A traditional house and garden in Mondragon / Arrasate

these notes started as a email to the permaculture list hosted by Lawrence London.

1.Mondragon and Permaculture

In the Mp3 audio of Bill Mollison 1983 PDC (Permaculture Designers Certificate) in Stanley,Tasmania (Geoff Lawton attended) that are available as DVD for sale and on the internet, Bill Mollison talks at length about the Mondragon Cooperative (along with Commonworks etc) as an organisational framework - a natural order of People Care and Fair Share for Earth Care that permaculture projects ought use.

I actually found and listened to these Mp3’s just before we went to Mondragon (such is life!). We really did Build The Road as We Travel (the only book on Mondragon that we saw on tour).

Also, re-reading the Permaculture Designers Manual 1988 he has a couple of references again to Mondragon in the Alternative Nation section towards the end of the book.

In the audio of the PDC Bill ends by saying something like “I think I will go and pay the Mondragon cooperators a visit”. As far as I know - which isnt much, he never did.

Judging from the conservative, industrial, mass-consumer framework of the Mondragon Cooperatives - who in the 1980s would of been immersed and adapting to the end of Franco’s regime, the enslaught of global neoliberalism i.e. outsourcing, multinationals moving into the local markets etc… Bill may of simply bounced straight-off the Mondragon Experience.

IMHO the Basque language and culture are one kind of self-protection mechanism for the Arrasate locals and also the Mondragon Cooperators. Also the highly developed and complicated internal “corporate culture”, the elaborate and specific “business rules of Mondragon” act as a auto-immune system. Protecting them from the outside.

So an approach from Bill in the early days of the permaculture movement may not have succeeded.

We where told during our information day that permaculture people - pioneers - had visited Mondragon Cooperative. Does anyone have information on who that might have been ?

2. Attack-on and Decline of Cooperatives

Cooperatives (especially worker cooperatives) in the advanced industrial societies are the opposite to the modern tyrannical corporation (with all its pathologies), see the film or the book, The Corporation or the Corporation2020 conference recently held in Boston. i.e. worker ownership and self-management, vs wage slavery and top-down decision making etc

The cooperative sector has been under systematic attack from the state and the business community for the last 30 years.

For instance, a single example (and there are many others) is the chart that maps the number of cooperative organic distributors in the USA. In 1982 there were 28 consumer cooperative distributors. Today there is just 1. http://www.msu.edu/~howardp/coopmap.pdf https://www.msu.edu/~howardp/organicdistributors.html

This pattern is repeated in Australia (New Labor), UK (Thatcher), USA (Reagan) with credit unions, mutual societies, food cooperatives, consumer cooperatives. etc.

The entire social economy, along with the social-welfare state is being systematically dismantled by neoliberalism and being replaced with the rapacious corporate state-capitalism we are now joyously living under. As the saying says “you might not be interested in politics, but politics is interested in you.”

In the global south, the attack on the social economy and the cooperative sector went much further, with right-wing dictatorships such as in Bolivia or Chile. See Noami Klein’s recent The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism [video]. Ominously, the engineer of the Schock Doctrine in Bolivia, Russia and many other countries, Jeffrey Sachs, is now running the Earth Institute at Columbia University.

3. Permaculture Pioneers Adapting to Neoliberalism

The permaculture pioneers, along with everybody else (from the Arctic to the space) have been forced to adapt to or perish from the realities of this form of globalisation.

And so as cooperative and social forms of organisation are systematically dismantled we are being sold an “entrepreneurial story” a lie sold through the commercial and state propaganda of the media. Chomsky’s Manufacturing Consent, Understanding Power.

The permaculture pioneers where forced to survive in this increasingly hostile market economy, with its tendency towards concentration of ownership and control.

