Localization: An Alternative to the New Normal

Guest Post by Colin Todhunter

‘World Localization Day’ will be celebrated on 20 June. Organised by the non-profit Local Futures, this annual coming together of people from across the world began in 2020 and focuses on the need to localise supply-chains and recover our connection with nature and community.

The stated aim is to:

galvanize the worldwide localization movement into a force for systemic change”.

Local Futures, founded by Helena Norberg-Hodge, urges us to imagine a very different world, one in which most of our food comes from nearby farmers who ensure food security year round and where the money we spend on everyday goods continues to recirculate in the local economy.

We are asked to imagine local businesses providing ample, meaningful employment opportunities, instead of our hard-earned cash being immediately siphoned off to some distant corporate headquarters.

Small farms would be key in this respect. They are integral to local markets and networks, short supply chains, food sovereignty, more diverse cropping systems and healthier diets. And they tend to serve the food requirements of communities rather than the interests of big business, institutional investors and shareholders half a world away.

If the COVID lockdowns and war in Ukraine tell us anything about our food system, it is that decentralised, regional and local community-owned food systems based on short(er) supply chains that can cope with future shocks are now needed more than ever.

The report Towards a Food Revolution: Food Hubs and Cooperatives in the US and Italy offers some pointers for creating sustainable support systems for small food producers and food distribution. Alternative, resilient food models and community-supported agriculture are paramount.

Localization involves strengthening and rebuilding local economies and communities and restoring cultural and biological diversity. The ‘economics of happiness’ is central to this vision, rather than an endless quest for GDP growth and the alienation, conflict and misery this brings.

It is something we need to work towards because multi-billionaire globalists have a dystopian future mapped out for humanity which they want to impose on us all – and it is diametrically opposed to what is stated above.

The much-publicised ‘great reset’ is integral to this dystopia. It marks a shift away from ‘liberal democracy’ towards authoritarianism. At the same time, there is the relentless drive towards a distorted notion of a ‘green economy’, underpinned by the rhetoric of ‘sustainable consumption’ and ‘climate emergency’.

The great reset is really about capitalism’s end-game. Those promoting it realise the economic and social system must undergo a reset to a ‘new normal’, something that might no longer resemble ‘capitalism’.

End-game capitalism

Capital can no longer maintain its profitability by exploiting labour alone. This much has been clear for some time. There is only so much surplus value to be extracted before the surplus is insufficient.

Historian Luciana Bohne notes that the shutting down of parts of the economy was already happening pre-COVID as there was insufficient growth, well below the minimum tolerable 3% level to maintain the viability of capitalism. This, despite a decades-long attack on workers and corporate tax cuts.

The system had been on life support for some time. Credit markets had been expanded and personal debt facilitated to maintain consumer demand as workers’ wages were squeezed. Financial products (derivatives, equities, debt, etc) and speculative capitalism were boosted, affording the rich a place to park their profits and make money off money. We have also seen the growth of unproductive rentier capitalism and stock buy backs and massive bail outs courtesy of taxpayers.

Moreover, in capitalism, there is also a tendency for the general rate of profit to fall over time.

And this has certainly been the case according to writer Ted Reese, who notes it has trended downwards from an estimated 43% in the 1870s to 17% in the 2000s.

The 2008 financial crash was huge. But by late 2019, an even bigger meltdown was imminent. Many companies could not generate enough profit and falling turnover, squeezed margins, limited cashflows and highly leveraged balance sheets were prevalent. In effect, economic growth was already grinding to a halt prior to the massive stock market crash in February 2020.

Fabio Vighi, professor of critical theory, describes how, in late 2019, the Swiss Bank of International Settlements, BlackRock (the world’s most powerful investment fund), G7 central bankers, leading politicians and others worked behind closed doors to avert a massive impending financial meltdown.

The Fed soon began an emergency monetary programme, pumping hundreds of billions of dollars per week into financial markets. Not long after, COVID hit and lockdowns were imposed. The stock market did not collapse because lockdowns occurred. Vighi argues lockdowns were rolled out because financial markets were collapsing.

Closing down the global economy under the guise of fighting a pathogen that mainly posed a risk to the over 80s and the chronically ill seemed illogical to many, but lockdowns allowed the Fed to flood financial markets (COVID relief) with freshly printed money without causing hyperinflation. Vighi says that lockdowns curtailed economic activity, thereby removing demand for the newly printed money (credit) in the physical economy and preventing ‘contagion’.

