Mini-Factories: The Greatest Freedom Trend of Our Time
Published: Tue, 12/01/09
"Empowering Ordinary Citizens to Make an Extraordinary Difference"
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Mini-Factories: The Greatest Freedom Trend of Our Time The following is an excerpt from Oliver's most recent book, The Coming Aristocracy: Education & the Future of Freedom.
If freedom is to reverse the onslaught of American and global aristocracy, it will likely do so through the greatest freedom trend of
our time.
This trend is revolutionizing institutions, organizations,
relationships, society and even nations around the world. It is still
in its infancy, and many have yet to realize its potential.
The experts
tend to overlook it because it seems small. It will likely always
seem small because it is a "bottom-up" trend with no "top-down"
organizations, alliances, or even affiliations.
Truthfully, it isn't
even a single trend at all--it is thousands of small trends, all
following a similar pattern.
Malcolm Gladwell called part of this trend "outliers," Harry S. Dent called it the "customization" explosion, Alvin Toffler said it is the wave of "revolutionary wealth" as led in large part by "prosumers," John Naisbitt named it the "high touch" megatrend, Stephen Covey called it the 8th Habit of "greatness," Daniel Pink coined the descriptor "free agent nation," and Seth Godin refers to it as "tribes."
Others have termed it "social
entrepreneurship," "the new leadership," "a new age," and even "the
human singularity."
All of these touch on
facets of this freedom trend, but I think the best, most accurate and
descriptive name for it is the "mini-factory" model.
Modernism
came with the factory--the ability to mass produce. This revolutionized
the world--economics, governments, how we spend our time each day, what
we eat and wear, relationships, the size and functions of our homes and
cities, etc.
It changed everything.
Today the mini-factory is changing
everything just as drastically.
In ancient times the
wealthy set up estates or fiefdoms to cover all their needs, and the
masses worked to provide the needs of their aristocratic "superiors."
In modern times the factory provided mass goods and services.
Imagine the impact on everything in our lives if each
family could provide all, or even many, of its needs for itself--and do
it better than kings or politicians ruling over working peasants or
even corporations employing workers to produce goods and services.
Such is the world of the mini-factory.
How Does a Mini-Factory World Function?
For
example, what if parents could educate their children better than local
school factories, with the best teachers, classes and resources of the
world piped directly into their own home?
What if a sick person had
more time and motivation to research the cases of her symptoms than the
factory doctors, and the availability of all the latest medical
journals right on her computer screen?
She
would also have holistic works, original studies, alternative and
collaborative experts, and the ability to email the experts and get
answers in less time than it would take to wait in the hospital lobby.
Ten friends would likely send her their experiences with similar
illness within days of her mentioning casually online that she was
sick. If she chose a certain surgeon, a dozen people might share their
experiences with this doctor.
What if a mother planning to
travel for family vacation could just book flights and hotels herself,
without calling the "expert" travel agent? Maybe she could even choose
seats on the flight or see pictures of her hotel room--all in her own
home between her projects and errands.
Welcome to the world of the
mini-factory. I purposely used examples that are already a
reality. But they were just a futuristic dream when writers like Alvin
Toffler and John Naisbitt predicted them before 1990.
Technology has
helped it, but the impetus of the mini-factory trend is freedom. People
want to spend less time at the factory/corporation and more time at
home. They want to be more involved in raising their children and
improving their love life.
In an
aristocracy, these luxuries are reserved for the upper class. In a free
society, anyone can build a mini-factory.
What is a Mini-Factory?
A mini-factory is anything someone does alone
or with partners or a team, that accomplishes what has historically
(meaning the last 150 years of modernism) been done en masse or by big
institutions.
If a charter
school provides better education for some of the community, it's a
mini-factory. If it does it at less cost and/or in less time spent in
the classroom, so much the better. A homeschool or private school can
be a mini-factory.
Of course, if the charter, private, or home school
does a worse job than the regular factory, it is a failed
mini-factory.
If joining a multi-level
company and building it into a source of real income serves you better
than an employee position, it's a mini-factory.
If downsizing from a
lucrative professional job in Los Angeles
to a private practice or job that pays much less but allows you twice
as much time with your family and a more relaxed lifestyle in, say,
Flagstaff or Durango and makes you happier, it's a mini-factory.
