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Here’s the Future of America

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by John Robb on June 25, 2012

Writing from:  Aspen, CO.  I’m speaking/attending the National Geographic Environmental Conference (focus of the conference:  adapting to climate change).

I had the good fortune of sitting on a conference panel with Mayor Fetterman of Braddock, PA.

He’s a great bear of a guy (he makes me, at 6′ 1″ and well built, look small in comparison), but despite his size, he looked like he was slowly being crushed by the weight of the world when he showed up at the panel.

His story explained why.  He’s spent the last decade trying to save a storied American town, crushed by global economic and financial forces.  Forces that gutted a prosperous steel town of 18,000 with some historical treasures (e.g. the first Carnegie Library) and a thriving retail sector.


When Fetterman arrived in Braddock, the town was already in shambles.  The population had fallen to below 3,000 and gang crime was rampant.  In fact, the landscape of the town was so bleak, the town was used as a setting for the darkest apocalypse movie I’ve ever seen, “The Road

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3ACondemned_houses_in_Braddock%2C_Pennsylvania.jpgCondemned houses in Braddock, Pennsylvania

Undeterred, he set to work.  He cleaned up the crime.  Built a local organic farm inside a no-go zone, to produce food for a town without a supermarket.   He also established a craftwork that produces high quality and inexpensive ($15) ceramic water filters.

However, despite this progress, it seemed that with every advance he made, something always dragged him backwards.

The day I met him, the good news was that a well-known organic chef was opening a restaurant in Braddock (due in part to the success of the organic farm there).  The bad news came in a phone call that woke him at 5AM:  somebody in his small town had been shot.  More bad headlines.

“The future is already here, it’s just not very evenly distributed.”

William Gibson

When I met the Mayor, it was pretty clear to me that the story of Braddock isn’t a story about how a steel town failed.

Instead, Braddock is our future.

A future created by a perfect storm of financial and environmental disasters that is already ravaging the landscape.  A future that will manufacture tens of thousands of Braddocks — small towns to major cities mired in the intractable muck of an economic depression (D2).

Fortunately, we have the capacity to prevent this outcome in our communities.

However, as we saw with Mayor Fetterman’s heroic yet Sisyphean task to make Braddock resilient, it’s much tougher to do after the damage is done.  After the wealth, skills, and talent leaves.  After the infrastructure and social networks decay.

In this way, Braddock serves as a cautionary tale.  A warning from the future.

This is the message I brought to Aspen.   Braddock tells us to get to work, sooner rather than later, on building Networked Resilient Communities together.

Networked Resilient Communities bounce back when faced with the types of financial, economic, and moral assaults that reduced Braddock to dysfunction.

Networked Resilient Communities integrate the production of food, energy, and water into the community’s fabric.  They smartly leverage the best technologies and methodologies (e.g. permaculture) to maximize the quality, quantity, and availability of essential goods.  This production will prove invaluable when departure of retailers depart (Braddock lost all of its retail, including its supermarket) and utility providers find it impossible to provide regular service (blackouts, disruptions, bankruptcy, depletion, shortages, rationing…).

Networked Resilient Communities aren’t insular.  They understand a larger world exists and even if the economy is depressed, they are actively entrepreneurial.  They seek new sources of income.  However, they don’t do this by courting large businesses.  They do this by helping small artisinal businesses and co-ops export goods and services to the larger world.   A group of nimble, small businesses like these produce a diverse income stream (where if one goes dry, another takes its place).  They also can be flexible on terms (trade, barter, new currencies, etc.) in ways that larger businesses cannot.

Networked Resilient Communities build local platforms that make it easier for everyone in the community to produce.  From tool libraries to Saturday fix-it sessions to hackerspaces t0 co-working spaces to solar co-ops to community supported agriculture to garden allotments to community currencies.   Platforms that make the common things needed for productive tasks easier and less expensive.  Platforms that make community building and business formation easier.

The Good News:  The Resilient Community Network is Growing.

We’re getting more innovators and contributors every day.  People dealing and solving the problems — from overcoming antiquated zoning to finding alternative means of financing projects — we face.

If you are already a member of this amazing community, thanks again.

If you aren’t, join us.  The future awaits.

Your future is local, productive, and connected analyst,

JOHN ROBB
PS:  Let’s design/copy, prototype, and test methods our compatriots in Braddock can use to become resilient.   Methods that many will find very useful in the future.

reposted from: http://www.resilientcommunities.com/heres-the-future-of-america/

Last Updated ( Thursday, 03 January 2013 21:18 )
 

Positive Possibilities Self Governance vs. Getting Fracked

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by Josephine Laing

Two hundred years ago women and slaves were property.  If a woman was raped, she had no recourse under the law because she had no rights.  However, her husband, the property owner could sue her rapist for damages if he chose.  If a slave ran away, he was guilty of theft, having stolen himself from his rightful (full of rights) owner.  When we have no rights we can not govern ourselves.

The Declaration of Independence grants all of us the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.  Two hundred years ago this did not include women or people of color.  Corporations have been granted personhood and have progressively accrued human rights and legal privileges which seriously undermine our ability to democratically govern ourselves. 

[For more information on this aspect of this topic, please connect with the Move to Ammend Group in SLO.http://www.facebook.com/pages/MOVE-TO-AMEND-of-San-Luis-Obispo-County/189896431102174 ]

And just like two hundred years ago, once again we face the privileged few who have unjustly claimed the right to own as their property our air, our drinking water and the quality of of very lives.  Back in the 1950's, Rosa Parks refused to acknowledge the unjust rights of the privileged ones and asserted her right to sit anywhere she like on the bus.  She met the opposition of those who chose to uphold unjust laws and then gained support from others who saw the injustice there and joined her cause and changed the course of history.

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 23 May 2012 12:02 ) Read more...
 

Gas prices set records, soon to reach new highs

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A sign outside of a Shell station indicates that all grades of gasoline have already surpassed the $4 mark on Feb. 21, 2012 in Miami, Fl.
A sign outside of a Shell station indicates that all grades of gasoline have already surpassed the $4 mark on Feb. 21, 2012 in Miami, Fl. (as well as the central coast of California)
Credits:
Joe Raedle/ Getty Images

Gas prices set records, soon to reach new highs

Mainstream media outlets throughout the country are now reporting on record-breaking gas prices, the highest ever for this time of the year.  Also making the rounds is the commonly cited prediction by former Shell CEO John Hofmeisterthat there is a better than 50 percent chance that gas prices will reach $5 a gallon by this summer in the U.S.  This is in spite of the fact that U.S. oil production is up and oil consumption down, since 2008.  What the media isn’t reporting on is the rest of what Hofmeister said in a recent peak oil themed debate he had with Tad Patzek on Feb. 14.

In the debate, Hofmeister said that we’re heading for $7 to $8 gas and rationing by 2015, and rolling blackouts and brownouts.  He also made clear that oil is the lubricant of the world’s economy, and there is no alternative.  He further stated that China, which used 8 million barrels of oil a day last year, uses 9 million now, and is projected to use 15 million by 2015.  India will go from 4 to 7 in the same time frame.  And, that there’s “not enough oil out there to meet that demand.”

 

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 28 March 2012 10:48 ) Read more...
 
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