Using lockdowns and restrictions, smaller enterprises were driven out of business and large sections of the pre-COVID economy were shut down. This amounted to a controlled demolition of parts of the economy while the likes of Amazon, Microsoft, Meta (Facebook) and the online payment sector – platforms which are dictating what the ‘new normal’ will look like – were clear winners in all of this.

The rising inflation that we currently witness is being blamed on the wholly avoidable conflict in Ukraine. Although this tells only part of the story, the conflict and sanctions seem to be hitting Europe severely: if you wanted to demolish your own economy or impoverish large sections of the population, this might be a good way to go about it.

However, the massive ‘going direct’ helicopter money given to the financial sector and global conglomerates under the guise of COVID relief was always going to have an impact once the global economy reopened.

Similar extraordinary monetary policy (lockdowns) cannot be ruled out in the future: perhaps on the pretext of another ‘virus’ but possibly based on the notion of curtailing human activity due to ‘climate emergency’. This is because raising interest rates to manage inflation could rapidly disrupt the debt-bloated financial system (an inflated Ponzi scheme) and implode the entire economy.

Permanent austerity

But lockdowns, restrictions or creating mass unemployment and placing people on programmable digital currencies to micromanage spending and decrease inflationary pressures could help to manage the crisis. ‘Programmable’ means the government determining how much you can spend and what you can spend on.

How could governments legitimise such levels of control? By preaching about reduced consumption according to the creed of ‘sustainability’. This is how you would ‘own nothing and be happy’ if we are to believe this well-publicised slogan of the World Economic Forum (WEF).

But like neoliberal globalization in the 1980s – the great reset is being given a positive spin, something which supposedly symbolises a brave new techno-utopian future.

In the 1980s, to help legitimise the deregulated neoliberal globalisation agenda, government and media instigated an ideological onslaught, driving home the primacy of ‘free enterprise’, individual rights and responsibility and emphasising a shift away from the role of state, trade unions and the collective in society.

Today, we are seeing another ideological shift: individual rights (freedom to choose what is injected into your own body, for instance) are said to undermine the wider needs of society and – in a stark turnaround – individual freedom is now said to pose a threat to ‘national security’, ‘public health’ or ‘safety’.

A near-permanent state of ‘emergency’ due to public health threats, climate catastrophe or conflict (as with the situation in Ukraine) would conveniently place populations on an ongoing ‘war footing’. Notions of individual liberty and democratic principles would be usurped by placing the emphasis on the ‘public interest’ and protecting the population from ‘harm’. This would facilitate the march towards authoritarianism.

As in the 1980s, this messaging is being driven by economic impulses. Neoliberalism privatised, deregulated, exploited workers and optimised debt to the point whereby markets are now kept afloat by endless financial injections.

The WEF says the public will ‘rent’ everything they require: stripping the right of personal ownership under the guise of ‘sustainable consumption’ and ‘saving the planet’. Where the WEF is concerned, this is little more than code for permanent austerity to be imposed on the mass of the population.

Metaverse future

At the start of this article, readers were asked to imagine a future based on a certain set of principles associated with localization. For one moment, imagine another. The one being promoted by the WEF, the high-level talking shop and lobby group for elite interests headed by that avowed globalist and transhumanist Klaus Schwab.

As you sit all day unemployed in your high-rise, your ‘food’ will be delivered via an online platform bought courtesy of your programmable universal basic income digital money. Food courtesy of Gates-promoted farms manned by driverless machines, monitored by drones and doused with chemicals to produce crops from patented GM seeds for industrial ‘biomatter’ to be engineered, processed and constituted into something resembling food.

Enjoy and be happy eating your fake food, stripped of satisfying productive endeavour and genuine self-fulfilment. But really, it will not be a problem. You can sit all day and exist virtually in Zuckerberg’s fantasy metaverse. Property-less and happy in your open prison of mass unemployment, state dependency, track and chip health passports and financial exclusion via programmable currency.

A world also in which bodily integrity no longer exists courtesy of a mandatory vaccination agenda linked to emerging digital-biopharmaceutical technologies. The proposed World Health Organization pandemic treaty marks a worrying step in this direction.

