The Pros and Cons of Living in an Income-Sharing Commune

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  • čas přidán 20. 09. 2016
  • In the heart of Washington, D.C., seven people live in a single home and pool all of their incomes (which range from upwards of $80,000 to a couple thousand) together to share. The residents of Compersia Commune embrace an ideology that values unpaid labor and disavows capitalism. In this tiny, socialized economy, the collective gets everything you have-which, for some, has been liberating. “We talk a lot and think a lot about trying to transform our relationship to money,” says GPaul, the commune’s founder. “We’re doing all of this work so that worrying about money [and] stressing about money is not so present in our lives.”
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  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 1,8K

  • @pauka90
    @pauka90 Před 7 lety +2726

    They should combine more minimalistic philosophy because looking at all that clutter and mess makes me sick...

  • @egc3729
    @egc3729 Před 6 lety +1033

    Looks like they haven't figured out who is responsible for cleaning.

    • @CeeCeeB.
      @CeeCeeB. Před 5 lety +8

      👏🏻🙄

    • @AandP4dummieslikeme
      @AandP4dummieslikeme Před 5 lety +24

      LOL I can't imagine what it smells like. And sharing a bathroom with these people? No thanks.

    • @beautychallengechannel6466
      @beautychallengechannel6466 Před 5 lety +3

      😂😂😂😂

    • @sassybatchz
      @sassybatchz Před 5 lety +27

      I think there's a difference between dirty and cluttered. It doesn't necessarily look dirty just cluttered as hell

    • @fobbitguy
      @fobbitguy Před 5 lety +7

      Like most utopian communities in the past their community will implode when they figure more people are taking than giving.

  • @DrewDienno
    @DrewDienno Před 5 lety +97

    "sorry for interrupting you" --what polite kids, my god!

    • @lolk6331
      @lolk6331 Před 4 lety +1

      I thought the same thing I'm suprised more ppl in the. Moments section haven't mentioned it

    • @thebattlemageXD
      @thebattlemageXD Před 3 lety

      That’s what I said

  • @sethjones5250
    @sethjones5250 Před 6 lety +58

    I grew up in a community where there was a group like that. It's resulted in a lot of pain now that I've grown up, and grown apart from them. It also gave me a very bad understanding of how to handle money, and what I am actually worth as a skilled laborer. When you grow up hating the idea of money, you tend to be willing to work for a lot less than you should and people take advantage of you.

    • @JM-de2gh
      @JM-de2gh Před rokem +4

      Yes, if you are the most efficient worker in a commune, you are discouraged and punished. If you are the least efficient worker in a commune, you are encouraged and rewarded. Thanks for sharing your experience over time.

  • @kimchloe4458
    @kimchloe4458 Před 7 lety +1210

    I could do shared land and garden and farm but the clutter is already driving me nuts in the living space.

    • @AvgJane19
      @AvgJane19 Před 6 lety +32

      Kim Chloe that's just them, you can definitely organize better in your own shared space

    • @user-hv6dv6wh7v
      @user-hv6dv6wh7v Před 6 lety +9

      It was called the tradigity of the commons. (Shared lands) in the early American colonies. Almost everyone died. Try cracking a history book every once in a while.

    • @Bobbobbob984
      @Bobbobbob984 Před 6 lety +26

      Tragedy of the commons is an economic idea. It only applies if no one can talk to each other and make an enforceable deal for the better of eveyone. It's 4 adults for freaks sake. They could fix it if they wanted to. They probs don't care. There's 3 children running around what's clutter.

    • @SuperHorseman22
      @SuperHorseman22 Před 6 lety +5

      +S “Superhero for Fun!” history books lie

    • @bpjog25
      @bpjog25 Před 6 lety +10

      The clutter is the first thing I noticed. I'm sure someone will get it together. 50 hours of community labor, that should be plenty of time.

  • @noragoodman-bryan1336
    @noragoodman-bryan1336 Před 6 lety +1196

    when the kid apologized for interrupting, I cried

  • @justincerveny
    @justincerveny Před 6 lety +259

    So the lawyer is paying for everything lmao

    • @LoggyWD
      @LoggyWD Před 5 lety +7

      Yeah but she got a younger boyfriend.

    • @m_m_m_m_m_m_m_m_m_m_m
      @m_m_m_m_m_m_m_m_m_m_m Před 4 lety +5

      Not sure about that. Her income should be divided by 4 since she has 3 kids. I think...

    • @therealhypehype5617
      @therealhypehype5617 Před 4 lety +6

      And a bunch of babysitters lol

    • @lukelyon1781
      @lukelyon1781 Před 2 lety

      You literally didn't pay attention to anything that was said in this video. All the income everyone makes is being pooled into a collective community fund that goes toward making it a more equitable community for all.

  • @johnsprystaff9605
    @johnsprystaff9605 Před 6 lety +50

    “I made 27, 000... so i quit my job and now I don’t know how much I make.” This is the exact opposite of the type of person you want splitting your resources...

    • @DebsFan101
      @DebsFan101 Před 2 lety +10

      Isn’t that the point though? These are people who realize that in a capitalistic society we decide one’s worth based on income. There are many valuable resources one can provide that don’t produce income. Cooking, cleaning, childcare, etc. I’d have no problem living with someone who earned no income, but did help keep the house running.

    • @greggroberts2317
      @greggroberts2317 Před 2 lety

      I agree with you Sarah. I think we should start are own commune lol. I'm in Indiana now but looking to move anywhere warm all year round.

  • @matthewkern6054
    @matthewkern6054 Před 6 lety +1066

    someone making $27,000 and someone making $85,000 treated as equal providers.......hmmmm....i think i'll just keep my money thanks

    • @blanket1309
      @blanket1309 Před 6 lety +15

      Matthew Kern I wonder who is taking advantage of whom!

    • @jamiee1519
      @jamiee1519 Před 6 lety +78

      actually, someone who used to make 27 thou... he quit and went freelance hahaaah

    • @PFC_50_Grand
      @PFC_50_Grand Před 6 lety +26

      What time is the daily stoning of residents that want to leave?

    • @KarthikAyyalasomayajula
      @KarthikAyyalasomayajula Před 6 lety +90

      The one making 85,000 brought 3 kids though

    • @obeb787
      @obeb787 Před 6 lety +1

      M awesome analysis!

  • @MoistMumble
    @MoistMumble Před 6 lety +199

    It's great that these people have found a way of life that makes them feel satisfied and whole. I hope it works out well for them and they reach their goal. I know I wouldn't fit in here at all, I like my own space and managing my own money.

    • @merrelthorson2224
      @merrelthorson2224 Před rokem

      So do l. I'm contemplating going to visit a friend, eager until my friend told me they are living in a commune, now not s sure about going, especially since my friend has been constantly nagging me to visit, l need t o find out more about communes.

