<b>Take things forcibly, but without violence? While hinging ostensibly<br></b><div class="gmail_quote"><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex"><b>
on the greater good?<br>
<span class="HOEnZb"><font color="#888888">--<br>
Garrett<br>
Twitter: @xkit<br>
<a href="http://personx.tumblr.com" target="_blank">personx.tumblr.com</a></font></span></b></blockquote><div><br></div><div>What I meant is that they may be taken & used by those who need them, if they are lying idle somewhere else, & it should not be viewed as violence. Especially if it's to fill a need, like shelter, warmth, hunger. There was a news clip a while back about blue painter's tape that was showing up on people's doors. The cops in the clip made it out to be a burglary threat. It caught my attention b/c I happen to know they got the motive wrong in that particular "crime" spree. I wondered what difference, if any, it would make to the TV-watching public if they thought people were sussing out the occupancy of their house not with the intention of breaking in & stealing things of potential value, but for shelter, a place to sleep.</div>
<div><br></div><div>I've gotten quite a bit looser with my own material possessions (letting things come & go without attaching emotional significance) over the past couple years. I've also gotten a lot looser about taking things that aren't mine whenever I need them. Usually I put them back; sometimes I put them back plus extra — because that's a nice, ethical thing to do, & it makes up for the times I "forget" to put things back. I've definitely gotten more pirate-like as well. Maybe it's something I've picked up from spending so much time in the Mission; the Mission has a piratical feel to it as a 'hood, don'tcha think? I love how people seem to literally just drop stuff on the sidewalks the moment they're finished using it, so that you find New Cool Weird Free Shit on any walk you take through the Mission. </div>
<div><br></div><div>We're raised to believe that taking things that don't belong to us is wrong, but I think we should also be taught that hoarding way more things than you need when other people's basic needs are unmet is wrong. I'm not categorically opposed to private property, things that are YOURS that others shouldn't take. I def still have a few things I'd be really sad to lose, so I secure those items or take them with me everywhere. They are things I use more or less every day, hence tools of a sort. (A computer is just a fancy tool.) There's nothing wrong with having tools, that's legit (although the sharing thing comes to mind here, too....does every person really need a full set of every kind of tool in every variation?) I feel we (Americans in particular, though not exclusively) imbue our "stuff" w/ far too much significance; "liberation" from that impulse is what I was describing.</div>
<div><br></div><div>Maybe I'm just trying to find philosophical justification for self-serving criminal behavior. I hope not. The truth is probably complicated, as usual.</div><div><br></div><div>Oh, one last thing re: houses & such—you don't "forcibly" enter, because The Door Was Already Open.</div>
<div><br></div><div>+11+</div><div> </div></div>