This ‘new normal’ would be tyrannical, but the ‘old normal’ – which still thrives – was not something to be celebrated. Global inequality is severe and environmental devastation and human dislocation has been increasing. Dependency and dispossession remain at the core of the system, both on an individual level and at local, regional and national levels. New normal or old normal, these problems will persist and become worse.

Green imperialism

The ‘green economy’ being heavily promoted is based on the commodification of nature, through privatization, marketization and monetary valuation. Banks and corporations will set the agenda – dressed in the garb of ‘stakeholder capitalism’, a euphemism for governments facilitating the needs of powerful global interests. The fear is that the proposed system will weaken environmental protection laws and regulations to facilitate private capital.

The banking sector will engage in ‘green profiling’ and issue ‘green bonds’ and global corporations will be able to ‘offset’ (greenwash) their environment-degrading activities by, for example, protecting or planting a forest elsewhere (on indigenous people’s land) or perhaps even investing in (imposing) industrial agriculture which grows herbicide-resistant GMO commodity crop monocultures that are misleadingly portrayed as ‘climate friendly’. Imperialism wrapped in green.

Relying on the same thinking and the same interests that led the world to where it is now does not seem like a great idea. This type of ‘green’ is first and foremost a multi-trillion market opportunity for lining pockets and part of a strategy that may well be used to secure compliance required for the ‘new normal’.

The future needs to be rooted in the principles of localization.

For this, we need look no further than the economics and the social relations that underpin tribal societies (for example, India’s indigenous peoples). The knowledge and value systems of indigenous peoples promote long-term genuine sustainability by living within the boundaries of nature and emphasise equality, communality and sharing rather than separation, domination and competition.

Self-sufficiency, solidarity, localization and cooperation is the antidote to globalism and the top-down tyranny of programmable digital currencies and unaccountable, monopolistic AI-driven platforms which aim to monitor and dictate every aspect of life.

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57 Comments
Svarga Loka
Svarga Loka
April 29, 2022 7:35 am

“Localization” = just another word for a concept that I thought was the path toward a more desirable life for at least 2 decades now. The last few years have only put a magnifying glass on it, but it is not at all a novel idea.

Wideguy
Wideguy
  Svarga Loka
April 30, 2022 6:03 pm

I’m not sure what “localized supply chains” would look like in reality, but I’m pretty sure that where I live, if nothing was available that was not produced locally, there wouldn’t be much at all available.

Of course I have no idea how local “localized” is.

If you’ve been dreaming about ‘localizing’ your life for decades now, what’s held you back?

Arthur
Arthur
April 29, 2022 7:52 am

Does anyone see the irony in “World Localization Day?”

The nudgers and resetters will hijack this idea too.

Guest
Guest
  Arthur
April 29, 2022 8:16 am

I believe the actual word was Global

Wideguy
Wideguy
  Guest
April 30, 2022 6:04 pm

Why not go ahead and have a Universal Localization Day?

Ginger
Ginger
  Arthur
April 29, 2022 8:27 am

I’ve got a problem with it interfering with the month long Juneteenth celebrations and the homo pride month, not to mention all the sacrificial preparations for Summer Solstice. There is only so much time in a month.

Svarga Loka
Svarga Loka
  Ginger
April 29, 2022 8:35 am

I think I have written here before, my children refer to pride month as the time of year when gay people celebrate that they are not normal.

Wideguy
Wideguy
  Svarga Loka
April 30, 2022 6:05 pm

Lucky you that you got normal children.

Grumpy
Grumpy
  Arthur
April 29, 2022 9:12 am

Darn, you beat me to it. And it’s already hijacked. Too funny.
The real local folks are not bragging about it.

Wideguy
Wideguy
  Arthur
April 30, 2022 6:04 pm

Anarchists Unite!

Is that the same sort of thing?

Guest
Guest
April 29, 2022 9:05 am

Actually the Go Local, Homesteader movement must be really gaining momentum if these people are trying to co opt it.

Stucky
Stucky
April 29, 2022 9:11 am

Localization won’t help me.

99% of people in NJ are fucking libtard assholes.

Svarga Loka
Svarga Loka
  Stucky
April 29, 2022 9:14 am

You should localize with Maggie. At least for a visit.

We are going to Six Flags in New Jersey in May. Want to join us? We can ride rollercoasters drunk and vomit on the libtards.

The Duke of New York
The Duke of New York
  Svarga Loka
April 29, 2022 11:38 am

please post some pics of that

bucknp
bucknp
  Svarga Loka
April 29, 2022 3:29 pm

Perhaps relax in Big Bend area down here in Texas and forget theme parks? It won’t be too hot , yet maybe hot. Star gazing is worth it. And, Marfa Lights are accessible, depending where you are, 150 mile drive.

bucknp
bucknp
  Stucky
April 29, 2022 3:21 pm

No offense, one of my best liked coworkers when I was corporate was from NJ. I know we are not to tell stories. Anyway, he was a riot, always laughing , always drinking after hours, large quantities as he put it. I could tell though growing up in an environment where one learns to shake fists at taxi drivers…it is what it is.

Ken31
Ken31
  Stucky
April 29, 2022 3:26 pm

That number sounds a bit low, don’t you think?

bucknp
bucknp
  Ken31
April 29, 2022 5:30 pm

I have no clue what it would be like visiting there. Some beach? My old corporate friend had some stories. Found his number actually if it’s still good. Good friend from NJ, a riot. 😆

Wideguy
Wideguy
  Stucky
April 30, 2022 6:08 pm

I wouldn’t be at all surprised that 99% or more of the people you know in NJ are assholes, but really, how many people do you know? Why do you suppose that almost everybody you know is an asshole?
Could it be that people who aren’t assholes don’t want anything to do with you?

Stucky
Stucky
  Wideguy
April 30, 2022 6:16 pm

I personally know 5,831 people. They all love me.

The only people who think I am an asshole are an ex-wife, 2 family members, and 3 people on TBP.

Auntie Analogue
Auntie Analogue
April 29, 2022 9:27 am

Localization? Read E.F. Schumacher’s fifty-year-old book Small Is Beautiful.

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
  Auntie Analogue
April 29, 2022 12:45 pm

Available here … https://www.pdfdrive.com/small-is-beautiful-e30549384.html

Aunt Acid
Aunt Acid
  Auntie Analogue
April 29, 2022 7:30 pm

Hear, hear!

Fielding Mellish
Fielding Mellish
April 29, 2022 9:35 am

This is the way to end imperialism and affirm the dignity of the individual. This is the way we escape the New World Order and build a better world for ourselves. We must learn to fend for ourselves and rise above the fear mongering of the mass media. To exercise our free will in community with others. We can do it.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Fielding Mellish
April 30, 2022 6:10 pm

How do you imagine that will end imperialism?

Drat! I forgot to write ‘Wideguy’. Sorry.

The Boogie Man
The Boogie Man
April 29, 2022 9:50 am

“worldwide localization movement” Isn’t that sort of an Oxymoron?

Dan
Dan
April 29, 2022 11:07 am

TBT has a great article today, Amish Farmer Faces $250K Fine, Jail Time And Losing His Sustainable Farm For Processing His Own Meat. You can tell from the title what the problem is, and it’s not a failure of capitalism as claimed by this article.

Dan
Dan
  Dan
April 29, 2022 12:08 pm

TBP, obviously

Crush Limbraw
Crush Limbraw
April 29, 2022 12:05 pm

The already ongoing war with Russia which our brilliant rulers in DC are escalating will produce a global collapse of all our dependent systems and institutions……..which in turn……..will bring about localized networks out of sheer necessity.
That is HISTORY…..which does have a tendency to repeat itself because of our tendency toward ignorance and stupidity also having the same subsequent patterns of behavior.
No – we do NOT learn from history – we just use it to ‘splain WTF just happened.
Only the few can see…the rest, who are not only blind, even refuse to look….because seeing brings on responsibility for what we see and thus destroy our delusions.
We love our delusions! How do I know?
Been there….done that!
Seven years ago I thought my attempts to inform and edify on the net would contribute to at least some folks starting to look and thus see….but I was right in only one category – very few – but then I was reminded by many of the authors that I archived: “Truth and justice was never achieved by majority rule!”
It was always the few….with the help and providence of God! May it be so again.

