Ideology, ecology, permaculture, activism, paganism
- artifact81
- Posts: 13
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Ideology, ecology, permaculture, activism, paganism
Centralized societies like America repeatedly prove themselves to be a neo-colonialist extension of the same systems of slavery and extortion, hosted by centralized societies, that we have seen FAIL en masse, with enormous ramifications, ever since 8,000 B.C.E. Observing that we live in an unsustainable society that has done little but to mimic other failed societies, when and how can we actually do something to help ourselves? When are we really going to pursue action in creating a culture that works.. not just for us but also generations to come? When is the study of permaculture going to be the primary focus of how we should change our ways of life?
Totalitarian agriculture, and then mechanized totalitarian agriculture have provided an arbitrary surplus of food that have worked to make a superficial carrying capacity that works to stimulate population growth. This growth cannot be sustained without misappropriating these resources. For example, today it is nonrenewable resources that are contributing to this problem, and a previous yet extant problem is that centralized and hierarchical power structures' manipulate masses of people, in the forms of slavery and extortion, in order to create this form of surplus.
Today, an institutional separation between human ideology and human relationship to global ecology has changed the dynamic of how human culture is created, destroyed, and changes in general. The present dynamic that defines our culture is between our ideology, our institutions, and our ecology. For example, ecology is turned into resources, and resources into institutions, and institutions into ideology. It is arguable that the lack of large social institutions prior to the agricultural revolution allowed for those cultures to be relatively permanent and sustainable. The dynamic that formed culture then was solely between a culture's ideology and its ecology, and through that dynamic a more immanent and engaged relationship was formed between humans, their natural environment, and their ideology. This relationship evidently allowed for a non-hierarchical, egalitarian and matrifocal social structure that had relatively no unsustainable impact on their physical world or other societies? Were these kinds of societies the only real claimants to actually having free will without harming anything or anyone? Should we be attempting to educate ourselves about how to recreate this form of culture? Could all of the chaos and destruction in this world be some kind of karmic reaction to the ecological destruction that our culture forms have imposed on the ecosystems of this planet? Is this why I am a pagan anarchist? Is this why I have never felt at home in any 'normal' part of my society? -I think so to all of the above.-
Totalitarian agriculture, and then mechanized totalitarian agriculture have provided an arbitrary surplus of food that have worked to make a superficial carrying capacity that works to stimulate population growth. This growth cannot be sustained without misappropriating these resources. For example, today it is nonrenewable resources that are contributing to this problem, and a previous yet extant problem is that centralized and hierarchical power structures' manipulate masses of people, in the forms of slavery and extortion, in order to create this form of surplus.
Today, an institutional separation between human ideology and human relationship to global ecology has changed the dynamic of how human culture is created, destroyed, and changes in general. The present dynamic that defines our culture is between our ideology, our institutions, and our ecology. For example, ecology is turned into resources, and resources into institutions, and institutions into ideology. It is arguable that the lack of large social institutions prior to the agricultural revolution allowed for those cultures to be relatively permanent and sustainable. The dynamic that formed culture then was solely between a culture's ideology and its ecology, and through that dynamic a more immanent and engaged relationship was formed between humans, their natural environment, and their ideology. This relationship evidently allowed for a non-hierarchical, egalitarian and matrifocal social structure that had relatively no unsustainable impact on their physical world or other societies? Were these kinds of societies the only real claimants to actually having free will without harming anything or anyone? Should we be attempting to educate ourselves about how to recreate this form of culture? Could all of the chaos and destruction in this world be some kind of karmic reaction to the ecological destruction that our culture forms have imposed on the ecosystems of this planet? Is this why I am a pagan anarchist? Is this why I have never felt at home in any 'normal' part of my society? -I think so to all of the above.-
- artifact81
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Re: YGMIR
For example, hunters, gatherers, and horticulturalists all have had a system of leadership that was based solely on a basis of personal merit instead of heredity or class or other form of social stature. These leaders were selected on a consensus basis usually for hunting purposes. Contrarily, leaders of today are much more disconnected from the people they represent which allows for widespread misrepresentation. I was not arguing for no structure but for a structure that works without institutionalization.
