by gg3 » Sun 07 Nov 2004, 07:46:46
Interesting analysis, Marco.
Though, in order to get to the point of mass land confiscations, all of the current law and legal history regarding private property would have to be overturned. If this is done via the exercise of extraordinary powers by central authority, it will spark an enormous rebellion. If this is done through the disintegration of central authority, we go to the next scenario below.
The remainder of your scenario, i.e. after central government and centrally-controlled forced labor disintegrates, is basically a return to feudalism. It appears that the controlling variable in this case is protection from starvation and lawlessness.
Both of those goals: adequate food and protection, can be met through other means than feudalism. I'm not denying the potential for feudal arrangements to arise in certain areas; merely suggesting other possibilities. For example, independent property owners could re-constitute something like county-level government (perhaps on a smaller scale than the county; more like a town with its surrounding agriculture).
This would include a local nexus of trade such as a farmers' market, to allow each property owner to specialize in crops s/he/they see as having market value as well as use value. There might be social mechanisms in place to discourage profiteering and gouging. In some cases there might be a quasi-socialistic requirement to provide a certain percentage of one's production for distribution through a regulated market (somehow I doubt that's going to be popular in the USA anyway).
This arrangement would also include, critically, the means of common defense. Most likely this would consist of a local militia -in the oldschool sense, not as used by extremists in the USA presently- with mandatory participation by all able-bodied adults (probably the age of majority drops to 16 years at this point). The defensive arrangements would include perimeter patrols and communications means for calling troops in to potential trouble spots. If I have anything to say about it where I live, they'll also include intelligence collection and analysis on a proactive basis, through both human and signals intelligence. In any case, a well-organized defense will tend mostly toward deterrence, in the sense that roving bands of outlaws will tend to stay away from such places, preferring softer targets.
It's possible that these "counties" could grow through voluntary arrangements with landowners on their perimeters. However, the limits of trade will be determined by the limits of transport (i.e. no more than 1 day's travel from the geographic center to the periphery), and the limits of governance and defense will be determined by the limits of communication, for example the boundaries of the local telephone exchange and its network of defensible distribution cable. Landowners outside of a given unit of governance would be encouraged to form their own nexes of governance, and then form alliances with those areas that gave them support in doing so.
Individuals who are not landowners would face a variable future. In a scenario such as above, some of the landowners might try to institute a form of serfdom. However, to the extent that competitive forces remain in play, freer labor arrangements would have an advantage: after all, people do produce more & better when they have their freedom than when they don't. So to this extent we would see something like a labor market, in which some workers were more long-term and others tended to move as suited their advantages. Those who stayed in one place for an extended time might be offered equity arrangements similar to employee buy-in plans.
There remains a considerable risk that a given county might decide to embark on a localized form of empire-building by annexing neighboring counties on a less-than-free basis, where their workforce would be subjugated more or less as serfs. The best way to meet this is via strong bonds of trade, which are a stabilizing force (trading partners have an incentive to not go to war against one another) and also a primary channel of human intelligence (news travels at the market); and strong defensive capabilities generally.
Does any of this seem likely to you?