by smallpoxgirl » Tue 06 Dec 2005, 01:46:29
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('o2ny', 'O')k let's just give it all up and go home, forget about even trying...
I'm not saying that. I think where you and I are parting ways is that you are looking for technical solutions to our problems. I think that the technical approach is our problem and the solutions are to be found in changes in our culture and in our approach to problems not in technology. I think that the
only thing that stands a snowballs chance of fixing this is if people turn away from the culture of consumption and start building interpersonal culture. As long as we keep trying to consume our way to solutions, we will keep falling on our face. The truth is that the solutions are blatantly obvious, but we can't see them because of our culture. Our forbears lived on this planet without trashing it for thousands of years. Now in the last couple hundred we've really made a mess of it. The thought of trying to live like they did scares the crap out of us, because we see ourselves as latte sucking consumers instead of self sufficient participants in an ecosystem. Also because our communities have been so horribly fractured by consumer culture that we (perhaps rightly) are scared to rely on our neighbors when we are in need. Instead we turn to cold impersonal beuracracies, governments, banks, insurance companies, credit card companies, which help us but only in exchange for a hundred types of enslavement.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('o2ny', ' ')in my opinion we should stop nit-picking and get *something* built
A friend of mine has a rant that I really think is right on about humans. He says we should spend a lot more time as "human beings" and stop spending so much time as "human doings". The earth is robust. It will fix itself if we quit tearing it up all the time. What we need to do is start thinking towards smaller more interpersonal solutions. When we organize ourselves by the thousands and millions, we mess things up consistently. Building solutions happens family to family and block to block. It doesn't happen by using a 30 megawatt biodiesel generator to light up Starbucks and power the Muzak.