A lot of the things we do on a daily or weekly basis have ways of doing them that can either be private or communal, some of these which we do not think to consider as having that characteristic.

For example, bathing in the Roman Empire used to be communal, but then Rome fell and citizens in the splinter countries began taking baths privately.

Receiving mail is another example. There are countries which don’t have mailboxes and everyone gets their mail at the post office in the PO boxes. It was the United States which pioneered the idea of the modern mail system, which is why we associate it as a private act.

There are activities as well which don’t have any history as jumping between one or the other that might benefit from it, for example I think towns might benefit if internet was free and freely accessible but only at the local library.

What’s a non-communal aspect of life you think should be communal?

  • PeriodicallyPedantic@lemmy.ca
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    17 days ago

    Any necessity of life.
    Any inelastic commodity.

    Edit:
    Upon rereading, I totally missed the spirit in which the question was asked. Whoops lol

    • NOT_RICK@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      I’ve seen those public bike repair racks with attached tools. I feel like that’s the closest thing to that we have

      • Ech@lemm.ee
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        18 days ago

        I always see those with the tools cut off. Feels bad :\

    • Bobby Turkalino@lemmy.yachts
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      18 days ago

      Google your city name and “maker space” to see if there’s any near you. Not only does my local library district have them, there’s another local option with a monthly membership fee. They have large equipment like laser engravers, CNCs, drill presses, etc. They usually also have small stuff like drills that you can check out and bring home. Also a great way to meet other makers in your community

      • TheWeirdestCunt@lemm.ee
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        18 days ago

        I tried looking for something like this in the UK and it turns out the nearest one for me got shut down during COVID, the rest are all an hour or two away at least. It’s a great idea but I guess it’s unsustainable without some sort of external funding cause the local one was already running at a loss before 2020 according to their website.

    • OneCardboardBox@lemmy.sdf.org
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      18 days ago

      Especially gardening tools.

      Why does every fucking house in our neighborhood need its own lawnmower, weedwacker, and hedge trimmer? You only need it for an hour or two every month.

  • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    Generally think private homes are a giant waste, both in terms of wasted physical space and energy lost due to poor insulation.

    Living should be communal. No residential construction should hold less than eight housing units.

    After you do this, you can consolidate a bunch of an amenities - washing machines, parking, central heating/AC, pools, gardens, outdoor grills, wet and dry bars, basements, rumpace rooms, home theaters.

    It all gets so much nicer when it’s a communal living space.

    • funkajunk@lemm.ee
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      18 days ago

      That’s a nice idea, but how do we decide on who gets to live in the communal space?

    • tiredofsametab@fedia.io
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      18 days ago

      I’ve lived in shared housing. Never again. I’m way too introverted and can’t stand how poorly some people clean nor how badly the behave to others (loudness, using resources inconsiderately, etc.)

      I’ll be social when I have the energy. I help out my neighbors when they need it. We do have community events about monthly where we cut grass, clean up, etc.

    • cm0002@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      Some people like living in communal spaces and some, like me, loathe it. Seriously, fuck that. Maybe more and affordable complexes do need to be built, but it should never be the only option.

    • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      18 days ago

      washing machines, parking, central heating/AC, pools, gardens, outdoor grills, wet and dry bars, basements, rumpace rooms, home theaters.

      Aw hell naw. Tell me you’ve never been poor enough to have to use a shared washing machine or even a laundromat without telling me you never had to. Those things are absolutely disgusting.

      I used to believe in dense housing in cities until I had two sets of psycho upstairs neighbours and no thanks, I want to be as far away from another human being as reasonably feasible at all times, nevermind not share a fucking pool with one.

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        18 days ago

        Tell me you’ve never been poor enough to have to use a shared washing machine

        Literally every college kid ever. Lots of apartments and dorms have laundramats. They save space within the units, you can do two or three loads at once, and when you’ve got one per floor its never really a problem except on the day after exams when everyone is cleaning up and shipping out at once.

        I used to believe in dense housing in cities until I had two sets of psycho upstairs neighbours and no thanks

        In my experience, a little insulation goes a long way. A couple of extra inches of wall thickness transform shouting/cheering/screaming kids into faint muffles. Meanwhile, anyone that’s had to live in an HOA community knows the annoyance of getting a nasty-gram from a neighbor down the street who might as well have had her ears shoved up against your window in order to complain that you had a party.

