Peak oil notes – October 27
A midweekly roundup of peak oil news, including:
-Developments this week
A midweekly roundup of peak oil news, including:
-Developments this week
– The ‘Informal Economy’ Driving World Business
– Rethinking GNP: From welfare to cost
– The Third Industrial Revolution — an interview with Jeremy Rifkin
– The Shocking, Graphic Data That Shows Exactly What Motivates the Occupy Movement
– NY Daily News: Voices from Zuccotti: Marsha Spencer, 56, Seamstress
– We Are the 99% (as we gather together) – gospel anthem from Reverend Billy & The Stop Shopping Choir
– Voices from Zuccotti: Daniel Zetah, 35
– New Interview With The Marine Who Took On 30 Wall Street Cops
Today sees the launch of three exciting new developments and outputs from Transition Network, the results of many months of work, that finally emerge blinking into the daylight. We are sure that they will greatly deepen your understanding of Transition, bring depth and richness to your work, re-inspire and energise you. They represent a radical shift in how Transition is understood and communicated.
What if rising sea levels are yet another measure of inequality? What if the degradation of our planet’s life-support systems — its atmosphere, oceans, and biosphere — goes hand in hand with the accumulation of wealth, power, and control by that corrupt and greedy 1% we are hearing about from Zuccotti Park? What if the assault on America’s middle class and the assault on the environment are one and the same?
– Ralph Nader: Occupy Wall Street on the Move
– Rise of the Planet of the People
– Occupy Wall Street: Outing the Ringers (video – awesome 3-Card Monte analogy)
I am not by nature a squirrel. I don’t get a big feeling for hoarding or collecting stuff (though I do, like many coastline dwellers, have a habit of pocketing stones and quirky things from the beach). And yet this is the time when it is smart to be thinking ahead and stocking up with summer’s abundance. Some wise Transitioners have been at this for months: plaiting onions, bottling raspberries, cooking up vats of green tomato chutney and damson jam, drying rosehips and borlotti beans. Along their hallways and windowsills sit pumpkins of various colours and sizes, seeds carefully collected in a drawer, dried herbs and chillies swinging from the ceiling.
How can Transition Towns and Resilience Circles help us navigate a changing economy and environment?
Move over, Bill Shakespeare. The whole world is no longer just a stage, and we merely players with our entrances and exits. Today’s world is otherwise occupied, as people in over 1000 centers around the globe play their role, take their entrances and exits around platforms, portals and places— the Three P’s of 21st century movement politics—as in Occupy Wall Street. The city-based food movement is based on many similar principles, so city officials and food advocates should take a close look and wave their jazz fingers when they see an idea that can be adapted.
It says here in the paper that it takes 125,000 new jobs every month just to keep up with population growth. No wonder we have so many people holding down unnecessary jobs. There aren’t enough real jobs to go around and besides, we are replacing people with machines as fast as we can to do the real jobs. Rather than trying to eliminate pretend jobs for the sake of efficiency as is now being proposed (lots of pretension in that too), we should be thinking up better quality pretend jobs — imaginative new positions in useless work that are more beneficial to society than the usual run of useless work.
Bank Transfer Day is gaining some serious steam. Although it’s not technically affiliated with Occupy, it’s being embraced by the movement and is the first specific call to action since the Occupy protests began.
-Fertiliser cost warning
-The Food Crisis Strikes Again
-Occupy the Food System!
-Women Farmers Feed the World