They where not alone, as many of the products of the 60s and 70s such as intentional communities, ethical businesses etc suffered and where reversed or coopted and transformed during the period. See PHowards studies of the Organics Industry in the USA.

i.e Permaculture International Journal is killed and Gardening Australia takes the niche which is now printed by News Corp. Newsspace AD Specs for Gardening Australia

4. Organisational Succession for Permaculture Pioneers

I agree that there is an entire generation of babyboomer, and now later, permaculture pioneers that need support with succession, this was actually one of the first ideas discussed in Australia for a horizontal Permaculture Cooperative.

I actually registered the domain www.Permaculture.coop (and paid for it with mine and kirsties money) under trust with Tagari (Bill Mollison). Our written agreement with Tagari, which has been published to the internet was that Tagari would auspice the domain while we researched and developed a Mondragon style cooperative.

This support service would be a worker cooperative and provide administrative, marketing, finance, legal, IT and also perennial polyculture-style ecological farming services.

On many farms, sites, communes, communities etc… succession is failing.

The founders are really at retiring age, and want a succession, and sometimes will find a WWOOFer with abilities and will to help that transition.

Immediately there is a power imbalance. Usually the WWOOFer is already living precariously and has little support from any kind of succession planning organisation i.e. a global Permaculture.Coop.

Succession takes time, money, knowledge and services. Often is needs patience and is a slow process that goes beyond the skills of a single or small group of people.

Often the WWOOFer and the Pioneer are already burning-out and trying to do too much.

Eventually something gives, an argument ensues and the there is no Social Council (as in Mondragon) or any kind of third-party mechanism for resolution.

So the Pioneers that survive are still running things basically by themselves and are essentially bosses to the workers around them, that come and go.

The WWOOFers have no ownership of the permaculture operation; usually ZERO financial and often very little actual decision-making. They might be able to inform the options for decision-making, but they are NOT the ones taking the decisions.

If you dig below the surface and actually TALK to many WWOOFers or younger generation permies the stories of exploitation, arguments, falling-outs etc are legion.

Indeed for many this is THE Permaculture story.

This dynamic comes all the way from the top of the teacher-student hierarchy down to the smallest operation. Often its not an intentional, I am going to exploit you situation. Its a reality of survival. The Permaculture Pioneer is working abnormally long hours, and expects all around them to do the same.

The fact that there is little pooling of resources .i.e. services, finance, equipment… on an organised and global framework makes harder work inevitable.

 5. Example of Permaculture School converting to Cooperative

I havent followed this up, but I learned that the Dutch Permaculture School has made itself into a cooperative so that projects launched as part of the PDC design project have an organisational home. http://gaiapermaculture.com/projects/permaculturecooperative/blog/2009/08/30/permaculture-cooperation-in-netherlands/

6. Permaculture Worker Cooperatives in Britain

I had a kitchen meeting with Andy Goldring of Permaculture Association of Britain about a permaculture worker cooperative and he shared my view, that to scale-up and sustain BIG industrial ecology style permaculture projects, a Mondragon worker-cooperative (or UK-style Rochdale cooperative, or even like the Cooperative Group of the UK) was a natural phase in organisational evolution.

Some groups in the UK are Radical Routes secondary cooperative and Rootstock social investments division.  http://gaiapermaculture.com/projects/permaculturecooperative/blog/2009/08/26/permaculture-worker-cooperative-britain-ideas/

Also, Eastside Roots permaculture worker cooperative in Bristol. http://permaculture.tv/?p=998

The UK cooperative (social enterprise) scene is deep and rich and I am hoping to research and develop within this culture. Hopefully doing more in 2010 in the UK.

5. Transition Network

Was in Totnes and had a good chat with Ben Brangwyn, a co-founder of the Transition Network (of Transition Town Totnes).

The famous Transition Towns Totnes, have started a cooperative, an Industrial and Provident Society a kind of credit union for the Totnes Pound.

Interestingly the Totnes Pound section of the website is twice as busy as an other section and the in public meetings its also the most asked about the Transition Towns process.

For the Transition (Transition Towns) Movement the focus is on Project Delivery and Implementation. Rob Hopkins and the TTT team have raised a lot of awareness and interest and now are faced with delivering on the ground and managing expectations.

