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Toward a global community solution

General discussions of the systemic, societal and civilisational effects of depletion.

Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby Ludi » Mon 05 Sep 2005, 09:11:25

Ok, I want to apologise for my unclear and rather cryptic initial post.

What I'm interested in seeing is what we can do now, today, as global citizens to work toward a solution to the problems we see looming before us. What can we do now to implement these ideas people are posting? How do we educate our respective governments or international agencies about the realities of oil depletion and rising prices?

Macsporan,can you tell us how to implement your proposal?

Remember, I'm not interested in what we "hope" will happen, but rather in what we can do now.

Liamj, can you suggest how we can get this information out to people more effectively? What can we do now to implement your ideas about open source?
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby Doly » Mon 05 Sep 2005, 11:16:07

You've asked the million dollar question, Ludi.

I think the best answer would have two parts:

1) Collect all sorts of specific information about things that could make the transition easier, at all levels: individual, small business, big business, local government, national and international levels. I have already made a first approach to these sort of documents, specific to the city of Brighton, UK. You can see them at www.powerswitch.org.uk

2) Put that information in the hands of the relevant people. Who is the relevant people depends, obviously, on the level we are talking. The information on what to do at the individual level should be targeted at the public in general, the information for small business to the managers of small business, etc.

I don't really know much about the practical steps involved in 2. If anybody knows, please post the answers here.
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby Macsporan » Mon 05 Sep 2005, 11:21:16

Buy yourself a manual on how to function as political pressure-group in a democratic society and do it.

Contact and ally with like-minded groups throughout the country.

Do whatever you can to put our ideas, both scary and constructive, into circulation.

Hold meetings, street-marches, hand out pamphlets, media stunts, talk to everyone you know every chance you get, give talks in schools, colleges and universities, lobby federal, state and local politicians, give interviews on the radio, put up posters in your front yard, print bumper-stickers, raise funds, play "Guess the Spy".

You know, all that stuff.

Yes I know, its hard, its boring, you have to associate with ugly people you don't particularly like, and folks can get tetchy...but hey that's the way things get done in the world.

And to anticipate your next impertinant question, no, I'm not doing it myself because I can't.

My health is very poor, but I am happy enough to offer encouragement to others, and be an oracle to anyone who might care, one way or an other, what an obsure Australian invalid might think about the future of the world he briefly inhabits and shares with others. :)
Last edited by Macsporan on Mon 05 Sep 2005, 11:27:55, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby doufus » Mon 05 Sep 2005, 11:23:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', 'O')k, I want to apologise for my unclear and rather cryptic initial post.

What I'm interested in seeing is what we can do now, today, as global citizens to work toward a solution to the problems we see looming before us. What can we do now to implement these ideas people are posting? How do we educate our respective governments or international agencies about the realities of oil depletion and rising prices?


It's the old adage- act locally think globally.

In my experience, nothing is as powerful as living your beliefs. We see
tons of hypocrisy- words, words, words, spin, spin and nothing to back
it up in actions.

Do all the good stuff and be frank about the why. Consume less,
own less, live a conscious, guided life.

Even without political engagement, a living example is worth a great
deal. people pay attention to what others do much more than what
they say.

With children, it's evident that words without consistent behavior
from adults do not produce outcomes. They pick the hypocrisy.
But even without the words to go with it, children emulate and model
on role behaviour very powerfully.

When enough people live consciously, they become a demographic,
a trend to be engaged, a political feature- even if they don't want
to be.

So my advice, do it and be it before you speak it. It's much more
credible as well as personally satisfying.
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby spudbuddy » Mon 05 Sep 2005, 13:17:30

For starters - to encourage or demand a mandate on a global basis to embark upon a reduction of energy use.
The larger the scale, the better.
This requires a new model of international economic activity that is not based on growth, or without limits to growth.
In other words, a contraction.
This is imperative, because necessary conservation of resources will not happen effectively enough simply with reduced consumer demand.

