Tuesday, February 27, 2018

  • Artleads says:
    I wrote this a little while ago. It may show the struggle some of us go through trying to make sense of the present:
    150 STRONG: A PATHWAY TO A DIFFERENT FUTURE (By Rob O’Grady)
    “We all share a future with many challenges. The economic, environmental and social systems that sustain us are stressed, and an inevitable period of “the unfolding of consequences” is approaching. The headlines we read on climate change, wealth inequality, geopolitical instability and precarious financial arrangements, represent the realisation of structural flaws inherent in our current system, and it seems that there is little we can do to address these issues within the confines of our existing political and economic arrangements.”
    A SHAKY LOOK AT WORLD AFFAIRS
    Our social organization is too big to modify as a whole. The human race evolved in small bands, and prior to the age of agriculture, continued to live in small groups, rarely expanding beyond 150 people. (See Dunbar 150 strong).
    Society past the age of agriculture, starting some 10,000 years ago, began to be organized in bigger and bigger units that were increasingly complex, having to be managed by armies and organized governments. This was only possible to do with the help of surplus energy (beyond what the sun and biomass could supply). This energy came from slaves. Later, it came from coal. Later still, coal was supported by oil.
    Complex social organizations have come to depend on very complex financial systems too, banking and debt being prominent among them. But the financial and energy systems, being tightly interdependent, tend to prosper or decline in tandem. They use up natural resources like minerals, fisheries, wood and topsoil. They pollute the atmosphere. Finance, energy, natural resourced are all bonded together within a prevailing belief system that we call civilization. We have now come to the limit of what our civilization can sustain, especially at the quite unprecedented levels of human population (along with lifestyle) that has been increasingly exponentially and has doubled in the last 40 years alone.
    Something has to give.
    The world of economics, finance and energy is a world of hyper complexity that average people can’t understand. I’m somewhat rescued by having good intuition–something I refer to as “aesthetic intuition.” I knew intuitively since the 1960’s that society was heading in a catastrophically wrong direction. I knew intuitively that the political and economic systems were oppressive and murderous. Intuition, as compared purely with reason and book learning, is an equally reliable way of knowing. And possibly better. But it’s the combination of factual learning and intuitive understanding that works best…and this has led me to two years of regular posting, reading questioning on a blog dedicated to the subject. But that blog is firmly dedicated to the eternal churning over of the hopelessness of the current situation, while just as firmly stuck within the paradigm that caused it. They do recognize, as O’Grady does, (or do they?) “…that to talk of sustainability in the world of business and politics was ‘to pour from the empty into the void,’ because the underlying context is subversive of such efforts.”
    “Medical treatments for 90 year olds are favored, for example.” I surely agree. Keeping more people around longer will be highly appreciated by such people. It also ought to reduce drag for all kinds of care dispensed by the young for the old. It ought to cut down on contagion too. I could see a whole lot more telemedicine as well. We’re pretty much wasting the available technology. And I agree also that military spending ought to grow…mightily!

