Friday, December 30, 2011

RT @YourAnonNews Couple Uses Music Video To Embarrass Bank Of America Into Closing On Their Loan - http://t.co/SGkM7YGY

RT @telecomix Orangutans learn iPad, Skype. Internauts welcome our new ape overlords: http://t.co/aeTS8pxd

Fwd: [P2P-F] Fw: PCI Messenger - Looking back, Looking forward

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "robert searle" <dharao4@yahoo.co.uk>
Date: Dec 30, 2011 4:01 AM
Subject: [P2P-F] Fw: PCI Messenger - Looking back, Looking forward
To: "p2p-foundation@lists.ourproject.org" <p2p-foundation@lists.ourproject.org>



----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Post Carbon Institute <newsletter@postcarbon.org>
To: dharao4@yahoo.co.uk
Sent: Friday, 30 December 2011, 0:06
Subject: PCI Messenger - Looking back, Looking forward
Post Carbon Institute banner
    2011 collage       contents

   1. the oil journey
   2. latest publications
   3. the end of growth
   4. energy bulletin picks
   5. transition us update
   
What a year it's been: revolutions, protests, financial crises, high oil prices, a tsunami, massive floods, record droughts,...and all the many personal stories behind these headline events. PCI readers know that we're experiencing the effects of overshoot on a finite planet. But the mainstream narrative is still focused on a return to economic growth at any and all costs—literally. Our work is therefore more urgent than ever.Together, with your support, we've punched above our weight in 2011, and we want to do even more in 2012. The first item on the agenda is our new customizable presentation—You Are Here: The Oil Journey— that you can deliver in your community. Following shortly will be the release of Michael Shuman's new book Local Dollars, Local Sense: How to Shift Your Money from Wall Street to Main Street and Achieve Real Prosperity, just the first in a series of Community Resilience Guides. There's so much more, and we need your support. If you haven't done so already, and can pitch in with a contribution, please donate here.Thanks again for your help this year in spreading the word, and giving us feedback and ideas. Our very best wishes to you and yours for the holidays.From all of us at Post Carbon Institute.

you are here: the oil journey

Thanks to your support, we have just completed "You Are Here: The Oil Journey." This is a customizable presentation *you* can use to tell your own journey and to invite new people to join the larger conversation.

Oil journey videoThis animated slide show delivers PCI's core message honestly, but in a compassionate way that...well, just watch it and see for yourself.

The recording presented above features the mellifluous voice of the legendary actor, author, screenwriter and narrator Peter Coyote. The video is intended as a model upon which you can base your own real-world presentations of the Oil Journey deck. Please feel free to share it with your friends and peers.

WOULD YOU LIKE TO PRESENT THE OIL JOURNEY IN YOUR COMMUNITY?
We'd love you to join our team of presenters. Contact us and we'll email you information about our coming Presenter Trainings.

WOULD YOU LIKE TO SUPPORT THIS PRESENTATION & PCI?
We'd love to have your support. In fact, we depend upon it. Donate now and we'll keep products like these coming!
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latest publications
Read, watch or listen to the latest content by our Fellows, Board, Advisers and Staff anytime on our website. Here are some selections from the last month:
Shift shopping logo Buying Local Yields More Jobs, Stronger Communities
Post by Michael Shuman • December 19, 2011
According to the National Retail Federation, Americans will spend an average of about $700 per person on holiday season shopping this year and, despite the hype surrounding Black Friday, the busiest shopping week... Read more
   
Bakery shop "Another world is not only possible...she's opening a bakery round the corner".
Post by Rob Hopkins • December 15, 2011
I spent a fascinating afternoon on Monday at an 'Economic Summit' (nowhere near as glamorous as it sounds) for Members of South Hams District Council... Read more
   
Stopwatch Making 2012 The Year Resilience Built
Post by Asher Miller • December 13, 2011
It's all too easy to feel that hope is lost. But with your help, we're determined to make 2012 the year that resilience built. 2011 has been another turbulent year... Read more
   
  more recent publications from our staff & fellows
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the end of growth
Richard Heinberg has been busy spreading the word about his new book The End of Growth, published by New Society Publishers. Catch some of Richard's recent press interviews and writing.
End of Growth cover Q&A: Richard Heinberg, author, The End of Growth: Adapting to Our New Economic Reality
Terence McNally podcast
Economists, politicians, and pundits insist recovery is at hand, yet unemployment remains high, real estate values continue to sink... Listen
   
COP17 panelist Behind the Durban Blame Game
Post by Richard Heinberg • December 9, 2011
Why did the Durban climate talks fail? Ultimately, the culprit is the near-universal pursuit of economic growth. All the major players want growth... Read more
   
  more on the end of growth
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energy bulletin highlights
Below is a selection of recent articles and media appearing on Energy Bulletin.
energy bulletin featured articles
Bread and cheese Soil Capital: A ground-level investing opportunity
by Ellie Winninghoff, FA Green
What would it be like to invest in—not just eat from—the veggie farmers, cheese artisans and ranchers at the local farmers' market? When Woody Tasch published his book, Inquiries into the Nature of Slow Money...Read more
energy bulletin featured media
Extraenvironmentalist logo Simplifying Complexity
by Justin Ritchie & Seth Moser-Katz The Extraenvironmentalist
In Extraenvironmentalist #31 we speak with Dr. Joseph Tainter about collapse, complexity and energy. Dr. Tainter recently co-authored Drilling Down which explains why the BP Gulf Oil spill occurred in terms of the complexity... Listen
 
  more from energy bulletin
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transition US update

A monthly update from the US regional hub of the international Transition movement.

