Society isn’t Broken!

From Tory plans for com­mu­ni­ties to cre­ate their own schools to Guardian hacks beg­ging for alter­na­tive cur­ren­cies, ex-Soviet strate­gies for social col­lapse to alarmist talk of counter-insurgency on Amer­i­can soil, there has been a lot of talk lately about the advan­tages of small, self-sufficient com­mu­ni­ties over the sin­gle one-size-fits-all approach of the nation state. Half the world seems to think that, due to the eco­nomic down­turn or by delib­er­ate pol­icy deci­sion, the gov­ern­ments of the world won’t be effec­tive at rul­ing their nations anymore.

In the lat­ter three cases, it reeks of scare­mon­ger­ing — “The End is Nigh, pre­pare while you still can!” But this kind of idea is infec­tious. There’s a secret thrill in imag­in­ing the down­fall of soci­ety, and some­how a rose-tinted aura of romance around the idea of self-sufficiency. There’s some­thing that feels good and hon­est about being part of a small com­mu­nity rather than just one cit­i­zen out of 60 million.

But there’s a rea­son why, over the cen­turies, fief­doms and tribal ter­ri­to­ries merged together into the nations we have today. Being a small, self-sufficient com­mu­nity is really hard and you don’t want to do it.

What­ever scale of small com­mu­nity you pick, there are problems.

With a vil­lage, maybe you can be self-sufficient on food pro­vided you have enough arable land and peo­ple to farm it. But you’ll all be get­ting by at the sub­sis­tence level, your qual­ity of life will be poor.

With a group of vil­lages work­ing together, you can grow more things, your diet gets bet­ter and you get more resis­tant to crop short­ages and dis­ease. But that’s the kind of issues we’re still talk­ing about. Eco­nomic doom­say­ers who sug­gest that this is the kind of com­mu­nity we should be work­ing towards are sug­gest­ing we revert our mas­sively suc­cess­ful first-world coun­try to third-world near-poverty.

With towns work­ing together, finally we see infra­struc­ture, health­care, edu­ca­tion. But we still can’t afford to defend our­selves. Effec­tive police forces and mil­i­taries, and with them the public’s con­fi­dence that they can go about their daily busi­ness with lit­tle risk of assault or inva­sion, only really become pos­si­ble at the level of the nations we live in today.

Split­ting up into self-sufficient com­mu­ni­ties becomes even more dif­fi­cult because the infra­struc­ture we’ve built up over thou­sands of years of being a coun­try doesn’t lend itself well to being split up again. Case in point: I live in a conur­ba­tion, a fusion of three towns that’s home to around 400,000 peo­ple. How much farm­land do we have within the bound­aries of this conur­ba­tion? Oh, none. How would we feed that many peo­ple? Well, we’d have to absorb the rest of Dorset (pop­u­la­tion 700,000) into our com­mu­nity. Sud­denly it’s not small and roman­tic any­more. We might as well call it Wes­sex and find some­one called Alfred to be king of it for about 5 years until Athel­stan 2 turns up.

To top it all, we our­selves have, through thou­sands of years of mov­ing away from this lifestyle, become incom­pat­i­ble with subsistence-level com­mu­ni­ties. They’re not going to have a lot of demand for autonomous vehi­cles, or for war­ship com­bat sys­tem design­ers, or even (god for­bid) blog­gers. What if — and I know this is going to come as a shock — the hair­dressers and man­age­ment con­sul­tants and adver­tis­ing exec­u­tives that live on my street turn out to not be very good at farm­ing?

No, it’s not going to work. Nations are what we have, and nations are what we have to stick with for the fore­see­able future. If the econopoca­lypse brings down gov­ern­ments, makes them inef­fi­cient, so be it. What we have to do, and luck­ily what hap­pens nat­u­rally, is try our best to fix them.