  • Artleads says:
    What about spending on the Internet? Ability to share information globally could be useful to a self organizing system. I would agree that the poor do not need housing or education expenditure. (A functioning Internet could be a major means of education.) .Neither the rich, IMO. There are a lot of old buildings left to rot. The rich could buy these and fix them up.
  • Artleads says:
    To a large extent, the poor never asked and don’t need to be in the boat. They can get by with nothing, providing obstacles aren’t put in their way. What people think the poor are and need is misguided. It might come from never having lived among them. A lot of who are called poor were doing OK on their own till greedy bas tards insisted on selling them things they never wanted or needed.
    • Fast Eddy says:
      If they didn’t want or need the stuff — why did they buy it?
      And if they didn’t buy the stuff …. there would be no jobs…. and we’d end up in a cyclonic disaster
      Thanks heaven for greedy ba st ards… and human nature…. and little girls…..
  • Fast Eddy says:
    Check out Soros Greenspan Adelson …. they look like talking corpses… how are these men still alive?
    If they were run over by a car the birds wouldn’t bother to try to pick the bones clean … there’s nothing but mummified skin and brittle bones there….
    Could it be that the wealthy are spending trillions on treatments that allow them to live to 150?
    Or is there some sort of pact with the devil going on here…..
  • Artleads says:
    Your comment is awaiting moderation.
    Intuition comes up again and says the situation isn’t hopeless for the continuation of civilization, that civilization is more likely than not to endure. Times aren’t worse for civilization than they’ve ever been; they’re merely different. That’s one way to look at it anyway, and people who scientifically study trends will assure you that we are at the end stage of civilization, owing to all the variables they have studied and measured. Intuition can’t give reasonable arguments against these findings; it can only assert that these are not ITS findings. Part of the trouble is the materialist outlook of Western civilization (civilization). This is a civilization that puts no value on beauty. And if it were to look it into the matter at all, it would do so based on its materialist premises. You can’t measure, weigh and calculate the qualities of beauty, and so, of course, it must be a meaningless and irrelevant.
    Africa is noted for producing brute strength, ignoring the fact that Africa’s is a civilization run on the energy-enhancing effect of rhythm. This is the premise of beauty. It doesn’t separate energy from aesthetics. Many of its products are energy enhancing and cultural.
    In the West, even the advocates for fossil fuel don’t think of it as beautiful. But why? There must be hundreds of types of natural and treated oil, and the transparent viscous liquid I put into my car is, to my mind, beautiful. It’s power to take me around is magical, awesome beyond words. If oil was seen and respected as beautiful, you might not have the craze for solar panels and all sorts of shiny so called renewable technology to replace it with. If oil was respected as beautiful it might be used with gratitude and care instead of taken for granted.
    Much of Western preoccupation is with material survival. But that point of view inevitably puts safety over beauty. And if you do that on a civilizational scale, you will dispense costly safety and security measures that could be avoided. You widen and straighten out roads that might be riskier but more beautiful left winding and adventurous. (The Brits were quite good with the winding ones; the Americans favor the other kind.) You invent all sorts of safety rules for housing, having nothing to do with beauty (or erroneously confusing them with beauty), which results in housing that too many find unaffordable. That puts so much strain on those many that they can’t buy the products of industry.
    And to top it all off, it might be better for civilization not to think about beauty, since it’s not something you can think your way through, and you end up believing it’s prettiness and all manner and types of trivia…which is a worse outcome. You’ll find beauty as much in a bombing blitz as in an art gallery. I guess it’s the fact that you can recognize it when you see it, and what value you place on that, which matters.
Artleads says:
Your comment is awaiting moderation. 
Intuition comes up again and says the situation isn’t hopeless for the continuation of civilization, that civilization is more likely than not to endure. Times aren’t worse for civilization than they’ve ever been; they’re merely different. That’s one way to look at it anyway, and people who scientifically study trends will assure you that we are at the end stage of civilization, owing to all the variables they have studied and measured. Intuition can’t give reasonable arguments against these findings; it can only assert that these are not ITS findings. Part of the trouble is the materialist outlook of Western civilization (civilization). This is a civilization that puts no value on beauty. And if it were to look it into the matter at all, it would do so based on its materialist premises. You can’t measure, weigh and calculate the qualities of beauty, and so, of course, it must be a meaningless and irrelevant.
Africa is noted for producing brute strength, ignoring the fact that Africa’s is a civilization run on the energy-enhancing effect of rhythm. This is the premise of beauty. It doesn’t separate energy from aesthetics. Many of its products are energy enhancing and cultural.
In the West, even the advocates for fossil fuel don’t think of it as beautiful. But why? There must be hundreds of types of natural and treated oil, and the transparent viscous liquid I put into my car is, to my mind, beautiful. It’s power to take me around is magical, awesome beyond words. If oil was seen and respected as beautiful, you might not have the craze for solar panels and all sorts of shiny so called renewable technology to replace it with. If oil was respected as beautiful it might be used with gratitude and care instead of taken for granted.
Much of Western preoccupation is with material survival. But that point of view inevitably puts safety over beauty. And if you do that on a civilizational scale, you will dispense costly safety and security measures that could be avoided. You widen and straighten out roads that might be riskier but more beautiful left winding and adventurous. (The Brits were quite good with the winding ones; the Americans favor the other kind.) You invent all sorts of safety rules for housing, having nothing to do with beauty (or erroneously confusing them with beauty), which results in housing that too many find unaffordable. That puts so much strain on those many that they can’t buy the products of industry.
And to top it all off, it might be better for civilization not to think about beauty, since it’s not something you can think your way through, and you end up believing it’s prettiness and all manner and types of trivia…which is a worse outcome. You’ll find beauty as much in a bombing blitz as in an art gallery. I guess it’s the fact that you can recognize it when you see it, and what value you place on that, which matters.


Work gets divided up into so many smaller units that the industry as a whole may better withstand hard times.  

At some levels of culture, there are female societies and male societies that have complementary roles.  And I'm looking for ways to apply such cultural forms to living today.

As to whether abortions should be legal or not, it shouldn't concern men. Men should have no voice inh the matter, and it could suggest that voting by gender on issues that are gender specific. Men don't bear children.

Repairs with materials that show, therefore turning restoration into art

 USE LESS ENERGY

REPAIR SOCIETY

HAPPINESS INVERSE TO AMERICAN DREAM

EXTERNALITIES AND MARKET FAILURE

INADEQUATE INFORMATION

is a not as top down

top down needed for nuclear management, energy supply (to whom?) and basic order--contagion, loss of workers, etc.

the south needs less energy than the north

Enabling free flow of information is not the strength of top down, probably military governance

need for a program dedicated to protecting free flow of information

basic order includes a sophisticated and minimalist health care system that is heavily dependent on prevention, telemedicine and local control

social media connection for exchange of information

Need for council of women who must have veto [power over top down government order

women must be equally represented within all leverage areas of power

women must control their reproductive functions

women must serve in equal numbers in military/top down power structure

no top down intervention in housing, food, education--these must be locally provided to suit local conditions, and they don't have to cost money.

clarify what basic industrial functions are needed and support them (how? who?)

cardboard to be the basic industrial material

no demolition or discontinuity --keep the energy flow going

it will help if the poor and local governance model the future initially.

the aspirations of African liberation and colonial cultural heritage need to be united. 





Monday, February 19, 2018

CLIMATE CHANGE NTL PARK

https://ny.curbed.com/2018/2/14/17009764/climate-change-national-park-meadowlands

https://ny.curbed.com/2018/2/14/17009764/climate-change-national-park-meadowlands
EXPATS AND RESENTMENT


- Over the past 100 years Jamaican emigrants have been sending money, cleaning other people's toilets to help our country. There may be as many of us abroad as on the base. You would be worse off trying to support all of us. Jamaica's economy is too small. We needed to spread out. 

- We ARE Jamaicans, and deserve the regard that other Jamaicans are afforded. That's the first principle. It shouldn't only be about voting for one or the other of two parties that have largely failed. There needs to be smaller units of government closer to the people in those communities. And they all need to network. The current top down model of government isn't working anywhere in the world. The First Wold model you so avidly follow isn't working. What keeps the First World orderly is the enormous disparity of wealth between them and us. But they are all failing. You are just slow to realize it.

- We Jamaicans abroad take pride in our country. During the Olympics, who do you think we cheer for?

- Education--my mother slaved to pay for my higher learning. Then I try to help my country through all that sacrifice only to be told that you are an outsider and not needed. That is disrespectful and ignorant. Jamaica needs all the help it can get, especially from people of the same blood and family.

- If you don't know what to do, somebody is going to give you advice. It could be Americans, Canadians, Chinese, the French, the Dutch, and you don't mind prostrating yourself and stretching out your hand to them. It's the Jamaicans abroad that you save your venom for.

- You're OK with the international hotels that expel you from the beaches and treat you like a serf. Or the Canadian bauxite companies that fail to deliver the promised taxes. 