Entrepreneurship,
alternative education, the downshifter movement, environmental groups,
alternative health, the growth of spirituality, community architecture,
the explosion of network marketing, home doctor visits, the rebirth of
active fathering, and so many other trends are
mini-factories.
How do Mini-Factories Impact Freedom?
It
all comes down to this: Big, institutional, non-transparent,
bureaucratic organizations are natural supporters of aristocracy.
Freedom flourishes when the people are independent, free, and as
self-sufficient as possible.
I
am not suggesting going backwards in any way.
Forward progress is most
likely in a nation that is both well educated and highly trained, where
big institutional solutions are offered wherever they are best and
individuals and groups seek smaller solutions where they better serve
their needs, where free government enterprise rules apply and there are
no special benefits or perks of class (either conservative aristocracy
or liberal meritocracy), and where government, business, family,
academia, religion, media, and community all fulfill their distinct,
equally-important roles.
Such a model is
called freedom. It has been the best system for the most people in the
history of the world, and it still is.
To adopt freedom in our time,
either the aristocracy must give up its perks and voluntarily
restructure society, or the masses must retake their freedoms bit by
bit, day by day, by establishing mini-factories.
Mini-factories
will be more successful if each person only does a few, and does them
with true excellence.
Freedom will flourish best if there is no
organization or even coordination of the mini-factories; if
individuals, partners, families and teams identify what is needed in
the world and in their own lives and set out to deliver it.
This
is especially hard in a time like ours where the employee mindset wants
someone to "fix" things (like the economy, health care, education,
etc.), exactly when an entrepreneurial mindset is most needed to take
risks and initiate the best and most lasting changes.
If
real, positive, and effective change is to come, it will most likely be
initiated by the people acting as individuals, small groups, and teams.
If it comes from the top, it will tend to only bring more aristocracy,
and the day of freedom will be over for now.
Whatever
your mini-factory contribution might be, consider that it will help
determine the future of freedom.
Is it Worth the Challenge?
Mini-factories
can be hard to establish and challenging to build. Many people fail
once or several times before they learn to be effective.
But the type
of learning that only comes from failing and then trying again is the
most important in building leaders and citizens who are capable of
maintaining freedom in a society.
Note that
this very type of education is rejected in a training model of
schooling, where failure is seen as unacceptable and students are
taught to avoid it at all costs.
This mindset only works if an
aristocracy is there to take care of the failures.
In
a freedom model, citizens and leaders learn the vital lessons of
challenges; failures and wise risk-taking are needed.
Starting and
leading a mini-factory, and indeed all entrepreneurial work, is
challenging.
Those who embraced this difficult path in history
established and maintained freedom, while those who embraced the ease
of past compromises sold themselves and their posterity into
aristocracy.
In the long term, though, aristocracy is much harder on everyone than freedom.
What Will You Build?
As
you consider what mini-factories you should support, start, and build,
just ask what things could be done (or are being done) better by a
small mini-factory than by the big organizations that try to control
nearly everything in our world.
If it could
be done just as well by a mini-factory, the change to the smaller
entity can drastically promote freedom. If it can be done even better
by a mini-factory, it is better for life itself!
The mini-factory is
the new vehicle of freedom.
Take a mini-survey: What are your pet complaints? Government? Develop family government models. Health Care?
Educate yourself on prevention and self-care. Education? Learn the
principles of Leadership Education. Media? Start a blog. Entertainment?
Develop a group of hobbyists who share your interests, whether it be
Harley road trips, ice fishing, scrapbooking, etc.
You get the idea: Live
deliberately, and do not wait for institutions to change
to meet your needs.
Do not waste your energy or good humor on
complaining.
Find a mini-factory that does it right and get behind
it--or start one yourself. So many are needed, and they can bring the
miracle of freedom!
The future remains
unseen. It is the undiscovered country.
Many ancients felt that fate
drove the future, but the idea of freedom taught humanity to look each
to his/herself, to partner with others, and to take the risk to build
community and take action now in order to pass on a better life to our
children and our children's children.
Today, that concept of freedom is waning--slowly and surely being replaced by a class culture.
Those
who love freedom, whatever their stripe--be they green, red, blue,
rainbow, or anything else--are needed. They need to see what is really
happening, and they need to educate themselves adequately to make a
difference.
The most powerful changes toward freedom will likely be
made by mini-factories, in thousands and hopefully millions of
varieties and iterations.
Aristocracy or freedom--the future of the globe--hangs in the balance... |
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