Yes we 'prey' on our environment and on each other, and we exploit the resources around us. But there are differences between sustainable and unsustainable exploitation. I think it is safe to say that our concept of having dominion over the earth is a new development in the last 10,000 years that came with the advent of patriarchal institutional and ideological structures. This is also the same time period where most of the origins of the oral traditions of the world's major religions' began. The coexistence of institutionalization and patriarchy is the cycle that needs to be broken; not the natural cycle of natural selection that should exist both socially and ecologically.
Yes we 'prey' on our environment and on each other, and we exploit the resources around us. But there are differences between sustainable and unsustainable exploitation. I think it is safe to say that our concept of having dominion over the earth is a new development in the last 10,000 years that came with the advent of patriarchal institutional and ideological structures. This is also the same time period where most of the origins of the oral traditions of the world's major religions' began. The coexistence of institutionalization and patriarchy is the cycle that needs to be broken; not the natural cycle of natural selection that should exist both socially and ecologically.
- Ugly Dougly
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- Location: เชียงใหม่
- Ugly Dougly
- Posts: 17612
- Joined: Wed Sep 10, 2003 9:31 am
- Burning Since: 1996
- Location: เชียงใหม่
Have you seen the Neo-Luddite Association website?
It's www.com.
It's www.com.
- artifact81
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Neo-Luddism?
Neo-Luddism.. hmm wish we never needed to break things to make a point. I do have to agree though that it would be a lot of fun. Ever read the Monkey Wrench Gang by Edward Abbey... one of my favorites.
"Can we imagine how men would behave if this decency could find full release, if society earned the respect, even the love of the individual? "
-Lewis Herber
-Lewis Herber
- pizzamancer
- Posts: 357
- Joined: Thu Jul 10, 2008 6:56 pm
- Burning Since: 2008
The gods don't care what you say, they gods know that they are, and play with, Chaos.
Human society is the chittering of insects against the forces of Chaos--it's only value is in it's aspirations to godhood. Give that up and the Abyss looms--as it does for all failures.
And the Abyss is always hungry.
Animals are shaped by their ecology and the Abyss eats them
Intelligent life shapes its ecology--and the Abyss STILL eats them
The gods remove themselves from the chains of ecology--and the Abyss screams its hunger.
Humanity walks on the edge of a knife, it's lifeblood dripping into the Abyss, taunting, tantalizing on the one side...
On the other.....a future
Choose. Choose to remain an animal and fail, fall back, become fodder for the Abyss. None will mourn. And the gods will turn away until something else rises above the slime to attempt an ascent.
or choose something else....
Human society is the chittering of insects against the forces of Chaos--it's only value is in it's aspirations to godhood. Give that up and the Abyss looms--as it does for all failures.
And the Abyss is always hungry.
Animals are shaped by their ecology and the Abyss eats them
Intelligent life shapes its ecology--and the Abyss STILL eats them
The gods remove themselves from the chains of ecology--and the Abyss screams its hunger.
Humanity walks on the edge of a knife, it's lifeblood dripping into the Abyss, taunting, tantalizing on the one side...
On the other.....a future
Choose. Choose to remain an animal and fail, fall back, become fodder for the Abyss. None will mourn. And the gods will turn away until something else rises above the slime to attempt an ascent.
or choose something else....
"Life is like a box of razor blades. Sharp, shiny, and good for removing unwanted body hair"
- artifact81
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re:lurker
I idealize the gods as being a part of the natural, and not the supernatural. Immanent and engaged, and only as transcendent as they are interconnected with the physical world:
the gods are immanent in ecology; immanent in us and all of our surroundings and always have been. I think 'institutionalization' is a human misconception of this reality; I think THAT is 'falling back'
it makes a lot of sense to me that the in same period of time we began to manipulate our ecology in an unsustainable way is the same period of time the largest religious separations occurred. They still exist today.. ever since the agricultural revolution. -direct connection between ecology and ideology-
the gods are immanent in ecology; immanent in us and all of our surroundings and always have been. I think 'institutionalization' is a human misconception of this reality; I think THAT is 'falling back'
it makes a lot of sense to me that the in same period of time we began to manipulate our ecology in an unsustainable way is the same period of time the largest religious separations occurred. They still exist today.. ever since the agricultural revolution. -direct connection between ecology and ideology-
"Can we imagine how men would behave if this decency could find full release, if society earned the respect, even the love of the individual? "
-Lewis Herber
-Lewis Herber
Flesh is a plaything for the gods. They are self-sustaining. They do not rely on the scum that grows on the rocks that float in space--though they love to play in it.