- Expatriates are blind without people on the ground to write back. We can't help you if you don't help us. Our cup is very full, and neither of us will fare well if this kind of us versus them game continues. Talk about resentment!!!!!! It works from the other side too.

Thursday, February 15, 2018

Tuesday, February 13, 2018

Graffiti artists win one:
\http://www.newshub.co.nz/home/world/2018/02/graffiti-artists-win-6-7-million-lawsuit-after-their-work-is-buffed.html

Saturday, February 10, 2018

FF ENERGY TO THE RESCUE

I'm *slowly* getting to internalize Gail's point (if I even am getting it) that oil producers need higher prices.

I think it can be done.

Society needs to support the fossil fuel industry. In an organized way. Not just left up to market forces. Dense fossil fuels taken from existing mines, and compensated at a higher (boutique) rate.  That arrangement obviates the complexity in making new stuff meant to take the place of fossil fuel products.

So how do we get a critical mass reoriented to see that FFs, far from being the worst things, are the best things? You can do more with less environmental destruction, including less deforestation.

What would seem to be needed is to spread FF use out laterally instead of continue the vertical way of current use. First world countries need to hit the pause button and all the rest need to use more FF...in a targeted way that is much better than now at planning. There need to be restrictions--keeping people better served where they are without having them sprawl out beyond.

The real enemy is the current developer and planning community.
Interesting. I didn’t recognize the Stoicism in the philosophers who’ve most influenced my ethics (Deleuze, Nietzsche and Spinoza) but it’s clearly there. Deleuze’s whole reading of joy, as making real your power of action, and sadness as feeling like you had some capacity but it was blocked or frustrated, is a beautiful (and quite Stoic) concept. What I particularly like about this ethical system is that it goes beyond simply your power of action in the world. Rather it’s based on affect; your power to affect and, importantly, to be affected. I find adding the power to be affected is the most important part. Most applications of domination are power without affection (or being affected). A bureaucrat who decides that thousands of people get kicked off welfare and go deeper into poverty isn’t affected by their power of action. On social media we don’t see the faces of those we shame and humiliate. Drone pilots sees the grainy silhouettes of the people they bomb but are insulated from the violence in a way traditional soldiers are not. We have effect but not affection. Introducing affection into power of action gives us responsibility in the true sense of the word, an ability to respond and to be changed by that which we are changing.

Friday, February 9, 2018

ENERGY AND HOUSING
I take it that 1) Keeping energy flowing smoothly along its current lines, using the same roads, materials, processes is the most affordable? 2) The best option for the environment is to keep current fossil fuel businesses patronized without the necessity for them to spend more energy to mine new sources and set up new delivery infrastructure 3) Using existing manufactured materials–plastic roofs, drywall, joining tape, staples, etc. that are currently available in hardware stores is consistent with 1 & 2. 4) using existing materials from the store and modifying them with readily available industrial materials is a beneficial way to create housing.

Thursday, February 8, 2018

CULTURE YARDS

Cheap or free housing (including work to create it) should not be impossible to do. There are endless large abandoned structures to supply work adapting for housing and home based enterprises. These are places where drug counselling, small-animal care and horticulture could all complement each other. Not being able to see how straightforward a "solution" this could be is an incredibly huge shortcoming in the way our society is able to imagine and believe.
CULTURE YARD

Trevor Burrowes Is this Culture Yard 2? Can this building (see 0:57 on) where he lived be a shrine to Bunny Wailer? There are very handsome and solid features about it, like the steps, the concrete plinths, the window frames... Underneath the surface, the building looks solid. The quality of this scene, with its trees, its history, its low environmental impact is the best that I've ever seen. This might well be the very BEST urban space in the world. What if, after being meticulously photographed and measured, it was restored to the state that Mr. Livingston remembers? What if the people living there now are enabled to remain there...with improved education and "structure" for the children? What if that education centered on how to fix and maintain the site along the lines of its present assets...and then be able to teach other similar communities elsewhere to do likewise? Is there anyone interested in seeing this done?

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=756832854519915&set=pcb.756837137852820&type=3&theater&ifg=1

Wednesday, February 7, 2018

ADVANTAGES OF SMALL CITIES

Garbar argues there are good reasons why people are moving less. "This is not as easy as it sounds: Yale law professor, David Schleicher, has laid out three issues that have contributed to Americans’ declining geographic mobility: zoning restrictions that raise housing prices in coastal cities, occupational licensing requirements that make it hard for professionals to cross state lines, and welfare benefits that are difficult to take from place to place," Garbar writes.

hat's more, these cities effort distinct advantages. "They’re small enough for regular people to participate in politics and make a mark on civic life; small enough for responsive, local ownership over institutions and infrastructure like banks, broadband, retail, and food production; small enough for short commutes and easy access to nature," Garbar argues.

Friday, February 2, 2018

LETTER TO THE EDITOR--TRANSPRTATION

I don’t live in the city of Atlanta, so I am not all that familiar with the particular developments. Jobs are scattered very widely over the Atlanta metropolitan area. MARTA covers only a very small portion of it. I expect the area MARTA covers is maybe 10% or 15% of the Atlanta metropolitan area.
These new developments seem to be connected by rail to the Five Points area in downtown Atlanta. One of my sons works at Five Points. (Lots of pan handlers there!) He takes an express bus twice a day. This is the only kind of transit available to the city from our suburb. He works in the building with the State of Georgia workers. (He is a subcontractor, not an employee). Marta does run quite a long distance North, but we don’t live North. I suppose if our son wanted to live in the city, this might be an option. But with a contract job, there is a question whether he would want to sign a lease for at least a year, when his contract will run out this summer.
I haven’t looked at the economics of these developments.
  • Artleads says:
    +++++++++++++
  • Artleads says:
    It’s relatively advanced when you can get to work by bus at all. There’s a free shuttle in my county (part of a regional shuttle service shared by northern NM and southern CO), but it arrives here at 11:30, long after commuters have gone to work. So they’re often near empty. They drop you off in the city at a mall where you can switch to a city bus to get to the city destination. But if you’re old or feeling poorly, you don’t want the hassle of asking all the drivers if they’re going your way. Somebody to advise you as you get off the shuttle would help. That person could be what I call a “synapse connector.”
    The shuttle drops you off in the city at a somewhat sleepy mall that has no supermarket. Folks coming in from the county village with no major food supply are often heading for the supermarket. There is a supermarket across a very busy, fast, wide street from the mall, and even a young person is living dangerously trying to cross it on foot. A synapse connector could take you in another shuttle to that supermarket across the street and return you for your shuttle when ready. The trouble is that the next shuttle back to the county leaves at 4:15, four hours after you got to the mall. But fixing that with small (maybe station wagon size) shuttles that operated at slightly better times with slightly better frequency doesn’t seem like too high of an expectation.

Thursday, February 1, 2018

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

s Among the items to be discussed, I don't see planning itself. We have two documents that are Sustainable something. One is a plan and the other is a code to implement the plan. The residents of Santa Fe county who understand any of this are very few. There are planning issues emerging in the field that contrast "land use" planning with "form based" planning. I think what we have here is land use planning, which groups developments into different uses, such as industrial, light-industrial, residential, and so forth. This is an old formula of planning dating from the height of smoke stack era and the 1950's explosion of car travel. This outdated form of planning--not suited to our climate realities, among much else in today's world--is the paradigm which Ms. Penny Ellis-Green, the chief county planner, has championed and is expert on. It is, however, inappropriate for the county, and indeed for most places today. Form based planning is visual and shows how development is allowed to look in a given area. But it doesn't prohibit various uses within those spaces. Mixed use zoning seems to be an improvement over single use zoning. For instance, Rancho Viejo exemplifies single use residential zoning, while south Cerrillos in SF exemplifies single use commercial zoning. Single use zoning exacerbates commute traffic, since it requires automobile travel for employees to reach work. How form based planning and mixed use zoning intersect needs to be studied. Each might have considerable improvements to offer over what we have now.