  • @justincerveny
    @justincerveny Před 6 lety +363

    $60/hr as a handyman wtf is he on

    • @kchididdy
      @kchididdy Před 6 lety +61

      sounds right in sf bay area for quick jobs. keep in mind that he doesn't get many hours.

    • @xXxGnuVirusxXx
      @xXxGnuVirusxXx Před 5 lety +26

      You get someone to come to your house to fix your plumbing, he is probably getting paid more than 60/hr

    • @justincerveny
      @justincerveny Před 5 lety +9

      San Francisco maybe. Not in Texas

    • @shattynatty27
      @shattynatty27 Před 5 lety +17

      Justin Červený different cost of living in Texas vs San Fran. That will effect wages/cost of goods and services.

    • @justincerveny
      @justincerveny Před 5 lety

      Payscale says different.

  • @tipsycat27
    @tipsycat27 Před 6 lety +553

    i wouldnt wanna be making 80+k a year only to be sharing a dirty small space with a bunch of others and eating diseased, dumpster food....

    • @jonguyen100
      @jonguyen100 Před 5 lety +15

      @yutr7o6856e7d68f9g you have zero insight into her finances, or into what she gets back in the arrangement. Free childcare, for instance.

    • @HHH-qp9zd
      @HHH-qp9zd Před 5 lety +64

      @@jonguyen100 lmao, let's weigh both sides: make 85k/year, become financially stable and independent, save up for your children's college fund, retire at 55-60 OR make 85k/year, have most of that income go towards people who work and do less than you do, will never be financially independent, can't save for children's college fund because it all goes towards grown men and women, never be able to retire BUT AT LEAST I GET FREE CHILDCARE

    • @kristenhayes8295
      @kristenhayes8295 Před 5 lety +15

      @@HHH-qp9zd dude communes are wierd but they are not evil whats bad is not being able to choose. But they do have choices. They keep their finances in check and put money into different accounts for all the members. And even if that chick is the tent pole for 1 house and all utilities she's probably paying the same amount as for only her and her kids. Like chill this is like having roommates but with a student government and a fundraiser mixed in. And guess what? No one wants you in their commune and you don't have to be in one.

    • @hypernation8298
      @hypernation8298 Před 5 lety +17

      @@jonguyen100 im not sure of i would want free childcare in the form of Steve telling my kids "what he can do to stop that"

    • @unsettledonpurpose
      @unsettledonpurpose Před 5 lety +9

      Well, from an efficiency view for the commune, it does make more sense to have a few high cash earning people, instead of a bunch of people spending more man-hours making the same amount of cash. That said, those who are not earning, should have enough time to keep that house MUCH nicer. But, they knew they were being filmed, so perhaps, that's not a priority for them (?) Also, I'm not convinced that they have fully thought out the ramifications of sharing income as opposed to just reducing and sharing bills. It might be my indoctrination speaking, but this situation may be feasible as long as it remains a "family-sized" enterprise, but I seriously doubt this is scale-able to 15+ people. I predict if it gets much bigger the founder and the lawyer will leave together. (I suppose that's not a remarkable prediction.)

  • @scottfree6479
    @scottfree6479 Před 6 lety +42

    As long as you don’t force me to join then have at it. Make all the communes you want, but don’t legislate it.

  •  Před 6 lety +1024

    I couldn't live there. It's a dump.

    • @TheFlutterflies
      @TheFlutterflies Před 6 lety

      Susan Fudge not in California! 🤣

    • @itssenecaball
      @itssenecaball Před 6 lety +36

      Susan Fudge fuck that! they are dumpster diving for food...food that has been recalled! they are feeding the kids trash! oh mah gawwd!!!!

    • @jaggsta
      @jaggsta Před 6 lety +13

      prob has bed bugs also can't have all those people coming and going without getting bed bugs.

    • @Tombee2
      @Tombee2 Před 6 lety +3

      Jaggsta oh come on its not *that* easy to get bed bugs

    • @Tombee2
      @Tombee2 Před 6 lety +6

      Lauren Ball they may be feeding kids throsn out food but at the same time some people are feed their kids rrash in another way(double bacon cheese artery stopper with a gallon of soda and a mountain of greasu fries)

  • @joeweaver7288
    @joeweaver7288 Před 5 lety +402

    The woman who makes 80K a year is just paying for a bunch of squaters.

    • @tisha3831
      @tisha3831 Před 5 lety +36

      Hopefully she has a secret savings stashed in the capitalist bank.

    • @rhondarose9497
      @rhondarose9497 Před 5 lety +11

      somebody should clean that house....ok that would be my job

    • @MK_ULTRA420
      @MK_ULTRA420 Před 5 lety +11

      Well she seems fine with it. This is what gender equality looks like.

    • @alexcarter8807
      @alexcarter8807 Před 5 lety +23

      I have seen this and lived this. Survivalist compound on 5 acres, the owner of which makes around $100k a year. He invites all kinds of squatters to come live, the ones with any work ethic at all (myself, and a few others) get all the work piled onto them and eventually wise up and leave. The owner's left with a lot of lazy suck-ups who stroke his ego by agreeing with everything he says no matter how stupid, picture Mr. Burns out of the Simpsons and his yes-men.

    • @courtesyofdickboak
      @courtesyofdickboak Před 5 lety +10

      She’s also contributing her ex husbands child support

  • @BunnySlippers82
    @BunnySlippers82 Před 5 lety +67

    "Setting aside money to put into individual accounts for each person." So the lawyer and the teacher are supporting 3 basically jobless men and ALSO giving them cash that they will never get back.

    • @craiga4215
      @craiga4215 Před 4 lety +6

      No different than a husband and a stay at home mom. They do most of the financial work and the others likely do the house work. Both are equally important

    • @BunnySlippers82
      @BunnySlippers82 Před 4 lety +24

      @@craiga4215 They're not married, they're roommates. And by the looks of that unkempt house those 3 men are not doing housework nor taking good care of the other people's children.

    • @landonyoung4850
      @landonyoung4850 Před 4 lety +4

      you mean a handyman, a small business owner, a teacher and a single unemployed man

    • @kmtgoddess7793
      @kmtgoddess7793 Před 3 lety +3

      No there pooling together their resorces and as this commune grows so will the money and their opportunities. For example that person ur counting out as just the cook or whatever might be able to invent something or start some sort of buisness now or maybe the other will and they will all help and all share in the profits it's essentially a giant happy family

  • @Niklas323
    @Niklas323 Před 7 lety +491

    There are components of commune living that makes sense. Child care shared amongst adults with shared living and eating space sounds very healthy, but income sharing isn't completely necessary and seems destabilizing. Cooperative housing with more communal elements might be more appropiate for most people.