I expect to see more Transition cooperatives within the Transition Network and would encourage anyone interested in permaculture cooperation to get involved with the local Permaculture groups, Cooperatives & Transition process (they are often the same folks).

6. Social Economy Networks & Worker Cooperatives

Have recently started to email the SEN and share some of the permaculture worker cooperative research.

In the USA, there is an re-emergant interest in social economy networks and worker cooperatives.

Social economies and worker cooperatives emerged from the wreckage of the neoliberal engineered collapses of South American countries such as Argentinia. See Noami Klein’s movie The Take. Workers re-took their factories, that the capitalists wanted asset-sripped and closed and restarted their own cooperative economy. This popular economy underwrote the popular governments now running the entire continent.

The US Social Forum 2010 is in Detroit http://www.ussf2010.org/ where there is a lot of food justice, worker cooperative and sustainability style renewal going on now the big auto-makers have imploded and been bailed-out by the state-capitalists.

Mondragon is also working with the United Steel Workers (one of the only real unions in the USA) to work on setting-up Mondragon style worker cooperatives. Mondragon has a unionised operation manufacturing wind power generators.


Micheal Moores movie Capitalism a Love Story  http://permaculture.tv/?p=739 features lost footage of FDR talking about an Economic Bill of Rights and features worker cooperatives.

The Catholics Social Doctrine, that informs the worker cooperatives of Mondragon (the Basque are Catholic, such famous Catholic Basques are Loyola the founder of the Jesuits). Mike Moore is also Catholic. So too are the South American social economy activists, Liberation Theology & Liberation Ecology are the stream of Catholic experience in much of Sur America.

We have the domain WorkerCooperatives.com and have been threatining to set-up a video blog like Permaculture TV. http://gaiapermaculture.com/projects/permaculturecooperative/blog/2009/09/09/climate-change-and-a-climate-of-change-in-manhattan/

Food Rebellions

The Nation has caused a splash, with a feature issue called “Food For All” about food activism from US coast to coast. A decent, if shallow and unimaginative critique “Cornucopia Blues” in that edition, calls for food activists to go beyond evangalism, for enduring institutional arrangements that go beyond informal volunteer driven local community efforts. Our focus has been worker cooperative organisations: Mondragon, Radical Routes etc.

These networks are forming, In Oakland, the Network of Bay Area Workers Cooperatives and other groups have formed JASecon for Just Alternative Sustainable Economy and hosting a Grassroots Economy Festival at the Humanist Hall. We visited some of these organisations earlier this year, and like Radical Routes in the UK and Mondragon in Basque Country the resilience comes from a network or group of cooperation.

Another article from The Nation is about Detroits “Quiet Revolution”, the food justice movement in Detroit, which will host the USA Social Forum in 2010.

7. Brazilian Permaculture Worker cooperatives

in relation to Jorgen’s direct question about avoiding mistakes when setting-up a new permaculture project in Brazil, think about giving ownership of decisions and the organisation to the people involved.

Perhaps it would be a multi-stakeholder hybrid model. i.e. teachers, students, workers, community.

I have some notes from the Mondragon talk and a PPT that I hesitate to post to the web, but will email privately permaculturecoop@gmail.com Also have a Mondragon tour video that needs uploading to Permaculture.TV.

There are also groups such as Via Campesina and The People’s Movement Against Climate Change

8. Permaculture Worker Cooperative Movement

we have been thinking that permaculture worker cooperatives need to become a movement, perhaps with a unique flavor of education, part permaculture, part worker cooperative education.