As a coun­try and a col­lec­tive body of peo­ple, all we ever do is the bare min­i­mum to ensure that life car­ries on as nor­mal. And for once, that’s not a bad thing. When our soci­ety breaks in lit­tle ways, we need to find lit­tle ways of patch­ing it up. If the Tories’ “free schools” work, then great — it’s a lit­tle patch to a prob­lem which is tiny, if it exists at all.

But politi­cians telling us that “Britain is bro­ken!” and blog­gers telling us to pre­pare for a life of sub­sis­tence farm­ing just aren’t helpful.

3 thoughts on “Society isn’t Broken!

  1. A good argu­ment and, although there are some days when I would love to see the total col­lapse of all soci­ety purely for the inter­ests in see­ing wht would come next, I agree that improve­ment is the way forward.

    The big thing that I think a lot of the peo­ple that are dri­ving for the small soci­ety life for­get, wihch I’ll adit to los­ing in the roman­ti­cism some­times myself, is that small scale farm­ing, espe­cially on an indi­vid­ual fam­ily level, is quite innef­fi­cient. A large farm of peo­ple ded­i­cated to the pro­duc­tion of food is far more capa­ble of pro­duc­ing the food to feed every­one. Admit­tedly we prob­a­bly should try harder to eat the food that is more locally pro­duced, reduc­ing excess ship­ping and sup­port local com­mu­ni­ties are still impor­tant, but farms that serve a large num­ber of peo­ple are still the way forward.

    The prob­lem I believe we have with mov­ing for­ward though is that of con­vic­tion. The things our soci­ety could be capa­ble of, the places we could be are fan­tas­tic when you think about them. Now look at where we are. It an overused exam­ple, but in terms of space explo­ration 2001: A Space Odessey was bang on the money for it’s time for where we should be when the time rolled round. Now ten years after the date and we still haven’t put peo­ple back on the moon.

    As the human pop­u­la­tion expands as well we will find our­selves increas­ingly hav­ing to find bet­ter ways to get the resources for all the peo­ple which ulti­mately falls down to argu­ments of whether we can afford expan­sion­ism or not. Per­son­ally I believe that we can, in a small amount through a re-awakening of some of the colo­nial­ist ideas.

    Obvi­ously there are very few places on earth that we take colo­nial­ism to now and the meth­ods in which colo­nial­ism was used in the past were ques­tion­able at best. There are how­ever avenues avail­able to us now for expan­sion, for new resources and new fron­tiers, that just didn’t exist in the past. We have the tech­nol­ogy now to start to exploit our oceans in an intel­li­gent and safe man­ner (not BP style I hasen to add, but in the style once pro­moted as part of the future by Cousteau him­self) and to expand beyond our lit­tle rock of home entirely.

    You can see exam­ples through­out his­tory that the soci­ety which is top dog is that which has most recently dri­ven to expand itself and to bet­ter exploit new resources. It was the Britsh Empire with half the globe at it’s beck and call. Then the US started to expand and bet­ter exploit it’s own resources. Most recently China has come to the fore as its started to realise the mas­sive resources avail­able to it for lever­age on a global stage.

    The last hun­dred and fifty years or so showed the fastest changes that I believe our soci­etal struc­ture and tech­no­log­i­cal prowess have ever seen and now Stag­na­tion is our biggest threat. The more we stag­nate, the big­ger I believe our cracks will be and the big­ger the patches we will need for them. Per­haps we need a big crack to give us the courage to progress?

  2. Well said. For bet­ter or worse the vari­ety of activ­i­ties in the world is increas­ing, and has done so for a sig­nif­i­cant period of time. Small com­mu­ni­ties sim­ply don’t work for a tech­no­log­i­cal soci­ety (see the his­tory of inter­na­tional trade and knowl­edge trans­fer even a thou­sand years ago). And I like it. Although its fairly impor­tant to learn some­thing about every­thing, even if it doesn’t inter­est you. Broad­ens the brain.

  3. Pingback: Revenge of the Mosquito | Only Dreaming

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