Classic bifferism!!biffvernon wrote:No, but that's a strawman. The fact that I happen to own a nature reserve has little to do with the price of fish.
MIT report: collapse by 2030
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- UndercoverElephant
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It's anything but a strawman, Biff. You can't "degrow" unless you either can afford enough land to scratch a living off, or you've simply given up on your own future security, as I have.biffvernon wrote:No, but that's a strawman. The fact that I happen to own a nature reserve has little to do with the price of fish.
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)
- biffvernon
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Oh come off it folks. By degrow I mean, in the Mobbsey sense, that we can, indeed must, reduce the amount of fossil carbon we burn. If everyone reduces their carbon footprint to my level, which is entirely possible and compatible with a happy existence, that would be a good thing.
And after that we could do a lot more, but degrowing to my level would be a jolly good start.
If you are a peakist you know this is inevitable. I happen to think it's better to do it voluntarily in a way that we chose, rather than the alternative which is to have it forced upon us. You either design the transition or have it thrust upon you.
And after that we could do a lot more, but degrowing to my level would be a jolly good start.
If you are a peakist you know this is inevitable. I happen to think it's better to do it voluntarily in a way that we chose, rather than the alternative which is to have it forced upon us. You either design the transition or have it thrust upon you.
- UndercoverElephant
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I'd love to be in your position, Biff. But like most of the population of this country, I just don't have the money.biffvernon wrote:Oh come off it folks. By degrow I mean, in the Mobbsey sense, that we can, indeed must, reduce the amount of fossil carbon we burn. If everyone reduces their carbon footprint to my level, which is entirely possible and compatible with a happy existence, that would be a good thing.
It's going to come down to land reform. If it doesn't, there is going to be some sort of revolution, or an authoritarian state.
Yes, but you do not appear to understand the realities of urban life in the UK. Spend a year living in South London and you may see things differently.If you are a peakist you know this is inevitable. I happen to think it's better to do it voluntarily in a way that we chose, rather than the alternative which is to have it forced upon us. You either design the transition or have it thrust upon you.
In order to make the sort of transition you are hoping for, we'd need to get rid of about half the current population and distribute the newly-available land to the poorest half of those that remain.
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)
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Quite agree but we don't have to get rid of them all tomorrow. Short term, instant fixes are a big part of the problem.UndercoverElephant wrote:I'd love to be in your position, Biff. But like most of the population of this country, I just don't have the money.biffvernon wrote:Oh come off it folks. By degrow I mean, in the Mobbsey sense, that we can, indeed must, reduce the amount of fossil carbon we burn. If everyone reduces their carbon footprint to my level, which is entirely possible and compatible with a happy existence, that would be a good thing.
It's going to come down to land reform. If it doesn't, there is going to be some sort of revolution, or an authoritarian state.
Yes, but you do not appear to understand the realities of urban life in the UK. Spend a year living in South London and you may see things differently.If you are a peakist you know this is inevitable. I happen to think it's better to do it voluntarily in a way that we chose, rather than the alternative which is to have it forced upon us. You either design the transition or have it thrust upon you.
In order to make the sort of transition you are hoping for, we'd need to get rid of about half the current population and distribute the newly-available land to the poorest half of those that remain.
Having lived in the country and cities I've noticed that people in both enviroments want to live in the other. Fundamentally they aren't happy with their life and see moving as the only way out. Most are overwhelmed by the realities of changing so you'd need to keep it limited to a couple of things at a time. As they get used to change you'd be able to speed up but I'd still think keeping the 'campaigns' to 2 or 3 at a time would be best.
Scarcity is the new black
- biffvernon
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UE, I'm not some rich landowner! I was born and brought up in South London but by 1979 I had a very good understanding of the realities of urban life and decided it was not good for me. I moved to Lincolnshire and bought a field rather than spending my money on the stuff the most folk do. And to pay off the mortgage I worked pretty hard for 25 years at a job that was mostly boring. So yes, now I'm in a position that you might like to be in. I'm able to live comfortably with an income that is less than half the national average wage and it's lucky that I have little desire for foreign holidays, flashy cars or even an i-phone!
Land reform? Yes, there's plenty of scope but take care. The biggest farmer in my area is the Co-op! They have their own private ban on neonicotinoids.
