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Dobra plata, dobro mesto, jeftin real estate


noskich

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Ova anomalija u kojoj se ne poznaje komsija, radi daleko od kuce i porodice po ceo dan i onda na spavanje dok se deca daju na cuvanje strancima pa se isto to desava roditeljima kad ostare, gde se jede hrana i nosi odeca proizvedena na jednom kraju sveta, pa zapakovana na drugom pa prebacena na trecem je osudjena na propast. Sve je to samo minut u godini dana. Presahla jeftina nafta, puca naduvani imaginarni finansijski balon, propadaju ekosistemi. 

 

Problem ljudi je kratkovidost, posmatraju svet iz perspektive strahovito malog vremenskog perioda. 

Ljudska vrsta je 3 miliona godina zivela u malim kooperativnim zajednicama u skladu sa prirodom. U kojima su neophodna sredstva za zivot deljena na dar. A trgovina je bila retka i samo proizvodima koji nisu neophodni, Zivot za zadovoljenje potreba, a ne zelja, sa bliskim ljudima koje znas ceo zivot.

 

Bice tako opet ili nas nece biti uopste.

Edited by noskich
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iz perta idu ozovi za melburn i sidnej

zastoj investicija, zatvoreni rudnici

tako sam bar cuo

To kao kad su Poljaci krajem osamdesetih bezali "na Zapad' u blagopocivshu SFRJ... 

Zadnjih 7-12 godina sav posao u industrijama koje imaju bilo kakve veze sa rudarstvom se desavao u WA i u QLD. I melburn i sidnej su otprilike ziveli od toga. industrije koje imaju veze - ne sve industije, ne d'o bog.

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  • 4 weeks later...

http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/35499-helena-norberg-hodge-for-personal-and-planetary-well-being-localize-the-economy

 

We are not proposing a return to some localized utopia, where we all live on the land, off the fruit of our own labor. However, we need to find a balance, and the fact is that it is Mother Earth that provides everything that we use in the modern economy. The difference between tradition and modernity is scale, and the ability to see the impact of our actions on others and on nature. The destruction we're seeing today -- environmentally and socially -- has to do with the scale of the economy. The deregulation of corporations and banks has created a system that is inhuman in scale, and inherently wasteful and destructive. But as it turns out, breaking down interdependent social structures and distancing populations from the natural resources upon which they depend is the perfect recipe for generating ever more profits for global business.

It's easy to get caught up in dichotomies of capitalism versus communism or socialism. But these were all top-down, centralized systems that were incapable of respecting biodiversity, cultural diversity and genuine individualism. Localization rejects the idea of imposing a single economic system. Rebuilding local economies is about adapting economic activity to ecological and cultural diversity. Bringing this about will require a global perspective and global collaboration, not isolationism.

 

The active proponents of trade and finance deregulation believe that they are creating a "free market." In actual fact, what we have today is almost as far from a free market as you could get, with regulations and subsidies continually furthering the expansion of multinational corporations to the detriment of local businesses and the communities they support. 

 

Imagine if governments didn't subsidize fossil fuels, which they do to the tune of more than$500 billion a year globally. Suddenly, it would become a lot less profitable to transport goods around the world to take advantage of lower labor costs. Redundant trade -- where a country imports and exports identical products -- would also cease to be a reasonable business transaction. 

 

Scaling back the economy would reign in the power of these corporations and free up government spending for social programs and supporting local enterprise. It would also foster businesses that, by their very nature, have a smaller ecological footprint and offer more meaningful employment. Because localization is all about adapting the economy to place -- local culture, local environment, local needs -- there is no one blueprint.

Edited by noskich
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  • 2 weeks later...

Bravo ljudi, bravo:

 

Food Street: Feeding off the kerbside and creating close communities

 

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-04-22/food-street-feeding-off-the-kerbside-creates-close-community/7343456

 

"Almost every afternoon, this street fills with the neighbourhood children. They ride bikes, they play ball. Adults will be sprawled on blankets across the lawn," Ms Kemp said.

"People now stop and talk or wave when they drive past. There's a real sense of cohesion in this neighbourhood — people really do know each other," Mr McNaught said, waving to a passing neighbour.

"And none of these families desire a park because we've got one," he added.

"There's no additional cost, it's just everyday living.

"It's spontaneity, just like the food."

Edited by noskich
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