On the political front and worldwide, the issue of globalization needs to be addressed...
Globalized producers are the reason that goods move around the planet the way they do.
I'm looking for a worldwide political will that confronts energy use as a liability...and that can exercise the necessary restraint.

Ultimately this means control of the market...and not the market controlling itself.
Governments need to be called out...to address this without dithering or dickering over "ism's". A market is not free at all when it creates so much slavery.
Take your pick...slavery to energy consumption, slavery to sprawled communities with so few transportation choices...slavery to ridiculously low non-liveable wages.

In plain terms...the end of "cheap" goods that cross 10 or 15 thousand miles on their way to market.
The corporate economy of scale has created the currency that even makes this possible.
Governments need to be answerable to their constituents...corporations certainly are not.

There are three major economic regions on the planet...Southeast Asia, Europe, and North America.
Each of these three regions needs to reclaim control over their own areas, and draft an economic model that works for them, one that requires drastically reduced energy consumption.

On local levels (especially in North America)...new building codes, mass transit, contracted walkable communities, more energy-efficient vehicles, regionalized food production, a shift from agribusiness to agriculture, organic instead of petrochemical, local and regional manufacturing...community economies that belong to communities...and not to corporations.

All these things begin with an exercise of public will.
Enough public will creates a political will.
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby Ludi » Mon 05 Sep 2005, 13:36:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('spudbuddy', 'F')or starters - to encourage or demand a mandate on a global basis to embark upon a reduction of energy use.
The larger the scale, the better.
This requires a new model of international economic activity that is not based on growth, or without limits to growth.
In other words, a contraction.
This is imperative, because necessary conservation of resources will not happen effectively enough simply with reduced consumer demand.


Spudbuddy, can you give more detail about how we can encourage such an economic contraction?
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby Ludi » Mon 05 Sep 2005, 13:40:15

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Macsporan', '
')
And to anticipate your next impertinant question, no, I'm not doing it myself because I can't.


Thank you for being honest. :) I'm not up to much political activity myself beyond writing letters.
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby deconstructionist » Mon 05 Sep 2005, 14:08:40

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Macsporan', 'B')ush is powerful largely because no one is challanging him.


you'll remember that 50,000,000+ americans voted AGAINST him. bush is powerful because of corruption...

i agree--positivity is neccessary no matter how doomeristic your personal view is. not that we may avoid the effects of peak oil, but that we may have viable communities to survive and to cope. lead by example. i'm going to walk to the bike shop to pick up my new bike...
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby Macsporan » Mon 05 Sep 2005, 22:00:09

Deconstructionist,

Yes! This is what we need.

Have you got you're new bike yet?

Tell us about it.

'Lead by example' is very important.

Keep up the good work. :)
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby basil_hayden » Mon 05 Sep 2005, 22:30:20

Isn't the whole point of becoming self sufficient (i.e., debt free, off the grid, living simply) the way everyone on this globe can create a solution?
Obviously some of us are closer to this ideal and some of us are further away and need to do some work.


This ain't gonna come from up top, it'll start at the bottom...
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby Liamj » Mon 05 Sep 2005, 22:38:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', 'O')k, I want to apologise for my unclear and rather cryptic initial post.

What I'm interested in seeing is what we can do now, today, as global citizens to work toward a solution to the problems we see looming before us. What can we do now to implement these ideas people are posting? How do we educate our respective governments or international agencies about the realities of oil depletion and rising prices?
...
Liamj, can you suggest how we can get this information out to people more effectively? What can we do now to implement your ideas about open source?

To get information out more effectively i think person to person is the best way, the times force the use of electronic & other media, and on that front i think its proceeding as well as might be expected. But for us as individuals, we should be taking the message personally to those who matter in our communities, and thats not the MP, imho.

