Re: New tribes and adverse selection?

Booner [no longer around] said Sep 8, 2006, 7:00 PM:

 

I am still in the city during the week but hike in the mountains on weekends.  I aspire to turn this inside out and live in the country full time and come into town once a week for supplies.  I am all for virtual communities.  Right now satellite internet is the only “broadband to the boonies” and that is just barely adequate.  I have no objection to physical proximity, in fact I am looking to visit or intern at an eco-village or other sustainable community to learn a few things.

You say that “leaving the tribe would be as simple as all agreeing…” etc.  But all don't have to agree.  The only person who has to agree is the one leaving, and he can just walk out.

I do have some experience with virtual project teams, and there are some real problems with this, mainly with people who coast on the efforts of others.  Open-source projects do work, but it is all volunteer work so there is no bounty to share and no problem with slackers.

When a business hits hard times, the tendency is for the best employees to move on while the worst employees hang on as long as they can.  Scarcity for all?  Not if people are free to leave. 

New tribalism?  I think there needs to be some very strong social glue to hold a tribe together.  Even then, it's problematic.  Marriages fall apart, business partnerships dissolve. It would be interesting to see some statistics on turnover in intentional communities.  A virtual tribe?  Even more problematic.