Deep thought – Jan 19
Social Movements 2.0
One cord per acres: thoughts on sustainability
How the city hurts your brain
Social Movements 2.0
One cord per acres: thoughts on sustainability
How the city hurts your brain
Iceland: “It will fix itself”
‘Food Security’ in Boise
Top 7 alternative energies listed
Bill Would Allow Bicyclists to Legally Roll Through Stop Signs
Students, communities pay when schools cut busing
Expensive oil means end of roads – why include them in stimulus?
To live with as little petroleum and other non-renewable resources as possible right now is to embrace a new world of localized economics and a lower-tech set of practices and processes formerly termed Appropriate Technology. But if we instead hope for as little change as possible in the near future, we will probably bring on the worst consequences of recent decades’ energy gluttony.
Eastern Europe braced for a violent ‘spring of discontent’
Study looks at mortality in post-Soviet era (importance of community)
Military report raises concerns about social unrest fueled by globalization, urbanization
The new ecology of war (Mike Davis interview)
Self-help journalism among farmers
Towards more fruitful agricultural experimentation
How to carry out an agricultural experiment
A new kind of big science
Farmer experimenters: self-developed technology
Transition Town networking site for the U.S. – beginning of a movement?
Post Carbon Institute launches partnership with Transition United States
Transition Town movement gains traction in New Zealand
Obituary: Arne Næss
From Russia: The current crisis was predicted 30 years ago
We can’t afford to do everything the hard way
Oil will peak. I get it…I am convinced that this thing we call civilization is ludicrously based on profit and is a madman’s interpretation of the pursuit of happiness. I recognize the insanity. The illusion that participating in the race for stainless steel appliances and ride-on lawn mowers as a worthy endeavor is squashed forever.
So now what?
Embracing Petrocollapse
A New Kind of Big Science
Seven Grams CO2 per Google Search? Not True or Relevant, but Fun To Repeat
HopeDance tackles peak oil, sustainability on California’s Central Coast
Environmental S.W.A.T. Team at New York Times
Transition California Online
Because just as my friend’s husband found, when something is needed – and by needed I mean either practically necessary because there is no alternative (ie, the baby is coming or the power is out) or when something is needed because a body of people are committed to its rightness and seriousness (ie, the embargo requires us to make our own cloth, or the bus boycott requires elderly women to walk miles each day) we find in ourselves capacities that we hardly knew were there. While sometimes the worst does happen, often we are surprised by outcomes – simply because we underestimate people.