An Economic Alternative to Exploitative Free Market Capitalism
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/02/01-3
In 1649, a group of English communists started fighting the notion of private property in what became known as the commons movement. They were using the unstable period in Englands history to introduce a new economy, one that would see land, wells and other means of wealth as shared resources. This group would prevent a small class of people from collecting and consolidating the rights to basic human life, such as water and food. In an annual celebration that doubled as a protest, they would circle the village commons and level or dig up any hedges and fences that designated spots of private ownership. They became known as the levelers or diggers.
The movement, which was subsequently quelled in 1651 by landowners and the Council of State, has seen a revival in the past decade. It remained dormant for so many years because of its fundamental threat to modern economics, putting community needs at the center of society rather than those of the individual.
The commons protects large resources from privatization, such as the lobster fisheries in Maine or grassland management in Mongolia, and allows collectives to regulate extraction. Exploitation is avoided because no one individual has more of a right to the source than any other.
[The commons] is an intellectually coherent way of talking about inalienable value, which we dont have a vocabulary for, David Bollier, author of The Wealth of the Commons said in a conference Tuesday at the Heinrich Böll Foundation in Washington, D.C.