One of the advantages of doing a #BuyNothing event across the street from Camden pond is all the nature!
We saw multiple bald eagles, a flock of what was probably pelicans, lots of egrets, great blue herons, cormorants, and red winged blackbirds.
One of the advantages of doing a #BuyNothing event across the street from Camden pond is all the nature!
We saw multiple bald eagles, a flock of what was probably pelicans, lots of egrets, great blue herons, cormorants, and red winged blackbirds.
It’s almost time for #BuyNothing
It looks like Saturday’s #BuyNothing event will go forward! It’ll be a little cool but no rain.
Please let me know if you are coming and bringing stuff to give away! We want to make sure there are enough spaces.
Buy Nothing Minneapolis!
Saturday, April 26th 11am-1pm WEATHER PERMITTING
You arrive at 11am, bring stuff you want to give away. You shop other peoples' stuff. You take the stuff you brought home (minus what other people got), or take it to your favorite charity shop at 1pm. Nothing gets left behind.
In the old ice rink parking lot on 42nd Ave N, across from Camden Pond/Morgan & 42nd or so.
You do NOT need to bring stuff to shop.
I, of course, will have lots of crafty things. #BuyNothing
Anyone in Canberra need a free desk? It's 1.8m X 0.8m three draws in reasonable condition (looks good).
Pick up or can deliver if not too far away.
In protest, the only things Americans will be buying are groceries. It’s such an old-fashioned term but a beautiful term: groceries. It sort of says a bag with different things in it.
#Degrowth can work — here’s how science can help
Wealthy countries can create prosperity while using less materials and energy if they abandon #EconomicGrowth as an objective.
By Jason Hickel, Giorgos Kallis, Tim Jackson, Daniel W. O’Neill, Juliet B. Schor, Julia K. Steinberger, Peter A. Victor & Diana Ürge-Vorsatz, 12 December 2022
Excerpt: "The global economy is structured around growth — the idea that firms, industries and nations must increase production every year, regardless of whether it is needed. This dynamic is driving climate change and ecological breakdown. High-income economies, and the corporations and wealthy classes that dominate them, are mainly responsible for this problem and consume energy and materials at unsustainable rates.
"Yet many industrialized countries are now struggling to grow their economies, given economic convulsions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, resource scarcities and stagnating productivity improvements. Governments face a difficult situation. Their attempts to stimulate growth clash with objectives to improve human well-being and reduce environmental damage.
"GDP is getting a makeover — what it means for economies, health and the planet
"Researchers in ecological economics call for a different approach — degrowth. Wealthy economies should abandon growth of gross domestic product (#GDP) as a goal, scale down destructive and unnecessary forms of #production to reduce energy and material use, and focus economic activity around securing human needs and well-being. This approach, which has gained traction in recent years, can enable rapid #decarbonization and stop ecological breakdown while improving social outcomes. It frees up energy and materials for low- and middle-income countries in which growth might still be needed for development. Degrowth is a purposeful strategy to stabilize economies and achieve social and ecological goals, unlike recession, which is chaotic and socially destabilizing and occurs when growth-dependent economies fail to grow.
"Reports this year by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (#IPCC) and the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on #Biodiversity and #Ecosystem Services (#IPBES) suggest that degrowth policies should be considered in the fight against #ClimateBreakdown and #biodiversity loss, respectively. Policies to support such a strategy include the following.
"Reduce less-necessary production. This means scaling down destructive sectors such as #FossilFuels, mass-produced meat and dairy, #FastFashion, #advertising, #cars and aviation, including #PrivateJets. At the same time, there is a need to end the #PlannedObsolescence of products, lengthen their lifespans and reduce the purchasing power of the #rich.
"Improve #PublicServices. It is necessary to ensure universal access to high-quality #HealthCare, #Education, #Housing, transportation, Internet, #RenewableEnergy and nutritious food. #UniversalPublicServices can deliver strong social outcomes without high levels of resource use.
