Liberating spaces
The fall issues of YES! on standing up to corporate power have not yet arrived from the printer, but we're already deep at work on the next issue. Here's our thought about what the issue might involve (and a request for your ideas), and afterwards, there is a question for you.
YES! #44: Winter 2008
Liberated Spaces
or
Whose Space? Our space.
or
DIY—creating free spaces
or
Whose Space? Our space.
or
DIY—creating free spaces
People ask the powerful for what they already have. There exists another notion of power: the idea that the people already have it. In this conception, power has another name. It is called dignity.
-Gustavo Esteva
I believe it to be perfectly possible for an individual to adopt the way of life of the future. . . without having to wait for others to do so.
-Mahatma Gandhi
In the game of chess, you win by confronting and vanquishing your enemy. In the game of Go, you win by taking over spaces. You simply surround territory and make it yours.
The “liberated spaces” issue of YES! magazine is about taking the game of Go into the way we live our lives. Instead of waiting for the world to change so we can live as we would like to live, we create the spaces where we can make it so, now.
Instead of looking for policy changes or the right job, we create the lives we want, along with others, without waiting for permission of the authorities. This is the approach of the autonomists, the street artists, the tent city dweller. Some people are on the fringes of society because they have been excluded -- because they are poor, a sexual minority, undocumented. Some because they choose not to fit in. In either case, they can, together or separately, create a different world within which to live their lives.
Spaces that can be liberated include physical spaces, virtual spaces (on line), and consciousness spaces (the freed mind).
Examples of possible article topics:
- The Critical Mass bike rides — taking over the streets for bicycles
- Street art that creates community space
- Egalitarian communities
- Villages in Colombia that declared themselves peace zones
- A death-row inmate who has found inner freedom although he remains behind bars.
- Your idea here (leave it as a comment or email: editors ( at ) yesmagazine ( dot ) org. Put the word "free" in the subject line.)
Labels: freedom, liberation, YES




2 Comments:
I feel my most freedom in my self love, in the respect that I give up my notions of need of material want, for the desire to give. Freedom comes in relying on the world as something, and full of someone's, that I am able to receive from, and give my receptiveness to. Freedom comes in learning. Learning about myself and my ability to give, learning about my world, and learning about the people around me. Growth would be the greatest freedom. Although it may be uncomfortable at times, it brings the greatest satisfaction, the best results, and the most possibilities. Learning makes love to potenial and creates new life.
Ms. van Gelder,
I just picked up Yes Magazine for the first time and I'm just blown away. I spent some time in Rio, toured the favelas and was taken by the notion of creating your own living space as a method of solving a basic financial problem. I thought the act to "create" in such a manner spoke of mentality of proactivity and "can-do." Some how this appeals to my natural sense of being.
I was wondering if you could comment more on idea: "deconlonise the mind."
Thanks.
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