Jeremy Jackson: How we wrecked the oceanLost GenerationJonathan Reed1min 44seca palindrome
StaycationsBlake Poland1min 23sec"The most radical thing you can do is stay
home."
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What is missing in Community is Solidarity.Read this article at Transition Culture. Solidarity2010 Feb 22
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Urban RootsDetroitVideo: 3min 20sec 2010 Feb 22 |
2010 - The Year of Urban AgricultureSeattle, WA2010 Feb 19 |
One PlanetBBC World Service 2010 February 18 Audio - 28 minutes |
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Trinity Institute, 2010 Jan 28-29 Building an ethical economy Sir Partha Dasgupta Cambridge University video: ? audio: 30 mins Panel Discussion: 60 minutes |
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2010 Mar 01 |

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We are up to 14 Transition Towns and growing. The newest additions are Cowichan, BC Salt Spring Island, BC Poplar Hill/Coldstream, ON (near London) with many more to come. Here is an example of another coming: Transition arrives in Sooke, BC (near Victoria) 2010 Feb 05 |
Coming soon at a movie theatre near you...
Hooked on Growth
Our misguided quest for prosperity
Every Drop You Take
A message to Nestle
from James S Gordon
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Radical Abundance: a Theology
of Sustainability
Trinity Institute, 2009 Jan 21-23 discusses city vs rural towns and transition towns author of "Agenda for a New Economy"
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A song written and sung by
Raffi
for the launch of David Korten's latest book "Agenda for a New Economy" 2009 Jan 23 |
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The Rising Seas
with host Bob McDonald (link is broken) 2009 Dec 05 |
A story the Food Giants
don't want you to know about.
Food, Inc.
How to avoid and/or reduce eating "Factory Farm" foodsSee this blog, www.righteousporkchop.com/righteousblog if you want more, read the book: Righteous Porkchop: Finding a Life and Good Food Beyond Factory Farms, by Nicolette Hahn Niman, 2009, order from Bryan Prince Bookseller in Westdale. Avoiding
Factory Farm Foods This is what she says: "Without a doubt, the question I've been asked most frequently is this: How can a person avoid eating foods from factory farms? It's everywhere and so cheap. Well, the reality is you'll probably never totally stop because it is, indeed, everywhere. I mean if you're invited to your aunt's house and she makes a pork roast especially for you, what are you going to do? But there's a lot you can do. Probably the single most important piece of advice I have for people is to stop being a supermarket zombie. As I describe in Righteous Porkchop, when I started looking, really looking for foods that were not from nameless, faceless commodity markets of industrially produced food, I had to get out of the supermarket. Supermarkets buy in huge quantities and are generally unable and unwilling to buy from independent, traditional farmers. A second important piece of advice is to try to change what you're eating one step at a time. Start, for example with eggs. (I describe my own egg hunt in Righteous Porkchop). Try to find a local farmer or even a backyard hobby farmer who is raising their hens outdoors. You will pay more for these eggs but they will be well worth it." See Avoiding
Factory Farm Foods: An Eater's Guide |
How do you change people's behavior?By making it fun.We call it the fun theory. |
Where did the honey bees go?2009 Nov 25 Listen to Part 3 of The Current on CBC Radio An interview with Reese Halter, author of "The Incomparable Honey Bee and the Economics of Pollination" |
Peak Oil2009 Nov 09 Is it sooner than we are led to believe? A whistle blower with the International Energy Agency (IEA) says: Key oil figures were distorted by US pressure - The Guardian. |
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Thought for today by Margaret Atwood This speech was given by Canadian author Margaret Atwood at a benefit concert produced by St Lawrence Works for the Toronto Dollar in 1999. I am honoured to have been invited to share this occasion with you. I'm here because of Joy Kogawa, who along with many others has done so much selfless work on this project. Now, Joy Kogawa is an artist, and those performing here tonight are artists, and you may wonder what an artist is doing getting involved in a project that has to do with the structure of money. Weren't we all taught that Art and Commerce were polar opposites? But art has to do with symbolism -- the human tendency to make one thing stand for another -- and money is the most deeply symbolic thing there is. Money as such is, as Oscar Wilde said, perfectly useless. You can't eat it, drink it, shelter yourself from the cold with it, wear it, or make love with it unless deeply disturbed. In and of itself, it has no emotions, no mind, and no conscience. It doesn't put out flowers or have children, and it makes a lousy pet. It has meaning only when it circulates, and is exchanged for other things; and money doesn't do that for itself. People do that, using money as a symbolic token. We have all been brainwashed into believing that there is only one kind of money -- one kind of wealth -- and only one measure of human worth -- how much money you have -- and one kind of exchange -- traditional buying and selling. And only one motive to do so -- the Siamese twins of consumer greed and the profit motive. We've also been told all of this is controlled by a mysterious god called Global Market Forces, who is now beyond our control, but to whom we are forced to sacrifice our children. Thus if international commercial interests suck up our wealth, stomp out our magazines, trash our culture, and dictate what toxic chemicals we must eat and drink and breathe, it is the will of Global Market Forces, whose ways are dark, but who is thought to have our best interests at heart in the end. Now, the Toronto Dollar Project is an exercise in changing the symbolic structure of money. This project believes that there can be a different kind of money, and that its circulation can directly enhance the community through which it circulates. "Don't touch that money, you don't know where it's been," we used to be told as children. But with the Toronto Dollar, you do know where it's been. It's been right here, and it's staying here, and 10% of it is going directly to those in the community who need it the most. There is more than one kind of wealth. A country, province or city that has embraced the principles of selfishness, hatred, envy, greed and spite, is poor, no matter how rich its individual citizens may be. One that incorporates concern for the well-being of a society as a whole will, on the contrary, be rich, even though its citizens don't all have 5-car garages. Thank you again to Joy Kogawa and to our performers this evening, Catherine Robbin and William Aide, and to all the others involved in the Toronto Dollar. They are making Toronto a richer place, through this initially small but very meaningful step towards the formation of a more human -- and also a more humane -- symbolism for money. June 4, 1999, Toronto. |
Recent additions to the DO-iT website
2010.09.22 - Dark
Clouds of Climate Change, Gord Miller, The Hamilton Spectator
2010.08.06 - Added link to Draco
eBikes
2010.05.24 - "The Ascent of Humanity" in Articles
2010.04.24 - Dundas
Star News, "Is it time to limit growth?"in News
2009.11.10 - "Searching for a Miracle" in Articles
2009.11.08 - People's Grocery video added in Projects - Gardening
2009.11.04 - CBC Radio - The Current in News
2009.10.28 - New events in Events
2009.10.05 - Added photos in Dundas Farmer's
Market in Projects
2009.10.03 - More posters in Resources
2009.10.02 - "Across the Pond" in Articles
2009.09.17 - Would you know how to survive after the oil crash?
- Articles
2009.09.06 - Build an inexpensive greenhouse in Projects - Gardening
2009.09.02 - Screening of "Toxic Trespass" in Events
Sep 18
2009.09.02 - Canning WorkShop in Events
Sep 14
2009.08.31 - CBC Radio-Dispatches audio clip in Articles
2009.08.08 - CBC Radio audio clip in Articles
2009.08.06 - Garden Share added in Projects - Gardening
2009.07.15 - Aboriginal Garden video added in Projects - Gardening
2009.06.26 - The Transition Initiative in Articles
2009.06.14 - More photos in Photo Gallery
2009.06.08 - Secret Gardens in Photo Gallery
2009.06.07 - Dundas Eco Park in Projects
| Started 2008.11.11 - Last Updated 2011.05.30 |