Originally posted by eighthobstruction
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Greta Thunberg at EU
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Richard Tarleton
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostOn a quick read-through - ownership does not necessarily have a bearing on food production - quite a lot of the land in question is owned by the few yet extremely productive food-wise (Dyson), some (Scottish Highlands) is of little or no use for food production (not saying the concentration of ownership isn't bad for all sorts of reasons, just that it's not necessarily relevant to the sustainability debate).bong ching
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Originally posted by eighthobstruction View Post....as I say beyond my pay grade....food being of great importance....but also some change ref employment, production, what to produce....who gets what is produced, a definite need for more equality [or some might call it Equality] goes with sustainability surely....all things Transport, policy, production , use , who uses.... imaginative Community Hubs....and my goodness what to do with the Underclass....etc etc....Sustainability cannot be ppossible without some sort of Social form of Community....What of the Land Owners then [+ their private Security Forces....} Is Sustainability available to 62 Million persons....??
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI raised some of these issues earlier on this and many other threads on the forum. Totally blanked. Same the jazz bored. I may have caught the Lat syndrome. Do you ever get the idea you've outstayed your welcome here? 'cos I do.
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostI find your posts on these issues very interesting. However, having no basic, let alone advanced knowledge in the related fields makes it difficult to discuss or even respond. Do you think you could possibly make it, er...non-specialist friendly from time to time?
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI will try. Rightly or wrongly I sometimes get the impression that making posts too long just puts people off, so I admit I do tend to resort to condensed ways of putting ideas across. It's hard to avoid when dealing multifaceted issues, and you don't want to leave anything out you think needs including in the thinking about a subject!
To add a personal view on the thread, I usually find myself being conflicted between the kinds of approaches that you so eloquently outline ( and where my heart probably is), and approaches born out of experience driven by the day job, ( perhaps my head rather than heart ? ) of how we can make the best of and in a very flawed system, what you might call ( I suspect ) papering over the cracks.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostS-A, I usually take time to read your posts on such matters, but your knowledge of socialist and other Left theory and approaches is so far in advance of my own, that I don't usually have a response that would add any value. And though it it is nice for the writer to get a response, it can become tedious for all involved if a stream of " Thanks for an interesting post" type posts is the sole outcome.
To add a personal view on the thread, I usually find myself being conflicted between the kinds of approaches that you so eloquently outline ( and where my heart probably is), and approaches born out of experience driven by the day job, ( perhaps my head rather than heart ? ) of how we can make the best of and in a very flawed system, what you might call ( I suspect ) papering over the cracks.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostIt's not easy knowing at what level to "pitch" sometimes without risking being condescending and talking down.
Same prolly goes for Big Band Jazz .I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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....Having just watched Saving Mr Banks....about Mary Poppins S/A....all I can say is....https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-lXH9O94jakbong ching
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>>>"This is all part of a much bigger systemic breakdown, the solution to which can only involve producing more locally and consuming less more sustainably - the science and technology for which, along with birth control, are already in existence. Weaning people off the means of temporary escape from the everyday of life as we know it will of course be difficult as long as there is ever-increasing reliance on travel to far off places, where populations are being drawn into so-called eco-tourism to fulfil national income requirements. On top of all this are the provisioned addictions of capitalist culture, designed to procure conformity to stereotypes that can be changed at an advertiser's whim, and which substitute consumption for creativity, in turn shaping and delimiting the popular to the instantly digestible. In a travestied inversion of values, what it means to be free is thereby invested in individual purchasing power, the delusory yet perennially vaunted freedom to choose.""<<<
....yeah what he said....S/a you should try being dyslexic for a day....actually makes certain things easier....bong ching
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostI found myself nodding in agreement while reading SA's posts on this thread. But I have not much further to add...Originally posted by teamsaint View PostS-A, I usually take time to read your posts on such matters, but your knowledge of socialist and other Left theory and approaches is so far in advance of my own, that I don't usually have a response that would add any value. And though it it is nice for the writer to get a response, it can become tedious for all involved if a stream of " Thanks for an interesting post" type posts is the sole outcome.
And I'm sure I'm not the only Forumista who realizes that one of S_A's posts needs more attention than the "banter"-type replies, or the "I'd get the Karajan if I were you"-type replies. I move away from them, intending to return with a reply - but by that time the conversation has moved on.
My silence does not mean that I don't value the posts greatly.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Thanks to all for the replies. I hasten to say I'm not getting at anyone in particular, and it's not "me" taking any offense but rather someone, it could be anyone and perhaps should be, who just happens in this instance to be me trying to distil several streams of ideas from different sources into a comprehensive take on things I feel generally to be absent, or proceeding in different silos that are treated as if in total ignorance of each other.
The theory that everything goes together, interlinked and mutually inter-related belongs to several "disciplines" - in my case Taoism, Buddhism, Marxism, Ecology, certain strands of sociology and psychology - while other traditions are schismatic and divisive: I try and articulate points of connection and and explore that. I've been gathering evidence for my case now for more than fifty years - my book shelves, doubtless like others who contribute to this forum, representing a fount of the world's most elevated thinkings over the centuries. Maybe one day others will benefit from them!
I happen to think there to be a core underlier in common to most of what is wrong today, from which most else emanates, and for my bearings I tend to refer back to it. Sometimes discussions reach towards that point and then break off - the thread runs out of steam; events have "moved on" etc.; but the main principles underlying them are still in the driving seat! Now that the games players have left the forum and we can exchange views without misprepresentation, throwing wobblies or being abusive, this could be the good place to bring them together, roughly sums up my feelings about it all.
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Richard Tarleton
You'll certainly find ecology, psychology and anthropology on my shelves, S_A I had a Buddhist and Taoist phase, some basic principles still inform my approach to life and the natural world, which has been my career.... I too read your posts carefully and sometimes find myself disagreeing with your political and social analysis so profoundly I think it's best not to start - and I mean that in the friendliest possible sense, that this is just a message board, behind every statement or line (on both sides) there is a lifetime of thought and learning which is difficult to get across in a few lines, I don't want to write essays which nobody is going to read and quite simply they take up too much time (I'm going out birdwatching in a minute ).
Just a (simplistic) word about the present demonstrations - now I've cooled down after my immediately deleted post the other day - the UK contributes about 1% of the world's carbon emissions, and we're not doing too badly in switching to renewables. China and India contribute the biggest shares, Indonesian, Malaysian and Brazilian rainforests are being cut down at a terrifying rate....but I'm not going to participate further in this discussion.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostYou'll certainly find ecology, psychology and anthropology on my shelves, S_A I had a Buddhist and Taoist phase, some basic principles still inform my approach to life and the natural world, which has been my career.... I too read your posts carefully and sometimes find myself disagreeing with your political and social analysis so profoundly I think it's best not to start - and I mean that in the friendliest possible sense, that this is just a message board, behind every statement or line (on both sides) there is a lifetime of thought and learning which is difficult to get across in a few lines, I don't want to write essays which nobody is going to read and quite simply they take up too much time (I'm going out birdwatching in a minute ).
Just a (simplistic) word about the present demonstrations - now I've cooled down after my immediately deleted post the other day - the UK contributes about 1% of the world's carbon emissions, and we're not doing too badly in switching to renewables. China and India contribute the biggest shares, Indonesian, Malaysian and Brazilian rainforests are being cut down at a terrifying rate....but I'm not going to participate further in this discussion.
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