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9
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • It is terrifying in its wickedness, yes. But it also opens up powerful possibilities for resistance. To bet against the future on this scale – to bank on your bunker – is to betray, on the most basic level, our duties to one another, to the children we love, and to every other life form with whom we share a planetary home. This is a belief system that is genocidal at its core and treasonous to the wonder and beauty of this world. We are convinced that the more people understand the extent to which the right has succumbed to the Armageddon complex, the more they will be willing to fight back, realizing that absolutely everything is now on the line.

  • There's a lovely quote by Rebecca Solnit, "to hope is to accept despair as an emotion but not as an analysis. To recognize that what is unlikely is possible, just as what likely is not inevitable."

  • Holy cow. Thanks for sharing - I had no idea this existed.

  • Solarpunk @slrpnk.net

    I'm writing a book on how environmentalist themes in The Lord of the Rings are relevant for the modern movement to confront the climate crisis

  • I've never seen this chart. What a story!

  • solarpunk memes @slrpnk.net

    Soil scientists, so pesky!

  • Solarpunk @slrpnk.net

    At a CT co-op, housing is affordable – and tenants run the property

  • I love it. And somewhere back in the base there's a hardbitten sargeant breaking in the raw recruits, chewing them out for flying to get to their base and making them scrub the bathroom with organic cleaners on a compostable toothbrush.

  • ha! I have the same background. Great minds...

  • Fiction @slrpnk.net

    Sharing my Solarpunk Reading List

    bookwyrm.social /list/185/s/solarpunk
  • I've found that town-level organizing is satisfying, and a scale where a small group of individuals can help make bigger change.

    My town government agreed a few years ago to adopt the sustainablect.org framework, which has a bunch of green/sustainable elements I am really excited about.

    Once the town agrees in principle to a framework, you can advocate for policies based on that framework, and mobilize people who are particularly interested in one issue (say, composting!) or another (sidewalk networks! green energy!)

    The trick, I think, is to find a framework the town government is willing to support (in principle) with specific changes. The fact that there's a certification program to go along with the framework that has prestige is really helpful. But really, the core of it all is to find a bunch of folks in your community that want to push things forward towards a goal with a shared vision. Which means that ultimately community organizing is what makes it possible, in my experience.

  • Self-hosting @slrpnk.net

    How Indigenous Groups Are Leading the Way on Data Privacy

    www.scientificamerican.com /article/how-indigenous-groups-are-leading-the-way-on-data-privacy/
  • Fiction @slrpnk.net

    The Terraformers is a lovely book about balancing ecosystems

    bookwyrm.social /book/840945/s/the-terraformers
  • Open source is like a pressure valve for how much companies can screw people over. I hope this becomes a big thing.

  • Solarpunk @slrpnk.net

    Disguising solar panels as ancient Roman tiles in Pompeii

    solarpunks.net /post/705972567678304256/invisible-solar-invisible-solar-is-a-new-pv