Productive Sovereignty: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Productive sovereignty is freedom from financial and lifestyle coercion achieved by owning and operating open, replicable means of production—energy, housing, manufacturing, and enterprise—rather than selling labor to extractive institutions. | Productive sovereignty is freedom from financial and lifestyle coercion achieved by owning and operating open, replicable means of production—energy, housing, manufacturing, and enterprise—rather than selling labor to extractive institutions. | ||
It is structural independence through productive capacity. | |||
Gig workers and the self-employed typically have labor autonomy, not structural freedom. | Gig workers and the self-employed typically have labor autonomy, not structural freedom. | ||
Revision as of 00:46, 13 January 2026
Productive sovereignty is freedom from financial and lifestyle coercion achieved by owning and operating open, replicable means of production—energy, housing, manufacturing, and enterprise—rather than selling labor to extractive institutions.
It is structural independence through productive capacity.
Gig workers and the self-employed typically have labor autonomy, not structural freedom.