Treetop wrote:. . . I think sometimes the nature of the internet makes some things seem more relevant then they are, we see all this buzz, and forget it might be only a small actual percentage, we just happen to all be able to gather readily around an idea online. . . .
Treetop wrote:...
So for me politically, its different. We need to push to ensure we retain the right to de centralize as we see fit. Retain a bit of personal sovereignty.
Once, America was truly different. People lived as they wished and barely saw the government. They had rights that government couldn’t touch, not just in propaganda, but in real life.
Now, America is the same as all the other nations, and government reigns supreme. Personal sovereignty has been outlawed.
There are still a few currents from the early days running through American hearts, and I do pray that they continue. But to pretend that American exceptionalism exists on any level beyond that is misleading propaganda… a pretty lie that encourages us to praise ourselves.
Treetop wrote:I have been de centralizing my lifestyle, and families needs since I left home. It has been rewarding for me, but I can tell you without any doubts, it is not the life for most. I was fought the entire time.
Treetop wrote:Even among others on this same train as you call it. Food for instance, <snip> even if all of these loosely related mindsets galvanized behind purposely trying to de centralize, it would take a long time before a significant portion could even offer any significant number a truly de centralized food system.
Unless there was a whole de centralized economy built up then the bulk of those eating from a truly de centralized system would need to grow it themselves.
treetop wrote:All of this to say... even if the masses wanted a de centralized food system which imo is the easiest avenue to de centralize, it would probably take a generation or more to get it done in a truly de centralized way, for any significant portion of the population, and it would look almost nothing like current CSAs.
treetop wrote:And to do this while I assume it gets harder and harder to keep food on the table? Unlikely as it will simply cost more unless you grow it for yourself, and honestly most seem to spend more trying to grow for themselves then they could save. <snip>
<snip> The food angle has made much progress, but it is still only baby steps at a time "TPTB" are centralizing power FAST. There are exceptions, but not many at all, certainly not enough to build a whole new paradigm overnight.
A drive in my own work has always been to have my growing models rely mostly on onsite or local materials. This is why I can tell you, most just arent thinking about this. <snip> There are exceptions, some amazing ones in this field in fact, but [there are] lots of bugs to work out to replace the current model for one thing, it also takes time to grow in. We'd go hungry if we as a nation decided to transfer to such a model over night and converted all at once, assuming we didnt import massive amounts in the meantime.
treetop wrote:You mention many different de centralization trains meeting at the same place, but i see this as a blog induced dream. What I see is a bunch of loosely related movements, none of which have enough traction, and currently none of which even offer a model others can fully engage in that is legitimately decentralized. <snip>
So for me politically, its different. We need to push to ensure we retain the right to de centralize as we see fit. Retain a bit of personal sovereignty. This imo is an achievable goal within the current paradigms, truly decentralizing even just food for a handful of localities is a generation or more away, let alone nationwide. <snip> I've been on this road many years, and hopefully I'm wrong and hordes of americans find paths to truly own their own lives, but I dont see it as even an option on the table currently, and it would take a large concerted effort of sustained will to change that.
johnbrickner wrote:
Back to the subject at hand. Along with decentralizing the Power Elite must come the increase in the opposite, the building or increase of power of the local community.
johnbrickner wrote:,
"our analyses suggest that majorities of the American public actually have little influence over the policies our government adopts."
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