Tarnicus: We currently live in a world where there has never been such an inequity in the distribution of wealth. The basis of all wealth is the fallacious concept of land ownership(it can only be occupied and used, never 'owned') and all wealth derives from that. Sorry I do not have the time to write an economics essay so my apologies to those who do not understand what I mean by that nor do I have references on hand to point others in the direction of that concept. Use a search engine <3
We live in a world where we are willing slaves to sell our labour short in order to keep a very small minority insanely rich. We are taught that through hard work we can make it too. This is complete bullshit. This way of human existence is unsustainable. Money has no intrinsic value, it is merely a means of exchange with no value in itself. We are heading towards a global economic collapse and this is constantly being propped up by band-aid measures. Our species cannot continue to live this way without a collapse. It isn't a matter of if but when.
How would you live in an interdependent specialised society with skills that have very little application to survival if your way of life vanished now? Can you source your own food, water, shelter etc? In the Great Depression(something I have researched extensively) people grew food and knew how to find it. People went bush and built squats. People had a far greater understanding of nature and life and how to survive. Community and family existed in a way then that has since been fractured for many. These days it is far more of an "everyone for themselves" mentality.
How can I live freely as a being when I am not allowed to "trespass" or live where I choose or source or share food without breaking so many stupid laws that are merely there to protect the interests of the elite? (...)
I find I cannot agree with you on that. I think you are idealizing the previous centuries. In Ancient history there were real human slaves who lived only for their owners pleasure or profit. In Medieval times peasants were tied to the village they lived in and couldn't leave without their lord's permission. They were also bound by religion which is sometimes true even to this day. Lastly, industrial revolution gave us12-18h/day work in manufactures for really meagre money. How was that fair?
I think the most important skill is to be able to adapt to any change that this life is throwing at us. Right now, the computer skills and education are most wanted. If the economy collapses maybe those other skills (finding food, being able to survive in the wilds) will be most important for humanity. But right now to survive you need to at least partially belong to the capitalist world we live in - and there's nothing wrong with that.
I guess what I'm trying to say: we live in a slightly better times than our ancestors but there's a long way before us. Though I won't be holding breath to see an utopian world someday; we humans are too flawed to create it by ourselves.