Archive for the ‘Link’ Category

How to Save the World

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

I’ve been reading a blog entitled How to Save the World again after not reading it for a long time and I really encourage everyone to take a look at what this man, Dave Pollard, has to say.  I would recommend first reading his essay entitled How to Save the World and go from there.  He’s got years and years worth of essays and blog posts that could keep you reading for years.  He is an avid Earth lover and someone who actually has some interesting solutions about how to save the Earth and still allow for humans to live on it, albeit with much lower population numbers.  He is extremely intelligent and may be hard to comprehend for some readers.  He often has all kinds of charts and diagrams to show his thinking in a more visual format.  He is of very high consciousness and has very interesting and true (to me) opinions of what needs to be done to get our species back into balance with the rest of life on Earth.  I’m not going to even attempt to give a summary of what he believes in because I know I’ll miss something and maybe add something that is incongruent.  I would just suggest reading his big signature essay, linked above first and then moving from there.

I would have to say he has one of the best environmental/realistic blogs on the planet and he doesn’t sugarcoat the problems we will be facing in the next century.  The man has read extensively on the state of the world and then read more, and continues to keep reading about all these issues and how they have evolved.  And he keeps writing, and I assume he will continue to until his death, which means there will be plenty of material to be read by everyone.  He also has a reading list that will clarify all the issues he is talking about.  It’s somewhere on his site. There it is.  Just click that link.  I’m not one to go around promoting other people’s blogs, but if I find one that really speaks to me, I send the gift to you, free of charge.  He is the imaginer as he puts it, great at imagining possibilities.  Highly recommended.  Have been a long-term reader on and off for years, at least since 2005.  Happy Reading.

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A Wednesday Link for the Week

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

I found a very interesting essay by Joe Bageant.  I’ve never heard of him before, but I was linked to him from another site.  I would like to link it to you now:  Escape From the Zombie Food Court.  It talks about the oncoming decline and current decline of America and talks about how he lived with native peoples in Central America.  He talks about how America is one of the least free nations in the world and how we live in a control and police state that is only going to get tighter.

Here’s a sample, but the whole thing is worth reading.:

The bad news is that we nevertheless remain one of the most controlled peoples on the planet, especially regarding control of our consciousness, public and private. And the control is tightening. I know it doesn’t feel like that to most Americans. But therein rests the proof. Everything feels normal; everybody else around us is doing the same things, so it must be OK. This is a sort of Stockholm Syndrome of the soul, in which the prisoner identifies with the values of his or her captors, which in our case is of course, the American corporate state and its manufactured popular culture.

When we feel that such a life is normal, even desirable, and we act accordingly, we become helpless. Learned helplessness. For instance, most Americans believe there is little they can do in personally dealing with the most important moral and material crises ever faced, both in America and across the planet, beginning with ecocide, war making, and the grotesque deformation of the democratic process we have settled for. Citizenship has been reduced to simple consumer group consciousness. Consequently, even though Americans are only six percent of the planet’s population, we use 36% of the planet’s resources. And we interpret that experience as normal and desirable and as evidence of being the most advanced nation in the world. Despite that our lives have been reduced to a mere marketing demographic.

Let me digress for just a moment, to tell you about how life is outside the marketing demographic. I live much of the year in the Third World country of Belize, Central America, a nation so damned poor that our cash bounces. True, it ain’t Zimbabwe, or the Sudan — there are no dying people in the streets. But food security is easily the biggest problem and growing by the day.

Yet, despite our meager and diminishing resources down there, and much government corruption, people are still citizens, not marketing demographics, not yet anyway. Citizens who struggle toward a just society. They have made more progress than the United States in some respects. For instance, we have: A level of free medical care for the poor, though we lack much equipment and facilities. Maternity pay if either you or your spouse are employed. Retirement on Social Security at age 60. Worker rights, such as mandatory accrued severance pay for workers, even temporary workers. Most Belizeans own their homes outright, and all citizens are entitled to a free piece of land upon which to build one. Employment is scarce, and that has a down side: Many folks waste a lot of valuable time having sex , perhaps because they have too much time on their hands. The Jehovah’s Witnesses missionaries are working hard to fix that problem.

Anyway, American and Canadian tourists drive by in their rented SUVs and you can see by their expressions they are scared as hell of those bare footed black folks in the sand around them. Central America sure as hell ain’t heaven. But lives there are not what we Americans are told about the Third World either. It’s not a flyblown, dangerous place run by murdering drug lords, and full of miserable people. It’s just a whole lot of very poor people trying to get by and make a decent society.

And if you really want to see something that will knock your socks off, here’s The Dark Side of Dubai.  I believe it draws a parallel to how it is the country that is most like America, only worse.  It is the only country further to the right than America, according to Ran Prieur.  I didn’t actually read this article yet, but I have read some reviews.

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Saturday Link for the Week

Saturday, March 21st, 2009

Money and the Crisis of Civlization–This is an excellent piece on how money and the way interest works has damaged our civilization to a collapse.  Also about how we’ve monetized everything to the point of exhaustion, giving the explanation why there is a financial crisis.  I felt it was a very revealing and interesting piece of literature that I felt my loyal readers would enjoy.  Courtesy of Reality Sandwich.  I would like to hear your opinions on this piece.  Feel free to comment below.  Enjoy!

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