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Fredric Markus

Protected classes: sexuality - 9 views

Fredric Markus wrote: > Now we are blessed - and cursed - with great change in these matters. The academic world has come around to an understanding that situational understandings of "normal" are...

Todd Suomela

War and the Tragedy of the Commons | Truthout - 0 views

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    "In this seven-part series of articles on each environmental impact of US militarism, scientist and author Patricia Hynes provides an overview of modern, military pollution and the use of natural resources with a central focus on the US military superpower, a power without precedent or competitor. From Superfund and former nuclear weapons sites in the US to Vieques, Agent Orange, depleted uranium - particularly in Iraq - biowarfare research and the use of fossil fuels in routine military training and wars, Hynes examines the war machine as the true tragedy of the commons."
Emilia Bell

The Hottest Speaker in Australia - 1 views

Our company had our annual training and workshop seminar last month and I was happy that I was able to meet David Ferrier from The Keynote Speaker. I had the best time with him not to mention the k...

started by Emilia Bell on 13 Nov 12 no follow-up yet
Todd Suomela

OnTheCommons.org » Private Property and the Power of Magical Thinking - 0 views

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    All the talk about rights-based fishing and IFQs is a red herring that throws all of us off the track of what is important. IFQs do not work because they are rights, or because they are property rights…. IFQs work because they involve an assigned catch, as opposed to having catch be determined competitively. (Vermont Law Review, Spring 2004, p. 659) It is apparently irresistible for people, even trained scientists, to misunderstand ITQs as a triumph of the market and privatization. ITQs play into the grand narrative that private property rights promote good stewardship of a resource. Remember the so-called "tragedy of the commons" story? That parable holds that if you give people private property rights in the commons - if only your privatize the collective resource! - people won't over-exploit it. "Tragedy" can be averted. The mythology insists that the commons can be responsibly managed only if it is duly privatized.
Todd Suomela

Upsetting the oil drum | The Agonist - 0 views

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    it means not only a radically different structure of the economy, but a change in who runs American industry. And this is what the current political order is fighting to the death.
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    More political than commons related, but connected to the question of energy and resource usage and power.
Fredric Markus

The beauty of locality is in the eye of the beholder. - 11 views

Plunging right in to the relative merits of local production: When the City of Minneapolis was keen to clearcut everything on Nicollet Island at the end of the 1960s, we Islanders were an inventi...

started by Fredric Markus on 24 Jun 08 no follow-up yet
Todd Suomela

OnTheCommons.org » More than just jobs, we need meaningful work. - 0 views

  • We are today surrounded by an abundance of productivity that the market does not recognize or value. In this consumer society, we think about “work” as what people do to pay for goods and services in the marketplace. If our work doesn’t earn money, it’s not counted as an economic asset. The power of the market is so strong that we often don’t recognize or value work that is essential to society’s future. The unpaid contributions of homemaking, parenting, volunteering, care giving and citizenship are not valued or nor appreciated. Americans (and many others in the modern world) have internalized a limited definition of work defined exclusively as employment in the market economy. As a result, we have discarded the real and potential productivity of young people and retirees—and everyone else who is outside of the paid workforce.
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