Authors > Charles W. Johnson

Charles W. Johnson Quotes

Worker ownership and consumer co-ops are part of the market; grassroots mutual aid associations and community free clinics are part of the market; so are voluntary labor unions, consensual communes, narrower or broader experiments with gift economies, and countless other alternatives to the prevailing corporate-capitalist status quo… The question, then, is whether, when people are free to experiment with any and every peaceful means of making a living, the sort of mutualistic alternatives mentioned might take on an increased role in the economy, or whether the prevailing capitalistic forms would continue to predominate as they currently do.
Source: Markets Freed From Capitalism (2010) [link] #295
In a free market--a truly free market, where individual poor people are just as free as established formal-economy players to use their own property, their own labor, their own know-how, and the resources that are available to them--the informal, enterprising actions by poor people themselves would do far more to systematically undermine, or completely eliminate, each of the stereotypical conditions that welfare statists deplore. Every day and in every culture from time out of mind, poor people have repeatedly shown remarkable intelligence, courage, persistence, and creativity in finding ways to put food on the table, save money, keep safe, raise families, live full lives, learn, enjoy themselves, and experience beauty, whenever, wherever, and to whatever degree they have been free to do so.
Source: Scratching By: How Government Creates Poverty as We Know It (2007) [link] #379
State corporatism forcibly reshapes the world of work and business on the model of a commercial strip mall: sanitized, centralized, regimented, officious, and dominated by a few powerful proprietors and their short list of favored partners, to whom everyone else relates as either an employee or a consumer. A truly free market, without the pervasive control of state licensure requirements, regulation, inspections, paperwork, taxes, "fees," and the rest, has much more to do with the traditional image of a bazaar: messy, decentralized, diverse, informal, flexible, pervaded by haggling, and kept together by the spontaneous order of countless small-time independent operators, who quickly and easily shift between the roles of customer, merchant, contract laborer, and more.
Source: Scratching By: How Government Creates Poverty as We Know It (2007) [link] #380
The shape of a free society is formed not only by anonymous economic tendencies and "market forces," but also by conscious social activism and community organizing.
Source: The Bold and the Desirable: A Prophecy and a Proposal (2012) [link] #653

About Charles W. Johnson

(From Reason.com)

Charles W. Johnson is a market anarchist writer living and working in Auburn, Alabama. He keeps a blog at radgeek.com and edited, together with Gary Chartier, the anthology Markets Not Capitalism: Individualist Anarchism Against Bosses, Inequality, Corporate Power, and Structural Poverty (Minor Compositions, 2011).


Additional Resources

Rad Geek
Markets Not Capitalism (2011)
Charles Johnson on Left Wing Market Anarchism (YouTube)
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