        Folks in the suburbs somehow manage to develop Superman hearing and still complain about everything. Folks in midtown townhomes experience night-and-day differences when they get double-panned glass. Nice apartments have thick walls (good for heating/cooling as well as sound-proofing) and let you enjoy your privacy as soon as you shut the door.

      • nimpnin@sopuli.xyz
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        18 days ago

        Greetings from Sweden, here shared washing machines are really common and generally not disguisting at all.

        There are also solutions to people behaving badly in apartment buildings. Unfortunate if nothing was done at yours, but it’s definitely not an impossible problem to solve.

    • ChexMax@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      This is a wild take. There is value in privacy. There is value in quiet! There is value in space. Electricity efficiency isn’t the only important thing!

    • Jimmybander@champserver.net
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      18 days ago

      Yeah, no. Apartment living sucks ass. I’d rather live in the suburbs. My neighbors are close but far. We can’t hear each other normally. It’s great.

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        18 days ago

        Apartment living sucks ass. I’d rather live in the suburbs.

        Live in a nice apartment. Makes all the difference.

        The suburbs are horrendous. Everything is five miles away, you’re in gridlock when school starts or lets out, and the only social activities are pay-to-play. Spent my childhood in the suburbs and it was miserable.

        We can’t hear each other normally.

        Lived in an apartment for ten years and I couldn’t hear a peak from my neighbors, because the walls were wide and padded. Moved into a townhouse with single-pane glass windows. Neighbor’s kids were practically in my living room until I upgraded to double-pane a few years later. Insulation is a total game changer.

        Past that, anyone who lives in a neighborhood with teenagers will hear those teenagers. As soon as someone gets a motorbike with a cut-out muffler, everyone on the block knows what time they get home.

        • Jimmybander@champserver.net
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          18 days ago

          Where I live apartments are places that people try to leave. People who live in apartments are generally less well off and have problems with crime and anti-social behavior. There were 2 murders in 3 years where I lived. Moved back to my parent’s house and then was lucky enough to be able to buy a house.

          It’s just not something that I would want to do again unless I was forced to.

          • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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            18 days ago

            People who live in apartments are generally less well off and have problems with crime and anti-social behavior.

            There are apartment buildings in my city of Houston where the base units rent for north of $10k/mo. Housing is cheaper (relatively speaking) but you don’t get the kind of access or amenities that these spaces provide. If there are criminals in these units, its all white collar crime. Nobody is stealing catalytic converters to pay rent at the Riverway Plaza.

            Live in a nice upscale spot and you’ll enjoy the apartment lifestyle. Live in a falling over money pit and you’ll hate home ownership.

            Moved back to my parent’s house and then was lucky enough to be able to buy a house.

            The great thing about parents is that they’ve already paid off their mortgage (or near enough) that they financed on a property purchased decades beforehand. But the down payment on a house costs more (even in PPP adjusted dollars) than the whole unit would thirty years ago.

            That’s not a rich-guy / poor-guy problem, its an old-guy / young-guy problem.

            • Jimmybander@champserver.net
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              18 days ago

              Most cities in the South stink. Our suburban school district is the best in the state. Very little crime. My house is the correct size thankfully. I can afford it.

              10k/month for an apartment. Lol. That is a rich guy thing. My mortgage is $750/month.

              I don’t like all the people everywhere anyway. Whatever floats your boat.

              Amazingly my parents house and my house cost the same at purchase. $130kish. A lot of things fell into place for us to be able to buy a house. I did get lucky.

  • alcoholicorn@lemmy.ml
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    18 days ago

    Cooking. 5 people working together can cook for 100 people easier, cheaper, and less wastefully than 100 people can cook for themselves/their families.

    Unfortunately the current restaurant system in the US is incredibly wasteful, expensive, and pays fuckall.

    • CarbonIceDragon@pawb.social
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      18 days ago

      I sometimes think about automats, and what a modernized version, designed to both be healthy enough to eat as one’s primary meal source without ill effect and efficient enough to compete in price with home cooking, might be like. I suspect it would probably involve a lot of soup and chili and the like, just because that stuff is relatively simple to produce in large quantities, and uses cheap yet generally healthy ingredients

    • SreudianFlip@sh.itjust.works
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      18 days ago

      Verified: group cooking is the way.

      I have friends and family who live in a cohousing building. About 50 people in 30 units. Each apartment is complete but the kitchens are slightly smaller than typical.

      Cohousing is mutual ownership of the building. About 20% of the building is common areas, like widened hallways with couches and bookshelves, or a games nook, music room, workshop, laundry, etc. It’s basically a tall village, and they are like roommates with privacy.

      The giant kitchen and dining room is used six nights a week. One person is chef with a small crew, and dinner is for around 30 people. It costs $5 CDN per meal, though if you raid the leftovers later it’s pay what you want, usually $2. The cooking volunteer roster is optional and organized by a Slack channel. Food is usually awesome and everyone wins.

      If you want you hardly ever have to cook dinner for yourself.

      • vaderaj@lemmy.world
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        17 days ago

        I am from India and currently work in IT. Due to a lot of reasons I did not pursue cooking but my main motivation to pursue cooking was this aspect, and if you are interested check out community kitchens in India (Mega Kitchens docu series is a good place to start)

            • SreudianFlip@sh.itjust.works
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              17 days ago

              You are familiar with the concept of #cohousing, right? I don’t think anyone is renting there, all owners. Land values have been fucked in Vancouver since capitalism arrived, and in fact when the group bought the three house lots they needed, they had to deal with one of them being shadow-flipped during the purchase.

              Still, pooling resources did make it very possible for the group. The hard-to-swallow expensive part was actually building to passivhaus standards and dealing with bureaucracy, if I understand correctly.

            • SreudianFlip@sh.itjust.works
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              17 days ago

              Other savings built into collective infrastructure:

              • super cheap fast internet. They pay about $5/ month and when I am visiting I get 1ms ping to speedtest servers, amazing.
              • tools, the workshop is set up for tool sharing as well
              • laundry room, no coins
              • car sharing is easy
              • bulk buying groups naturally form
              • event facilities, guest rooms just need booking (big deal in Vancouver eh)
              • profit control: fewer middlemen to feed for maintenance and management
              • dozens of tiny efficiencies that add up
              • village settings are naturally designed for mutual aid, good cohousing is a microvillage
    • Brewchin@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      This makes me think of the Sikh community’s charity/giving (can’t remember the term) food giving that happens in most towns globally where there a Gurdwara.

      There has to be a better way than waves hands everything, really.

  • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️@yiffit.net
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    18 days ago

    Funny mentioning the mail thing in the US… I’ve never had a singular mailbox and I’ve lived in California my whole life. Always had a communal mailbox somewhere in the neighborhood (or my apartment now) where everyone’s mailbox is in like a big bank of boxes.

    I kinda hate it. Mostly because the neighborhood Karen would always be at the thing and always had some shit to say to me, even when I was a little-ass kid.

    I always wished we had community baths though. Seems like everywhere else in the world does that except us. Definitely would be cooler to normalize being naked around strangers.

  • SavvyWolf@pawb.social
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    18 days ago

    … Why should private internet be banned or discouraged? What benefits would that being?

    It’s a bit of a cop out, but maybe talking about and dealing with feelings. At best people usually only talk privately with a professional for money. Normalise just having regular group therapy for everyone that they can just drop in and out of.

    Or if we want to really push boundaries: Orgies and kink parties. Sex is a natural part of life, no need to keep it secret.

    • CarbonIceDragon@pawb.social
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      18 days ago

      I’m not sure that something like a public orgy would be a good idea, not because of “morals” (I tend to think modern society is far too repressed about sexual stuff), but because of the health implications that would come of encouraging sexual contact between large groups of strangers. That sounds like a recipe for STI spread unless you were very strict and thorough with testing, vetting participants, and enforcing protective measures, which inevitably not every instance would be.

      • SavvyWolf@pawb.social
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        18 days ago

        However, if talking and partaking in sexual acts is less stigmatised, people will hopefully feel a lot more comfortable about getting tested and talking about it.

        And honestly, if it does turn out to be that big a problem, vetting and requiring regular testing seems a reasonable thing to require before people are allowed in.

    • CraigOhMyEggo@lemmy.mlOP
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      18 days ago

      A few reasons.

      1. The internet is taken for granted and this would be like a social cap. In theory, something could take its place in limited form in private settings.

      2. The internet travels around the world through undersea cables (long enough to encircle the Earth 180 times) which then go into servers which then go into cables which then reach your residence, and that’s a lot of service strain we add onto by putting the internet wherever we can.

      3. Knowledgeability isn’t as appreciated as it used to be, and having a hub for it would un-devalue it.

      4. It would help maintain the right flow of interaction and information and combat things like misinformation.

      5. So that people don’t pose a hassle to administration.

      6. To bring people together.

      7. Some countries want to ban it entirely, and it would serve as a good middle ground to pacify the urge to do this without eliminating the internet.

      It’s no different in my opinion from proposing something such as us all living in communal housing.

  • jerkface@lemmy.ca
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    18 days ago

    We should be using neighbourhood food co-ops to purchase and distribute food from farmers and wholesalers rather than from retailers.

  • Boomkop3@reddthat.com
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    18 days ago

    Energy, public transport, postal service We’re never going to have progress if they have a stake in not doing that

  • Oka@sopuli.xyz
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    18 days ago

    Clothes being optional

    Im not saying we should be nude all the time. Clothes have their purpose.I think we should have the option to be nude in public, without making it sexual

    • ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works
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      18 days ago

      I never feel inconvenienced by having to wear clothing. I suppose part of that is because as a man, I can go shirtless without getting stares and I wouldn’t want to be without underwear (for support) even if I were on a deserted island. I wonder what the circumstances you have in mind are in which you would like to have the option of being nude in public.

      Edit: Now that I think about it, there have been a few times when I wanted to go swimming and just swimming in my underwear wasn’t an option because I would have to walk while wearing it later and that would be uncomfortable.

      • Oka@sopuli.xyz
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        18 days ago

        In addition to your example, I’ll think of a few of my own:

        • Washing your car (wash yourself while you’re at it)
        • The weather is comfortable enough to not wear clothes (instead of having 1 layer, go down to 0)
        • Don’t want to do laundry (in fact, you save money by not dirtying up clothes as often)
        • You do not have to change outfits (swimming to exercise to sleep, etc.)
        • You get more vitamin D
        • No tan lines
        • Allows your skin to breathe and take in the weather: rain, sun, wind
    • TheBananaKing@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      Nude beaches are nice places for exactly this reason. It’s like everyone tacitly agrees not to give a shit.

      You can walk past people with your balls waving in the breeze and nobody even blinks - and more importantly, someone can walk past you with their tits akimbo and you don’t even blink. It’s not sexual, it’s not even interesting, it has no significance here. It’s like seeing someone breastfeeding: yes, boobs are still great, but we’re not doing that right now.

      And that’s just a really nice headspace to be in. All of the unconscious monkey-politics games just go away, you don’t have to think of people in those terms, or concern yourself with where you stand relative to them, because we’re just not doing that.

      Oh no, you’ll see unattractive naked people! Yep, most of them in fact. And honestly that’s kind of awesome. 85yo woman pottering around living her best life stark naked and not giving one single shit: you go girl. Fuck yeah. You know how people say they look forward to being old enough to just not give a fuck any more? You can have that yourself right now, right here, for free.

      It’s funny, walking past clothed beaches afterwards, you realise just how sexualised many swimsuits really are. A bunch of naked people are honestly about as glamorous and exciting as a pile of dead sheep; fashion designers do one hell of a job creating drama and hype around it all.

    • snooggums@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      Most places in the US legally allow nudity, with the main barrier being people calling the police and making a big deal out of doing something legal.

      • Oka@sopuli.xyz
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        18 days ago

        In my area, you can be nude on private property as long as a neighbor has to make an effort to see you. My back yard allows it.

        • snooggums@lemmy.world
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          18 days ago

          It isn’t about allowing. It is about not prohibiting.

          Most places haven’t prohibited nudity because most people don’t choose to be nude.

            • snooggums@lemmy.world
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              18 days ago

              Nudity is legal in those places, like how driving a car with a license is legal. That is why places can have naked runs and bike rides.

              Sexualized nudity is illegal like drunk driving is illegal. It isn’t the nudity itself that is illegal, but the combination of actions.