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
April 29, 2022 12:11 pm

AUTHOR: please correct the link to the report about food hubs to …

https://media.churchillfellowship.org/documents/Yarnit_M_Report_2017_Final.pdf

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
April 29, 2022 12:35 pm

2 quotes from the author that I question:

‘Capital can no longer maintain its profitability by exploiting labour alone.’ and

‘This ‘new normal’ would be tyrannical, but the ‘old normal’ – which still thrives – was not something to be celebrated. Global inequality is severe and environmental devastation and human dislocation has been increasing.’

Nowhere does the author mention the overwhelmingly negative effects here in the United States and in the EU of mass migration from the 3d world and the total destruction of the 1st World that it is causing — almost as if by plan … Here in the United States, we’ve got tens of millions of illegal aliens already – and the current regime running the Country is looking at allowing more than 540,000 more every MONTH … for at least as long as it’s in power — more than 6,500,000 per year …

The grossly negative effects of such uncontrolled invasion by the 3d world into our Nation has been going on since at least the ’65 immigration law changes under LBJ … and we’ve had to deal with it daily ever since then.

As for the ‘inequality’ agenda — that’s not our problem … let the 3d world solve its own problems already — and that goes for everything south of our own borders to pretty much the rest of the world outside of Europe and Russia and the other former Soviet satellites.

Allowing — even even encouraging — mass migration from the 3d world into the 1st World brings nothing but enormous problems to the 1st World Nations that get invaded — we’ve witnessed that for decades here in the US and throughout the rest of the 1st World enough to realize how it jeopardizes our very existence — yet no one seems to want to do anything to stop it.

Why? Cui bono?

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anthony Aaron
April 30, 2022 2:19 pm

Wouldn’t hurt to acquaint yourself with the united fruit co. And its predecessor(s). The dulles bros. are in there somewhere. The U.S. has been
‘Evil/ Wicked central’ since… Origin of ‘banana republic’ self explanatory.
The deeper you dig the more disgusted you will become.

The panama canal was the direct result of civil war that our ‘government’ fomented. amazing how much incriminating evidence is still available with a little effort, probably change soon…already in progress?

Haven’t looked to see if the story of bill gates buying the GUI (Graphical User Interface) part of windows from his roommate for $50,000 with a loan from his daddy is still out there. OR his mother’s involvement with IBM

Wideguy
Wideguy
  Anonymous
April 30, 2022 6:24 pm

What?
If you don’t (or can’t) keep government under control and within the bounds you set for it (you did remember to set bounds, didn’t you?) it will certainly become a dangerous master.

Probably you should start with the Spanish American War, our first “progressive” global war of conquest.

Wideguy
Wideguy
  Anthony Aaron
April 30, 2022 6:19 pm

You think capitalists will no longer be able to “exploit” labor? Or just that capitalists will need help to remain profitable even if they continue “exploiting” labor?

Isn’t it in fact places like Communist China where labor is truly exploited?

I’m with you on global inequality being severe. It’s a shame that there are no well governed countries in the world, and most are certainly far worse than others!

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 29, 2022 2:45 pm

As with anything, mass non compliance is the answer. stop paying everything, mortgage, insurance, etc. Make the system default on tens of millions of people at once. Who will be there to enforce the corporate edicts when everyone stops paying everything. That’s why trillions are spent to keep us plebes divided.

Wideguy
Wideguy
  Anonymous
April 30, 2022 6:25 pm

Great idea! You go first.

rhs jr
rhs jr
April 29, 2022 3:04 pm

The imminent dollar and a food crisis was evident decades ago; Preppers went way out on a financial limb to buy some farm land and work like heck to make a small farm. They told others they needed to buy some land too and make a farm but almost nobody did. Telling people doesn’t work because most people are lazy. Suppose the Wright brothers told people how to fly? They had to really do it. I found out even showing people how to farm doesn’t work; I had to do it all for them because they all feel financially rich enough to just BUY STUFF: that’s the Most Popular dumb Plan A for 300 million Americans: and when the food is all gone, buy some more. There are 40 million Westerners just watching their last water for the next 30-50 years spin turbines to run their air conditioners, then roll away to preserve the snail darter fish in the delta. Most Popular Plan A won’t work in the foreseeable crisis coming; maybe as soon as late 2022, as the Grand Solar Minimum and TPTB Genocide Plans merge, and start having deadly consequences: there are way too many consumers and way not enough producers; just like the musical chairs game: no matter how 300 million rich Americans play the food game over the next 30-50 years, Most Popular Plan A will ultimately fail and most people won’t get enough to eat. Put some of that diversified portfolio into a farm or you will eat dirt (euphemism).

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  rhs jr
April 30, 2022 7:56 am

Sadly you’re correct. Part of the reason I was drawn to TBP was because there were far more folks here open to discussing this topic rationally than any other forum I was able to find on the Internet. Most people dabble in deep thought, like a hobby, very few consider it as the powerful tool it can be. Given all the possible outcomes and alternatives there are none as likely to provide a pathh to the future- our prime directive as a species- than through a connection to the land in the production of food. Everything else is a temporary luxury that arises from the production of those who make food their basic endeavor, no exception.

rhs jr
rhs jr
  hardscrabble farmer
April 30, 2022 1:02 pm

Food is the foundation of the life pyramid; no food = no life. The 300 million “rich” Americans sitting back expecting somebody else to always do the hard work bringing them food are blind to the very real Eddy Minimum (ref the Maunder Minimum etc). Is TPTB “global Warming” Big Lie mainly responsible? The Gravy Train is breaking down for the Urban/sub-urban, US SW, and far north areas esp for the next 30-50 years. The Simple Minded will ignore the warnings and pass on, and suffer (Prov 22:3). I’m sure to see Blue City daily Congo Long Pork Barbecue Specials. This will raise the IQs of Americans 50 years from now like no school system ever could. God made Darwin and both are right on.

Wideguy
Wideguy
  rhs jr
April 30, 2022 6:29 pm

Actually, farmers work hard to grow food with the hopeful expectation that people will buy what they produce. I expect farmers will keep doing just that as long as the government doesn’t make it impossible.

rhs jr
rhs jr
  Wideguy
April 30, 2022 10:23 pm

True but you understand that a Grand Solar Minimum has always significantly reduced what farmers can produce; that 98% of Americans currently do not produce any food, they buy it; therefore if things don’t change, there won’t be enough food and the price of food will skyrocket and many people will probably not be able to afford food and will starve. Given the change in the food situation, which could become real late 2022, a prudent person will make a garden and get small livestock to feed themself ASAP.

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 29, 2022 3:11 pm

Good take, but anyone else take issue with the author conflating capitalism and corporate-fascism?

Social welfare = central planning. So socialist states like the US, UK, et al are incompatible with a free market. Read some Hayek.

rhs jr
rhs jr
  Anonymous
April 29, 2022 5:40 pm

The Feds murdered Capitalism. The Big Farm/Retail Corp-gov’t Fascist complex has drive the capitalistic small farm far far from the consumer; we operate under the radar scope as individuals and as small scattered mom&pop markets (no grassroots meat & dairy allowed). When TSHTF, I bet Food Nazis will be busting up our small farms looking for Bird & Swine Flu, making us felons for protecting our crops from the Kings deer or selling without enough licenses, fees, taxes, reports, etc.

nuthinmuffin
nuthinmuffin
April 29, 2022 9:46 pm

I guess the economic principle of “economies of scale” will no longer apply. I like bison meat…who is going to be my local supplier? and I guess all of those guacamole addicts in the northeast will have to go without. see?

tr4head
tr4head
April 29, 2022 11:03 pm

The Amish had it right all along.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  tr4head
April 30, 2022 8:03 am

NEVER found the true reason behind them not having to pay social security, ‘Political’ for sure. Allegedly pay all other ‘tributes’. Something is fishy in Denmark, no matter the B.S.

rhs jr
rhs jr
  Anonymous
April 30, 2022 2:13 pm

Can they collect SS at 62?

anonymous
anonymous
  rhs jr
April 30, 2022 6:20 pm

I believe their rules are no paying in, no taking out.

Swrichmond
Swrichmond
April 30, 2022 7:37 am

Stopped reading where it turned into “capitalism is failing” and the whole labor theory of capital thing.

Propaganda always starts with statements you agree with, to get you to buy in to the author, and then leads you down an incrementally different path. This piece is a classic example.

The problem is not capitalism nor is it growth being bad or unsustainable. The problem is tbe sociopaths who bribe and murder their way into power so they can loot. Sociopathy is the unsustainable element.

