Been through this already, GP. Nobody on this planet can produce all the stuff they want by themselves.
Capitalism is going to arise by default as people start making offers in order to get a refrigerator and a car and medical care and a computer. It's inevitable.
But you go right ahead and keep attacking that windmill. Keeps you occupied so you don't get in the way of capitalism. (Or maybe that's just reverse psychology? Who knows)
I know that, and as long as the object in question isn't the basics I'm saying they are only entitled to get so long as people want to produce it for them.
I forgot my glasses today, and that text was a bit hard to read, but what I think you're saying is that people produce what they want or need directly (where possible) and if they have a surplus they can trade with each other to get other things they need (that they can't or won't produce themselves). Am I on the right track so far? There are still some things I don't understand.
You know you could just copy it into a word file and enlarge the text right (I feel kind of guilty since I have been without my glasses and it sucks).
Thats not really how it works, although somewhat similar. I'm saying that people produce what they think is worth the effort and if some people produce things they either want for others or don't want themselves they can share it.
How does that society cope with people who work but don't produce anything tangible (a child minder, teacher, fireman etc.)?
Well, its most likely that the vast majority of people would spend the small time it takes to produce enough food to eat for themselves and those that can't produce basics (its relatively very small since practically everyone would be sharing the workpoad doing whatever it is they can to make up for themselves). Since there would be reletavely little on this manual labor they could spend the rest doing whatever it is they wish to do (which, due to rea life, would probably still include things they don't actually like doing but in the end are worth doing). Irrelevant note: whats a child minder?
Do people have to donate X% of their produce to a communal pool for funding people who produce nothing to trade?
Nobody ever has to donate anything except basics for those who are physically unable to produce them.
Who decides how much is donated, and how is it enforced?
If people who are physically unable to provide work for themselves are starving when it is completely unnecessary, then the time it takes to stop that is how much time needed to "donate." This would be enforced by those who think a starving baby living a place with an abudance of potential food is wrong (in other words the community would enforce upon itself to provide). Of course, there are people who like the act of providing basics and these people would probably make up for those who can't provide the labor. Of course permaculture could potentially make the biggest basic of food production as easy as harvesting and releasing wastes (at the cost of land efficiency from what I know, which probably isn't a major concern).
Does everyone have to contribute to services like child minders (even if they have no children themselves)?
I'm guessing a child minder is some non-American term, but in terms of caring and doing things that aren't neccesarily basics, these are provided solely by people who think the actual product is worth the effort of producing it.
Does this communal pool exist on a national level or does each community have their own?
Have their own government you mean? The political decision making process of whether someone has violated the rules I previously mentioned is done by each community upon itself.
If a community has a larger population of elderly or disabled people, is it at a disadvantage compared to other communities?
Somewhat, but this may lead to false thoughts about what a community. A community is nothing more than a body insuring that its members follow the rules.
What if the young people in that community want to join a different community?
No problem, as long as that community doesn't mind having them (it could only really become a problem is the community has so many people in it that making a decision requires too much man-power).
If people wanted to join friends, relatives, or a love interest in another community, how easy is it for them to emigrate?
Extremely, there is nothing stopping a person from leaving a community or even the society (except of course the effort it takes to move).
If one community is more efficient and outperforms its neighbours, can people leave theirs and join up with the more successful one?
I don't really see this as possible, since a community can really be outperforming a society in decision making except due to its size which is good because it levels off the population of communities.
If somebody wanted to leave the community temporarily to visit friends or relatives (or perhaps even for a holiday) how would they support themselves at their destination? (if the produce they have for trade isn't accepted as currency there).
Well, I'm a little confused as to what you mean, could you give me an example?
If there is a shortage of one kind of produce (i.e. food), then how do you encourage people to produce something they don't like producing? Hunger and the desire to survive is an incentive, but by the time it kicks in it may be too late to grow a full crop before the food is needed (a lot of humans in a group have a habit of expecting "someone else" to do something that the group needs, until their need becomes severe enough).
You never should have to incentivize (is that a word?) the production of a product except in the case I mentioned.
If people have to trade what they produce with someone else to get other items, how do you stop people making a profit?
Note: I'm expecting you'll say that someone can complain to the group about this behaviour, but is there really an incentive to do so? After all, if you do that the person may not want to trade with you anymore (you still won't get the items you want/need) - he might trade with your neighbour instead.
The whole point is that positive incentives are banned (which includes trading).
How is the value of goods worked out? If it takes a week to produce 1,000 hippyburgers, and a week to produce 10,000 hippyshakes (dumb music reference, lol - you might be too young to get that), does that mean a person who wants a hippyburger must trade 10 hippyshakes to get one?
No, producing hippyburgers should only be done if one likes the actual production or finds the product to be worth producing it (ps, I'm curious what are these things?)
If there is a shortage of a produced item (lets take food again), does a person have to trade at all? If a person who produces food (they keep what they produce remember) sees a shortage of food, isn't it in his best interest to keep the food for himself rather than trade it?
As I said trade is not allowed, so most likely the vasat majority would be producing basics like that.
How does the community react to people not voluntarily sharing what they produce (if they can keep it) when the community has a need for those products?
If one produces something they get to keep it and if they want share it, otherwise the community can not take it (which reenforced by the fact that if one person's produce is stolen then everyone's is so it gives everyone an incentive to not steal). BTW, a "person" is not neccessarily a "person" since a group is often needed to perform a task, they all most acknowledge how the product will be shared between those producing it.
If a food producer wants to ensure their own survival (or suvival of their family) in a time of need - isn't it causing harm for the community to take action to remove food from that person's posession?
As I said, the amount of food shared between everyone is already decided so yes it would be harm for a person to have their fair share taken away and it would not be right of the community to take it.
I know withholding food might be seen as harm too, but taking it from an unwilling producer violates two laws (do no harm, and you can keep what you produce), so isn't that the worse of two evils?[/quote]
As I said above everyone is a producer and in a time of foos shortage, see below:
What if the producer has enough food to feed himself and family for a year, but sharing it among the community would thin it out so much that it wouldn't guarantee that anyone has enough food to survive until the next crop is ready?Is it better for the producer and his family to survive, or for everyone to die equally in the interests of fairness?
Haha, that would be PC to the max! Anyways, in a time of food shortage most likely it would have to be decided who would die, and if there aren't enough heroes/heroins and nobody can come to a decision of who else should die, then most likely it would decided on randomness.
Basketcase said:
So much for the simplicity Greenpeace promised, eh?
He only has alot of questions becasue I'm bad at explanation.
Without even reading through his whole list, Evil Muppet has a lot of considerations that society must.....errrr.....consider.
And somehow I'm stupid enough to have spent enough time answering them (never underestimate the power of stupidity!)
Bardolph said:
Hmm... all I can say is "make it so, Greenpeace!"
Go start your dream society, and let me know how it goes.
How would I tell you? By shouting really really loud? Unless I did some very hypocrtical things or managed to build a computer from the minerals of the land, I don't think it will be a short time before there is that high a level of technology

And even if I did it would be so awkward, "hey remember me from twenty years ago? Yeah, it friggin' works!"
Evil Muppet said:
Just for the record, I'm not having a go at you greenpeace. I just can't get my head around how its supposed to work. Besides, if its something you're serious about its better for you to think about these things now, rather than later.
Actually I'm thankful since I'm bad at explaning things, maybe this will help people understand.
Cheezy the Wiz said:
Wow, you guys are still at this?
Yeah, I know what stupidheads. Especially that creepy Greenpeace guy.