Dave Pollard, how to save the world
Much of what we believe, and much of what we are trying to change, is rooted in the terminology, the language we use to discuss it. If we want to change our own ideas, beliefs and worldviews, we need to stop using that terminology, because it leaves us anchored in the paradigm we are trying to escape.
archived May 11, 2012
Dave Pollard, how to save the world
I have read some of the "energy descent plans" of some of the leading Transition communities, and they strike me as being long on ideals and objectives and short on credible strategy -- how to get there from here...I have come to realize that our future is so "unimaginable" that strategic planning is impossible...Instead, I wondered if it made sense to have...a "Working Towards" plan -- specific ideas for helping us (1) build community and increase collaboration and sharing, (2) reduce dependence on imports and centralized systems and increase self-sufficiency, and (3) prepare psychologically and increase resilience for whatever the future holds.
Could we do this using the Resilience Circle model?
archived March 28, 2012
Dave Pollard, how to save the world
One of the lessons of Nassim Taleb's The Black Swan is that the events that have caused the greatest changes (and collectively most of the substantive change) to our civilization and our way of life were completely unexpected, unpredictable "black swan events. His new book argues that rather than trying to plan and prepare for a future we can't predict, we should do things that improve our resilience, and create systems that are "anti-fragile". Unlike most fragile, complicated human-made systems, "anti-fragile" systems (such as evolution and other complex natural systems) actively adapt to, learn from and benefit from upheaval and dramatic change.
archived March 21, 2012
Dave Pollard, how to save the world
If I am right in saying "the key to resilience in the coming decades will be our ability, in the moment, to imagine ways around the crises we cannot prevent, predict or plan for", then how can we increase the imaginative capacity of our fellow citizens so they/we will be ready, in the moment?
archived February 6, 2012
Dave Pollard, how to save the world
The Occupy movement has focused public attention on the vast and growing disparity of wealth and power in the US, and increasingly in other affluent nations. You've all seen the statistics -- essentially all of the increase in real wealth and income over the last 40 years has accrued to less than 1% of citizens, and for the other 99% real wealth and income have declined, in some cases precipitously. As a result, nearly half of all Americans, and well more than half of American children, now live in poverty or near-poverty. There is essentially no social or economic mobility left in US society -- if you're born rich, you will surely grow richer, and if you're born poor, you will surely grow poorer. The American Dream, and the American middle class, are dead.
archived January 16, 2012
Dave Pollard, how to save the world
Some of you are aware that I have been working on a cooperative board game called Collapse! designed to help people learn and practice grassroots community-building and preparing locally for the various crises that may precede civilization's collapse. I've finally got a first outline draft of the game, and decided to share it with the world before I go any further. Here are the rules and some images of the game equipment that I have developed thus far, along with a list of what I still have to do to complete the game's development.
archived December 22, 2011
Dave Pollard, how to save the world
Instead, what is needed is for the 99% to walk away from the current unsustainable, rapacious, soul-destroying and Earth-destroying systems the 1% have so effectively exploited to their own advantage — the political, economic, work, media, education, health, and technology systems on which we are all, today, utterly dependent -- and build a new culture with new systems and infrastructure, bottom-up, egalitarian, community-based, focused on the welfare and well-being of all, without the 1%'s help or the need for their support.
archived November 7, 2011
Dave Pollard, how to save the world
It is encouraging to see thousands of people in hundreds of cities around the world marching in the streets in solidarity for the 99% of the population disempowered and disenfranchised by despots and corporatist elites, pulling the strings of government and making all the key political, economic and social decisions in our world. But in order to convince the despots and elites that we really are the 99%, we need to engage those who are unable, because of fear, or lack of access or opportunity, to join us in the streets...How can we build on the Metamovement phenomenon to start to achieve the objectives that 99% of us believe in, that the current power structures are disinclined to pursue?
archived October 25, 2011
Dave Pollard, how to save the world
I believe the key to resilience in the coming decades will be our ability, in the moment, to imagine ways around the crises we cannot prevent, predict or plan for.
archived October 13, 2011
Dave Pollard, how to save the world
There have been, belatedly, attempts to connect the "We Are the 99%" Occupy Wall Street protests with the protests in the Mideast against anti-democratic regimes and in Europe against unemployment, austerity and government inaction. What is unique about the newest US protests (at least since the ill-fated anti-globalization protests of a decade ago), and perhaps the reason why it took so long for them to get media and public traction, is that they are anti-corporate more than anti-government.
archived October 11, 2011
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