this post was submitted on 05 Sep 2024
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I once saw a documentary about food independence in the Bahamas, but it seems like this documentary is gone from YouTube now, and I don't know where else I can find it. It brought up all sorts of techniques that Bahamians are using to grow their own food despite the negligible amount of arable land in the country. Other countries have dealt with a lack of arable land by simply building more land, but whether land reclamation is at all feasible in your country is not for me to say.
In any case, there should be two aims for the food and goods issue:
I think we can compare a country to the case of an individual person: you sell your labor power to the capitalist class to get a wage that you largely spend paying for food, utilities, housing, other goods and services, and this ends up only giving that money back to the capitalist class. So it's a dependent relationship, you can't provide yourself with all of life's necessities. However, you can still find ways to become more independent, and you can find ways to get more of your necessities from other people in a way that doesn't feed into (or feeds less into) this dependent relationship. In this case, you might still need to sell your labor power to the capitalist class in order to survive, and you might still give much of your earnings back to the capitalists, but you'll at least have something to fall back on if you try to assert yourself and things don't quite go your way.
So I might say that a focus for the left in your country should be organization across national lines. Wins for the socialists in the countries yours imports from is a win for your own country's independence. In other words, don't get too distracted by lines on a map, that you don't look at the systems of dependence themselves, because these systems also impact many regions recognized as parts of larger countries.