Login

Community

Small animals and urban ag - Nov 20

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-Female farmers find goats a good, but busy choice
-Chickens come home to roost in backyards around the USA
-Bite-Sized: Small cattle make big impression
-Saving The Bed-Stuy Farm: Choose Better Nutrition, Not Demolition

archived November 20, 2009
	

Solutions & sustainability - Nov 19

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-Go forth and multiply a lot less
-The new wave of urban farming (and fresh food from small spaces!)
-Urban farms a fertile idea
-Summary Presentation for Plan B 4.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization
-The next Industrial Revolution will be people-powered
-Sustainability and Social Justice: Do the Math
-Greening Portland - Your City How To

archived November 19, 2009
	

How to Set Up and Run a Bicycle Repair Company

Robin Lovelace, The Oil Drum: Campfire

Many of the articles that discuss the causes and effects of humanity's unprecedented energy use are entirely theoretical, offering little practical guidance for the everyday reader. This essay offers respite to all the people who confront our collective energy problems with a furrowed brow and an expression that is puzzled by the continuous stream of theoretical insights that explain our current circumstances.

archived November 19, 2009
	

Review: The Ecotechnic Future by John Michael Greer

Frank Kaminski, Seattle Peak Oil Awareness (SPOA)

John Michael Greer has officially established himself as an institution within the peak oil community. Truly one of the finest minds working on the predicament of modern-day industrial civilization, he is so well-read in so many fields that he regularly gains access to insights that utterly elude his contemporaries. For this he is treasured by a growing number of loyal readers—and, I suspect, hated by equally many fellow bloggers who wish that they could be half as good.

archived November 19, 2009
	

How Relocalization Worked

John Michael Greer, The Archdruid Report

One of the most rarely used resources for relocalization projects is the fact that our species has been this way before -- the twilight years of many other civilizations featured the breakup of centralized economic arrangements and the rise of a new localism. Can insights from past examples offer us guidance in the present case?

archived November 18, 2009
	

Crop to Cuisine: Book Features
Audio

Dov Hirsch, Crop to Cuisine

Crop To Cuisine stocks the pantry for Thanksgiving. We speak with historians about the truth behind the thanksgiving meal and the turkey. We also feature reports on how people are coping during tough times, and how you can give back.

archived November 18, 2009
	

Deconstructing Dinner: "The California Drought and Fox News"
Audio

Jon Steinman, Deconstructing Dinner

We travel to the State of California where 50% of all fresh fruits and vegetables consumed in Canada and the United States are produced. Beyond fresh produce, California is also a major producer of dairy, olives and nuts, and the list of foods goes on.

archived November 17, 2009
	

Food & agriculture - Nov 16

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-Program could match Colo.'s next generation of farmers with land, expertise
-Feeding the city
-The Nitrogen Fix: Breaking a Costly Addiction
-Aid Groups, Farmers Collaborate to Re-Green Sahel

archived November 16, 2009
	

Enter the Elephant

Nate Hagens, The Oil Drum

In the Happiness Hypothesis , psychology professor Jonathan Haidt compares human brain/behavior to a man riding an elephant. There exists a complex choreography between our newer rational cortex (the 'man'), and our older, more primitive brain structures (the 'elephant').

archived November 16, 2009
	

Peak Therapy: Do we Need a Shrink as the World Ends?

Carolyn Baker, Energy Bulletin

This past week I read with fascination the posts by Sally Erickson on “The Culture of Pretend: How Psychotherapy Keeps our Communities Sick” and Kathy McMahon’s response “Bozos On The Couch: What Is ‘Good Therapy’ In A Time of Collapse?” As I’ve pondered these posts, I’m compelled to respond to several incongruities and offer missing pieces that I believe must be added to the discourse.

archived November 16, 2009
	

The Oceans are Coming Part II - Living on the Land

Keith Farnish, Dmitry Orlov, ClubOrlov

Are you still talking about Cyclone Nargis? Have you ever heard of Cyclone Nargis? Here’s a reminder: on 1 May 2008 a weakening low-pressure system suddenly picked up energy as it approached Burma from the Bay of Bengal...The Irrawaddy Delta was devastated, causing at least 140,000 human deaths. Most of us have forgotten about it.

archived November 16, 2009
	

Bozos on the Couch – What is ‘Good Therapy’ in a Time of Collapse?

Kathy McMahon, Peak Oil Blues blog

I read Sally Erickson’s post on Energy Bulletin, and as a clinical psychologist, I gotta tell you, I found it sort of depressing. It wasn’t her criticism of psychotherapy. I understand her point about psychotherapy not healing a sick culture. James Hillman made the same point in “One Hundred Years of Psychotherapy and The World’s Getting Worse.” But golly, if we’re here anyway, shouldn’t we have some role as Peak Shrinks while the world as we know it collapses around us?

archived November 13, 2009
	

Energy Bulletin Survey November 2009

Staff, Energy Bulletin

We'd like your help with a basic demographic survey. Answering just 10 questions will help us better serve you and the rest of the Energy Bulletin community. Your participation is anonymous (unless you choose otherwise), and we welcome feedback beyond the basic questions.

archived November 2, 2009
	

The Culture of Pretend: How Psychotherapy Keeps Our Communities Sick

Sally Erickson, VisionQuest Pictures ltd

In recent years I’ve grown uncomfortable with the institution of psychotherapy and have begun to call into question the ultimate value of this work. While I create a safe place for people to unpack their secrets, I also simultaneously and unwittingly, collude with the Culture of Pretend. I make it easier for people to cope with, instead of confront, this culture that breeds shame and dysfunction.

archived November 11, 2009
	

Deep thought - Nov 10

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-Clive James isn't a climate change sceptic, he's a sucker - but this may be the reason
-The Stories We Tell…
-Building a Better Citizen
-Sacred Activism: An Unprecedented Marriage

archived November 10, 2009