    • @bodyofhope
      @bodyofhope Před 6 lety +54

      Nada I have to agree with you. I love the idea of a community based child rearing, something that used to be more common in American Christian churches and in American Jewish communities. Some percentage of income pooling is fair for food and shared living expenses, but for the long term, a fully shared income seems very risky to me.

    • @blah7983
      @blah7983 Před 6 lety +25

      Maybe they could give a large share 30-40%, but a sense of independence is important.

    • @patches_kitty
      @patches_kitty Před 6 lety +21

      Nada I agree. I think though that every commune is going to have different levels of involvement, and that that's okay too. Communes that are built and operate in the context of capitalism while being very socialist internally are the future. And communes aren't for everyone either- they are ugly when they are not free and consentual.

    • @AuroraLalune
      @AuroraLalune Před 6 lety

      Agreed

    • @maryanne2025
      @maryanne2025 Před 6 lety +8

      mm I've heard of shared living but this shared income ..perhaps not a lot of people would be able to do that.

  • @christianrupprechter3645
    @christianrupprechter3645 Před 6 lety +497

    If the attorney left, the commune would be dead. They are already eating out of dumpsters!

    • @Batya-Grace
      @Batya-Grace Před 5 lety +10

      Christian Rupprechter ....That's why it's called a commune, because they all pitch in financially. It's not just the lawyer.

    • @IndigoXYZ18
      @IndigoXYZ18 Před 5 lety +27

      Joyful Noise But she brings in half the money... The unspoken reality of their commune is that everybody secretly has a priority list of who they'd kick out if push came to shove. There is going to one person in that group who is least likely to be voted off, give a wild guess as to who is at the bottom of that list.

    • @natecat33
      @natecat33 Před 5 lety +14

      @@IndigoXYZ18 The whole idea of a commune is that human labor is intrinsically valuable, whether it is making 85,000 a year for the commune or caring for the children or preparing meals.

    • @IndigoXYZ18
      @IndigoXYZ18 Před 5 lety +11

      natecat333 Well that's the thing, all forms of work just aren't as valuable. That doesn't mean that we shouldn't strife to life in a world where everybody is happy, healthy and well fed, but some careers make bring us closer to that reality than do others. Nobody would die tomorrow if all the fast food workers forgot how to do their jobs, where as if the same were true of doctors it would be a crisis. You need only grant me the fact that some jobs improve global well being more than others, and that most of these jobs only a handful of people can do, and you are literally describing what value is (utility & scarcity). That woman can dumpster dive for recalled chicken, that bum however cannot cover for her on a sick day and represent her clients in a court of law.
      Now I'm not opposed to socialized funding, far from it, there are problems that don't generate money by solving them, and where the free market cannot solve problems, not solve them fast enough, or actively cause programs, that's where a health dose of socialism comes into the picture to balance things out. That said we need to face facts lest we end up like Venezuela; a nuclear physicist brings more to the table than does somebody who collects cans. Full stop.

    • @planetvegan1046
      @planetvegan1046 Před 5 lety +4

      Just for the record, they also mentioned food reclamation, which is a really amazing way to get food from grocery stores that would be thrown away otherwise. We have to reshape the way that food is wasted around the world. Currently nearly 30% of food that is produced goes to waste. That's INSANE

  • @iridescentaurora268
    @iridescentaurora268 Před 6 lety +661

    Idk, if I had kids, I don’t think I’d be all that comfortable with them living in the same house as several people that I really don’t know *that* well?..
    I mean, they’re probably fine and being treated very well, but… seems a bit risky to me…

    • @TheMusachioedBrony
      @TheMusachioedBrony Před 6 lety +91

      Sierra Long Yes! I was cringing the whole time, especially when her boyfriend, the man with whom after 3 weeks together she has the “ greatest relationship she has ever had”, yelled at her kids and was visibly angry. He may have had reason to be upset, but really? Talking to the kids like that in front of a film crew? I was very unimpressed.

    • @almostskater3210
      @almostskater3210 Před 6 lety +31

      +Mary Anne Brown Really? You are the reason kids are so weak and overly-sensitive in today's world.

    • @HSfox
      @HSfox Před 6 lety +35

      Billsama Bin Clinten totally agree with you. You have to be cautious but we should also develop the skills needed to be in a functioning society. The kids in this video seemed nice polite and centered.

    • @TheMusachioedBrony
      @TheMusachioedBrony Před 6 lety +10

      Billsama Bin Clinten How many children do you have?

    • @TheMusachioedBrony
      @TheMusachioedBrony Před 6 lety +17

      H. Santos Believe me, my children definitely have the skills to make it in society. Are you a parent? Or are you just a keyboard warrior spouting of on a topic you have no personal experience dealing with.

  • @dankhaze4207
    @dankhaze4207 Před 5 lety +81

    Is it just me or do all these people seem a bit off?

    • @CriticalSurvival0
      @CriticalSurvival0 Před 4 lety +8

      Who are you to say what's normal? Shut up

    • @powpowouchy5
      @powpowouchy5 Před 4 lety +12

      ​@@CriticalSurvival0 somebody is a bit touchy. deeply insecure about your lifestyle?

    • @tieflingcorpse9817
      @tieflingcorpse9817 Před 3 lety +6

      @@powpowouchy5 what’s normal tho???

  • @Campfishfamily
    @Campfishfamily Před 6 lety +335

    So you have a bunch of people under the same roof, sharing all the bills? Yeah, you have roommates. Not a new thing.

    • @maryanne2025
      @maryanne2025 Před 6 lety +16

      this may be a bit different. .. aka sharing income

    • @Parisroam
      @Parisroam Před 6 lety +36

      It is like being married to whole bunch of people you done know, minus the sex. Your financial decisions are not your own.

    • @drumyogi9281
      @drumyogi9281 Před 6 lety +8

      Paris Roam basically Socialism in a small scale. Like Jim Jones. You know, totally works in our brains if we just use our imaginaaation lmao

    • @lendluke
      @lendluke Před 6 lety +4

      This could work for them, be I doubt socialism could work on any larger scale.

    • @classapcs
      @classapcs Před 5 lety

      @Michael Bravo That's what socialist countries end up looking like...lol

  • @barbaravick5634
    @barbaravick5634 Před 6 lety +29

    I'm a messy person. But that disgusting mess shown in every room was way beyond anything I could tolerate. That was impossible. Just gross.

    • @michellepaul8514
      @michellepaul8514 Před 5 lety +2

      Barbara Vick It wasn’t gross. There was just a lot of stuff everywhere. They probably don’t have enough room in the house for everyone’s stuff.

  • @maryvalentyne2553
    @maryvalentyne2553 Před 5 lety +6

    When the brother said “Sorry for interrupting you Laren (?)” oh my god great parenting and such a sweet boy!

