audiodef
New Member
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2012
- Messages
- 135
- Reaction score
- 4
Would anyone be interested in building a system where deaf people do business with each other in ways that do not use the financial systems of the rest of human society? This could mean trade and barter, or even coming up with a new credit system (maybe with a unit with a creative name, such as the Earmark).
Such a system could be face-to-face or online.
Examples:
You fix cars. I grow organic vegetables. My car breaks down and you want fresh veggies. You fix my car in exchange for fresh veggies for an agreed-upon period of time.
I build web sites. You enjoy research. I build and maintain a web site for you, in exchange for research you provide for one of my non-profit online ventures.
As far as a credit system goes, I'm thinking about something like this: a community is formed, in which members state what they are able to provide. You want vegetables now but my car is not in need of repair. You buy vegetables from me, using Earmarks, not dollars. In turn, I use those Earmarks to purchase services not only from you to fix my car later, but from a deaf dentist when I need dental work.
Earmarks would not be subject to speculation or inflation, or have anything to do with dollars or euros. It would be a simple, value-based system in which, for example, an hour of skilled labor is one Earmark, and a pound of fresh produce grown by a member skilled at gardening costs one Earmark.
Such a system could be face-to-face or online.
Examples:
You fix cars. I grow organic vegetables. My car breaks down and you want fresh veggies. You fix my car in exchange for fresh veggies for an agreed-upon period of time.
I build web sites. You enjoy research. I build and maintain a web site for you, in exchange for research you provide for one of my non-profit online ventures.
As far as a credit system goes, I'm thinking about something like this: a community is formed, in which members state what they are able to provide. You want vegetables now but my car is not in need of repair. You buy vegetables from me, using Earmarks, not dollars. In turn, I use those Earmarks to purchase services not only from you to fix my car later, but from a deaf dentist when I need dental work.
Earmarks would not be subject to speculation or inflation, or have anything to do with dollars or euros. It would be a simple, value-based system in which, for example, an hour of skilled labor is one Earmark, and a pound of fresh produce grown by a member skilled at gardening costs one Earmark.