Below is a reproduction of the new Global Villages Network page at the P2P Foundation Wiki.
An ongoing effort to create a dedicated group if people to enhance Village2Village cooperation
Below is a reproduction of the new Global Villages Network page at the P2P Foundation Wiki.
An ongoing effort to create a dedicated group if people to enhance Village2Village cooperation
Video Interview in Eleven Parts
01 – genesis of the P2P Foundation
02 – what are the commons?
03 – Old Vs New
04 – constitutionalism from below
05 – civil renewal
06 – why can't we work together?
07 – democratization of culture & education
08 – Us and them vs mutualization
09 – localised production and the future of community
10 – from disintermediation to reintermediation
11 – mindfulness and the commons
A good place to start your research into the electric nature of the universe.
Donald E. Scott, Ph.D. (Electrical Engineering)
There is a revolution just beginning in astronomy/cosmology that will rival the one set off by Copernicus and Galileo. This revolution is based on the growing realization that the cosmos is highly electrical in nature. It is becoming clear that 99% of the universe is made up not of “invisible matter”, but rather, of matter in the plasma state. Electrodynamic forces in electric plasmas are much stronger than the gravitational force.
This briefing has been prepared for the BRICS + Indonesia and Iran — and other nations such as Brunei, Malaysia, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) — as a means of fostering a conversation about the future of Earth and humanity — there are solutions that are affordable, interoperable, and scalable.
SHORT URL (This Post): http://tinyurl.com/EIN-BRICS-OSEE
PPT (21 Slides with Notes): EIN BRICS Ultimate Hack Lite 1.6
All Graphics and Notes in Full Text (Translatable) Below the Fold
Among the most disturbing trends in 2015 was the intentional and unintentional targeting of water infrastructure in several of the ongoing conflicts in the Middle East and the Ukraine, attacks on water pipelines and water supply systems in Syria and Iraq, and the use of major dams as weapons of war in Iraq. In other parts of the world, however, we also saw several instances of violence over access to water, from low-level fights among land owners to the deaths of thousands in Yemen in armed fights over wells and other water access points.
See Also:
Water Conflict Chronology List
Tip of the Hat to Berto Jongman.