Humanity can move to join them or it can burrow into the mold, like a maggot feeding on a corpse.
Eventually, no matter how good the stewardship, there is no nourishment left.
and the Abyss is always waiting....
tick tick tick......
Humanity can move to join them or it can burrow into the mold, like a maggot feeding on a corpse.
Eventually, no matter how good the stewardship, there is no nourishment left.
and the Abyss is always waiting....
tick tick tick......
"Life is like a box of razor blades. Sharp, shiny, and good for removing unwanted body hair"
- artifact81
- Posts: 13
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re:abyss
Lurker,
stretch my imagination- tell me about this abyss
sounds pretty dualistic - if there is an abyss is there an opposite?
I am usually all about chaos and the reality of death, but this abyss sounds pretty antagonistic and absolutist. Death is inevitable but so is life.
stretch my imagination- tell me about this abyss
sounds pretty dualistic - if there is an abyss is there an opposite?
I am usually all about chaos and the reality of death, but this abyss sounds pretty antagonistic and absolutist. Death is inevitable but so is life.
"Can we imagine how men would behave if this decency could find full release, if society earned the respect, even the love of the individual? "
-Lewis Herber
-Lewis Herber
- Ugly Dougly
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- Location: เชียงใหม่
- artifact81
- Posts: 13
- Joined: Fri Sep 12, 2008 2:19 pm
- Location: Anchorage, AK
- Contact:
UNPLUG NOW OR LOSE YOUR SOUL
Yes!!! Ugly you got it!! Exactly!!
I'm a hypocrite! ..and my soul is trapped on eplaya.
I like my TeVo and my DSL connection. ..and that's the problem
but personally I am going to school for Journalism and plan to support certain activist movements once I graduate. I plan to use my powers for good. So rock the hypocrisy!! It seems to be how our society operates so lets all get with it and be good hypocrites!!
-truly hilarious Ugly-
I'm a hypocrite! ..and my soul is trapped on eplaya.
I like my TeVo and my DSL connection. ..and that's the problem
but personally I am going to school for Journalism and plan to support certain activist movements once I graduate. I plan to use my powers for good. So rock the hypocrisy!! It seems to be how our society operates so lets all get with it and be good hypocrites!!
-truly hilarious Ugly-
"Can we imagine how men would behave if this decency could find full release, if society earned the respect, even the love of the individual? "
-Lewis Herber
-Lewis Herber
Why must an internet make us abandon our tribes? Why must modern life do so?
Those same tribes gave us the structures to make all this possible.
It is the fool who abjures their gifts. To refuse the gifts your ancestors gave you, to aspire to an artificial primitivism. This is the path to the Abyss.
We move the tribe to the Tribe, to a collection of individuals who band together out of desire--not the craven need to survive. We move towards what tribes only hoped for.
The abyss is Oblivion. It is the dark nothing that would eat the chaotic All if that All ever stopped moving.
In you is a spark, a tiny light that can catch occasional glimpses of infinity, of eternity. Your ability to hold on to those glimpses are all that seperates you from the animals.
To deny it, to go back to the ways of the animals, to be ruled by the unthinking whims of the rock beneath your feet, that is the greatest crime, that is perhaps the only, and true meaning of Sin
And it is no pale 'devil' that tempts you to it--it is the very flesh you reside in that does the deed. With memory of instinct, of a time when thought was limited by your ecological niche.
That spark is a great gift. That tiny bit insures that even the most devout atheist will have a surprise waiting when at last he drops his flesh.
You have a choice. Animals don't. Plants don't. The stones don't. Even the gods don't--they are part and parcel of Chaos and have been so since their beginning.
But everything that gets the chance to begin to think beyond survival gets that choice.
Will you make that choice or will you slip back into the comfortable patterns, the soothing chant of instinct...the dull sleep that is Order at it's most foul? When each action is reaction along a carefully woven set of responses.
The Abyss is drumbeats around a fire.
