Neo-green
Moderator: Peak Moderation
- biffvernon
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Neo-green
Paul Kingsnorth, thought provoking as ever http://www.paulkingsnorth.net/journalis ... eo-greens/
Re: Neo-green
We're done forbiffvernon wrote:Paul Kingsnorth, thought provoking as ever http://www.paulkingsnorth.net/journalis ... eo-greens/
- UndercoverElephant
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- emordnilap
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It appeared in The Guardian originally; the non-neo-nincompoops are out in force in its comments section of course.
Write an article for them, UE, why not? (The Guardian, not the nincompoops).UndercoverElephant wrote:Permaculture is the only true "green technology", but almost nobody takes it seriously.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
Also see this from Fred Pearce which Kingsnorth recently took exception to.
http://e360.yale.edu/feature/why_are_en ... QR.twitter
http://e360.yale.edu/feature/why_are_en ... QR.twitter
- emordnilap
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No, nature got there first.Fred Pearce wrote:On issues ranging from ocean acidification and tipping points in the Arctic to the dangers of nanotechnology, the scientists have always gotten there first — and the environmentalists have followed.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
Perhaps I'm missing the bigger picture, but it seems to me that throughout my life headline science has failed to deliver most of the things it promised.
I well remember watching "Tomorrows World" as a kid, I loved the idea that we'd all be driving hover-cars in the year 2000, we'd all have limitless clean energy and be spending our holidays on the Moon. Cancer would be a thing of the past.
We got amazing computers, but we're still using coal-fired power stations and half the world doesn't have clean drinking water.
Science stalled when it ran into economics.
I well remember watching "Tomorrows World" as a kid, I loved the idea that we'd all be driving hover-cars in the year 2000, we'd all have limitless clean energy and be spending our holidays on the Moon. Cancer would be a thing of the past.
We got amazing computers, but we're still using coal-fired power stations and half the world doesn't have clean drinking water.
Science stalled when it ran into economics.
- emordnilap
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Be careful, was it 'science' that promised all these undeliverables or was it the media's and wider society's reinterpretation of that science?Catweazle wrote:Perhaps I'm missing the bigger picture, but it seems to me that throughout my life headline science has failed to deliver most of the things it promised.
I suspect it was actually scientists looking for funding, and modern claims that technology will save us from energy starvation could be the same.clv101 wrote:Be careful, was it 'science' that promised all these undeliverables or was it the media's and wider society's reinterpretation of that science?Catweazle wrote:Perhaps I'm missing the bigger picture, but it seems to me that throughout my life headline science has failed to deliver most of the things it promised.
Well, sometimes things do come to pass, but with strange twists compared to how they were originally envisaged. In the "developed nations", technology and industrialisation has indeed allowed us to feed ourselves while a significant proportion of the population remains idle (either by choice or otherwise). Without the technology we'd all have to be pitching in and helping.emordnilap wrote:Heh heh. And what on earth are we doing with all this 'leisure time' that was talked about? (Someone's obviously filched my share.)
We see this as a social problem rather than the idealised result we were looking for. Not exactly an image of people spending all their time wandering through sunlit gardens composing poetry!
I wonder what other rosy predictions of the future have come true, but with a dark twist?
Engage in geo-engineering. Plant a tree today.
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I, and many more like me, have traded the same 20% for longer working hours, shorter and unpaid breaks, no job security to speak of, confrontational management and so on.RalphW wrote:I for one have traded 20% of my income for and one more day of leasure each week - although I don't get much leasure out of it! I look forward to work days so that I can get some rest and catch up here.
A lot of what hasn't happened science-wise isn't economics it's politics, specifically the desire of TPTB to continue concentrating wealth.
It's only going to get worse I fear
Scarcity is the new black
- emordnilap
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Like Ralph, I chose to work four days and took a fifth cut in my gross wage. The way the tax system is set up (at the moment anyway), I didn't lose that much in nett wages.
If I was asked to work five days again, my gross wage rate would have to increase otherwise it wouldn't be worth it. The day spent at home is unbelievably valuable - I highly recommend it, though it seems a risk to some. Another guy at work has done the same.
The spare day is when everything else gets done, as opposed to stuff that has to be squeezed into a weekend. Or one can sit and contemplate what to do when the job disappears completely.
If I was asked to work five days again, my gross wage rate would have to increase otherwise it wouldn't be worth it. The day spent at home is unbelievably valuable - I highly recommend it, though it seems a risk to some. Another guy at work has done the same.
The spare day is when everything else gets done, as opposed to stuff that has to be squeezed into a weekend. Or one can sit and contemplate what to do when the job disappears completely.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker