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People do @yianiris. Theyre called outcasts, and you know? They build more resilient societies. But if they threaten the dominant society, not just or only death, imprisonment and such, but disruption... so they watch their dream implode and crumble. That was the fate of The Dirty Fucking Hippies.

Cite on resilience https://cluborlov.blogspot.com/2010/10/how-not-to-to-organize-community.html And it's followup https://cluborlov.blogspot.com/2010/11/but-what-is-community.html

The Dirty Fucking Hippies Were Right. A rap by joeyess, txt in YT dropdown https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKEZoY-TMG4
@yogthos
There is a term "intentional community" in English, as if there can be unintentional community.
In french since 1870s the derogatory term communards came about, with 5 digit numbers of the executed, imprisoned, exiled.

For my Bookchin affected thought, I'd say it is the unit comprised by as many people as can possibly participate/decide as equals, on a daily basis, for what they had as "common".

Agreed upon Values and principles is the key to the community
no kommisars

@heretical_i @yogthos
The warsaw ghetto, and the camps in Gaza that no longer exist for the most part, were and are Unintended on the part of the residents. Being forced to commute a hundred miles a day because you can'tafford rent near your work also creates unintentional on the part of the residents 'communities' is another example @yianiris @yogthos
But are they communities? Are prisoners really communities, although several communities can develop within the population, with various characteristics.

In some industrial towns, or near steel mills and such, the workers had really developed communal characteristics. Once the plant shut down, they developed into ghettos of gangs and the terrified poor. I'd call that community disintegration, which means they hadn't developed enough resilience.

@heretical_i @yogthos