That makes a perverse sort of sense, in their world where surplus is defined as the product of successful oppression. In that schema, the meting of that surplus back at a profit just looks like fair exchange. I like Graeber's observation that the paralogic of private property is a sort of taboo, a prohibition that proscribes its own interrogation. I see rich possibilities in détourning that taboo.
That makes a perverse sort of sense, in their world where surplus is defined as the product of successful oppression. In that schema, the meting of that surplus back at a profit just looks like fair exchange. I like Graeber's observation that the paralogic of private property is a sort of taboo, a prohibition that proscribes its own interrogation. I see rich possibilities in détourning that taboo.