Thursday, July 27, 2023

A Liberal Dose, July 27, 2023 "The Commons Are Not Tragic"

 


A Liberal Dose

July 27, 2023

Troy D. Smith

“Dispossessing the Poor, Part 8- The Commons Are Not Tragic”

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

Part 5

Part 6

Part 7

 

I started this 9-week series by mentioning “The Tragedy of the Commons” by Garrett Hardin. I am going to wind up with it, as well.

As a reminder, that term describes land that was set aside for the use of everyone in the village in the Middle Ages. Peasants were therefore able to supplement their farm-grown food by fishing and hunting in the forests of the commons, or foraging their livestock on the pastures of it. In the 1500s, nobles started fencing off the commons, reserving them for their own use (to make money) and denying them to the peasants, who were plunged into disaster -with those who survived forced to “learn to work harder” (from the nobles’ perspective).

Now, to me, the “tragedy” is that the commons were fenced off and the peasants were shafted… but that is not what Hardin was getting at in 1968. To him, the tragedy was that the commons were always destined to fail, in any culture, because they are unsustainable. He explained it like this: let’s say several villagers owned sheep, and they all grazed them on the commons. The commons can only support so many sheep, so it is in the best interests of the whole village for the number of sheep to be limited. But any individual herdsman is going to do the calculations in his head: too many sheep will ruin the pasture, yes, but if I get just one more sheep, to benefit myself, THAT won’t do it. Okay, maybe two sheep. Or three. The danger is that EVERY herdsman is going to think that way, and they will all be doomed. Better that they each have their own private acreage, because they will be much more likely to maintain it properly.

On the surface, that sounds like a very reasonable argument. I teach U.S. environmental history, and that argument is the very crux of the whole thing. Americans are virtually incapable of thinking in terms of the long-term good of the whole community, when there is profit to be had in the short term. This actually helped lead to the Civil War -cotton planters KNEW that they should rest their fields or they would become barren, but no one wanted to lose a potential year’s profit by doing so. Thus their fields became depleted, and they NEEDED to gain new lands, where of course they wanted to have slave labor, leading to the arguments about the spread of slavery.

But Hardin’s logic has a flaw. His argument only works with cultures that value the individual over the group, AND that place heavy value on profit. There have been cultures, in fact, where the concept of the commons worked quite well.

This includes most indigenous cultures of North America, the vast majority of whom were agricultural rather than nomadic. Each town would have a common cornfield, in which everyone would work together. At harvest-time, each family was given what it was approximated would hold them through winter. Of the remainder, part of it was sacrificed and part was put into a communal storehouse where anyone who fell short could draw from as needed. No one took more- because they had a strong sense of communal responsibility. No one accumulated extra- which prevented the development of capitalism. At the same time, it was not quite communist -there was no state that would enforce everyone’s conformity, because (ironically) Natives were both communal AND individualistic. NO ONE could order anyone else to do anything. Leaders had to PERSUADE.

Many indigenous people still have similar attitudes. They are less than 2% of the U.S. population, but they show up in huge numbers at any environmental protest. They do so with UNITY. For every action, they consider the repercussions seven generations from now.

I don’t subscribe to Adam Smith OR Karl Marx… but to Black Elk and Luther Standing Bear. I think we all should.

--Troy D. Smith, a White County native, is a novelist and a history professor at Tennessee Tech. His words do not necessarily represent TTU.

 

  You can find all previous entries in this weekly column HERE

A list of other historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE

Author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com

The author's historical lectures on youtube can be found HERE


2 comments:

  1. The homeless & low income have communal responsibility, a strong sense of camaraderie in which they help each other in times of need. They value sharing instead of private ownership. Perhaps low income tiny homes for them could be built around communal living space which would be self governed, self regulated & self maintained. Just a thought.

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