All Money Should be Used for Public Good
We have empirical evidence that extreme options never win in this procedure. They always lose.
We have empirical evidence that extreme options never win in this procedure. They always lose.
One of the notable features of Growthism is the way it takes growth to be entirely normal and, at the same time, understands it as the very recent triumph of humanity over the awful conditions it faced for the first two hundred thousand years of its existence as a species.
My name is Nakiguli Margaret, and my story is now filled with hope.
CommonsPolis— a civil society initiative to create dialogue between progressive municipalist movements and city governments, and European citizens — held an encounter described as “a common space for exchange; cities in transition and citizen struggles” in Paris on November 24, 2016…
As our energy sources change, our economy will likely evolve and adapt—perhaps in surprising ways.
Today there are compelling echos drawing social, environmental and spiritual movements into shared fields of understanding and activism.
Local lean economies are emerging that can be described quite accurately as ‘island cultures,’
“Very serious people often tell us that the word “degrowth” is too negative. People like happy, positive, nice things. Sure, the economy is systematically destroying life on earth. But nobody wants to degrow it. Instead, these critics prefer words like “post-growth,” “a-growth,” “re-growth”, even the mythical “green growth.” They want to create a circular economy, … Read more
In the matter of Free Trade, as with any ideology, there are none so zealous as the newly converted.
Of course we all know at some level what a “healthy shopping season” is really healthy for: the economy–that thing, that thing which giveth, it is true, but also taketh away, and is still the only game in town.
The election of America’s most prominently parasitic and malicious real estate capitalist to Chief Executive says “this is what happens, Larry.”
In the contemporary political landscape, the commons blur the lines of the ‘private’ and ‘public’ sectors as we have known them in the last century.