Bible_Belt
Master Don Juan
Last summer I met a girl whose best friend had joined a hippie commune. She was telling me about it:
http://eastwind.org/index.php
The commune has a farm and business selling their own brand of foods. Everyone works a 35-hour week and gets paid $150 a month, in addition to their room and board. All members vote equally in making decisions for the community.
I'm not exactly rushing out the door to join them just yet, but starting one's own commune seems like it could be a sweet deal. I could enforce my own strict standards of taking a shower a few times a week.
I see a lot of hippies trying to be farmer's market vendors and small farmers. What surprises me about them is that they all really seem to embrace the basic tenets of capitalism. They want to make a product, compete in the marketplace, and make profits. The Communism of the 20th century would never have embraced any of those ideas. I know it was before my time, but I think a radical hippie of the late 60s would have told you that money was evil. The most radical hippie today would say that big corporations are evil, but at the same time have a side business selling hemp jewelry out of the trunk of his car. Political communism is so dead as an idea that even the hippies have become capitalists.
http://eastwind.org/index.php
The commune has a farm and business selling their own brand of foods. Everyone works a 35-hour week and gets paid $150 a month, in addition to their room and board. All members vote equally in making decisions for the community.
I'm not exactly rushing out the door to join them just yet, but starting one's own commune seems like it could be a sweet deal. I could enforce my own strict standards of taking a shower a few times a week.
I see a lot of hippies trying to be farmer's market vendors and small farmers. What surprises me about them is that they all really seem to embrace the basic tenets of capitalism. They want to make a product, compete in the marketplace, and make profits. The Communism of the 20th century would never have embraced any of those ideas. I know it was before my time, but I think a radical hippie of the late 60s would have told you that money was evil. The most radical hippie today would say that big corporations are evil, but at the same time have a side business selling hemp jewelry out of the trunk of his car. Political communism is so dead as an idea that even the hippies have become capitalists.