Its Rotary, Unions, local govt, professional associations, traders groups, community development workers, NIMBY campaign groups, any semi-local midlevel community org you think has a more-obvious-than-usual role in what is in the process of happening. Go see them, one mob at a time, give tailored talks, alert them to similarly alerted orgs, assure them this aint no drill. And trust them to start making the running, once they're informed enough.

What can we do now re 'open source' community technologies (whether cultural, biological, mechanical)? Compile information on which ones worked where, what are their respective strengths & weaknesses, requirements etc.
E.g. Food org models: CSA require farm & farmer willing to multicrop and engage with eaters, whereas a drygoods food co-op requires a covered space and more group coordination. Both req goodwill and some cashflow. A community garden requires less financial or scheduling commitment, but runs greater risks of conflicts over land/produce etc.

I think there will be an increasing rush to more-sustainable behaviours as we get poorer. If self organising groups can access a library of e.g. the diff organisational structures (down to position descriptions, articles of incorporation) ever used in particular sector, then should better choose one that suits their makeup and needs and so avoid dangerous dysfunction (same applies with other technologies).

So might want to know whats the best storing root crop for loams in temperate climates, whats the most efficient lighting setup for a house, whats the workable dimensions of a carsharing network - they're all important pieces of knowledge/tech of broad interest and utility for the years ahead. Sharing and improving that knowledge is the best Global solution i hope for.

I suggest no big institutional agenda because i don't think the existing gov/corp/religious/cultural institutions are capable of sufficient change. I'm not telling anyone not to try it, but just don't think its possible for these institutions to quit 'growth is good'ism within one generation.

Ending fossil fuel & car subsidies, taxing real resource consumption, ending usury, demoting corporations to subhuman status, they're all great ideas, i support each of them 100%, but launch a political campaign to get them voted in? Not going to work, history suggests.
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby Macsporan » Mon 05 Sep 2005, 22:44:28

Good ideas these, my little monster, but why the sting in the tail?

They might work, they might not, but their chances of success are zero if no one does it.

Call me old fashioned but I still have faith in my fellow humans and in democracy, and both my grandmothers are dead so I'm not going to last long in a chaotic PO.

Also you're wrong about how history shows that these things don't work. They can work very well if many people act to ensure they do.

JF do it. :)
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby Liamj » Mon 05 Sep 2005, 22:56:18

I have faith in most of my fellow humans, and you're right Macsporan that 'these things' (if meaning cooperative endevours, even v.rarely but not recently major political ones) DO work at least some of the time. Thats great, gives me hope, is the very reason think we should be aiding that sector.

But democracy? I don't think it works, don't think its capable of bringing about useful change.. more wars for oil, more tax breaks on SUVs, sure, more locking out refugees from nations already stripped of resources, sure, democracy has got those covered just fine.
But global cultural change and voluntary simplicity, sharing with ppl you'll never meet (Rimini Protocol)? I dont think so.
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby rogerhb » Mon 05 Sep 2005, 23:15:54

One of the marvels of the Rimini Protocol is that if you follow the protocol and other countries don't, you will actually be in a better situation than the BAU crowd.

So you could argue that every individual who voluntarily changes his lifestyle in accordance with reducing oil footprint will be better off than their neighbours who try to maintain the status quo and keep on digging themselves into debt to do so.
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby Liamj » Tue 06 Sep 2005, 07:49:56

Not only could you argue it rogerhb, i think you'd be right. Every year prepeak spent living a less-consuming lifestyle is perhaps the best training for every year post peak, and triply so for how we raise kids. Thats why i'm trying to do it.
The only thing i'm declining is the obligation to lobby, nag, pester and persist in selling a message i think will arrive anyway.
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby holmes » Tue 06 Sep 2005, 12:29:19

