent “lifespans”) on medications.
This will allow generic versions of patented medications to enter the market
sooner, rather than later, usually in a manner which allows such a food to be
purchased more cheaply.
I have proposed a law called “E.M.P.A.T.H.I.C.”
which would do just this. “E.M.P.A.T.H.I.C.” stands for “Eliminating Medical
Patents to Achieve Technology for Immortality Cheaply”. I like to say that we
should make medical patent “lifespans” shorter in order to help make human
lifespans last longer.
#57. Advocate and lobby for the
passage of a new law which would offer doctors and nurses opportunities to
voluntarily submit to legally enforcement of the provision of the Hippocratic
Oath which prohibits them from declining to treat people due to inability to
pay. The same oath also requires doctors to share medical knowledge for free,
and even to give their own money to patients who are in need. Such enforcement
could potentially provide for the revoking of medical licenses for any and all health
care workers who promise to provide free care, but then renege on their
promises.
The Hippocratic Oath reads, in part: “…when he
is in need of money to share mine with him… to teach them this art, if they
want to learn it, without fee or indenture; to impart precept, oral instruction…”.
Such a law, if widely adopted, would
drastically reduce not only the costs of health care, but also the costs of
medical education.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hippocratic_Oath
#59. Increase awareness that
scarcity is a myth, because it is an illusion, and artificial, and
manufactured, for the purposes of making us think that shortages are natural
and normal and occur frequently. Additionally, raise awareness that scarcity, shortages,
fixedness, finitude / finity, and limitation / limitedness, are not the
same thing; and that schools of economics are trying to lead us to think that
they are the same thing.
For more information, please read my
May 2023 article, titled “Economics Uses a False Definition of Scarcity (and
Ignores Abundance)”, which can be read at the following address:
http://aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2023/05/economics-uses-false-definition-of.html
#60. Read articles about – and/or watch
video interviews with – Daniel Suelo, “the man who quit money”, in order to get
more ideas about how to live without using moneys and currencies.
Learn more at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suelo
http://www.becomingminimalist.com/the-man-who-quit-money-an-interview-with-daniel-suelo/
#61. Start a campaign which involves urging and encouraging others to boycott the U.S. Dollar, and/or to quit currency and/or money entirely, using the other tips which are listed, above and below, in this article. Remind people that you don’t die if you stop needing
money, and that money is not one of our basic means of survival; rather, air, water, food, clothing, shelter, and medicine are. Show this article to anybody you know, who claims that “you need money
to live” or that “you need money in order to survive”.
Learn more at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-monetary_economy
#62. Stop associating with people who use money and currencies and the U.S. Dollar. This will only be practical and practicable on a mass scale, if, after, and when more people begin to attempt to boycott currencies, and are able to share this knowledge with others, and recover from their addiction to currencies, successfully.
Written, and originally published incomplete,
Originally published under the title
"Fifty-Seven Ways to Decrease Your Dependence
Upon the U.S. Dollar, Other Currencies, and Moneys in General"
Edited, expanded, and completed
on June 22nd, 2024.
Based on my February 2017 article
"You Don't Need Money to Live",
which was written on February 17th, 2017,
March 19th and 23rd, and April 4th, 2017,
No comments:
Post a Comment