by Outcast_Searcher » Tue 26 Apr 2016, 16:27:00
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', 'T')he key concept I think is the conflict between consume and sustain; one meaning use up and one; preserve/perpetuate.
I'd like to see PO.com instigate a new minimalism where itty Bitty houses, tiny jobs, small income, small consumption is cool.
I'll start:
Income last year= $24k (12k/person)
Kids = 3 (well, 3 for DW, 1 for me, LoL)
SqFt = 1,200 / 50x100 lot
miles driven = 4k x 25-30mpg (total guesses, excluding moving)
Theme SongThere is more than one route to more sustainable living.
My income is relatively large ($100K to $200K on average), though inconsistent, since the vast majority of it comes from investment income (from 35+ years of saving, investing, and living on a small fraction of my total income. so I don't apologize for that).
However, I have no kids. My house, miles driven, etc. compare closely with yours. I focus on buying very little consumer cr*p and having a small energy footprint by doing common sense things like minimizing heating/cooling, travel, etc.
I only spend a small fraction of my income on myself. I spend much more on taxes, my sister's family (via gifts), helping friends (via gifts) and charity than I do on myself -- and yes, I still save (and invest the savings) when I can -- a lifetime of ingrained habits dies hard).
Spending money on "stuff" generally equates to a larger carbon footprint, so to me, this both helps people and avoids the carbon footprint of most of "the stuff". I've never understood why big cars, houses, and fancy stuff are equated with happiness -- once I'm warm, dry, fed, have decent medical care, basic clothes, etc., climbing Maslowe's heirarchy has very little to do with spending money aside from having access to media.)
One doesn't have to be an idiot and live large like Al Gore, just because one has a larger income.
Given the track record of the perma-doomer blogs, I wouldn't bet a fast crash doomer's money on their predictions.