I currently have 3 parcels of land. soon to be 4. One is 20 acres. 1 is downtown with good garden area. the newest is going to be 250 + acres.
the 3rd has poor solar gain with limited garden acreage.
the new one-
I would like 350 if I can get the surrounding parcel in it. This is out in prime ag country and a 2 acre garden with horse graze. This new acreage will be earthships and agriculture. THis is the way to begin. buy land if you can afford it. Grab the land and build up. If you have the land base in your city. Most dont anymore go for it. however as we see local sustainabliltiy depends on historic land management. and this historically has condemed many areas to the dependency on the grid and food handouts.

talk to people that have a vision and land. If they dont fit your "perfect" world than u werent meant for tribal living. Its about commonality not idealogy.
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby retiredguy » Tue 06 Sep 2005, 13:06:00

As I see it, the only hope is to create a grassroots organization that would be large enough to be politically/economically significant.

To do this is a formidable task, but it has been done in the past: anti-slavery movement, women's sufferage movement, anti-Vietnam war movement.

The problem with peak oil is that it is a complex issue. Some folks see the issue from a survivalist perspective. Some think it can be solved by drilling more wells. Others see conservation and alternatives as the solution.

The critical task is to determine what issues around which you want to build your organization. They have to be simple and general enough so that they resonate with the average man-on-the-street.

Let's say the organization wanted to make conservation its cornerstone issue. What types of conservation are you going to champion? Abandoning the suburbs? Not driving a car? Driving a smaller car or hybrid? Heating with alternatives? What ever choice you make, you will alienate some group of people.

It's a long shot, but one issue that could work would be to use the growing opposition to the war in Iraq. To do that, however, would require convincing the masses that the war is really the opening salvo in a much larger and more serious war over resources, oil in particular. That we need to reduce or eliminate our use of fossil fuels to avoid another world war.

This is going to be difficult, because the government's spin doctors are going to fight this interpretation vigorously.
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby Ludi » Tue 06 Sep 2005, 14:04:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('retiredguy', 'A')s I see it, the only hope is to create a grassroots organization that would be large enough to be politically/economically significant.


Who do you think should form this organization? Is this something PeakOil.com could become the catalyst for?

Who is up to this task?
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby holmes » Tue 06 Sep 2005, 14:38:23

there should be no wasting time planning with the present civilization. It is failing as all empires before. It must be done detached from the present swarm. it is our responsibility not the gubmint or corporations they will TALK about it. Its up to the "tribes" to do it. It is not in their best interest to do anything about overshoot or decay.
A total break away. Ludi has read beyond civilization I reccomend all that post on this thread to do the same and get back to us. it has to be done by the young being coached by the old. there is no other way except grassroots style. using the internet or what have you to communicate and get the groundwork begun.
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Re: Toward a global community solution

Unread postby backstop » Tue 06 Sep 2005, 14:41:59

Ludi -

I'm in. Have been for longer than I can remember clearly . . .

I doubt Iraq is the issue though.

Divisive of potential support - victims too foreign and Laden-like -

Consequenses of withdrawal actually risk mayhem -Saudi/Iran/Syria/Jordan/Kuwait/Turkey(NATO mutual defence obligation)
(not a justification for failing to mount orderly withdrawal ASAP)

Also, if it came to it - TPTB can withdraw - buy oil on global market (no change there then ?)
and rob movement of momentum.

RG is right to focus on the complexity of Peak Oil both in single interest groups and in the hands of status quo propagandists.
(Farmers round here get it straight off -
Post Peak declining stocks = less there, more remote, deeper, more crud, = less produced each year= more expensive each year).
But that's without industry propagandists' obfuscations anywhere in sight . . .

What is needed IMHO is an umbrella issue which :---

encompasses Peak Oil plus other critical issues,
has massive extant global support, both popular and political,
has the highest of scientific accreditation globally (acknowledged at G8 by Bush)
demands radical change in cutting fossil fuel dependence sustainably,
poses a dire, well-proven intensifying threat to the US, and
played a central but so far ignored role in New Orleans' demise.

Ideas ?

My two pennorth.

regards,

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