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Environment

The Good Life Doesn't Have to Cost Us the Planet

By Andrew Simms and Joe Smith, YES! Magazine. Posted December 17, 2008.


What if you woke up one day to find that humans eventually did make the right decisions, and the world turned out to be a pretty cool place.
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For a while, it looked as though everything would fall apart. There was the triple crunch of the global credit crisis, declining oil supplies, and the threat of runaway climate change driven by massive overconsumption by rich countries and the elites in poor countries.

In 2008, humanity overshot its global biocapacity on September 23. It was the world’s earliest “ecological debt day” since humanity first started going into the environmental red in the mid-1980s. We were pursuing economic growth for its own sake, but it was completely unsustainable, and the people it was most supposed to benefit -- the poorest -- were getting a shrinking slice of the benefits. Perversely, because of the way the world economy worked, to get tiny amounts of global poverty reduction required massive amounts of destructive overconsumption by those who were already rich.

In the face of inescapable economic chaos and ecological upheaval, we finally woke to find that we already had most of the solutions under our noses. This is what a day in our lives looks like now, after things turned out right.

On waking

With less time spent working, the choice is yours -- sleep in, go for a run, read a novel. Having rediscovered the real meaning of a good life, previously overconsuming rich countries have now cured most cases of work addiction. In this “downshifted” world the phrase “rush hour” has become a half-remembered curio. Our society has begun to get the hang of how computing and IT can make for smart work, rather than generate slave work.

Those choosing the early morning run enjoy fresh air and clear paths as dramatic reductions in traffic have transformed city air and streets.

Breakfast

No need to sweat over every shopping decision: socially and environmentally sustainable trade are the (carefully checked) norm. The weekly food bill has gone up -- but so has the quality, and the damaging consequences of cheap food systems have gradually been rolled back. This is sustainable consumption universalized -- no more scanning labels. A few deft moves in boardrooms and government chambers helped to make food markets fair and sustainable.

For an international meeting -- step onto your balcony: video-conferencing and networking are so slick and intuitive that you rarely need to travel for work. The hours gained, backache cured, and wrinkles postponed make you more effective and committed to the work you do. But these changes are about more than work. Social networking software has thrown you together with new people -- your desktop gives you a global network, but also connects you in new -- live -- human ways to the community where you actually live.

Computer connections aside, there are plenty of benefits in the new sense of community that has evolved from the revival of local shops (where the shopkeepers actually remember who you are) and the way that residential streets and town centers have become people-friendly. Streets are safer, with some entirely car-free, and many towns have reclaimed central plots of land as public squares. A calmer environment and more opportunities for casual contact between neighbors means people gather and talk to each other more. Even in cities, people, and especially the elderly, feel less lonely.

Take some time out late morning to plan your long-awaited summer trip. While the big increases in the cost of fossil fuels have made international travel a rarer experience, it tends to be much better -- and longer -- when you do head off on your travels. In the bad old days you might have dashed off a postcard after thirty-six hours in a congested foreign capital. These days it is more a matter of picking out a few choice photos from the hundreds you’ll take on your once-in-a-lifetime three-month trip to India. Travel has returned to being a pleasure and an adventure.


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View:
In this Utopian fantasy…
Posted by: Honkie the Nihilist on Dec 17, 2008 12:22 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Do theists still appease their sky gods with 3rd world birth rates?

Have we ended blatantly racist and sexist policies like affirmative action?

Are men now granted equal protection, as described in the 14th amendment, to terminate their responsibility to an unwanted child?

Are people held accountable for their actions? Or do we provide welfare and bailouts for individuals and institutions that are not fit to exist?

Do we hand the poor a rifle and send them to die in a third world shit holes for resources or humanitarian pet projects? Or, if needed to fill the ranks, do we have a fair draft system that treats women as equals to men?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» I AGREE Posted by: Last Chance
» time is too important Posted by: mgmyers79
» No, none of that ---> Posted by: Last Chance
» In a world run by women... Posted by: Honkie the Nihilist
WAR IS OVER
Posted by: greentime on Dec 17, 2008 4:22 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you want it.

There is everything good to be said about utopian dreams that include living well on the earth with peace and justice for all life. These dreams have always helped us to make a better world.

It is too easy to be cynical and hard-hearted. The real work of creating a better life takes real effort and real courage.

Oh yeah, and the willingness to be vulnerable and put your best love out there.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» What load of crap! Posted by: Last Chance
» Compost is the best fertilizer Posted by: chrysalis124812
» There Is No Free Lunch Posted by: Last Chance
» No free lunch indeed Posted by: mgmyers79
» What "privileges"? Posted by: Last Chance
» RE: What "privileges"? Posted by: SevenStarHand
» You be honest Posted by: mgmyers79
» RE: WAR IS OVER Posted by: SevenStarHand
wallstreet
Posted by: richholland on Dec 17, 2008 4:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
how about derivates, profits, CEO?????????

you describe a socialistic society, blame on you.

where is AL Gore and his private Jet and the billions of Oprah Winfry and Madonna???