Transition UNM classroomThis year has been a full year for us at Transition US. Here are some highlights of key moments: we welcomed our 100th Official Transition Initiative in an American city/town (and we're now at #107); over 1500 actions in 226 different cities and towns were leveraged as part of our 350 Home & Garden Challenge, which we organized in collaboration with a crew of amazing partner organizations; 24 two-day Training for Transition (T4T) courses were held across the country; we hosted over 30 webinars and online dialogue events, including (click on the link for the recording): 
In 2012 we plan to mobilize thousands of new residents, create innumerable sustainability actions and provide the community networks and cross-sector collaborations needed to Transition our towns and cities across the US. We will need your help to do it. Please consider a financial gift to Transiiton US today
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Image credit: Combine harvesters — Bloomberg News
Image credit: Water stream — John 'K'/flickr
Image credit: Bread & cheese — im just jody/flickr
Image credit: Students explore Transition in the University Setting at the University of New Mexico — Transition UNM
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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Fwd: Keep the Change? Maybe Not.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "The Daily GOOD" <hello@goodinc.com>
Date: Dec 29, 2011 3:23 PM
Subject: Keep the Change? Maybe Not.
To: "GOOD Readers" <technologiclee@gmail.com>

GOOD
 
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Spare Change for Social Change: Can Wasted Subway Fees Be Used for Public Good?
TODAY'S GOOD



23% nixed nickles 30% dissed dimes 47% mini-fund

New York City may be one of the most expensive places on earth, but that doesn't stop subway users from casting millions of dollars worth of rides to the wind each year. The Metropolitan Transit Authority generously gives subway riders a 7 percent bonus when they purchase a multi-ride pass. Yet this bonus often turns into a burden: 70 extra cents on a $10 purchase doesn't get anyone too far when a single ride costs $2.25. The flimsy plastic MetroCards are often chucked or ignored when the balance runs below the value of a ride, amounting to more than $52 million in unused fares each year.

A new project from a trio of New York University students seeks to transform that monumental sum into a public good. MetroChange is their concept for a charity platform that would make it simple for subway riders to donate spare change to nonprofits. With a swipe at MetroChange kiosks set up in highly-trafficked subway stations around the city, subway riders could scan their card to see how much change was left. Then, with the push of a button, they could donate the balance. At the end of every month, MetroChange would turn that change into social change by donating it to charity.

According to MetroChange, the idea would work best if the kiosks targeted tourists, who are less likely to refill their cards. But while it sounds like a simple, effective idea, founders Stepan Boltalin, Genevieve Hoffman, and Paul Maywill need to convince a key partner to sign on: the MTA. According to MetroChange's blog, they see two likely ways to partner: The MTA could agree to return the "unused value back to the community where it originated" or an outside group could agree to make a monthly match. MetroChange is actively recruiting partners. Message them via Twitter to send your ideas. –Zak Stone

Photo via (cc) Flickr user paulmmay

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

RT @leashless RT @smrki: The Moral Underground: How Ordinary Americans Subvert an Unfair Economy by Lisa Dodson http://t.co/bkL9AEKl

RT @darealmaozedong RT @AJEnglish: Op-ed: "The world's greatest shortage is not of oil, clean water or food, but of moral leadership." http://t.co/cJBMXVsJ ...

Fwd: Occupy Your Sidewalk With A Micro-Library

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "The Daily GOOD" <hello@goodinc.com>
Date: Dec 28, 2011 3:00 PM
Subject: Occupy Your Sidewalk With A Micro-Library
To: "GOOD Readers" <technologiclee@gmail.com>

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Occupy Your Sidewalk With A Micro-Library
TODAY'S GOOD



33% librarian 33% community activist 33% carpenter


Occupy Wall Street
's "people's library" helped popularize the idea of book lending that takes place outside of library stacks. Now ousted from Liberty Plaza, OWS's community library has been shuttling alternative books to New York City protests via shopping carts and other "mobile units." Meanwhile, guerrilla librarians are occupying street corners across the country with more permanent community-curated micro-libraries.

Since 2007, alterna-lender Colin McMullan has been learning the "quirks" of city regulations to figure out how to stash free reading materials in public spaces. McMullan launched Corner Libraries on a New Haven street corner before transplanting the idea to New York City. There, the project has toyed with distributing books via a chained-up sidewalk school desk, a book shed built to mimic a newspaper stand, a doghouse-shaped library living on a hand cart in Williamsburg, and now, micro-libraries built into tree pits on the city's streets. The library's current collection includes foraging tipsheet The Wild Food Trail Guide, a zine of handmade postcard art, and a mysterious self-made CD titled "I <3 Russian." "Members" are invited to donate their own pieces to the collection, or rent out materials for up to two weeks at a time.

McMullan isn't the only lender operating outside the official library system—a group called the Little Free Library has installed hundreds of micro-lending stations largely on private properties around the United States and Canada. Thanks to volunteer "stewards" who build and install the mailbox-like structures outside their homes and workplaces, readers can find free reading materials in a front yard in Fayetteville, Arkansas; a dentist's office in Madison, Wisconsin; and an elementary school in El Paso, Texas. Amateur lenders can start their own mini libraries with the help of the organization's crowdsourced tips, which help would-be librarians find repurposed building materials, curate their own unique collections, and learn how to protect against vandals.

Little Free Library was launched in the hopes of extending "the reach of your public library to parts of your community that might not otherwise use it," while Corner Libraries is "meant to encourage alternative and private presses" not supported by mainstream book lenders. McMullan told The Atlantic that he believes the library mindset "should be extended to everything, from tools to kitchen gadgets and sports equipment." Indeed, the librarians' websites read like manifestos, and the ethos is universal: "You can't steal a free book."

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