Thread: Who is gonna live in the best houses?

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  1. #1
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    Default Who is gonna live in the best houses?

    Before i start, English is not my main language, sorry for typos if you find some.

    As my first thread on this forum i want to put up the subject of housing the people, in a society after the revolution. As we all know, irrelevant where in the world you might live, we have seen the "winners" of the capitalistic game (which i think it as) living in these big villas, or penthouses with the best views.
    As a communist as my self, i love equality of everyone, but what would be the solution of the housing problem, who would claim the rights of these better homes? I was asked this question by my liberal uncle (i live in Denmark, so its not as hardcore liberalism as in USA or England) and simply didn't know what to answer him.
    I would love to hear your opinions.
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    Everyone will live in the best houses.
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    I think how cities are structured, how industrial areas are structured, highways, public transit, suburbs, living areas within commercial areas in city centers, all of that will possibly probably get rearranged so that things are a lot healthier for people/'communities' where folks proactively put themselves and each other before what was previously the interest of capital. Everything down to architecture of the buildings themselves. Also, doing a quick google search (a very brief one and reading only the headers of the websites) there are like 3.5 million homeless folks in the US (probably a lot more I think) and 18+ million vacant homes. None of what I mention here is some detailed program for how it will occur but that isn't up to me to decide right now.
    "whatever they might make would never be the same as that world of dark streets and bright dreams"

    http://youtu.be/g-PwIDYbDqI
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    Everyone will live in the best houses.
    Indeed plus everyone will be able to have whatever houses that they want, shit with the amount of unoccupied houses in my area there should be no fucking homelessness. Anytime someone breaks into one of the unoccupied and condemned homes they get arrested and it's utter bullshit.
    "But here steps in Satan, the eternal rebel, the first free-thinker and emancipator of worlds. He makes man ashamed of his bestial ignorance and obedience; he emancipates him, stamps upon his brow the seal of liberty and humanity, in urging him to disobey and eat of the fruit of knowledge." ~Mikhail Bakunin
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    During the USSR the best houses had their rooms divided and multiple families could live there. People had the choice between a "prestigious" house that you share with other people or a "basic" flat and people had to wait for years to get a place in a pretty house because a lot of people craved it.
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    Indeed plus everyone will be able to have whatever houses that they want, shit with the amount of unoccupied houses in my area there should be no fucking homelessness. Anytime someone breaks into one of the unoccupied and condemned homes they get arrested and it's utter bullshit.
    Just as a side complaint I hate when neighbors take a stand against it. I've been approached by 'neighbors' of the abandoned/bank owned/derelict blight buildings/homes just for walking down the public sidewalk near it when I had no idea it was even there. I hate citizens.
    "whatever they might make would never be the same as that world of dark streets and bright dreams"

    http://youtu.be/g-PwIDYbDqI
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    I don't think of it in terms of principles, i.e. that everyone needs to be exactly equal and if Johnny has five ounces more food than Billy then Johnny needs to be punished.

    For me, it's strictly practical: do they both have sufficient food? Their personal preferences might lead to unequal consumption, but minor variations in consumption are less important if there is abundant food.

    Who lives in the nicest houses doesn't matter as much as that everybody has clean, safe homes to live in.
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    During the USSR the best houses had their rooms divided and multiple families could live there. People had the choice between a "prestigious" house that you share with other people or a "basic" flat and people had to wait for years to get a place in a pretty house because a lot of people craved it.
    Never heard of this before, that's interesting... Under real socialism though, people will be able to have what ever home they desire, whether it need to be built or can be found. Their literally are plenty of good homes everywhere in the city of Erie, and the city of Jamestown that are unoccupied.
    "But here steps in Satan, the eternal rebel, the first free-thinker and emancipator of worlds. He makes man ashamed of his bestial ignorance and obedience; he emancipates him, stamps upon his brow the seal of liberty and humanity, in urging him to disobey and eat of the fruit of knowledge." ~Mikhail Bakunin
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    cyu

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    Never heard of this before, that's interesting... Under real socialism though, people will be able to have what ever home they desire, whether it need to be built or can be found. Their literally are plenty of good homes everywhere in the city of Erie, and the city of Jamestown that are unoccupied.
    I come from an ex-soviet country and my relatives experienced the different stages of the evolution of the USSR, it's always a pleasure to share what I heard from that era because it can help to answer a lot of questions.
    Look on wikipedia "communal apartment" or "kommunalka" for more details

