
See Also:

Open Source Everything
TWITTER HASH: #openall
DAILY HIGHLIGHTS: http://tinyurl.com/OSE-ALL
ROOT POST: http://tinyurl.com/OSE-ROOT
THE BOOK: http://tinyurl.com/OSE-Steele
THE PERSON: http://tinyurl.com/Steele2012
All the Opens Below the Line. Also Includes Autonomous Internet, Crowd-Funding/Sensing/Sourcing, and Transparency-Truth-Trust, & True Cost
Continue reading “20120712 Open Source Everything Highlights”

Emerging EcoNomics #4: Community revolution growing with food
Dear friends,
The remarkable article below speaks for itself and, since it is long, I won't add much except strong encouragement for you to read it and a note that you can productively and enjoyably jump around in it (as I did) if you'd rather not progress from start to finish. Until I finished it, I didn't realize it was by Rebecca Solnit, whose PARADISE BUILT IN HELL I applauded in another recent posting. I need to track her more…
Here she writes about the rise of non-industrial food culture in the U.S. – especially urban agriculture and need-inspired DIY community gardening emerging in some of the most creative forms you can imagine. She comments on the many other products that can come from gardening other than food, including individual and collective connectivity and power. This trend, she notes, can generate – or distract from – the kind of revolutionary change that the U.S. urgently needs.
I am including this post in my Emerging EcoNomics series because food culture is a very big part of a radically different way of meeting our needs that is local, self-reliant, cooperative, innovative, socially and environmentally responsible and filled with gifting, sharing, and non-monetized work and exchange. That new economy is rising among us and all around us, from back yards to Main Street, from anarchists and indigents to academics and investors. Solnit's article explores how it is learning to handle food.
There are few things that give me more hope than this very powerful human economy.
Coheartedly,
Tom
==========
REVOLUTIONARY PLOTS: URBAN AGRICULTURE IS PRODUCING A LOT MORE THAN FOOD
by Rebecca Solnit
Published in the July/August 2012 issue of Orion magazine
Continue reading “Tom Atlee: Emerging EcoNomics #4: Community revolution growing with food”

Steele 1.3 Two-Party Tyranny & Battle for the Soul of the Republic
Short URL: http://tinyurl.com/Steele-HOPE9

An important and informative Tony Capaccio article (from Bloomberg; shown below) came out today. It summarizes (accurately) CBO's analysis of the budget effects of sequester: if sequester were to occur, the Pentagon's “base” (non-war) budget would be $469 billion for 2013. This is slightly above what was spent in 2006, and it is “larger than the average base budget during [the Reagan era of] the 1980s.” (See page vi and the table on page 11 of the attached.)
This amount is also significantly more than the Pentagon received, on average, during the Cold War, and it is multiples of the defense budgets of China, Russia, Iran, Syria, and North Korea–combined.
This $469 billion is the same amount that Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta calls “doomsday,” that House Armed Services Committee Chairman Buck McKeon (R-Calif.) calls a “catastrophe” and that others, both Democrats and Republicans, want to rescue the Pentagon from–by adding money above the $469 billion level.
These same people will likely argue that this new CBO report is a reason to spend more money, not less. The new report, “Long-Term Implications of the 2013 Future Years Defense Program,” is CBO's annual update of its re-estimate of what it would actually cost to implement the Pentagon's programs in the “FYDP,” in this case the 2013-2017 version. Basically, like its previous iterations, CBO says DOD would need $53 billion more than it received in 2012 for each of the next five years to accuratey fund all its programs, as currently planned and implemented.
Ergo, the spending advocates will argue DOD needs more money, not less. Their logic is that nothing in the Pentagon should change–other than the amount of money it receives.
How can it be that more money than Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush spent on defense, tens of billions more than spent all through the Cold War and multiples of what any conceivable combination of opponents spend on defense are all a catastrophe for the Pentagon?
Such questions are prompted by Tony Capaccio's article and the new CBO report.
When the House of Representatives debates the Department of Defense Appropriations Act for FY 2013 next week, will these basic questions to be asked, or will there be only more hysteria and table pounding for more money?
Capaccio's interesting article follows; CBO's intriguing report is attached and at http://cbo.gov/publication/
Pentagon Would Keep 2006 Spending Power Under Cuts, CBO Finds
By Tony Capaccio, July 12 (Bloomberg)
Read CBO report: CBO on 2013 FYDP
Phi Beta Iota: The US Government continues to lack intelligence and integrity on the fundamentals. The truth about defense spending, defense abuse of defense personnel, and defense corruption across all acquisition programs from small arms to big ships, is relatively easy to document–what is less easy is to get anyone to pay attention to the truth–the truth today lacks a broad constituency.
See Also:
2000 Presidential Leadership and National Security Policy Making
2001 Threats, Strategy, and Force Structure: An Alternative Paradigm for National Security

Using nuclear waste, PRISM reactor could power UK for 500 years
‘Swiss Army studio apartment' transforms into 6 rooms
Finland's schools are designed for success
Harnessing the jet stream for wind turbines
GIS tools map social injustice in civil rights cases
How to turn a T-shirt into a battery
E.U. invests $450 million in smart cities
NASA will simulate Mars mission to test astronaut food
Chinese respect for German tech?

‘The idea behind www.gineagrotis.gr (the name means ‘Become a farmer’) is straightforward: citydwellers rent a patch of land from a farmer, tell him what they would like grown on it, and get their own fresh vegetables delivered to them weekly. And unlike some services elsewhere, it costs them on average 70% less than at the supermarket or greengrocers.
Phi Beta Iota: It is now documented that 47% of all food grown by mega-agriculture ends up as waste when combining the losses from farm to processing to sales to home to trash. The fastest was to cut waste from the system is to localize all money and most transactions.
See Also: The Safe Seed Resource List