The transition I'm hoping for will not require getting rid of half the population. I'd descibe that as genocide rather than transition. Our green and pleasant land is perfectly capable of supporting all the population and some, if we chose to do things a little bit differently. I look round and see rollilng acres of feed wheat, feed barly, oil-seed rape and horse paddocks. Not much of Lincolnshire's best land is being used to grow direct human food .
Land reform? Yes, there's plenty of scope but take care. The biggest farmer in my area is the Co-op! They have their own private ban on neonicotinoids.
The transition I'm hoping for will not require getting rid of half the population. I'd descibe that as genocide rather than transition. Our green and pleasant land is perfectly capable of supporting all the population and some, if we chose to do things a little bit differently. I look round and see rollilng acres of feed wheat, feed barly, oil-seed rape and horse paddocks. Not much of Lincolnshire's best land is being used to grow direct human food .
- UndercoverElephant
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Maybe, but I'm still not convinced you are fully aware of what this entails.biffvernon wrote: Our green and pleasant land is perfectly capable of supporting all the population and some, if we chose to do things a little bit differently.
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)
That's great and I applaud your foresight and hard work. I think what UE may be referring to is the fact that due to the ridiculous increase in house and land prices even someone with a relatively 'good' job will now struggle to buy a decent sized property, especially with land. What has happened to house prices has disenfranchised generations.I moved to Lincolnshire and bought a field rather than spending my money on the stuff the most folk do. And to pay off the mortgage I worked pretty hard for 25 years at a job that was mostly boring. So yes, now I'm in a position that you might like to be in. I'm able to live comfortably with an income that is less than half the national average wage and it's lucky that I have little desire for foreign holidays, flashy cars or even an i-phone!
Plus in order to get the 'decent' job people are now saddled with £27k of debt before they even start work.
I've worked extensively in disadvantaged communities and unbeknownst to them, most are leading green lives- no cars, high density housing, no flights and a high level of informal recycling.
Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. Frederick Douglass
Totally agree UEUndercoverElephant wrote:I'd love to be in your position, Biff. But like most of the population of this country, I just don't have the money.biffvernon wrote:Oh come off it folks. By degrow I mean, in the Mobbsey sense, that we can, indeed must, reduce the amount of fossil carbon we burn. If everyone reduces their carbon footprint to my level, which is entirely possible and compatible with a happy existence, that would be a good thing.
It's going to come down to land reform. If it doesn't, there is going to be some sort of revolution, or an authoritarian state.
Yes, but you do not appear to understand the realities of urban life in the UK. Spend a year living in South London and you may see things differently.If you are a peakist you know this is inevitable. I happen to think it's better to do it voluntarily in a way that we chose, rather than the alternative which is to have it forced upon us. You either design the transition or have it thrust upon you.
In order to make the sort of transition you are hoping for, we'd need to get rid of about half the current population and distribute the newly-available land to the poorest half of those that remain.
- biffvernon
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- biffvernon
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What exactly do you totally agree with? That I don't understand the realities of urban life? The last 14 years of my teaching career was in a school whose catchment included England's most socially deprived ward, around what was once Grimsby's fish dock. Don't try to teach me about urban life.stevecook172001 wrote:Totally agree UEUndercoverElephant wrote: Yes, but you do not appear to understand the realities of urban life in the UK. Spend a year living in South London and you may see things differently.
In order to make the sort of transition you are hoping for, we'd need to get rid of about half the current population and distribute the newly-available land to the poorest half of those that remain.
Or is it the need to get rid of half the population? Are you genocidal or just plain bonkers?
We have to make the transition to the post peak oil world with the population we have. Might not be easy but there is no other option.
Yes, i fully agree biff.We have to make the transition to the post peak oil world with the population we have. Might not be easy but there is no other option.
Its obviously going to be difficult, it might not even be possible, but it is what it is. As i keep saying wer'e all in this together.
"Unfortunately, the Fed can't print oil"
---Ben Bernake (2011)
---Ben Bernake (2011)
No we're not.hodson2k9 wrote:Yes, i fully agree biff.We have to make the transition to the post peak oil world with the population we have. Might not be easy but there is no other option.
Its obviously going to be difficult, it might not even be possible, but it is what it is. As i keep saying wer'e all in this together.
We should be.
But we're not.