The future is those drumbeats cast into the web, across the planet, and out into space and beyond.
Will you hunker around the fire until the secret of it's making is lost to you? Or will you demand the stars....?
Those same tribes gave us the structures to make all this possible.
It is the fool who abjures their gifts. To refuse the gifts your ancestors gave you, to aspire to an artificial primitivism. This is the path to the Abyss.
We move the tribe to the Tribe, to a collection of individuals who band together out of desire--not the craven need to survive. We move towards what tribes only hoped for.
The abyss is Oblivion. It is the dark nothing that would eat the chaotic All if that All ever stopped moving.
In you is a spark, a tiny light that can catch occasional glimpses of infinity, of eternity. Your ability to hold on to those glimpses are all that seperates you from the animals.
To deny it, to go back to the ways of the animals, to be ruled by the unthinking whims of the rock beneath your feet, that is the greatest crime, that is perhaps the only, and true meaning of Sin
And it is no pale 'devil' that tempts you to it--it is the very flesh you reside in that does the deed. With memory of instinct, of a time when thought was limited by your ecological niche.
That spark is a great gift. That tiny bit insures that even the most devout atheist will have a surprise waiting when at last he drops his flesh.
You have a choice. Animals don't. Plants don't. The stones don't. Even the gods don't--they are part and parcel of Chaos and have been so since their beginning.
But everything that gets the chance to begin to think beyond survival gets that choice.
Will you make that choice or will you slip back into the comfortable patterns, the soothing chant of instinct...the dull sleep that is Order at it's most foul? When each action is reaction along a carefully woven set of responses.
The Abyss is drumbeats around a fire.
The future is those drumbeats cast into the web, across the planet, and out into space and beyond.
Will you hunker around the fire until the secret of it's making is lost to you? Or will you demand the stars....?
"Life is like a box of razor blades. Sharp, shiny, and good for removing unwanted body hair"
- Ugly Dougly
- Posts: 17612
- Joined: Wed Sep 10, 2003 9:31 am
- Burning Since: 1996
- Location: เชียงใหม่
And yet, despite what you say, you place it here.
You bleat praise for the animal--but you do not really count yourself among them. You scratch your cave paintings in glowing letters of magic.
You beat you chest and scream your prowess in the place where eternity, for you, lurks.
You are a savvy savage, UD, reach high, ever higher, you are no disciple of Ludd, the joy of limitlessness is within your grasp. Chaos awaits.
You bleat praise for the animal--but you do not really count yourself among them. You scratch your cave paintings in glowing letters of magic.
You beat you chest and scream your prowess in the place where eternity, for you, lurks.
You are a savvy savage, UD, reach high, ever higher, you are no disciple of Ludd, the joy of limitlessness is within your grasp. Chaos awaits.
"Life is like a box of razor blades. Sharp, shiny, and good for removing unwanted body hair"
- artifact81
- Posts: 13
- Joined: Fri Sep 12, 2008 2:19 pm
- Location: Anchorage, AK
- Contact:
Riders on the storm.
Part of that song goes:
The world on you depends
Our life will never end
The world on you depends
Our life will never end
"Can we imagine how men would behave if this decency could find full release, if society earned the respect, even the love of the individual? "
-Lewis Herber
-Lewis Herber
When the still sea conspires an armour,
and it's sullen and abortive currents breed tiny monsters
true sailing is dead
pause, delicate poise
consent, in mute nostril agony
their stiff green gallop
-----and I'm lost that might be right, and it might not, either way, what bliss....
and it's sullen and abortive currents breed tiny monsters
true sailing is dead
pause, delicate poise
consent, in mute nostril agony
their stiff green gallop
-----and I'm lost that might be right, and it might not, either way, what bliss....
"Life is like a box of razor blades. Sharp, shiny, and good for removing unwanted body hair"
wait--I remember--
awkward instant
and the first animal is jettisoned
legs furiously pounding
it's stiff green gallop
okay...that's a bit more...I can't even remember what this is called....something about horses....
awkward instant
and the first animal is jettisoned
legs furiously pounding
it's stiff green gallop
okay...that's a bit more...I can't even remember what this is called....something about horses....
"Life is like a box of razor blades. Sharp, shiny, and good for removing unwanted body hair"