We have talked a little about having a convergance or an event, perhaps a PDC in Mondragon next year, perhaps before the IPC10 and the Klimaforum2010, we have the domain MondragonPermaculture.com

http://gaiapermaculture.com/projects/permaculturecooperative/blog/2009/08/29/permaculture-worker-cooperative-movement-climate-camp-uk/

9. 10 000 Trees: A Planetary Permaculture Strategy to Save the Earth

I have just had an interview with Tony Andersen, permaculture organiser of the Klimaforum09 (the climate social forum preceeding COP15) in Copenhagen this Dec 7-18. See Permaculture.TV

The International Permaculture Council has developed a strategy for dealing with Climate Change. They call it 10 000 Trees.

Basically they think that 5-7 metres of sea-level rise is inevitable, its intertia/momentum in the climate/global ecology and we can try to stop the planet from mega-death if we plant something like 5000-7000 trees per person in the next 25 years (most of the sequestered carbon is in the soil within the perennial polyculture agroecology).

We also need to reduce C02 emissions down to 1 tonne per person. They see Permaculture Institutes (and in my view a permaculture worker cooperative movement) as the key to success. I have 30 minutes of interview that I will be posting ASAP.


10. A Transition/Succession to Permaculture Mondragon Complex

Education at Mondragon is subsidised by the industrial cooperatives. The Mondragon University doesnt make money, education ought to lose money. It should be subsidised.

It is possible for students at Mondragon to work part-time within the cooperatives to help pay for study and living expenses. It also gives them a cooperative and industrial experience.

The Mondragon Cooperative is actually a group of 120 cooperatives, all working within a inter-cooperative framework. Organised with Industrial groups.

  • INDUSTRIAL    87
  • CREDIT        1
  • CONSUMER    1
  • AGRICULTURAL    4
  • EDUCATION    8
  • RESEARCH    13
  • SERVICES    6
  • TOTAL        120 cooperatives

Mondragons Strategy is

  • People are the mainstay of the enterprise (twenty-first century, century of knowledge)
  • We are all owners and protagonists
  • One person, one vote (democracy)
  • The involvement of everyone in: Management, Ownership and Results
  • Self-management
  • Decentralised organisation
  • Real inter-cooperation in funds and people
  • Reinvestment of surplus
  • Social responsibility
  • Innovation: Technical/Technological, Organisational, Financial, Social
  • Balance between job creation and financial profitability
  • Internationalization

Mondragon’s 10 principles are

  1. Open Admission.
  2. Democratic Organization.
  3. Sovereignty of Labor.
  4. Instrumental and Subordinate Nature of Capital.
  5. Participatory Management.
  6. Wage  Solidarity.
  7. INTERCO-OPERATION.
  8. Social Transformation.
  9. Universality.
  10. Education

Permaculture.coop Groups

Within permaculture the member cooperatives might organise in Industrial Groups and be;

Urban, Rural, Marketing, Education, Industrial (Solar, Wind, Hydro), Construction, Food, Research, Publishing, Finance.

  • INDUSTRIAL    ?
  • CREDIT        ?
  • CONSUMER    ?
  • AGRICULTURAL    ?
  • EDUCATION    ?
  • RESEARCH    ?
  • SERVICES    ?
  • TOTAL        ? cooperatives

Key to this is a Research and Development, Enterprise Development, Venture Capital and Financial Division.

We Build the Road as we Travel is a good book. The academic work of ….  see NOBAWC

Rules for joining the Mondragon Cooperative Corporation (MCC), the coordinating cooperative

  • Relocation of staff among cooperatives.
  • Restructuring results.
    • Within the sectorial groups (>15%-<40%)
    • Within corporative funds in MONDRAGON (Investment 10%) (Education 2%) (Solidarity 2% - for compensation In Case of losses)
  • Solidarity in profit distribution (net profit of each co-op)
    • 10% Fund of Education (Law 10%)
    • 45% Fund or Reserve of Co-op (Law 20%)
    • 45% Returns to workers > Capitalize > Interest 7,5% in cash
  • Initial  capital (14.000 euros in 2008).
  • Solidarity in remunerating managers.
  • Reporting of data to MONDRAGON Headquarters.
  • Not internal competition between co-ops within MONDRAGON.

11. David Holmgren’s Permaculture Principles

according to Permaculture co-creator/co-founder, David Holmgren 1994

“Cooperation not competition. Try where possible to arrange elements in cooperation not competition. In nature they work in balance, a dynamic tension. Natural systems tend to internalise cooperation and externalise the competition.”

12. Free Love vs Climate War

When babyboomers went back to the land things where very different from today.

Free love, cheap land, free health care, free education, plenty of work, relatively little debt. Optimism for the future.

Compared with the precarity of todays younger permies, where jobs are scarce, debt is high, education and healthcare are expensive, land is unaffordable.

Today many are attracted to permaculture as a kind of survivalism school, a way to live through the coming Climate War. Not exactly the Free Love era is it ? Lovelock Climate war could kill nearly all of us, leaving survivors in the Stone Age

In the past cooperation was a kind of dream, an ideal. Today its a requirement for survivial.

Pat Murphy’s Book, Plan C: Community Survival Strategies for Peak Oil and Climate Change

In Conclusion, a Call for Cooperation

I am personally grateful for the super hard work, creativity and dogged, never-say-die attitude of the Permaculture Pioneers. Like plant ecology, the Pioneers may be loners, spikey, tough, and pretty hard company, but they have had to adapt and survive in extremely hard conditions.

The organic farming, perennial polyculture, community supported agriculture pioneering work has been done.

We need to go back to that 1983 PDC talk of Mollisons and work-out a Permaculture.coop project. In my view its the organisational aspects that have held the international permaculture network back.

Kirstie and myself have been exploring the organisational level of permaculture evolution.

We hope others might join with us in the research and development of such a Permaculture.coop.

Anyone interested please get in touch with us below.

cheers

ps: an open letter to copyright holders, how much to make your collection a global commons ? how much money do you want so we can pool and open source ALL of the permaculture content ? making it freely available online ?


Times Square for consumers

Sitting in the Rose Room in the New York Public Library, chilled by over-powered air-conditioning. Arrived via the underground and walked from Times Square, where people have reclaimed the streets from cars, but not the future from mass-consumption, witness mile-high advertisements.

The underground is hot and dirty, the streets are noisy, dusty and distracting. The reading and wifi Rose Room is the largest room in the USA and the head-space, if not the Arctic air-con is a welcome respite.

Climate Change Industry

It seems there is so much going on and its hard to know where to place ones energies, time, and debts. There is a climate of change, and climate change, and a climate change industry. Or is it all noise, glimmer and glamour? Full of sound and fury, but signifying nothing? Or is the climate justice movement really having an effect in the USA and elsewhere? Can Gaia Permaculture Carbon Farming sequester the C02 and save us ? Or will be get more military-industrial sustainability (sustainment) via Bio-Char International and McGaia?

We landed at JFK sad to leave the UK after the friendships and sense of achievement after Camps for Climate Action Scotland and London (UK). Especially important was the work on the Coal Health Study and the media work. We have met cooperators and permaculturalists and all kinds of interesting people this past month at and through the Climate Camps, especially the good folks of the village of Douglas and the Mainshill Solidarity Camp Earth Firster’s and leads into the Radical Routes and Permaculture Association of Britain

At Climate Camp UK, in London, we kept getting asked “where we going to Copenhagen (for COP15 and to get involved in the network of Climate Justice Action ?”. The answer eventually was “we would like to, if we could afford it and had something serious to do!”. We developed a couple of ideas, one was a Climate Social Forum, in the World Social Forum principles and process.

After a little enquiry was informed there is government funded civil-society forum: Klimaforum09, which sounds rather like the European Social Forum, Malmo 2008 in its left-establishment (vertical-left) support. On the surface its structured like a World Social Forum, but under-the-hood, its a government funded conference for NGO’s, an extension of Nordic soft-power public-diplomacy.

However the Kilmaforum2009’s 9 themes and the attending organisations are right-on and would love to work-out how to go and work on Gaia Permaculture and the Permaculture Worker Cooperative Movement projects. The Klimaforum2009 creator is a Danish permaculturalist: Tony Anderson. So, its an amazing opportunity, will try to reconnect with Malmo solidarity accommodation types and contact  the Nordic permaculture contingent, and the Klimaforum online forum.

Glocalisation of climate

My major unresolved question with solutions, revolves on this reflexive obsession with localisation. It’s a kind of allergic reaction to the Washington Consensus modality of globalisation. Pure localisation just wont work. Globalisation is real; climate, weather, migration of organisms including people, trade etc. We live on a planet with a global climate.

Are we going to localise climate? It's a nonsense. 

The mindless business mantra of “Think Globally, Act Locally” is largely to blame. Corporations and the rich don’t limit themselves to this, they Think Globally and Act Globally. They Think Locally and Act Locally. Everyone knows the edge between the global and local is the most corrupt level of government, its the place where organised crime operates, dodgy planning occurs, corporations do things, see The Power Elite. Indeed there is a term; Glocalisation

Organisation needs to come from below but continue to the global level. We saw very large worker cooperative industrial democracy at Mondragon: from team to very large groups of 100 000s. It is possible to organise modern, industrial society with democratic decision-making and ownership. We need more highly organised social and economic arrangements. The anarcho-syndicalists also did it in Spain before betrayal by the liberal democracies, Socialists and Communists.

Democracy is a fractal. It can work on all scales and all systems.

One very promising discovery, which could be a lead-in to Gaia Permaculture is the plan developed by Tony Anderson and the Scandanavian Permaculture network for the Øresund Bioregion and the global plan for 10 000 trees.  

Animals migrate yearly, organisms move. So do people. We need technology, transport, communications etc. While COP15 progresses inside, Kilmaforum09 runs outside. COP15 is top-down, and Kilmaforum09 is bottom-up. But where do they meet ? The place where globalisation meets localisation is where corporations, the rich and the powerful control the present and the future. One of the reasons localisation is so popular is that its is so harmless and diffuses energies away from real political economic change into gardening. As Mollison said, ad nauseum, permaculture is more than a gardening system. Again, keep coming back to Gaia Permaculture wiki project. Me thinks the Rose Room will be good for developing the wiki.

Media Leaders

A Glen Beck fascist Fox News green-scare/red-scare (green is the new red) made green jobs czar Van Jones resign. He said in 1994 he is a communist. I wouldn’t have believed Jones in ‘94, I don’t believe him now. If he really was an anarchist communist, or even an ecologist, he might be interesting and important. But the Obama-lovers are in a tizz as he loses battles and their man’s popularity has dived, and he ducks and covers further to the right. The Black Agenda Reports editor Glen Ford says that Obama fired Jones, not Glen Beck. Both Jones and Obama are media-leaders (like Tony Blair) and that the President is acting like progressives are the only thing stop a grand non-partisan alliance.

I agree with John Pilgerthe Obama lovers need to grow-up” and Alexander Cockburn that this is Obama’s last chance. Chomsky spoke, was interviewed by The Real News and Democracy Now, and wrote at ZNET after the election at length about Brand Obama and Obama’s Army needing to mutiny and organise from below, to free themselves from the top-down social-network soft-power dicastorship. Obama is and has always been a conservative, at best a liberal Republicrat from his earliest days as a community organiser for the Catholic Church in Chicago, through Harvard Law School, as a Senator and campaigning netroots presidential candidate to now a perpetual-war imperial President, a kind of Pharoah to the world.

Food Rebellions

The Nation has caused a splash, with a feature issue called “Food For All” about food activism from US coast to coast. A decent, if shallow and unimaginative critique “Cornucopia Blues” in that edition, calls for food activists to go beyond evangalism, for enduring institutional arrangements that go beyond informal volunteer driven local community efforts. Our focus has been worker cooperative organisations: Mondragon, Radical Routes etc.

