Above is a twenty dollar bill from my pocket. I can exchange it for goods and
services up to twenty dollars’ worth.
But what is it literally?
It is a piece of paper with engraved printing. That is all.
The most powerful nation in history says that this piece of engraved
paper is worth twenty dollars.
The “full faith and credit of the United States” up to twenty dollars is
represented by this piece of paper.
Its value is ultimately arbitrary.
What about gold?
Surely that is worth something absolute and certain. Imagine if we found a solid gold
asteroid out there in space, and gold suddenly became as abundant as tin, would
it still be valuable? There are
other metals that are even more rare than gold, rhodium, iridium, ruthenium,
tellurium, etc. Gold is a
rare bright shiny yellow metal that has centuries’ worth of accumulated
mystique around it. But mystique
can vanish with ubiquity. Aluminum
was once more valuable than gold.
The top of the Washington monument is a pyramidion of 100 ounces of pure
aluminum. When a more effective
method of extracting and refining the metal was invented in 1886, the value of
aluminum dropped permanently. There’s
no reason to assume that something similar can’t happen to gold. The value we assign to gold is as
arbitrary as the value we assign to a piece of printed paper.
Currency is an act of faith. The entire modern economy with all of the cultural and legal
constructs around it is built on faith.
So much of the way we look at and think about life is predicated on
faith in currency.
What happens when that faith is called into question?
There is a man who has done exactly that. Daniel Suelo in 2000 made it his life’s
mission to live without money. He
does not make any, nor will he take any.
He lives in a cave outside of Moab, Utah. He hunts and gathers wild foods, and he scavenges the
leavings of modern society. He
completely rejects currency and all the transactional and actuarial assumptions
that come with it. He believes in
practicing an economy of “freely give, freely receive.” He will not even accept barter. He does keep a blog site.
He is not a survivalist or some kind of “up by your own
boot-straps” type. He believes
that we are all interdependent. He
wants to propose a radically different way of dealing with each other that is
not transactional or actuarial.
His inspiration is religious. His reasoning is a mixture of Christianity, Buddhism, and
Indigenous American religion. He
takes seriously the selflessness and anti-materialism in all religion.
Daniel Suelo in his cave near Moab, Utah
Daniel Suelo was born Daniel James Shellabarger in Arvada,
Colorado in 1961. His parents were
fundamentalist Christians. He left
that faith when he went to college.
Shortly after college, he came out as a gay man. He became deeply influenced by the
teachings of Buddhism and Hinduism on a trip to India, and by the examples of
wandering Hindu sadhus and Buddhist monks. He decided to live entirely without money completely outside
the commercial economy in the fall of 2000.
Do I want to follow this man’s example or suggest that we
all do likewise and live in caves?
Certainly not. I see that
this man spends all of his time getting by from day to day, and I realize why
civilization was invented in the first place. Besides, I have always said, and I still say, that I am not
an anarchist. Daniel Suelo clearly
is. It’s hard to imagine someone
more outside modern society than he, unless he moves to the Antarctic, cuts off
all communication, and lives off fish and penguin eggs for the rest of his
life.
However, I do think that some of the most creative and
boldest thinking about how we humans get along with each other comes out of
anarchist circles these days.
Daniel Suelo invites us to think about the whole business of value in a world
that doesn’t really believe in the possibility of intrinsic value. Most bankers and hedge fund managers
would agree with Karl Marx, that the only real values are use and exchange. Suelo rejects all of that and insists
that we think anew about what is really valuable to us.
So much of what we consider to be the foundations of
civilized life turns out to be disturbingly vulnerable and ephemeral.
The whole power of the law rests upon our consent to live by
it. When we withdraw that consent,
then all the force in the world can’t restore the law’s authority. The only law in nature is that of
succeed or fail, survive or perish.
There is no demonstrably transcendent law outside of ourselves and our
communities.
As Dr. Jacob Bronowski demonstrated so ably in a previous post, there is no absolute knowledge.
Our knowledge is finite. We
can only be more or less certain.
We are creatures of the surface of a small planet with
gravity and an atmosphere. Space
exploration demonstrates that most of the rest of the universe is impossible
for us to live in. Our physical
structure and form are shaped by gravity and air pressure. We can survive only in a narrow range
of optimum temperature. In the
vacuum of space, we would disintegrate.
We are creatures tied to a specific place, and bound to a moment in
time. Our lives are but the merest
flickers in the eons of universal time.
That small time and place that we dwell in with each other
is what we are all ultimately responsible for.
2 comments:
In the vein of money, you might want to listen to this:
http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives/episode/423/the-invention-of-money
St. Francis did the same. Let's hope Suelo's doesn't get sterilized for mass consumption.
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