"Introduce a green jobs guarantee. This would train and mobilize labour around urgent social and ecological objectives, such as installing renewables, insulating buildings, regenerating #ecosystems and improving social care. A programme of this type would end unemployment and ensure a just transition out of jobs for workers in declining industries or 'sunset sectors', such as those contingent on fossil fuels. It could be paired with a #UniversalIncome policy.
"Reduce working time. This could be achieved by lowering the retirement age, encouraging part-time working or adopting a four-day working week [and hybrid or remote work]. These measures would lower #CarbonEmissions and free people to engage in care and other welfare-improving activities. They would also stabilize employment as less-necessary production declines.
"Enable #sustainable development. This requires cancelling unfair and unpayable debts of low- and middle-income countries, curbing unequal exchange in international trade and creating conditions for productive capacity to be reoriented towards achieving social objectives.
"Some countries, regions and cities have already introduced elements of these policies. Many European nations guarantee free health care and education; Vienna and Singapore are renowned for high-quality public housing; and nearly 100 cities worldwide offer free public transport. Job guarantee schemes have been used by many nations in the past, and experiments with basic incomes and shorter working hours are under way in Finland, Sweden and New Zealand.
"But implementing a more comprehensive strategy of degrowth — in a safe and just way — faces five key research challenges, as we outline here."
Read more:
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-022-04412-x
Archived version:
https://archive.ph/AtJ87
#FourDayWorkweek #RemoteWork #HybridWork #CircularEconomy #CapitalismKills #RightToRepair #ProtectMotherEarth #CorporateColonialism #BuyLess #BuyNothing #LibraryOfThings #SolarPunkSunday
I love how #Linux, unlike #Windows, never bogs my computer down. Neither in the sense that an old Windows installation gets all grotty and slow with accumulated registry gunk, nor in the sense that Windows eventually forces you to upgrade to a version that is too computing-heavy in itself for a 5-y-o machine.
anyone know of decent fedi/self-hosted platforms for sharing/swapping items buynothing style?
@juliette you mentioned donation, but if you haven't considered direct mutual aid-style giving, that might be an option. Local #BuyNothing groups have been a great way for me to rehome stuff.
Annoyingly they're biggest on Facebook (although there is an app in parallel).
Patch applied.
Turns out these boots are made of EVA foam, which explains why they were so good in winter.
Also means they can be easily fixed with cyanoacrylate glue (superglue).
Been wrestling some more concrete in the garden and the patch holds so far.
Here's my beginning effort at a #BuyNothing #RaisedBed
I have random logs, standing on end, in a circle. I have dug out some of the soil from the circle. I'll fill the pit with sticks, for hugelkultur. I'll mix the soil with compost and put it back on top of the sticks.
Winter damaged #Schwiemu's greenhouse a little more. It's old and the fabric weakened from UV radiation, but every year we patch it up for "just one more season"
Last time I've sewn it with zip ties, this time no zip ties around, so I used some aluminium wire which itself was pulled out of old cables.
Hope it lasts one more season!
"The People’s Union USA, a movement led by a former drum instructor John Schwarz, organized a 24-hour “economic blackout” that calls on American consumers to make no purchases, especially from major retail, gas, or fast food companies. If people need to buy essentials, they are urged to shop at local, small businesses."
https://theintercept.com/2025/02/28/no-buy-nothing-corporation-boycott-capitalism-degrowth
Interesting data point on the #BuyNothing #Blackout yesterday.
Hard to verify, but data on that was always going to be hard to see.
I'll take a kick-in-the-shins level impact as a bit of evidence that we can move the needle.
Was glad to find out recently that the Buy Nothing Project (https://buynothingproject.org) doesn't JUST exist as adhoc groups on Facebook - you can make your own account to use it on it's own site/app
Looking forward to using this to minimize consumption while staying away from Facebook
Hey, American resisters. Here’s a protest y’all can do. It’s safe and easy, and it will send a message with real impact.
Buy. Nothing. Today.
Happy Boycott Day! If you have to shop, shop small. If you have to spend, use cash or debit. If you have to bank, bank with a credit union. You don't have to give your money to billionaires.
This is also an excellent opportunity to shop Canadian and sustainably. Here is a thread of some Canadian brands I enjoy: