[P2P-F] P2P Vs Cooperative and Distributist approaches ?

Dante-Gabryell Monson dante.monson at gmail.com
Tue Dec 6 16:02:04 CET 2011


What does p2p "property", "governance" and "production" most relate to , in
comparison to other ( historic ) movements ?
And what may people related to the p2pfoundation be supporting ?

*Do we have access to a chart which compares each of these ?*

And what "Laws" ( or absence of Laws ? ) would such p2p approaches support ?

A limit to the concentration of personal wealth ?
( or on any wealth at all, including businesses ? )
No moral person for corporations or any business entities ?

Such limits leading to the sale of property, maintaining prices lower and
hindering any artificial scarcity on land and resources ?


///

Ownership of ones own basic means of production,
combined with cooperatively owned property and means of production ?
Distributism combined with Cooperative approaches ? ( see links below )

- How would this compare to Anarcho Syndicalist forms of governance,
production and property ( absence of private property ? ).
- Or with Libertarian approaches ( in the US sense ).
Differing from Libertarian approaches by Putting a ( moral ? ) limit to
private accumulation ? - feel free to correct based on your understanding
of Libertarianism -
( as in Distributism ? see :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributism#Anti-trust_legislation )
- How would it also differentiate with Technocrats and the Technocratic
Movement ( and/or the Venus Project and the Zeitgeist Movement ).


///

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributism

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooperative

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributism#Economic_theory

Under such a system, most people would be able to earn a living without
having to rely on the use of the
property<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_property> of
others to do so. Examples of people earning a living in this way would be
farmers who own their own land and related machinery, plumbers who own
their own tools, software developers who own their own computer, etc.

*The "cooperative" approach advances beyond this perspective to recognise
that such property and equipment may be "co-owned" by local communities
larger than a family, e.g., partners in a business.*
*
*
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributism#Economic_theory
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