Do you think The Melon family likes your phantasy???

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» all those billionaires Posted by: chrysalis124812
An Arrogant Deception
Posted by: Last Chance on Dec 17, 2008 4:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Simm and Smith describe a personal lifestyle of the rich and anonymous, but fail to explain who would be doing the work and what sort of life workers would have to endure so certain special people could wake up every morning free of any social obligation whatsoever!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: An Arrogant Deception Posted by: mgmyers79
» HUNH ??? Posted by: Last Chance
For a detailed view of what a sustainable utopia what be like ...
Posted by: iforgetwho on Dec 17, 2008 5:04 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...check out Ecotopia by Ernest Callenbach. It's a 1975 novel that most have never heard of much less read. In the story, "northern California, Oregon and Washington have seceded from the Union to create a 'stable-state' ecosystem: the perfect balance between human beings and th environment." Ecotopia is full of great, plausible ideas. I came away from reading it recently thinking that something like this could actually work.

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Before the oil took over in the 20th century, there was an actual good life, not the current
Posted by: maxpayne on Dec 17, 2008 5:14 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
artificial phoney brand. Be it food, clothing, daily household products, etc..., I can only see a combination of frugality via conservation and reusability along with switching to alternative sources such as hemp as the only true way to save the planet.

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» The oil did not take over Posted by: mgmyers79
» And you're one of them. Posted by: maxpayne
India? INDIA?
Posted by: Beck on Dec 17, 2008 6:14 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
THIS is what we can't face: that air travel mainlines greenhouse gasses directly where they do the most harm, where trees can't absorb them, and where they remain for at least a couple of hundred years. Of all the strange denials we liberals and/or environmentalists indulge in, the refusal to even examine air travel is the strangest. I wonder what this symbolizes to us? It seems so hard to face. Sierra Club has trips in every issue of their magazine, to just about everywhere. They have trips to the arctic, advertising that we should come check out the places we're interested in saving.

There is no conversation I have with any environmentalist that does not eventually turn to the air trips they just took, or are about to take. And there's every excuse in the world why it's okay to continue doing so. Some excuses are as vague as, "People will never give up their travel" (this actually does seem true) and some sound specific ("air travel accounts for only x amount of greenhouse gasses", as if the earth takes that into account for us, and leaving out that plane emissions, because of being discharged exactly where they do the most harm, cause 2 1/2 times the damage of the same emissions emitted at ground level) but it seems pretty obvious that we are devoted to travel to an addictive degree. Addictive because we want it so badly that nothing will make us even contemplate its effects.

Yes, three months in India sounds like the trip of a lifetime, but I'd bet that three months nearby, even staying home, could be made equally satisfying. Humans have survived without this luxury. The fact that we want something so badly as to deny its effects makes me wonder how dedicated we really are to Mother Earth. Something is getting in our way, and air travel, and accumulating trips like notches on a belt, seems very symbolic of an inability to make connections between our actions and their effects.

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RE: SAd
Posted by: mgmyers79 on Dec 17, 2008 9:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If this is all that keeps you on board with our culture's desire to kill the world, then let me remove your block now. We've got ten to twenty years to stop the destruction, or it's over. That's the scientific consensus anyways.
This is not your only block though. The reason you have that "typical attitude" of inaction is because you reap numerous rewards/privileges for participating in the death project. That's how systems of domination maintain themselves. That's what you need to think about, because the system requires your life as well as mine and salmons'.

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» RE: SAd Posted by: corgyn
» RE: SAd Posted by: mgmyers79
» RE: SAd Posted by: DaBear
» RE: SAd Posted by: DaBear
By the way, as long as environmentalists won't legalize hemp or support a biker's infrastructure
Posted by: maxpayne on Dec 17, 2008 8:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
we the idiotic electorate are gonna keep slopping up all that oil until it all dries up and since gas prices are ridiculously low, we're gonna keep FUCKING ourselves with high volume traffic along with major accidents, explosions, and other roadblocks because god damn it, we're a bunch of dumb fat cats like Garfield ! MORE GAS ! MORE GAS ! We the AMORALLY IGNORANT electorate will keep shooting our fucking selves out with GLEE !!

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Warm and fuzzy, but misses a lot.
Posted by: Theodore on Dec 17, 2008 8:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Perhaps your office is one of the last bits of the building to have a green makeover."

Look again. The commercial real estate industry in major US cities is already committed to voluntarily greening itself.

It will be nice to make music and the performing arts a participatory pursuit again. The same will have to happen for agriculture as well. Many people will have to re-ruralize to sustainably meet the food demands of the compact pedestrian-friendly cities. I guess farmers will have to return to our old friend the horse for transportation.

