Monthly Archives: September 2007

The Impatient Listener

“In Deep Conversation” by Irish artist Pam O’Connell There’s a reason attention and appreciation are so highly valued — give them to someone, genuinely, and they’ll do almost anything for you — It’s a scarce resource. While we only have … Continue reading

Posted in Our Culture / Ourselves | 2 Comments

Finally, a Comprehensive Green Shopping Guide — for Canadians

Adria Vasil’s terribly-named book (and Now Magazine column) Ecoholic, is one of the most important reference books to appear on the newsstands in this decade. It’s subtitle describes it better: Your guide to the most environmentally friendly information, products and … Continue reading

Posted in Collapse Watch | 1 Comment

The World Without Us

Alan Weisman’s The World Without Us is a book-long exercise in “what if…” Specifically, it asks, and answers, what if the human species immediately and completely vanished from the Earth, today.The answer he provides is neither tedious nor depressing, in … Continue reading

Posted in Collapse Watch | 5 Comments

The Next War of Independence: Natural Community, Natural Enterprise, Natural Economy

The independent media have been telling us for several years now that the US is no longer a free country, nor is it any longer a democracy. It is a corporatist aristocracy — a corpocracy — where the laws are … Continue reading

Posted in Collapse Watch | 13 Comments

Sunday Open Thread — September 2, 2007

What I’m thinking about, and planning on writing (and podcasting) about soon:The Next War of Independence: Natural Community, Natural Enterprise, Natural Economy: The Germans didn’t know they lived in a fascist state until they had been living under it for … Continue reading

Posted in Our Culture / Ourselves | 2 Comments

Saturday Links for the Week — September 1, 2007 — The Natural Places Edition

Preserving and Recreating Natural Places It seems to me that our only hope to inspire future generations to want to preserve and recreate natural spaces is to show them so they can experience it first-hand. We cannot expect people to … Continue reading

Posted in Our Culture / Ourselves | 2 Comments