Systems Overview
Progressive Open Source Thought NetworkAn organization dedicated to establishing and disseminating the intellectual infrastructure of the progressive movement should not be thought of as a tank, because a tank is an enclosed structure, it should have an open structure that allows growth and the evolutionary development of core structures and related surrounding structures. An organizing structure should develop like a central nervous system develops in nature, through progressive iteration on the theme of nerve cell function in a multi cell network within the context of an organism. The philosophy of the open source software development movement is used below as a starting point for looking at a progressive think tank, which would be more like a think network, or habitat, than a tank in its structure and functioning.
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Privacy and PowerWith the advent and then the acceleration of extra-biological power availability to humans previous privacy dynamics should be revised. The dynamic of people, institutions, and systems being able to invade the privacy of others has been, and currently is, a feature of aggregation of social power. When extra-biological power is added to that social dynamic the inequities of the fact that the functional ability to achieve privacy, prevention of unwanted intrusion across a semi-permeable boundary from the outside of that boundary, has increased with the acquisition of power. Now that extra-biological power extends far beyond the scope of the individual privacy needs to be viewed as modifiable in inverse relationship to the possession of power. We should develop systems, political, legal, social, and economic, that implement this principal. Extra-biological power exceeds the biological boundaries of a person. As extra-biological power increases it becomes less private because it extends further beyond the biological boundary of the originating source.
Self-Replenishing SystemsThinking in terms of sustainability is better than not taking the impact of our actions on our environment seriously, but I think there is a subtle and important fault in looking at the relationship this way. Having grown up in an industrial capitalist economy, most of us unconsciously accept ?the economy? as an irreducible something on which we depend for our survival. For those of us who live in the cities and suburbs our direct relationship to nature is limited by our way of living and working where we spend most of our time in industrially produced enclosures and buy our food in stores instead of growing it on our land. The natural world from this perspective is seen as useful and, if you are supporter of sustainability, worth preserving to one degree or another. At the core of the sustainability meme there is a failure to step back and evaluate the premise of sustainability and appreciate that one side of the equation is an arbitrary social construct, ?the economy?, and the other, nature, is unavoidably real. In addition to equating something that is real with an arbitrary human social construct the idea gets the dependencies wrong, ?the economy? depends on nature.
?Though relatively new, the term "sustainability" has already proved useful. Sustainability discourse is discussion of how to make human economic systems last longer and have less impact on ecological systems, and particularly relates to concern over major global problems such as climate change and oil depletion. More useful than discussion, however, is to find ways to make some unit of economic production ? a business firm, a family household, a farm ? more sustainable.?
So here we have the dilemma stated clearly. What is to be sustained is the economic activity. Why should we start the discussion there? When starting from a sustainability frame, there is an inherent assumption that it makes sense to start there. There is also an implicit valuation of economic activity, as it currently exists, placing it on an even, or more critically, superior footing, when contrasted to ?the environment?. A better starting point for addressing the interaction between human activity and the rest of the natural environment is to begin at the base of the structure, the existence of life on Earth.
?To assist in this, it is meaningful, and pragmatic, to speak of some practices being "more sustainable" or "less sustainable." Thus energy-saving compact fluorescent light bulbs might be considered more sustainable than incandescent ones, and so on. Given the science, it is more apt to talk of moving "towards sustainability," or away from it. Sustainability advocates would argue that this kind of discourse helps inform debate about human impacts on planet Earth.?
When we find ourselves forced into talking of more sustainable and less sustainable we are operating from the absurd premise that the economy could exist independent of nature as if it were possible. I do not want to be a ?sustainability advocate? anymore than I want to be a ?consumer?, I want to be a livability activist. "The most potent weapon in the hands of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed." Speech in Cape Town, 1971. To bring about the change we deeply want and know is right we must liberate our minds. Choosing words that communicate the meanings you intend is a part of the process and livability works for me. Now that I have liberated myself from the shackles of sustainability language and found a word that allows me freedom of thought and expression, I am free to think, speak, and act as an advocate for livability. Now I have a purpose, enhancing livability, that is not constrained by modern, Milton Freidman, economics. It will be a lot of work to create an economy that uses our incredible extra-biological power to serve the ends of livability, but lets open the Overton Window all the way up and let that be our goal. Our economic and political systems should be structured to fit within the interconnected respiratory systems that transfer the energy required for life between various entities and levels of our living world. Our systems are all related to land use, shelter, agriculture, water, energy, and atmosphere, because the process of life is a dynamic dance of mutually beneficial exchange (respiration) across semi-permiable boundaries. Systems and Human PowerSystems of human cooperation are the primary method used to magnify human power. We are now in an era of human history where technology seems to be the primary amplifier of human power, but the growth of technology is really an outgrowth of human systems. The human systems that have collected knowledge in written form and made it widely available are the backbone of the technical accomplishments of our species. The economic and political systems that have made extended use of those growing technical capabilities are the means of accelerating the use of those technologies throughout our population. With the awareness that human made acceleration of climate change to a significantly hotter climate it seems obvious that significant change in the systems that have brought us to this point in our history must be part of the solution, as they have been responsible in full for the problem.
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