How do we address the natural human desires for status, competition for mates and reproduction? Unless we undergo literal biological evolution to change these things, we'll still want more stuff to impress and more babies than the world can feed.

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There will always be a top 10% and a bottom 10%
Posted by: billwald on Dec 17, 2008 9:19 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The trick will be to reduce and limit the difference between the top and the bottom. The nature of poverty has changed in the civilized nations. In the US, except for the street crazies, the poor people have every sort of consumer good that the rich people have but of a much lower quality. The big difference is that the rich don't stand in line to get their stuff and the rich can plan for their futures.

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The difference between fantasy and imagination
Posted by: mgmyers79 on Dec 17, 2008 9:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
apparently is "a few deft moves in boardrooms." The authors are engaging in fantasy to believe that the good life consists of computer conferencing and entertaining each other in public areas. Productions and producers are conveniently left out of this fantasy, as are any talk of oppression, privilege, and the institutional tools that maintain both.
This article is the worst kind of tripe, toxically misunderstanding the abusive relationships our society depends upon to offer us the privileges that keep us complacent and accepting of the abuse. In doing so, the authors offer their support for continuing the relationships, offering the privileged more privileges in exchange for their acquiescence. Disgusting.

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Fantasize all you want
Posted by: willymack on Dec 17, 2008 9:26 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
About heaven on Earth. Warm fuzzies are pleasant to contemplate, like a purring cat on your lap, or the warm body of your loved one next to you on a cold winter's night, but in the real world of self-interest, intractible greed, abysmal ignorance, geocentric thinking, and overpopulation, the trend is a steepening, slippery slope toward a tragic collapse of what we call "civilization", which has been anything but civil. The first, and by far, most important step in saving what we can is POPULATION CONTROL. I know, some feet have to be stepped on and some sensibilities rubbed the wrong way, but if we're to avert a global tragedy this MUST be accomplished.

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» RE: Fantasize all you want Posted by: munley
» Right-o .... You first then :.? Posted by: stellabloo
Say every sort of consumer good was available to every person
Posted by: billwald on Dec 17, 2008 9:32 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Say that energy was free and consumer goods came from a machine on the wall like in "Star Trek." Even if the same quality consumer good was freely available to every person, human society will still be separated into ranks (castes) just as on the Star Ship Enterprise.

Why? Because of human nature and human greed for power.

For example, consider the Seattle metro area in this new age of free, high quality consumer goods. Who would live on Lake Washington? The people who were rich in power. Say the entire Lake Washington shoreline was turned into a public park. Who would live across the street from the Lake Washington Park? The people who were rich in personal power. How can it be any other way?

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ludicrous
Posted by: JoshuaLudd on Dec 17, 2008 10:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Utterly ludicrous fantasy. Fewer hours worked? Even the computer revolution didn't bring THAT about. Neither did automation. Uh, this is, of course, not taking into account all the folks working part time because no one will hire them full time.

www.greenanarchy.org

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» RE: ludicrous Posted by: tommy_slothrop
It is possible...
Posted by: SevenStarHand on Dec 17, 2008 11:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is a radical and highly effective solution to all of our economic problems that will dramatically simplify, streamline, and revitalize human civilization. It will eliminate all poverty, homelessness, debt, and the vast majority of crime, material inequality, deception, and injustice. It will also eliminate the underlying causes of most conflicts, while preventing evil scoundrels and their cabals from deceiving, deluding, and bedeviling humanity, ever again. It will likewise eliminate the primary barriers to solving global warming, pollution, and the many evils that result from corporate greed and their control of natural and societal resources.

That solution is to simply eliminate money from the human equation, thereby replacing the current system of greed, exploitation, and institutionalized coercion with freewill cooperation, just laws based on verifiable wisdom, and societal goals targeted at benefiting all, not just a self-chosen and abominably greedy few.

The path to paradise awaits you...

Peace and Wisdom...

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A new fantasy life
Posted by: PaulK on Dec 17, 2008 7:05 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our world has 10 million engineers at least. Machines do most of our labor, even in poorer countries these days. A lack of engineers isn't why we hunger, nor is it why our world is getting hotter.

In my fantasy life the world's problems are almost all solvable. We just need a few people to walk away, be diligently quiet and even indolent for a while, think of solutions, try small tests of solutions, and encourage many successful solutions to grow.

Is your government full of corruption? Think of a small or a large improvement. Then bring it toward reality each day. Your grandchildren will thank you. God willing, your friends will recognize your work too.

That's reality for me! Watch what's about to happen. Better yet, I could use some help. Or go live the new fantasy life yourself.

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Clue phone to Smith & Simms
Posted by: DaBear on Dec 17, 2008 9:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think you need to get off the happy-happy pills and talk to Jan Lunberg over at culture change.

Oh shit, I just pulled another barbituate lefty thing again... it's like crapping my pants. I just can't stop doing it. Where's Timmy Wise when you need a spanking?

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