Solarpunk

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The space to discuss Solarpunk itself and Solarpunk related stuff that doesn't fit elsewhere.

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founded 3 years ago
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I saw an effort at trying to systematize solarpunk elsewhere that felt a bit confused, but it reminded me of this. I'm not typically inclined to try to taxonamize everything, but I'll admit that the appeal definitely isn't lost on me. This felt useful.

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by jeffhykin@lemm.ee to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net
 
 

I plan to speak to my city council about creating a tool library, where citizens use their existing library card to checkout tools. To make the idea a bit more robust, I'm also planning to require citizens deposit something as collateral when checking out a tool.

However.

I live in Texas (I love Texas). Thankfully my city council is receptive, but I know they're going to need compelling evidence before approving something like this.

So, if you guys have any advice, or examples, particularly of this kind of system working in the US, I would love to hear about it!

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Noticed that the slrpnk.net instance is down, had to create an account on lemmy.world to access lemmy. Anybody know what's up?

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by jeffhykin@lemm.ee to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net
 
 

I plan to speak to my city council about a tool library, and literally have citizens use their existing library card to checkout tools. To make the idea a bit more robust, I'm also planning to require citizens deposit something as collateral when checking out a tool.

However.

I live in Texas (I love Texas). Thankfully my city council is receptive, but I know they're going to need compelling evidence before approving something like this.

So, if you guys have any examples, or advice, particularly of this kind of system working in the US, I would love to hear about it!

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by schmorpel@slrpnk.net to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net
 
 

A few times I've come upon the power of a common language in the last few days.

I've seen a video about a meeting of Amazonian pajés (shamans) and herbalists sharing and maintaining traditional plant use, facilitated through the common language Portuguese, I've read about the success of the Zapatistas where native people are helped in their efforts by the common language Spanish. And just now a post in Anarchism & Social Ecology mixing Spanish and English just as comfortably as my family juggles three languages at home.

Do you know of other examples?

I thought one of the non-evil possible uses of a LLM could be to create a new language like Esperanto, and ideally it would simply be a mix of English and Spanish, to connect a maximum number of people? Or are artificial languages always doomed to fail?

Edit: title, because there is not one language of solarpunk

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“But, you will be sitting on a pile of ruins.”

We are not in the least afraid of ruins. We are going to inherit the earth; there is not the slightest doubt about that. The bourgeoisie may blast and burn its own world before it finally leaves the stage of history. We are not afraid of ruins. We who ploughed the prairies and built the cities can build again, only better next time. We carry a new world, here in our hearts. The world is growing this minute.

—Buenaventura Durruti, interview with Pierre van Paassen (1936-07-24)

https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/pierre-van-paasen-interview-with-buenaventura-durruti

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Weird title, I know. But I've recently found out that I'm pregnant with my first child. It's an equal mix of anxiety, excitement, and anger at just how consumeristic having a goddamn baby is. So I'm curious how my fellow Solarpunks would handle the introduction of a new small mammal into their world.

My main concern revolves around Amazon and general gifting.

I live in the UK, but I'm from the US originally, and my family and most of my friends are back in the US. Their go-to for sending me anything is Amazon, because you can easily shop in the US and ship to my home in the UK. I've had mixed feelings about this for a long time, but now that my entire family is gonna want to Buy Something for Baby I'm especially cautious. I don't want to tell them not to buy anything (Well I do, but more on that later). But I absolutely do not want to receive anything from Amazon. Environmental, economical, political, and ethical concerns aside, I don't really trust items from Amazon to hold up like I'd want them to. Might not technically be an issue with baby clothes, since they'll be worn for a day at most, but anything else I come into possession of needs to be sturdy enough to be safe, and to be able to be reused/passed down/given to other parents in the community when no longer needed.

I found a website called LittleList that's a UK-based baby registry, which seems to allow people from anywhere to order anything to my door, and they even seem to have an emphasis on more eco friendly brands. My plan as a result is to tell people they can only order off of the LittleList registry, or they can just get a card for my family and/or baby. That said, I'll take advice for either how to get people to actually listen to this request, or for other, better requests to make.

My other concern with getting gifts (and even buying stuff myself) is I don't know what I'll actually need and use, and I'd hate to buy or receive useless stuff just to clutter my house. Also, I'm in Scotland, so the government will send us a box full of baby necessities when baby is born. I hope I can use this little fact to convince people that really, I don't need anything.

TL:DR; anyone have advice for how to keep people from inundating me and baby with cheap Amazon stuff?

I'm also wondering if there'd be interest in a solarpunk parenting community here, because god knows if I posted this on a generic parenting forum I'd get all kinds of people not getting it, and I know this won't be the last weird question I have.