Mooseman
Mooseman
  Swrichmond
April 30, 2022 10:34 am

I think you are partially ,actually mostly correct . I think the idea of a “never ending progress ” with respect to our material needs and wants , (more is always better , bigger is always better , faster is always better , more efficient is always better ), seems to always end up taking everything too far and yet we can hardly help ourselves but to do just that . The other idea I think it would be helpful for us to disabuse ourselves of is this idea of an engineered / imposed “system ” , whether that be “capitalism” or these redistributive” isms” ( marxism ,socialism’ communism) to solve our problems and usher in some “heaven on earth ” utopia whereby “we “have solved all of humanities ills by the imposition of said “imposed system”. For me I do not like the word “capitalism” for that reason and prefer the term “free market ” for all that it conjures up (in my mind at least ) the stuff of the spontantious , organic , “invisible hand “of a good rounding possession of free will ( liberty) materially , intellectually and of course spiritually so that we may be free to be “inspired “to “innovate ” using our “intuition” rather then the reverse . But then that seems to put us right back” off to the races” of the first of our fatal flaws that I touched upon , the inability for us to know where that “goldilocksian “” sweet spot “is that we should just leave well enough alone and be happy with it . In the end I suppose that the beggining of wisdom is most definitely humility in all the ways that that word can be used . Like the imperial college plandemic computer model or climate computer model projections, as smart as we think we are( and some of us are actually quite clever ) we cannot reach accurate conclusions without complete data sets and lets face it , there is ALWAYS the thing we didnt factor for when we are trying to solve these kind of complex problems . Its not what we knew , it was what we didnt even know we didnt know that came back and bit us in the ass . Perhaps that is why I marginally identify as politically conservative .. Other then that , I have no answers other than mind our own business , let our “conscience be our guides , and be careful what you ask for , you just might get it .
Oh yeah , and come to The Burning Platform occasionally to have fellowship with other” un- brain dead “.

Dan
Dan
  Mooseman
April 30, 2022 2:55 pm

I like Bill Bonner’s definition of capitalism: “what happens when nobody is holding a gun to people’s heads”. But, yeah, “free market” doesn’t have the baggage of all the straw man depictions of “capitalism” people set up so they can knock it down.

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 30, 2022 7:48 am

When the Fun REALLY starts, ALL farms will be the first targets. The smaller the better from the Horde perspective.

R. Williams
R. Williams
April 30, 2022 10:06 am

It sounds like a great idea….and would be if we were playing on a field from 10 or 20 years ago. Back then, the people had access to fertilizer, seeds, water, land….and the .gov was restrained, for the most part, from interfering. Our .gov has collaborated with the enemy and handed the reigns over to the “globalists.” Like in the game “Janga”, “they” are removing the essentials that we the people need to support ourselves and are fortifying their scheme with support from Monsanto and corporate America as well as their power and influence to usurp the Rule of Law, etc….and GOBBS and GOBBS of money.

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 30, 2022 11:13 am

World Localization Day. I can smell the astroturfing from over here. Marketed just like any other globalist awareness day. They ask us to “reimagine” localization just like some Americans had to “reimagine” policing.

anonymous
anonymous
  Anonymous
April 30, 2022 6:23 pm

Yeah, Helena Norberg-Hodge is turning in her grave. She founded Local Futures to save Ladakh from globalization. What happened? Ladakh got globalized. No doubt with the help of fine NGOs like the one she naively started.

I wonder what the definition of “localization” will be when they get done reimagining it. 🙂

Mesomorph
Mesomorph
April 30, 2022 11:52 am

The closer I spend my money to home the better chance I will see it again.

lamont cranston
lamont cranston
April 30, 2022 7:39 pm

Our section of the county has around 60K out of 200K as a whole. There is a huge farmer’s market 15 min from our house. Name it, it’s sold there. Grass fed beef, eggs, every imaginable produce.

We literally have a year round growing season when you factor in cabbage, collards, lettuce, radishes, onions, taters and all other cold weather crops. Already 20+ small green maters, peppers are blooming, okra too. Tons of cilantro & parsley.

Bought an electric pressure cooker canner. Cabbage & what remins of our celery going into it this week.

Sounds like localization if you ask me.

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