I've never seen this chart. What a story!
I love this
I love it. And somewhere back in the base there's a hardbitten sargeant breaking in the raw recruits, chewing them out for flying to get to their base and making them scrub the bathroom with organic cleaners on a compostable toothbrush.
Anything that evokes Mucha is great in my book!
ha! I have the same background. Great minds...
Every time I return the community here feels more vibrant. Thanks for your work!
I've found that town-level organizing is satisfying, and a scale where a small group of individuals can help make bigger change.
My town government agreed a few years ago to adopt the sustainablect.org framework, which has a bunch of green/sustainable elements I am really excited about.
Once the town agrees in principle to a framework, you can advocate for policies based on that framework, and mobilize people who are particularly interested in one issue (say, composting!) or another (sidewalk networks! green energy!)
The trick, I think, is to find a framework the town government is willing to support (in principle) with specific changes. The fact that there's a certification program to go along with the framework that has prestige is really helpful. But really, the core of it all is to find a bunch of folks in your community that want to push things forward towards a goal with a shared vision. Which means that ultimately community organizing is what makes it possible, in my experience.
a lovely magazine.
That's a nice way to think of it, I've felt I must be on the bad alternate timeline for a while now. Maybe this is a healing branch!
Open source is like a pressure valve for how much companies can screw people over. I hope this becomes a big thing.
Holy cow. Thanks for sharing - I had no idea this existed.