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Title. I only ever hear about protest in the news, days after they happen. Does anybody know of anything that has nearby protests schedules? Or maybe an app that helps plan protests?

FOSS would be ideal, but anything would help.

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The Whole Earth Catalog: Access To Tools, was unique a publication in the 70's that, in some ways, laid a little bit of groundwork for Solarpunk. It saw the use of technology as something that could empower individuals, and attempted to spread the knowledge of those empowering tools to all.

This archive has the complete set of pretty much everything they ever published. It's use today is limited, but it's fun to look through for ideas.

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by AEMarling@slrpnk.net to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net
 
 

I’m dancing-on-photons happy to reveal the cover by Rita Fei for my upcoming solarpunk novel, Murder in the Tool Library. You can pre-order it on this site as well as on some more mainstream ones. The paperbook will be available on Barnes and Noble closer to the release date on Dec 8th.

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Hi friends and comrades! What are you working on these days? I'm really interested in praxis and in new ideas of what to do in real life to advance towards a solarpunk future.

Hope you're all well!

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When she woke up, she immediately sensed that something was wrong.

She stumbled out of bed, went to the window and looked outside. Her heart almost stopped: it was even worse than she had expected. Chaos was unfolding all across her communities. She was seeing and feeling people running headless around the streets, panicking from the incoming influx of screaming noise that seemed to come from everywhere at once. Where the hell did it come from, she thought against the unbearable throbbing in her head that made it almost impossible to concentrate. And then, in a sudden pang of realization that almost hurt her physically, it occurred to her: the Meta Myzel. It had actually arrived.

She pushed herself away from the window and while holding her ears, rushed down the staircase to severe the connection to the Meta Myzel – or was it already too late?

...

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I am so so divided on if I should vote for biden or not. I wanna vote third party to at least do something or should I just stay home and protest and advocate where I can? Thoughts?

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Hello, just wanted you folks to know I exist here. I'm aeleo and I'm a huge fan of solar punk. I am an egoist-anarcho-communist. I believe in abolishing the state and all unjust hierarchies. I'm not gonna be too active but I thought I'd say hi.

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by spaduf@slrpnk.net to c/solarpunk@slrpnk.net
 
 

cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/3868605

Institution: MIT
Lecturer: Prof. David Hsu
University Course Code: MIT 11.165
Subject: #climate #polisci #politicalscience
Description: This class is about figuring out together what cities and users can do to reduce their energy use and carbon emissions. Many other classes at MIT focus on policies, technologies, and systems, often at the national or international level, but this course focuses on the scale of cities and users. It is designed for any students interested in learning how to intervene in the energy use of cities using policy, technology, economics, and urban planning.

More at !opencourselectures@slrpnk.net

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For a long while, I'd been picturing a society that handled reuse the way I do IRL - if you have a thing, you make it last as long as possible, fix it if you can, and when it's finally worn out you find another use for it (even if just as component parts). I'd imagined the transfer of usable items would be handled informally, through community networks or something similar to Everything is Free/Buy Nothing groups IRL.

But conversations awhile back got me imagining a bigger, community/societal-level focus on reuse. Perhaps a society where most people's first source for some household items or appliances or furniture would be some kind of community stockpile. I imagine warehouses where items are sorted and tested, fixed, and perhaps broken down to components for other repairs. Where they're catalogued and posted to some kind of library- or eBay-like website. I imagine community drop off and collection points, where someone who's downsizing might bring extra appliances, and young folks just starting out might pick their first furniture. I picture a separate refuse stream for things that are still good or could be fixed, emphasizing that there's a difference between something you don't need anymore, and something nobody needs (actual garbage). I could even see work crews combing through long-abandoned houses, hauling out items to put back into circulation, before disassembling the building, Habitat For Humanity -style, to use the lumber and counters and cabinets etc elsewhere.

I don't think this would be the only source of stuff, probably not even the primary one. If you want fancy furniture I figure you'd go to a local workshop and see what they've got, or commission something from an open-source design. But I could see this system of reuse taking the place of something like Walmart or IKEA. Sort of your default for cheap stuff (I'm weak on economic theory; I'd love a society where it's all free, but I don't know enough to describe that with confidence. Hopefully it'd at least be a government org, or a worker run nonprofit type thing where all profits go to the workers and continuing operation?). I like the idea of a society with an institutional focus on reuse rather than extraction and disposal.

Normally I don't start off with a whole chunk of world building like that, but I'm planning some photobash scenes around these ideas, and I'd love to work out some of the questions and discussions about logistics before I've made the things and done something wrong.