    A communal apartment or kommunalka (Russian: коммуналка, коммунальная квартира) appeared in the Soviet Union following the Russian revolution. Communal apartments emerged as a response to the housing crisis in urban areas and were a product of the “new collective vision of the future”. A communal apartment was typically shared between two to seven families. Each family had its own room, which served as a living room, dining room, and bedroom for the entire family. The hallways, kitchen, bathroom and telephone were shared among all the residents.[1] The communal apartment was the predominant form of housing in the USSR for generations, and still exist in “the most fashionable central districts of large Russian cities.” [2]
    Also if you are interested into understanding more of people's minds at that time you should read the Master and Margarita by Bulgakov which is a classic for any Russian speaking person.
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    I remember someone on here suggesting that the quality of housing could be the mechanism for rationing according to contribution in the lower stage of communism.
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    Never heard of this before, that's interesting... Under real socialism though, people will be able to have what ever home they desire, whether it need to be built or can be found. Their literally are plenty of good homes everywhere in the city of Erie, and the city of Jamestown that are unoccupied.
    Well, in the Soviet case this was done as a direct measure to stem the extremely severe housing shortage in the cities, which was terrible. Housing construction then continued to be neglected (for various reasons, funds and lack of political will). There was some new construction, but it was limited and insufficient and often oriented at providing new communal flats of small sizes and poor service (because it wasn't so much about a communal service as it was about saving money on plumbing). The situation improved somewhat during the Khruschev-era and immediate post-Stalin time, with a few million new flats built, but this was not enough to do away with the severe housing shortage, though the situation somewhat improved.

    New housing was thereafter somewhat variable, and often new construction was done as a populist mean (because naturally, more and modern housing was an improvement), though new construction always fell well short of the demand, particularly in the cities. Though the early types of standardised blocks (1-464 and related serial designs, often known as Khruschevkas) were originally intended to be be rather temporary structures to be replaced by newer and improved blocks within a few decades, they remained often the primary housing stock in many smaller and medium-sized towns and cities. In the last few years of the Soviet Union's existence, local programs for providing resources to prospecting residents to build standardised blocks for their own future residency were introduced (because the government more or less caved in on its aspiration to provide housing to the citizen), and this gave a slight boost in construction, primarily in the wealthier cities and centres.

    Overall, construction did remain insufficient and many people still lived in old derelict shared flats, often with generations cohabiting out of necessity.


    If you do not appreciate the Soviet housing block design, I think horrible things should happen to you. In the background, P-55 type standardised blocks and scattered use of I-700A type 22-storey tower blocks to serve as eye-catching orientational aides for the estates. In the foreground a number of P-44 (in the most common 16-storey variation) in a variable orientation along the riverside frontage.
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  21. #12
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    During the USSR the best houses had their rooms divided and multiple families could live there. People had the choice between a "prestigious" house that you share with other people or a "basic" flat and people had to wait for years to get a place in a pretty house because a lot of people craved it.

    This is a critical and crucial question for a revolutionary politics -- it can be generalized to the question of luxury goods / luxury inclinations / luxury production, overall.

    I think the quick, administrative answer might be basically 'first come, first served' -- even if it has to measured to a microsecond-point accuracy. One possible option might be a calendar-year timesharing, if the requesters are open to that.

    But this *could* be tricky, especially from my own viewpoint in that I don't think liberated-labor-hours should be *exchangeable* for goods or materials of any kind -- due to that kind of exchange [1] *reinforcing* the practice of exchange, [2] implicitly valuing liberated-labor in terms of what it produces (which is very commodity-like), and finally [3] would tend to impede free-distribution and free-access.

    Just offhand, maybe an early socialist-type society might require whoever *takes* an existing abode to *reproduce* (build, or help-build) that domicile in its entirety, so that there's always a net-surplus of (similar) housing stock....
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    Not necessarily a good example, but the Amish engage in a practice of barn raising for building new homes in their communities
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barn_raising
    It is reciprocal and unpaid.
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    I think historically if we look at working class revolutions, probably the first thing would begin to happen before/during the overthrow of capitalism: people would just take unused commercial and residential space. I think then it would be a matter of the revolutionary forces sanctifying that initiative but also creating some fair way of dealing with conflicts (conflicts between residents, not between the new residents and the old landowners).