  • @karaokeandrandomclips
    @karaokeandrandomclips Před 2 lety +6

    I found an update on a blog- it seems the lawyer left after she and her bf broke up?:
    "The danger of relying on the income of one or two members is further illustrated by the slow demise of Compersia which began falling apart when the member who had a large income that basically supported the community left. This was also caused by a romantic breakup between two members-a different danger when relationships are what stabilize a community."

  • @HibHab69
    @HibHab69 Před 7 lety +131

    The lawyer's problems stem from her previously having kids with an inflexible jerk. It wasn't a living problem.

    • @lunapz433
      @lunapz433 Před 5 lety +3

      Yeah it almost seems like she is also paying for a father figure

    • @mattkennedy6115
      @mattkennedy6115 Před 5 lety +2

      She doesn’t seemed to be wrapped too tight

  • @alexgaggio2957
    @alexgaggio2957 Před 7 lety +335

    I don't understand the defensive reaction in the comments. If you don't want to live like this you don't have to, that's kind of the point. Why do you need to prove so badly that the way other people live their lives is wrong?

    • @ardalla535
      @ardalla535 Před 6 lety +45

      Because they are lecturing us about how decadent we are for living in a capitalistic society. We should join the wave of the future which is Marxism. Their arguments are tendentious and sophomoric; yet they look down on and are dismissive of main stream culture. The motto for the Federation of Egalitarian Communities is, "We're better than you ... we're MARXIST." These people are hated because they have the same message as ANTIFA: We're right and you're wrong. And anyone with a few brain cells still firing can figure out that they are not the wave of the future; that they represent a step back into tribalism and that can't possibly be a positive model for the planet in the 21st century.
      Just as an example, what do you think happens in an FEC community when someone wants to have a child and start a family -- a pretty ordinary thing for people in the outside world. In community it can become a BIG DEAL for obvious reasons. The community may well tell you to get on the child waiting list and wait until a spot opens up. Things that are straight forward in ordinary life are made unnecessarily complex in community.

    • @fabulosoallpurpose3570
      @fabulosoallpurpose3570 Před 6 lety +12

      Wade Rivers oh shut the hell up

    • @ardalla535
      @ardalla535 Před 6 lety +15

      Fabio... just what I would expect from a snowflake liberal. No discussion. Just shut up: the mantra of Antifa. If you don't agree with us, you have to be silenced. No dissent can be permitted in our Trotsky paradise. You know what happened to Trotsky; he was assassinated by Stalin. His world Marxist revolution never happened because you lefties always produce a bloodbath eventually when you gain power. It always leads to Mao's Cultural Revolution and Pol Pot's Killing Fields -- millions of dead bodies, sacrifices for leftist idealism. You don't really care about people ... what you really care about is your leftist fantasies. If blood has to be shed, it's always for a good cause ... right? Marxism has been an absolute and total disaster for the world; yet you lefties persist in promoting this moribund ideology -- no matter what the reality is.

    • @jjaj1243
      @jjaj1243 Před 6 lety +17

      Pat Downs how fucking pedantic can you get dude. Do u realize how bloody capitalism has been in retaining its ideals. You’ve never heard of the haymarket riots? Or, y’know, the genocide of native ppls to have them integrate into capitalism. You’re telling me the Vietnam war was completely justified for the US to join in? Ur a joke who has a couple 10 cent words up his sleeve to throw around during an argument in some shallow attempt to drown his opponents in vocabulary when ur just spewing the same shit every capitalist does. Lemme guess, the black book is ur main source for ur arguments?

    • @AdolfHitler-qs7qr
      @AdolfHitler-qs7qr Před 6 lety +4

      Red Walker Its the clutter it drives people nuts.

  • @Adam-de8jm
    @Adam-de8jm Před 6 lety +103

    That lady could probably do better for 85k/year.

    • @3of11
      @3of11 Před 5 lety +6

      Adam I don’t know she seemed crazier than a shithouse rat.

    • @erinthesystem9608
      @erinthesystem9608 Před 5 lety +6

      Not in D.C. she couldn't.

    • @Imsoo188
      @Imsoo188 Před 5 lety +3

      She’s probably paying off Student loans

  • @Ellie01841
    @Ellie01841 Před 6 lety +93

    You should do an update video. I would love to know if the commune was still working.

    • @jeezthatscocky3144
      @jeezthatscocky3144 Před 5 lety +22

      Miss_Ellie
      Update: last week, they all got sick from eating recalled romaine lettuce they found in the dumpsters. 🙃

    • @avamasquerade
      @avamasquerade Před 5 lety +20

      Update: kids homeless now because Mom funded these freeloaders useless lives by diverting all her money into individual savings accounts for them instead of paying for her kid's college/training programs so they can actually support themselves.

    • @kathyflorcruz552
      @kathyflorcruz552 Před 5 lety +7

      I think I can guess. Because collectivism NEVER WORKS.

    • @techstyle123
      @techstyle123 Před 5 lety +1

      Bet it's long gone

    • @VictorianRabbit3456
      @VictorianRabbit3456 Před 5 lety +3

      Kathy Florcruz yeah that’s why we never lived in them ever in any time in human history OH WAIT

  • @belygorod8368
    @belygorod8368 Před 6 lety +62

    I have spent 22 years of my life living with my parents, grandma and younger brother and sister. When I finish college I intend to move out but these people want to live with even more people. I would honestly go insane if I lived the way they do.

    • @onebyone2454
      @onebyone2454 Před 6 lety +3

      Serbian Patriot Its not you're life .lol

    • @belygorod8368
      @belygorod8368 Před 6 lety +5

      One by One True their life their choice but it just shocked me that people willing choose to live like this. The bathroom line must be a mile long there lol.

    • @KManAbout
      @KManAbout Před 5 lety +6

      personally living with people you choose to live with is different. Living with my friends was way more fun than with my family

    • @fabienzaca
      @fabienzaca Před rokem +2

      ​i would only work if the houses were separted. if they are in one building then there will be conflict for sure.

  • @jessicakelly377
    @jessicakelly377 Před 5 lety +64

    “Food reclamation and rescue” - dumpster diving. 😂

    • @kerseyatwell4475
      @kerseyatwell4475 Před 3 lety +1

      So this way of life is so great that they literally dumpster dive to put food on the table these people need to step back before they drink too much of the kool-aid

  • @michaeltitcomb8886
    @michaeltitcomb8886 Před 5 lety +7

    Mom earns 85k a year, kids eat out of a trash can, including tainted food that "only" killed a couple of people. Sounds liberating.

    • @conte2268
      @conte2268 Před 3 lety

      Fax

    • @lightfeather9953
      @lightfeather9953 Před 2 lety

      They seem safe and happy. Nothing wrong with food that's safe when cooked properly. Any undercooked food can have nasty germs. We throw out so much food because people can get careless but if you know you need to be cautious it's good free food.
      And in general this is a much better environment for kids. Do you think they were lying about the kids loving it there?

  • @katie323
    @katie323 Před 5 lety +51

    Couldn’t they have cleaned the house knowing that the film crew was on the way?

  • @ien2023
    @ien2023 Před 2 lety +10

    I glad she point out personality conflict in a commune since we are all so diverse as human. Also, I noticed that one of the room they shared, personal space was also considered as important.

  • @bostaurus1
    @bostaurus1 Před 6 lety +39

    The attorney seems to contribute most and i bet she also does all of their dishes and laundry

  • @21savageukvisa7
    @21savageukvisa7 Před 6 lety +132

    This looks awful. Freeloader heaven though.

  • @TheFlutterflies
    @TheFlutterflies Před 6 lety +10

    This is not that different from just living in a family household, you are just creating it with a roommate and community situation. I think some people don’t want to live alone and really want that support system, so this could be a great alternative.

  • @Cupcakeprincess85
    @Cupcakeprincess85 Před 5 lety +34

    This man said..... I would prefer not to have to ask you to do that.
    Then his mom is heard saying “ oh yeah the kids love it “. My thoughts"? Have you actually asked them or did you just assume?

  • @ArtistoftheWeek
    @ArtistoftheWeek Před 6 lety +27

    lived in a co-op and it is exactly like this. dirty, cluttered, tense, socially messy and self-isolating.
    do not do this. plz

    • @MichaTheLight
      @MichaTheLight Před 3 lety

      Hello where you had this negative experiences? BTW. they really have to less space for themselves.

  • @Liz-sc3np
    @Liz-sc3np Před 6 lety +3

    I lived in a commune in college. The biggest problem is when you have that one crazy person in the house ruining everything. That was a big deal.
    Other than that, I wished I had lived in a commune my whole college experience. It was much cheaper in terms of pretty much everything like rent, utilities, and groceries.
    The food was much more varied, healthier, and delicious. No ramen noodles for us. We did most of our cooking, cleaning, and some of the maintenance and groceries. I did the house cooking two days per week. It was a great experience.

  • @jenniferhill8776
    @jenniferhill8776 Před 6 lety +4

    4:44 I'm about to fall out when the boy says sorry for interrupting you with the stern face, wow

  • @krdiaz8026
    @krdiaz8026 Před 6 lety +12

    This is just normal in the Philippines. Everyone lives together. Relatives take care of your kids. Relatives also depend on your income. But they give back by doing your chores. Introvert hell.

    • @krdiaz8026
      @krdiaz8026 Před 5 lety +3

      Well duh!

    • @drjojo5551
      @drjojo5551 Před 5 lety

      Kr time to move back to heaven!

    • @avamasquerade
      @avamasquerade Před 5 lety

      Seriously, I, amd my children can do our own damn dishes/laundry/cooking etc... *Housework is not hard*

  • @wendytube007
    @wendytube007 Před 6 lety +17

    I really appreciate the editing of this, it wasn’t sugarcoated, there were awkward moments left in and that’s life isn’t it? lots of awkward moments. Lol. Power to them though, hope they get what they want out of it, it’s a beautiful idea. Personally I don’t think I could go that far I’m more of a cohousing person. We have been thinking about a way to do that in our (hopefully) early-ish retirement years. Fend off the Existential dread with community and hopefully have a little bit leftover for travel.

    • @denvercatwoman6561
      @denvercatwoman6561 Před 6 lety +3

      wendytube007, a group of people who all know one another built eight townhouses on my block. Five are young married couples with children and three townhouses have several single people. One townhouse has a communal room with a television and they share one meal together per week. They are the sweetest people I have ever known in my life. They all take in extra people, including some foster children. I'm a youngish senior and I get to stay in my own home and hang out down there all I want. It's perfect. Hope you find what you need.

  • @06Domino
    @06Domino Před 6 lety +4

    As an introvert I could never do this... it’s not even the clutter, just the lack of personal space freaks me out 😩

  • @wigglebiggle1811
    @wigglebiggle1811 Před 5 lety +5

    I like that they set up a system where there are multiple ways to contribute (working, labor, organization, etc). I personally wouldn't be comfortable with it but whatever works.

  • @antoniochiappetta4833
    @antoniochiappetta4833 Před 6 lety +56

    Is this how you want to live?
    I'd rather die.

  • @mikaelmacmurray6618
    @mikaelmacmurray6618 Před 6 lety +65

    why don't they have a garden?

    • @Mahakalidevi
      @Mahakalidevi Před 6 lety +5

      They actually do have a small garden, you could see in their yard, but also he said a few times that place is temporary, as they grow.

    • @TheMusachioedBrony
      @TheMusachioedBrony Před 6 lety +5

      mikael macmurray I thought the same thing. I would have thought they would put a lot of effort into growing their own veggies. I expected to see pretty much the whole yard turned over for cultivation. Well, I guess when you can get a box of expired bagged salads out of the dumpster, there is no need to put forth the effort into an organic garden.

    • @MrKiwiism
      @MrKiwiism Před 6 lety +1

      Yeah alot of people complaining about how it's a dump and stuff, but this project just started they said so ofcourse they aren't gonna have a mansion with plenty of space for everyone. Everything always starts out small and it takes a huge amount of time to actually get this going where they want it to be. They talk in form of a vision, not what it is now.

  • @CeeCeeB.
    @CeeCeeB. Před 5 lety +14

    The Listeria-prevention explanation made me cringe...just because they said they recalled it for that reason doesn't mean that's why...please don't eat that...🤢

    • @CeeCeeB.
      @CeeCeeB. Před 5 lety +6

      @Violet Heavensbee I know this. But if they pulled a recalled product out of the garbage and ate it, it may now have OTHER bacteria in it as well, that can't be cooked out.
      If the product has been in a temp zone of above 41°and below 140° for a certain time, it is unsafe, no matter how long they cook it.
      Not to mention there are kids in their house, and certain foodborne illnesses are far more dangerous to children, the elderly, and pregnant women. It is simply not a safe or smart thing to do.

    • @CeeCeeB.
      @CeeCeeB. Před 5 lety +3

      @Violet Heavensbee not to mention...as my original comment states...Listeria may not have been the only issue. If a product had to be recalled...it's bad. As in not fit for human consumption.
      You have to understand, other people may be watching this and think it's cool to pull anything out of the garbage and eat it, and it's not. It can kill you.

  • @brennaweaver190
    @brennaweaver190 Před 4 lety +5

    I’d love to do this on a farm where there’s multiple clean houses and a good environment that’s pretty self sustainable and equal between everyone

  • @playstorereviews5557
    @playstorereviews5557 Před 6 lety +18

    Oh my gawd.... dumpster diving recalled food..... Lol

  • @tamaralaird3389
    @tamaralaird3389 Před 6 lety +10

    Love the idea. First heard it from 4 sisters who has over a million dollars in student loans combined. They all lived together and paid that money in less than 10 years even with the younger one only making 28k they paid hers in full.

    • @levibond2555
      @levibond2555 Před 6 lety +3

      None of those sisters got married and moved out in 10 years?

    • @TheMusachioedBrony
      @TheMusachioedBrony Před 6 lety +2

      Tamara Laird But they were sisters, so they are family! These people are essentially all strangers coming together. No way can you know their true intentions.

  • @funnehsfan1122
    @funnehsfan1122 Před 6 lety +12

    So this “commune” is just roommates

  • @holypicklesmofo
    @holypicklesmofo Před 6 lety +9

    I like this idea but I always go back to the concept of social loafing. If group efforts are pooled, people are less likely to work as hard as they would individually. I think tension would also start to build if you have people making less than 20k per year with people that are making more than 80k per year. Maybe a commune of people who make the same amount of money, whose needs are about the same, would work a lot better.

    • @dinaariaudio4944
      @dinaariaudio4944 Před rokem +1

      not sure if someone who would get mad about sharing their 80k income would be the type of person to sign up to voluntarily share it.

  • @user-wickedflower
    @user-wickedflower Před 5 lety +53

    Id live in a commune with Jenny too if she was making that much & wasnt allowed to complain if she realised she funded us all for staying home making pseudo intellectual videos

    • @natalyaakselaleksander4502
      @natalyaakselaleksander4502 Před 4 lety +4

      😅

    • @stevennguyen4993
      @stevennguyen4993 Před rokem +1

      Glad I'm not the only one who caught that. She makes 85k a year as an attorney, her bf (who has a market value of 60 an hour) decides to stay home and cook, a male roommate who made 27k a year decides to quit and do odd jobs, and I'm still confused at what the other woman does for a living. Her income alone can sustain the two kids and the boyfriend, but the other two? I'm confised about their levels of contribution for folks who got the roof off their heads paid off. If she enjoys "unpaid labor" so much, her bf can stay at home and watch the kids. It only takes ONE person some elbow grease and patience to maintain a household.

  • @Soundsliketara
    @Soundsliketara Před 6 lety +5

    Not for me but it’s always interesting watching these videos and seeing some of the things people are coming up with to meet their needs

  • @joseryanalmodovar5877
    @joseryanalmodovar5877 Před 5 lety +2

    I applaud these individuals for pursuing a way of living that is moving from what has been "the way" for the last few decades. I think a common consensus is that it is difficult to remove oneself fully from the system, and to find the desired abundance, peace, and harmony. They are definitely onto something; it'll become clearer on what really works and what can be improved upon.
    A way I see that the communal way of living can really thrive is when each person is willing to fully open up to one another and look beyond ones own needs.. Yet ironically as one does this everybody benefits! It then becomes absolutely essential to find ways to cope with conflict as it arises, and to see it not as an attack upon oneself but instead to listen to what the person is really saying underneath it all and to be willing to ask how the person REALLY is feeling. Sometimes it's not just about the dishes left unwashed or the children playing too loud..
    On another note the concept of shared income is intriguing especially when there may be a great disparity between how much each individual contributes.. I think that as long as each person contributes in bringing what is needed to the community it's not perfect but this helps to balance things out. For instance if ones income is unsteady one can still work on house chores or gardening..
    On a personal front I do wonder if there's a community where I would fit in.. I'm really into gardening, I like to keep things neat(er) and organized, and I like to sing/dance 😁

  • @wormonthesidewalk
    @wormonthesidewalk Před 5 lety +2

    The way everyone interacts with each other and with the kids and how the kids interact is so lovely

    • @r.c.whitaker296
      @r.c.whitaker296 Před 5 lety +1

      Agree, I would love to have other people nearby. I live alone and it's okay most of the time, but having a good friend to drink tea with, and some children to love... that would be awesome.

    • @theend3541
      @theend3541 Před 2 lety

      Yeah until they argue about something because they can't come to a full consensus on how to spend the money. Instead of just having normal roommates who pay an equal share and clean the space that they use. Of course the video wouldn't show them NOT getting alone or disagreeing because this is a clearly a showcase. If they wanna do it, fine. But the inherent flaws in this sort of lifestyle to me greatly outweigh any possible benefit.

    • @jen-cy6wj
      @jen-cy6wj Před rokem

      @@r.c.whitaker296 beautifully articulated!

  • @beng4151
    @beng4151 Před 5 lety +35

    Pros: Great environment for growing bacteria
    Cons: Everything else

  • @mattcolver1
    @mattcolver1 Před 6 lety +7

    Marriage is communal living between two people. Even that always has money issues regarding what to spend the money on. It would be impossible in a group.

  • @sdfuify
    @sdfuify Před 5 lety +6

    Wow. Just the fact that her brother apologized for interrupting her says so much about their parents. How respectful 👏🏾👏🏾

  • @TheCrossbones8
    @TheCrossbones8 Před 5 lety +4

    So essentially what these people have done is created a family. A traditional family is a small-ish group of people who share resources for the benifit of everyone. In my opinion the US needs to get back to family values even if that means living with extended family and friends in order to take care of each other

  • @sublow
    @sublow Před 6 lety +78

    I respect the sentiment but I just had a panic attack watching this

  • @jamiee1519
    @jamiee1519 Před 6 lety +47

    Portlandia used to be funnier before they got rid of Fred and Carrie.

  • @funny-video-YouTube-channel

    If it works out for them. Then good.
    *A small productive community* can go further together. That's how companies and organizations work.

  • @simplyd2027
    @simplyd2027 Před 6 lety +3

    They knew the cameras were coming. Couldn't they at least make the beds? I think the idea of a commune is really cool, but if I started a commune, keeping things tidy and clean would be part of the rules.

  • @violetlavender9504
    @violetlavender9504 Před 6 lety +6

    Income sharing sounds difficult for me, but I would be willing to share other things.

  • @MistressOP
    @MistressOP Před 6 lety +66

    I love how the side recoment on this turns into. "How well meaning intellgent people end up in a cult"

  • @העבד
    @העבד Před 5 lety +16

    Guess who works the most in that commune, and who eats the most.

  • @MissTotos
    @MissTotos Před 6 lety +1

    That little boy, he realized he interrupted the little girl, and he apologized . *MIND BLOWN*

  • @ambarrose
    @ambarrose Před 6 lety +10

    I actually love the idea. My only "issue " with this community would be not having my own space. I'm the sort of person who needs at least a few square meters to be on it's own. Right now I share an appartment with other people and I'm really happy with it. It takes a lot of stress from me. But most people can't understand that.

  • @TheShowThatSUX
    @TheShowThatSUX Před 6 lety +75

    You know I wish these people understood economics better, like when he claims "cooking for everyone has no market evaluation"; because actually, it does. All those domestic jobs: pick up the kids Vs pay a nanny, cook Vs eat out and have others cook for you... we could go on. There is a hard value you can put on it. The money you DONT SPEND/DONT NEED because you do that work.

    • @AvgJane19
      @AvgJane19 Před 6 lety

      TheShowThatSUX but if they weren't doing that before, how would it save them money which is the basis of your definition of market value? And it certainly doesn't produce any hard monetary value. So I'm going to need you to elaborate.

    • @TheShowThatSUX
      @TheShowThatSUX Před 6 lety +5

      +AvgJane19, well first you assume MONEY is the only capital. So let us go over some basic economics:
      Let us say there is a kid that needs to be watched: ok we can pay someone other than the parent or guardian to run a daycare, or we can watch the kid out self as the parent or guardian. THE CAPITAL is KID WATCHING CAPITAL, you can trade MONEY to have the capital attended to by others or you can attend to the CAPITAL your self without money.
      Now an example that avoids the "if they weren't doing that before": say you have a kitchen set up in disarray, you can't and don't cook because of it. Now let us say you take the counters and turn them into an assembly line so that same kitchen cannot only make meals but many of them fast. THIS IS NEW CAPITAL, in the forms of FOOD PRODUCTION CAPITAL. If you do it for your self you have FREE TIME AND MORE FOOD PRODUCTION, if you do it for others you tend to get paid money or traded goods and or services in exchange for this capital that added value to others.
      Rather you EVER HAD THE MONEY TO PAY OTHERS TO DO YOUR WORK FOR YOU OR NOT is a different point from the market value and economic value of these labors. Now when you replied you were thinking in terms of "hard monetary value" and that is the same flawed argument made in this vid. It is not that LOW PAY OR NO PAY labor has no value, it is that the MAIN VALUE OF THAT LABOR is for your self and not others. Let me ask it this way WHY SHOULD I PAY YOU: TO FEED YOUR SELF, AND WATCH YOU OWN KID, AND TAKE A TV BRAKE; instead of pay someone to FIX MY WINDOW, OR HELP ME BUILD OUT MY BIZ, or anyother activity that is of value to me?

    • @capnslippy2460
      @capnslippy2460 Před 6 lety +3

      Man they should tell my friends brother that cooking has no market value... he makes a couple hundred thousand a year cooking for families in LA

    • @kcgunesq
      @kcgunesq Před 5 lety

      Of course cooking and laundry have a value, as you note. It just isn't equal to lawyering, plumbing or heart operating.

    • @haagjohnson2773
      @haagjohnson2773 Před 5 lety

      “Cooking for everyone” doesn’t have a value at the skill level he has. Even if he had spent a decade cooking, he still wouldn’t be able to find a job at a restaurant (excluding fast food). Also, picking up a kid once a week isn’t worthwhile as a job.

  • @savannahsputnik1663
    @savannahsputnik1663 Před 5 lety

    Hey, it’s May 2019, so how is the commune working for you now?

  • @Del-Canada
    @Del-Canada Před 6 lety +1

    I live with three people. We have our own money and do what we want with it and we don't pool it. However, we do help each other out when/if the need arises. We will share our food if one of us comes short with a pay cheque, loan each other money and just help in every regard right down to cooking meals. And we still have our own lives, our own things and our own rooms. I guess it's kind of like communal living except we don't toss our resources into one pot. We just help each other when it's needed.

  • @mysisterisafoodie
    @mysisterisafoodie Před 6 lety +4

    I’d like to see a commune where all the members are just like FUCKING RICH but they recognize that they could raise their kids better and have healthier interpersonal relationships by sharing a space together. Now _that_ would be something new.

  • @maryanne2025
    @maryanne2025 Před 6 lety +7

    these can help lonely people and instill a sense of worth and value in individuals

    • @kathyflorcruz552
      @kathyflorcruz552 Před 5 lety

      Yeah. Charity is a temporary thing because eventually it becomes DEMANDED.

  • @sunsetamor302
    @sunsetamor302 Před 2 lety +4

    Damn she talking crap about her daughter’s father as her daughter sits on her lap. That must make everyone feel great

  • @LindsayC33
    @LindsayC33 Před 6 lety

    Omg that little boy apologizing for interrupting was so cute 💙

  • @eitkoml
    @eitkoml Před 6 lety +4

    I would never do that. I prefer having my own space that I control and having control over my money.

  • @interminablyperplexed4903

    Live and let live.....but with kids, no way. Sometimes you can feel through watching others and I don't feel their happiness and joy one single ounce watching this video. I've seen a few similar vids where the folks at least pretended better or had a more positive ora about them. This feels to have more of a "got to" rehab vibe to it. As if they're all kind of being made to do this via court order. I'll take a tent in the woods or a tiny camper or a run down tiny studio apt over this a thousand times over, but i realize we all find comfort in different environments I guess. I agree with all of the comments about the disorganization and dirtiness factor...makes it that much more less appealing.

  • @madalynmull1681
    @madalynmull1681 Před 5 lety +1

    They're happy, they're not hurting themselves or anyone else, and they are making their contribution to society. Good for them

  • @avalonmist254
    @avalonmist254 Před 6 lety +6

    I absolutely loved communal living. I lived on The Farm Commune from age 15 - 20 and in 1979 we all moved to Austin Texas, which was a meca of some really great folks with a consciousness very much like our Commune. At The Farm, we had 1500 acres with up to 1700 people, we lived in households of up to 45 per house with 21 children in that number. We were vegan, no leather, living with free medical, I was taught " Spiritual Midwifery" , we smoked only herb and any natural Psychadelics and smoking herb was considered Communion, many ideas, philosophies, and ideas to help mankind, we lived in buses and other large structures, we were fully self sustainable, married folks had their own rooms, single ladies and men shared rooms with others of the same gender, everyone shared duties at home and worked jobs on the Farm or Construction workers worked off the Farm and brought money back and gave it to the Commune. We never paid for anything . However, we had to work to keep our village alive . The main Farm was in Summer town called,Tenn. With multiple satillite Farms from California, Canada, Guatemala, Florida, DC Austin,zero Wisconsin and the Bronx and more. We had Spiritual Teacher named Stephen Gaskin ,He was not a Leader, He encouraged everyone of us to be teachers too. How did it work, we had Agreements. I believe the most Important agreement was to tell someone immediately if they made you angry, hurt, upset , and to " work it out before any " sub conscious" / resentment festered. It wasn't always easy when on the receiving end however no one ever got mad. Wood stove heat, Live Music all weekend, I have been trying to get another situation started with Community. We need each other and one day even the young will get old. Honor your neighbor, feed each other, always have help when needed, Respect the Sacrament of the Family unit and raise creative children. Multiple books were published about how we all got started . One of my favorites is "This Seasons People". Great video!

    • @ZeroGravity60
      @ZeroGravity60 Před 3 lety +1

      Avalon Mist :) Sounds beautiful!
      P*E*A*C*E [End all war]

    • @avalonmist254
      @avalonmist254 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ZeroGravity60 Thanks for your comment✌️🦋

  • @noahhenderson3164
    @noahhenderson3164 Před 6 lety +2

    Wouldn't mind doing this in a bigger house for sharing living space, food costs, house work, and meal prep. But like lots of comments state...income sharing sounds like a lot of problems waiting to explode.

  • @Sbosch123
    @Sbosch123 Před 5 lety +64

    Income sharing.... 🤣🤣🤣🤣
    SHE shares her money and the rest live off it.

  • @DrAdnan
    @DrAdnan Před 6 lety +1

    I wonder if this would work on a large scale since people who can earn a high income often won’t be willing to give up their wealth potential.

  • @Karmageddonn
    @Karmageddonn Před 6 lety +2

    That's way too extreme for me. I'm such a introvert hermit crab, and living in that house with all those people and kids would put me in such a depressed mood.

  • @AbdulWahab-vv6mi
    @AbdulWahab-vv6mi Před 6 lety +9

    This is Eric Cartman nightmare.

  • @competetodefeat4610
    @competetodefeat4610 Před 6 lety +45

    I spot at least one person that is clearly getting more than their share.

  • @DiscoInTheNunnery
    @DiscoInTheNunnery Před 5 lety

    I realize that most of the dislikes probably come from people that don't like the idea of communes, or disagree with the worldviews of the people interviewed for this video, but that was a well-done and informative vignette. I appreciate the unconventional perspectives.

  • @JeffMorrisonAdventures
    @JeffMorrisonAdventures Před 5 lety +1

    I lived in a foreclosed on house in key west with 12 hippies, it was 2009 so the bank would take years to catch up on foreclosures and throw us out. The electric bill still had to be paid on time. Strangely half my housemates would disappear for a week or so whenever it was time to toss a few bucks in for the electric bill. Funny thing.

  • @lukedesobry3839
    @lukedesobry3839 Před 6 lety +52

    "Me and Steve becoming romantic could jeopardize the commune...but I'm selfish so I don't care"

    • @bomeshizzles
      @bomeshizzles Před 5 lety +6

      She's definitely not selfish when she gives her $85'000 pay check to them guys

    • @warreneckels4945
      @warreneckels4945 Před 5 lety +1

      So? Then they can leave. When they leave they will have their savings accounts. (Would she be taking the handyman or the freelancer?)

  • @rogerdodger8415
    @rogerdodger8415 Před 5 lety +11

    I want to join so I can mooch off the rest. Sure, I'll "look" busy once in awhile, but basically I'll be there to freeload. If someone says something.. I'll cry.

    • @originalblob
      @originalblob Před 3 lety +1

      This assumes other people are dumb. It's hard to get away with freeloading when people live closely together like that.

    • @kokobunni5897
      @kokobunni5897 Před 2 lety

      @@originalblob uh no it’s not.

  • @alexisworst2568
    @alexisworst2568 Před 6 lety

    I love this!! People need to stop valuing others in money!! Money has nothing to do with weather or not a person is a good person!! This is a great start!

  • @EyeLean5280
    @EyeLean5280 Před 5 měsíci

    As someone who's very interested in this sort of thing, I can tell you, I've seen communes that are much more appealing, with tidy spaces and responsible members (in other words, people didn't join and then quit their jobs). I wish these folks well and hope they figure it out, but I also hope that those watching will keep an open mind and not assume that all communes are like this one.

  • @lilacluna6650
    @lilacluna6650 Před 6 lety +13

    The second lady is sharing everything but the food !

  • @Danowarthemanowar
    @Danowarthemanowar Před 5 lety +7

    Communes without a charismatic leader seems incredibly dull.

    • @annad.4999
      @annad.4999 Před 4 lety +2

      A commune with a charismatic leader is a cult.

    • @Reub3
      @Reub3 Před 4 lety +2

      _jim jones ghost has entered the chat_ XD

  • @beldengi
    @beldengi Před 6 lety +2

    Gambling with Listeria is a huge mistake. Here in Australia we have had multiple deaths from Listeria in recent months.

  • @zopilote_4000
    @zopilote_4000 Před 6 lety +1

    what im getting from this is that its very delicate

  • @doobieddooo
    @doobieddooo Před 2 lety +3

    This doesn’t seem to be a safe environment for kids. Do they do background checks on the residents?

  • @user-ch7kb7pe5r
    @user-ch7kb7pe5r Před 6 lety +19

    Where exactly can a handyman make $60/hr?

    • @CrazyLady-NoCats
      @CrazyLady-NoCats Před 6 lety +7

      jesse loera in that guys dreams

    • @TheMusachioedBrony
      @TheMusachioedBrony Před 6 lety

      jesse loera Oh, I thought that was just me not being familiar with handyman compensation rates in the D. C. area. I was quite surprised when he said that.

    • @jonmacdonald5345
      @jonmacdonald5345 Před 5 lety +2

      jesse loera Working for NASA maybe!

    • @jeffb587
      @jeffb587 Před 5 lety +2

      Actually $60/hr is probably a bit low for a skilled handyman in the DC area if you know who to market to. I have a friend in Baltimore who does handiwork for upper-middle-class/wealthy households at around $80/hr. Plenty such households in DC, and everything is way more expensive there

    • @shawnthefarmer5161
      @shawnthefarmer5161 Před 5 lety +1

      @@CrazyLady-NoCats dammit, i wuz gonna say that

  • @Y2KDivaLocs
    @Y2KDivaLocs Před 5 lety

    There's layers in that opinions that I have in regards to this particular setup, however, at this moment I'm left completely speechless.

  • @razordu30
    @razordu30 Před 4 lety +2

    There are a lot of concepts this commune has that's interesting, but the execution seems off.
    1. More effort needs to be spent on producing food. That is where you need non-income generating labor hours.
    2. The house is too small. They need to relocate to a more rural area. A place with land to farm and have chickens.
    3. If staying in the city is necessary, food needs to be sourced creatively (and not dumpster diving, gross). They need to join a farm co-op and spend some labor hours that way, or rent a parcel of land outside the city and take turns living there and working it.

    • @lightfeather9953
      @lightfeather9953 Před 2 lety

      Why inefficiently pretend to be farmers instead of doing what they're good at and enjoy that brings in income that then pays for cheap food? What benefit? Living in a city means more jobs and resources within walking distance.