These networks are forming, In Oakland, the Network of Bay Area Workers Cooperatives and other groups have formed JASecon for Just Alternative Sustainable Economy and hosting a Grassroots Economy Festival at the Humanist Hall. We visited some of these organisations earlier this year, and like Radical Routes in the UK and Mondragon in Basque Country the resilience comes from a network or group of cooperation.

Another article from The Nation is about Detroits “Quiet Revolution”, the food justice movement in Detroit, which will host the USA Social Forum in 2010.

New York For Sale

"If you live in an unrealistic world then you can say everything should be a
community garden."
Rudolph Giuliani, quoted in The New York Times, 16 February 2000.

In New York City, my goals are to do an film/blog on Co-op City in the Bronx (the largest co-op housing project in the world), the Green Workers Cooperative in the South Bronx, and take some good stock footage of the institutions of global capital: media corporations, finance houses, etc.

We are staying in the Upper West Side in Manhattan, with a friend whose work is on energy efficiency, he is an industry expert and maverick, from the boiler-room, the Wes Jackson of building energy efficiency. He is running a similar battle with the Big Green Establishment. He has a very solid critique of the cosy world of LEED which is largely an exercise in greenwash. Similar to the dodgy corporate organics, whole and natural foods markets, with dubious schemes and consolidated industry networks. But where is the Food Inc or Omnivores Dilemna for building efficiences? Considering the realities of energy consumption in existing housing stock, its needed. Siemens corporation is developing service lines.

Independent media is also intriguing, as I believe in Robert Parry’s piece about building a left media infrastructure. We need scale. Standouts in NYC: Indypendent newspaper, NYC.indymedia, Democracy Now, WBAI.

Trying also to make time for the radical, anarchist, labour and other bookstores etc.

On a technical level, hoping to focus on the OpenCore, OpenGeo and TRAC ecosystems and work-out how we can develop further the technology cooperative aspect of our project. In my mind, MediaWiki, OpenCore, OpenGeo, TRAC are key tools. We also need accounting, CRM and design tools (video, audio, graphics, image, page etc).

Also want to research a New York City Food Justice Cooperative project, we had while staying at the Chelsea Hotel (getting the flu and further debt). The Office of Mayor and the Metro transport system support Greenmarket, the largest urban local food network in the world. However, the Indypendent newspaper has a story about the Bed-Stuy garden that is danger of closing. Is it outside of the Greenmarket system? Who else is ? Also, the first recorded guerilla gardening was in NYC, the cities first community garden: The Lizy Christy Community Garden.The strange neocon mayor Guiliani closed hundreds of community gardens, what was Greenmarket doing then ? A Google Timeline: History of Gardens in New York City 1920-2009 | GreenGuerillas

1965-1970: ”race riots” break out in Los Angeles, Detroit, Newark,
New York and dozens of other poor and over-populated American cities.
Various think-tanks, commissions and institutes (some publicly announced,
 others top secret) study “the problem” and come up with ideas for suppressing
the symptoms.

1970-1972: NYC government begins “spatial deconcentration”
of over-populated neighborhoods by acting with “benign neglect”
: closing firehouses and police stations, refusing to discourage or
prosecute banks/insurance companies that “redline” poor neighborhoods
or building-owners who torch their own properties for the insurance
money, letting ruined buildings collapse and/or become centers of
criminal activity, etc.


Source: History of Community Gardens in Lower-East Side Manhattan 

With the far-right libertarian CEO and owner of Whole Foods calling against more comprehensive healthcare insurance for the poor, and Omnivore Dilemnas Micheal Pollan calling for him to resign but not for a a boycott of Whole Foods, deeper questions need to be asked about the social relations of production.

Democratic Capital

In other words, how do we organise a democratic economy ? 

Especially in the capital of global capital, a place that Mayor Bloomberg (the richest man in NYC) declares “loves rich people“, with New York For Sale, a city with the Highline for “human humans” of the Power Elite and the dusty, dirty streets for everyone else.