Thanks for detailing the laws you have in mind. So you not only suggest, that everyone should get 10 trees, but that its illegal to own more than 10. Which effictively means that nobody owns 10 trees because if you cannotsellsomething you do not own it.
sure you can sell a tree to anyone who has less than 10, if everyone owns 10, then its just because they can’t buy it.
if you cannot sell something, because nobody can buy it, you do not own it? is that some alternative definition of ownership i’ve never heard? these are your trees for you to do whatever you wish with.
What should happen in case 2 of our 10 trees each population decide that one A declares “this tree now belongs to B and i get a boat from B” and B declares “I agree.” You put A in jail, B, both or tr to ignore the deal because it is void anyway?
i’m not following the first sentence here. are there any commas or periods missing that could clear it up? are you asking what happens if someone trade a tree for a boat, and thus someone who cut down a tree ends up with 10 trees again while the other guy has 9 and a boat? in that case, everything is perfectly fine. Now if everyone decided to cut down all their trees to make boats, maybe there’d be a new problem which my very quick simplistic isn’t covered in such a simplistic and rudimentary 2-sentence economic proposal.
but 10 fruit trees per person assumes this gives everyone a huge surplus (similar to the huge surplus of resources per person on this planet, globally speaking).
so someone could provide enough fruit for several with their 10 trees, and trade the fruit for something someone else has done with their trees.
or
are you asking what enforcement is in place for people who break the rules through trade and acquire more than 10 trees?
once again, there’s not nearly enough in my extremely rudimentary brief analogy to even claim to explain the nuances that any system would need.
my overall point was comparing the general concept of various systems:
A: make everything (resources and goods) shared, but who does the dirty work
B: make everything up for grabs, thus turning greed into a virtue
C: work towards ensuring that control and ownership of productive resources and opportunity is as widespread as possible, putting guards in place against the concentration of economic power.
What do you do if 2 peersons mary and have only 1 child? Can that child inherit 20 trees? Or does the child get 10 and the rest is distributed in what way?
there’s not nearly enough in my quick rundown to account for the nuance of generation cycles.
Does this community’s population grow or decrease with every generation?
The only thing that quick model assumed (which I probably wasn’t clear about) is that 10 fruit trees is a very generous portion and way more than any 1 person would ever need (which mirrors what they say about global resources to population).
but if the community’s core philosophy was to keep the productive resources (which = power) as widely spread as possible instead of concentrating into the hands of a few, you’d have to assume their system’s unique nuances would be developed with this in mind. This might mean that a child can only inherit 10 trees.
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You get it backwards, i want to know, what would you do, if the rich were not guilty or worse if some were guilty and some not. With what right would you take something from someone who did not acquire it in a criminal way?
define criminal. acquiring control of a larger percentage of what everyone depends on than is legally allowed in such a power-capping system would put you on the wrong side of the law.
Communists solve that by assuming all rich are guilty. But take Steve Jobs. What crime did he commit?
Assembling a computer in his garage?
define guilty. steve jobs didn’t commit any crime because his homeland’s laws weren’t arranged for communism.