The first question I had was around collection of these items. I'd been imagining some kind of vehicle operating a bit like a garbage truck, making rounds through various neighborhoods collecting the things people don't want, but less frequently and with a slower pace because they have to be more careful with the stuff they pick up and have to make more trips back to the depot. I'd love to do a streetcar or something other than a generic box truck, but I think a truck makes the most sense. Streetcars were occasionally used to deliver the mail, but I've found no examples of them even being used as garbage trucks, which might be able to maintain a pace that wouldn't disrupt everything else on the line. Depending on the level of service offered, they could need a lot of flexibility - do they pick up just from community drop off points, or from the curb outside people's homes, or do they assist with moving things out of homes for those who are elderly or disabled? Maybe different levels of service for different circumstances?

I hope people would do their best to re-home items directly using the future equivalent of EIF or Buy Nothing, but it'd be nice if there was an option besides the landfill for items that don't generate interest in their immediate community, or where the person just wants it gone with the convenience of throwing it out. I feel like this could help with that.

Then there's the question of how do you get bulky items home in a society where almost no one drives? IKEA and Walmart design a lot of their products to fit, flat-packed, into your sedan or hatchback. And they offer delivery. This society would be handling a lot of already built items and have a lower reliance on personal cars. Maybe most street cars would let you lug a dresser onboard if they're not crowded? I've certainly done similar with the local trains, though the guy at the turnstile wasn't paying attention and probably would have stopped us. Maybe you'd use a cargo bike and trailer? Maybe you just have to hire a delivery service for big things? Is it abelist if the small storefront-style drop-off/pickup sites first answer is to hand you a push cart with your bulky item and send you down the street with it?

Do you have any thoughts on the idea of reuse at this scale?

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I wrote a short story about the Fediverse, called "Breath Taker" / "Lamella on My Mind", which is set in a Solarpunk world, in which, with the help of mushrooms, the so-called Fungiverse replaces traditional social media. I posted links to the short story in this community. Now I'm thinking how to continue to make this story into something that could support the Fediverse and Solarpunk. What are your thoughts? What would you be more interested in?

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Cyberpunk themed rooms are pretty common, but I don't want to limit solarpunk discussion to just rooms; It could be as big as getting your city council to add a greenway, or as small as finding a nice desktop wallpaper. I'd like to hear about it. I'll start off with a few of my own:

  • I got a sunlight alarm clock; best decision I've ever made. The minimal design of this one is great except for one thing; you have you take 5 min to drill a hole in the dead-center of the speaker to kill the alarm noise. It's the only way to disable the sound. I'm sure there's other good options as well.
  • A couple years ago I got an EcoFlow battery with a small 100W solar panel. I mention it specifically because, unlike other batteries, the EcoFlow was extremely repairable, while also having top of the line specs (at least a couple years ago). I still haven't hooked up the solar panel to the grid, maybe next year.
  • I know plants help a ton, but you're going to have to get plant tips from someone else. Maybe someone will have some fake plant recommendations for me.
  • String lights and LED strips work wonders, both indoors and outside. Higher quality string lights (the lights are close together, bulbs are usually brighter and classic-looking) are quite a bit better than the cheap amazon ones, but even the amazon ones add atmosphere. Combine them with cheap timer-sockets and outdoor light sensor sockets to make a nice automated system.
  • I know it's kind of weird to consider going somewhere as part of a "theme" but I haven't found a farmers market that wasn't nice community. Last week I got an IRL side quest; one of the vendors heard I was going to visit the other market location and asked if I could bring a jug of sweetener to his counterpart there. Sometimes the people are them most important part of a theme, so I recommend participating in a market.
  • For transportation, there are some truly great e-options as of late. It's $300 for a cheap-but-good electric scooter on Amazon. I've also got an overpowered e-bike (Onyx RCR) and even at $4000 it's cheaper than a couple years of a car insurance and gas. Silently zooming with the confidence of being able to charge it off a solar panel is a really pleasant feeling.
  • Finally I've recently attended my first city hall meetings, and it's been shocking how helpful the city staff is. Absolutely nothing like the DMV or national politics. For example, I was told about a "SeeClickFix" app, and it has been great for getting street lights fixed.

It's not much, but that's all my tips.

Got any string lights of your own to show off? or maybe some watering systems, or plant tips? I wish we had an r/battlestations equivalent

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The idea is to have a piece of fiction that you can give a person to experience the Fediverse while also being moderately entertained in the process. So: would you give this story to a person that doesn’t know anything about the Fediverse? I would love to hear your opinions. I will try to incorporate feedback into the story but no promises!

(based on Feedback now with Fungi-Taylor-Swift, a Moderator character, Fridays for Fungi and MUCH MORE Lemmy-Drama)

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