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-   -   The Story of Stuff (https://ecorenovator.org/forum/showthread.php?t=1445)

Piwoslaw 02-17-11 02:03 AM

The Story of Stuff
 
The Story of Stuff

I found out about this last year when giving a lecture about global warming, now I see that there are more vids in the series.
Enjoy!

RobertSmalls 02-17-11 06:20 AM

Hmm, she seems to think the reason you can't put the latest generation of CPU into a motherboard from 1989 (or 2009) is because they changed the number of pins in order to force you to buy a new motherboard. Not quite, dear. AMD doesn't make much money on mobos, and they'd love to sell you just a CPU if they could.

It's bursting at the seams with statistics intended to stir up emotions, rather than to inform. I'm not impressed.

I dislike consumerism, too, though.

davranyou 02-19-11 01:23 AM

"It is bursting at the seams with statistics to stir our emotions" is definitely not new, advertisers have been playing on our emotions for decades convincing us we need something new and shiny.

The information on cosmetics is downright scary. I am going to have to start researching just what shampoos and bubble baths (and their ingredients) are used by my daughter.

Excellent site btw

Piwoslaw 02-19-11 04:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by davranyou (Post 12021)
"It is bursting at the seams with statistics to stir our emotions" is definitely not new, advertisers have been playing on our emotions for decades convincing us we need something new and shiny.

I agree that the vids are far from objective, just like the advertisements that have been brainwashing us. It's like fighting fire with fire.

RobertSmalls 02-19-11 08:09 AM

If you fight fire with fire, the whole world burns.

Weed Dog 05-26-11 11:38 AM

Gross Domestic Happiness
 
I credit the video for tagging some habits of thinking and acting that have gone largely unquestioned for decades.

...“Butan has something unique in the world that all other countries ought to imitate: the Gross Domestic Happiness index. For the ruling king and monk, what counts foremost is not the GDP — gross domestic product — measured on the basis of all the material resources and services that the country boasts, but the Gross Domestic Happiness — the result of public policies, good government, equitable distribution of earnings from the surplus of subsistence agriculture, ranching, plant extraction and the sale of energy to India, the absence of corruption, the universal guarantee of quality education and health care, with passable highways through fertile valleys and high mountains, but especially as fruit of social relationships of peace and cooperation among all people. This has not managed to impede conflicts with Nepal, but neither has the humanistic intent of the kingdom wavered. The economy, which is the golden calf of the globalized world, appears as only one item in the set of factors to be considered.

Behind this political project lies a multidimensional concept of the human being. The human being is conceived as a knot of relationships pointing in all directions who, yes, hungers for bread as do all living beings, but who is mainly motivated by hunger for communication, coexistence and peace which cannot be bought in the marketplace or on the stock market. The role of government is to tend to the life of the people in all its dimensions. Its fruit is peace. In the unsurpassable definition that the Earth Charter developed about Peace, it is "the wholeness created by right relationships with oneself, other persons, other cultures, other life, Earth, and the larger whole of which all are a part." (16, f)

Happiness and peace are not built on material wealth or the paraphernalia that our poor materialistic civilization gives us. It sees the human being only as a producer and a consumer. The rest doesn’t interest it. Therefore we have many desperate rich people, young people from families without economic problems who commit suicide because they don’t find meaning in abundance. The law of the dominating system is: he who doesn’t have, wants to get; he who has, wants more; and to him who has more, it doesn’t seem like enough. We forget that what brings us happiness is human relationships, friendship, love, generosity, compassion, respect…things that are valuable but cost nothing. The tragedy is that this humanly poor civilization is destroying the Planet in its desire to get more, when the important thing would be to try to live in harmony with nature and other living beings.

Butan gives us a beautiful example of this possibility. Wise was the observation of a poor person from our community who commented: "that person is very poor, so poor that all he has is money." And he was notoriously unhappy.”

Source: Gross Domestic Happiness
Free translation from the Spanish provided by Anne Fullerton. Done in Arlington, VA in cooperation with Refugio del Rio Grande, Texas.


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