    Beyond that though, it's just one of the many things people would have to figure out shot-term what makes most sense for the specific local conditions. If there is a lot of housing already that's decent, then it would probably be just a matter of cataloging available space and matching it up with people who need housing. I'm less concerned about what to do with real eliete places and mansions and exclusive beach houses or whatnot. I think that these are probably so extravagant that we could transform the best ones into "hotels" basically for travelers or just public buildings for common use, entertaining, or whatnot. McMansions and rich suburbs are a little trickier in the short-term because they are not nice enough to warrant keeping as permanent public spaces (like if we took Hearst castle and made it into a public museum or vacation area or whatnot). But maybe if there is a lot of need, some of these can be broken up into apartments in the short-term. I think people would need to elect some kind of committee to organize these issues in local areas and it would probably look different in different places.

    I think Mari3L is totally right about how it would be approached once immediate need for housing is more or less set and people begin to grapple with how to live (build communities) in a way not shaped by market forces. I think suburbs would quickly be seen as inefficient and undesirable (far from common services, isolating) once the effort to create new living arrangements is underway.
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    The thing about massive houses that require maids to clean is that they require maids to clean. You would think that a lot of people would want to live in a huge mansion, but when they have to pick up for themselves, most people would probably be just fine living in a spacious but modest dwelling. Not to mention all of the work that goes into the actual upkeep of one of those massive houses. Communal ownership/hotels/etc. as suggested before would probably be the best way to go about using these properties, assuming that's practical and desirable by the people in the area. As for the rest, there really isn't any reason why everybody can't have a comfortable living quarters; and no, I'm not talking about those weird modular tenements that the Soviets built, although I'm sure there would be people perfectly content with such a situation. Right post-revolution there might be housing issues, but I'd imagine shelter would come right after food and water on the list of "shit we need to make sure we have". Or perhaps between "water" and "marijuana"...

    As for the rest of the extravagant houses, they can just be my vacation homes. No problem, comrades; I'll take this one for the team.
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    This fits better in Learning.

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    I think historically if we look at working class revolutions, probably the first thing would begin to happen before/during the overthrow of capitalism: people would just take unused commercial and residential space. I think then it would be a matter of the revolutionary forces sanctifying that initiative but also creating some fair way of dealing with conflicts (conflicts between residents, not between the new residents and the old landowners).

    Beyond that though, it's just one of the many things people would have to figure out shot-term what makes most sense for the specific local conditions. If there is a lot of housing already that's decent, then it would probably be just a matter of cataloging available space and matching it up with people who need housing. I'm less concerned about what to do with real eliete places and mansions and exclusive beach houses or whatnot. I think that these are probably so extravagant that we could transform the best ones into "hotels" basically for travelers or just public buildings for common use, entertaining, or whatnot. McMansions and rich suburbs are a little trickier in the short-term because they are not nice enough to warrant keeping as permanent public spaces (like if we took Hearst castle and made it into a public museum or vacation area or whatnot). But maybe if there is a lot of need, some of these can be broken up into apartments in the short-term. I think people would need to elect some kind of committee to organize these issues in local areas and it would probably look different in different places.

    Agreed.



    I think Mari3L is totally right about how it would be approached once immediate need for housing is more or less set and people begin to grapple with how to live (build communities) in a way not shaped by market forces. I think suburbs would quickly be seen as inefficient and undesirable (far from common services, isolating) once the effort to create new living arrangements is underway.

    Possibly, though we'd be "surrendering" to an internalization of the status quo if we thought that *technology* had to stay the same while *social relations* were revolutionized -- in my estimation the world needs a permanent solution to the energy question, and such could be very liberating for geographical habitability.
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    I think how cities are structured, how industrial areas are structured, highways, public transit, suburbs, living areas within commercial areas in city centers, all of that will possibly probably get rearranged so that things are a lot healthier for people/'communities' where folks proactively put themselves and each other before what was previously the interest of capital. Everything down to architecture of the buildings themselves. Also, doing a quick google search (a very brief one and reading only the headers of the websites) there are like 3.5 million homeless folks in the US (probably a lot more I think) and 18+ million vacant homes. None of what I mention here is some detailed program for how it will occur but that isn't up to me to decide right now.
    100% agreed. The problem that revolution would put on the order of the day is not who would get the best houses, but how we will get houses for those who need them. Distinctions as to what house is better than another are a mere afterthought to this.
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    There are literally more empty homes than there are homeless in many countries. Take a look at China, f'instance.

    http://www.metropolismag.com/Point-o...s-Ghost-Towns/

    Problem isn't having too little decent quality housing, problem is distribution.
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    Well I have to say there is objectively no best house. Everyone would live in his own best house, I presume.

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