Mutual aid is a foundational element of Anarchism, but it is often difficult to translate theory into meaningful action while surviving the hellscape of late stage capitalism. Still, up and down the land there are a variety of practical examples from Food not Bombs stands, to Community Toolsheds, and Infoshops. Free Shops often go under the radar, but can be a vital link for many. If you go down to Boscome in Bournemouth on a Friday, outside Costa, you’ll find the Boscome Free Shop, week in, week out, being there, making their community better. We wanted to know more so asked them not only why, but how they do this and how can others looking to find a way to make their anarchism practical start their own.
Interesting. Now that I envision something like this, I totally see one of the retired enterprising guys just grabbing bunch of stuff to sell in one of our many thrift stores just nearby (if anything, just to mess with younger and poorer people, what else to do for a boomer when they’ve got theirs?), and general thrift store population maybe getting upset for free store stealing their business. It’s not even big capitalists, they don’t care about our backwater - that’s why we have so many people-to-people non-free junk stores.
I mean, this could spark some kind of direct action, but probably just beating up old farts is not really fun community building activity.
I dunno. From my experience in doing similar stuff for the first time I learned something else. Long story short, the things I imagined or feared etc, had nothing to do with what happened in reality. And doing the project felt great also because it opened the door to new kinds of interactions with other people.
I’m not trying to say that everything was great always or something. With time, challenges emerged, some tough and well handled, some easy and badly handled, you name it! But what you describe reminded me of some of my “fears” before starting a project for the first time, this is why I thought of mentioning the above.
Don’t get me wrong, I’m trying to figure out how exaclty to deploy gift economy - I’ve gave away some bread and booze to neighbours, some returned with similar gifts, but I’m just looking for a path to bigger network. And competing money-free with exactly same stuff going on - thrift stores where people just rent shelves for pennies to sell their junk for pennies, in a sort of sick but rewarding game - sounds disruptive not in a good sense, but in a bad one. Maybe if I could just somehow put emphasis on information exchange instead of stupid petty cash exchange, and probably also cook something in place…
Hmm I’m not totally sure that it is something you exactly find first and deploy after. Of course there are a tone of things to read, discuss etc but I have the impression that you find some parameters and then it’s a trial and error process. Maybe.
Sometimes there are already people doing stuff like that near you. In a squat or a non-hierarchical collective nearby? Sometimes these collectives do not exist in our area, so maybe try to find other people with similar interests close to where you live and start something all together? As it says in the article: