Archive for the ‘Books/Poetry’ category

From Farm City to Off Grid

June 3rd, 2010

Popular Mechanics profiles neo-pioneers, re-learining old skills of self-sufficiency and blazing new paths, not agosttownfarm8-09 011sking permission of  bureaucratic would-be-bosses-of-us-all, but taking matters into their own hands and beginning to rebuild the independent America the Established Elite trashed.  The ARTICLE starts with a goat-birthing scene at Novella Carpenter’s Ghost Town Farm in Oakland California.  For photos and a ChooseWings review of her book, Farm City, click HERE.

SciFi Gandhi

March 23rd, 2010

The old Empire of Earth foolishly attacks settlers of the planet Gand, who are phipf3panel(panel1)losophic descendants of Gandhi.  The Gands rely on their motto “F.I.W.” — “the mightiest weapon ever thought up by the human mind.”

To find out why force and threats of violence are utterly futile on Gand, pf3panel(panel2) click here to read And Then There Were None, Eric Frank Russell’s delightfully droll and profound story. It was later incorporated into a novel titled “The Great Explosion” which received a Prometheus Hall of Fame Award.pf3panel(panel3)

Russell completed nine science fiction novels, and in 20000 was posthumously inducted into the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame.

Farm City book review

August 30th, 2009

City-Grown Food
Novella Carpenter rents the top floor of a two-story house painted pink, where she enjoys pastoral farm life and the rich diversity of urban living. She’s shared her porch with baby chicks, turkeys, ducks, bunnies; she milks her Nigerian Dwarf goats in the pantry; and they scamper up and down the green staircase to her back door. (She explains that goats, instinctively on the watch for predators, like to survey the scene from a high place.)

Novella’s goats are pets; they’re milked once in the morning and have the rest of the day for play and leisure. The kids stay with their moms. One adolescent goat, nearly as big as her mom, abandoned any pretense at dignity to get down on her knees for a snack of milk — until the youngster butted hard, and mom took off.

Novella’s book Farm City tells how she first began farming on a vacant lot next to her apartment. She planted a garden, and acquired bees for pollination and honey. Today, chickens roam freely, pecking at delicious treats among the straw. Fuzzy bunnies sleep away afternoon heat. Novella loves and tenderly cares for her animals — each is valued as an individual personality. But even as she works hard to give her animals good lives, Novella conscientiously plans a good death for any pig, chicken, turkey, duck, or rabbit that is to become food.

When piglets grew into 300 pounders, Novella’s affection cooled slightly, perhaps because the effort to feed them was so exhausting. These immense eating machines required vast infusions of food which she scrounged from dumpsters of pricey restaurants. She hauled bushels of good if slightly wilted gourmet veggies, fish guts, and other delicacies. Still the immense animals tugged at Novella’s shirt tails, as if trying to pull her down as an addition to the proffered feasts.

No hobby farmer, Novella’s crops and livestock are a major portion of her family’s food; plus she donates a some to charitable organizations, and shares with friends and neighbors — many from countries where urban farming is normal.

Farm City details her joys and difficulties as a novice urban farmer at Ghost Town Farm, named for the many abandoned buildings in her part of Oakland, California. Besides Novella’s experiments in animal husbandry, the book tells of her delight in cooking fresh farm food. After recounting the high drama of the pigs’ slaughter, Novella studied traditional meat curing and house made charcuterie, with the chef of a tony Berkeley restaurant.

On a sunny August day I visited Ghost Town Farm, sampled goat cheese Novella made, olives she cured, and a tomato she grew using the dry-gulch method, in compost enriched by cleanup after the farm animals. The tomato was a flavorsome gem, not the watery-tasting sort usually sold in markets.

Now a touring speaker and teacher, Novella plans a second book of traditional farming how-tos forgotten by most urban dwellers today. It’s Novella’s goal to inspire a new generation of urban farmers, to enjoy simultaneously the rich resources of cities with the hands-on intimacy and skill of producing homegrown food: to consume, to share, to add layers of resilience to city living.

Novell writes a blog, click here; and in the video below she gives her view of the ethics of raising “edible pets.” Not for everyone, she is advocating a responsible, humane path for those who choose, or need, a carnivorous diet. Please skip this video if you find the subject distressful.

book review: Healing Our World, In an Age of Aggression

August 18th, 2009

Mary Ruwart’s Healing Our World in An Age of Aggression is a gift to every person on the planet. With a loving heart and a scientist’s (Ph.D., biophysics) unflinching analysis, she dissects destructive human behavior and finds one common denominator: and one deceptively simple but elegant solution to nullify it — peaceably and practicably.

In Part One Ruwart examines the confusion of private and public m
orality. She uses everyday examples and a rich harvest of quotes; among them, “…slavery, apartheid, Stalinist, Nazi, Maoist purges were all legal. Clearly legality alone cannot be the talisman of moral people.” Walter Williams, Economist.

Ruwart shows why the near-universal belief in force of law cannot create a world of peace and plenty, but always backfires and destroys both. She explains why a nation’s prosperity arises from “the self-determined thoughts and creativity of its populace,” not from its government.

“Amnesty International’s list of human rights abuses shows a pattern where those nations with the least respect for human rights are also the poorest. By contrast those with the greatest respect for human rights tend to be the richest.” — Williams

America’s Constitution and Bill of Rights sparked a magnificent leap of liberty that allowed the highest level of freedom and prosperity of any country. But colonial America was tainted by a culture of aggression. Even when slavery was outlawed, the predilection for aggression continued, gradually undermining the founding principles, until today liberty is threatened by an aggressive government and the culture that supports it.

In Part Two, Ruwart documents how nations create poverty in a world of plenty. She shows the harmful consequences of aggression: to health and the environment; destruction of jobs, businesses, currencies, economies; promotion of monopolies and cartels with transfer of wealth to a ruling elite; degradation of education and morals by indoctrination of unthinking allegiance to the State.

Ruwart gives detailed examples of ways a peaceful culture can remove incentives for crime, without becoming a police state where we lose not only peace but all rights. “The first step in putting an end to aggression is to stop teaching it by example.”

Part Four shows how the cost of criminality outweighs the cost of productivity when there are unlimited opportunities; and why jailing wrongdoers accomplishes nothing positive. Instead, a system in which aggressors must right their wrongs takes the profit out of crime, and teaches self respect and respect for others. And Ruwart gives practical solutions for a society to police aggressors without using aggression.

art to the right, www.umintsuru.com

In Part Five, she looks at the principle of non-aggression applied to the world, addressing environmental resources, peace, respect and maximum tolerance for diversity. Kindall and Louw, nominated three times for the Nobel peace prize and co-authors of After Apartheid, penned the forward to Ruwart’s book.

She tells of their study which found that Switzerland is the nation that best exemplifies the ideals of non-aggression, and how that country achieved the distinction. She also lists international organizations working for those ideals.
Photo left, www.johnehrenfeld.com
Ruwart ends her book with the vision of our world as a joint creation. She urges each reader to identify an aspect of non-aggression appropriate to his/her talents, and to offer this as “a gift to yourself and others,” for healing our world and making it a better place for all.

Still little-known but growing in influence, Healing Our World has been reprinted three times. Due to small print runs, it’s $25 new at Amazon, but they offer it used at lower cost. The wisdom in this book can illuminate your life – read it as an investment in your future and the future of the world.

Book review: The Sharing Solution

July 15th, 2009


How to share with people and not hate them.

Remember the Little Red Hen who planted, tended, harvested the grain, and baked it? The duck, dog, and cat refused to help, but each wanted a share of the bread.

Very young children get the message of the fable. But sadly many grownups behave more like the lazy duck, dog, or cat instead of the industrious Little Red Hen.

It can be tough to share, even with one other person, as modern divorce statistics show. Multiply the complications by millions and we see why government resource allocation degenerates into corruption and waste at best; civil war or genocide at the extreme.

The problem with national socialism is its reliance on force. Lacking voluntary agreement, police and military bully people into compliance with laws made by a powerful, inevitably corrupt elite.

By contrast, voluntary sharing on a local level can create harmony, resilience, and efficient use of resources. The Sharing Solution doesn’t gloss over the difficulties in sharing agreements, but it does offer tested, practical solutions.

Authors Janelle Orsi and Emily Doskow are both attorneys with real life experience in sharing arrangements, and their book is grounded in practicality. The first section explains how to get started and what problems and rewards to anticipate. It includes ready to use and easy to understand agreement forms. Also included are suggestions for conflict resolution and mediation.

The second part covers specific solutions: finding partners for sharing, and how to successfully share gardens, food, housing, child or pet care, tools, transportation, and more. An appendix provides pages of added resources and cooperative organizations.

Our country’s problems are too immense to wait for slow bureaucratic solutions. We citizens are the ones that produce and create, and we can get started now. Community sharing is one of many ways people are exploring to make their own and their neighbors’ lives better and richer with shared work and experiences.