70 lines
3.8 KiB
Plaintext
70 lines
3.8 KiB
Plaintext
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BABYSITTING IS ANARCHY
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by Mike Thain
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Babysitting, although it happens to be a job usually held by
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young teens, usually girls, or neighborhood mothers, is actually
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a blackmarket, anarchist occupation.
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The typical weekend babysitter collects a handful of cash at
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the end of the night, usually loosely based on an hourly rate. The
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babysitter files no tax forms and pays no income tax, yet is never
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imprisoned for tax evasion. This is a primary example of the
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"other" blackmarket - the blackmarket of services, much overlooked
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in favor of the blackmarket of goods (garage sales quickly come to
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mind).
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But young girls aren't the only babysitters. Often a mother
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(or sometimes an occasional father), chained to the responsibility
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of constant child care, seeks help from peers in the neighborhood.
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"I'll watch your brat today if you'll watch my brat Friday night."
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This works great, until the other has no need for a babysitter
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today or in the near future. This is where anarchist-style
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cooperation comes in handy.
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When I was young, several mothers in my town had an agreement
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set up. For every hour you sat for another kid, you got credit for
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an hour of someone else sitting for you. I can't remember all the
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details, but I know they had little coupons they made with smiley
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face stamps on them, each representing an hour. These were pretty
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powerful little tokens, cause everyone needed them now and then,
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so you could go right down the list and find someone who needed
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some tokens to make an exchange.
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Since there was no money involved, just an agreement, this
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could not be taxed or regulated. And if I remember correctly it
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worked great. Nobody had to pay any money at all. And since each
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token was one hour watching one kid, it was easy to earn extra by
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watching a few kids at a time.
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Hypothetically, what if some mother who happened to like
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watching kids had a glut of these tokens, and didn't need so many,
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but she had an overflowing toilet. She could probably call the
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plumber down the street and say, "Hey, I'll give you 10 babysitting
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tokens if you'll fix my toilet." And he could accept or reject the
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offer, but at least it is possible. Maybe the plumber is having
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a fight with his wife, and presenting her with 10 hours without her
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brats might help sooth things over.
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So this can be looked at on a larger scale. Why, then,
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couldn't the same people in that neighborhood use those tokens at
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a garage sale down the road? Or to hire the neighbor who happens
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to be a house painter? And if you are a painter but you hate
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watching kids, that would offer a different source of babysitting
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income.
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Of course, this could be compared to money, but on a smaller
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scale, only the money wouldn't be loosely based on some fictional
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rare metal that doesn't exist in those quantities, and it couldn't
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be minted up by someone in charge (except in the case of fraud) to
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cause inflation for a quick buck.
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And what if there was a problem with crime in the
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neighborhood, like prowlers and break-ins, and the people decided
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to set up a neighborhood watch. Instead of requiring everyone to
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put in a turn, why not pay the watchers with tokens? And in that
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case, what need would the people have for cops?
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There are definite possibilities here, depending solely on the
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trust and organization involved in a small community. Government
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would have much less to hold over people's heads if you did your
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financial deals with the lady who runs the craft boutique down the
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road instead of your stock broker in Tokyo. Take a lesson from the
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ladies in the babysitter club.
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(As a side note, I do not mean to sound in any way sexist in
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discussing mothers looking for child care, even though I can almost
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see those fingers wagging at me already. Its just the way my town
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happened to be, so live with it. -mt)
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