Meet The City With Virtually No Crime, No Unemployment, and Good-Paying Jobs
In the 1970s, Marinaleda was a poverty-stricken village, a farming community of serfs working huge estates owned by the rich nobles like the Duke of Infantado. In Andalusia, 2% of the population owned 50% of the land, fenced off and isolated while the population around them starved. Unemployment was at 60%. After the fall of Franco’s fascist dictatorship, Gordillo and the people of Marinaleda took matters into their own hands. They unionized the farm workers and through occupations and hunger strikes eventually won, earning 1200 hectares from the provincial government and turning it into a job creating powerhouse by planting labor-intensive crops.
While there are 690,000 homes in Andalusia abandoned by bank foreclosures, every family in Marinaleda is provided with a home and land, free of charge, from the town, which bought land from the provincial government. Homeowners invest 450 hours of work into construction, materials for which are provided free of charge, and pay a paltry upkeep sum ($19) every month under the agreement not to sell their home for financial gain.
Gordillo has been re-elected in a landslide every cycle, and is enormously popular due to his generosity and visionary fervor: “We have learned that it is not enough to define utopia, nor is it enough to fight against the reactionary forces. One must build it here and now, brick by brick, patiently but steadily, until we can make the old dreams a reality: that there will be bread for all, freedom among citizens, and culture; and to be able to read with respect the word ‘peace ‘. We sincerely believe that there is no future that is not built in the present.”
It’s a fascinating and inspiring story that we should take notes from. Obviously, their model wouldn’t work on an urban scale, but it has been enourmously successful for small rural communities. America’s isolated towns and hamlets that are bereft of opportunities and investment from the state government could do well to learn from Marinaleda’s successes. It shows that democratic socialism is not the totalitarian suffering that the right-wing propaganda would have you believe, but a way of life and a governing philosophy that truly takes the needs of the people to heart.