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Honey, I Shrunk the House

Posted on 16. Авг, 2006 by Park Girl in public interest

As mainstream houses become ever more obscenely gigantic and resource-wasteful, a parallel trend toward micro-dwellings may be building. From a recent article titled “Shrinking Down the House” in Time magazine:

Two years ago, Dee Williams, a toxic-waste inspector, put her 2,000-sq.-ft. bungalow in Portland, Ore., on the market and moved into an 84-sq.-ft. cabin on wheels that she built using salvaged cedar, torn-up jeans for insulation and solar cells for power. Then she hitched her tiny house to a biodiesel truck and drove to Olympia, Wash., where friends agreed to let her park in a grassy corner of their backyard. Although Williams, 43, admits that she misses having room for friends to spend the night, she says, “I love my tiny house.”

… [O]ver the past decade, dozens of architects and builders have begun specializing in tiny-house designs. And home buyers—motivated by the desire to simplify their lives, use fewer resources and save money—are falling in love with the little things. Gregory Johnson, a co-founder of the Small House Society in Iowa City, Iowa, estimates that anywhere from a few hundred to a thousand homes measuring less than 500 sq. ft. and costing less than $100,000 have been built since his group of 40 architects and builders formed in 2002. Says architect Marianne Cusato, a small-home designer who lives in a 300-sq.-ft. apartment in New York City: “It’s human nature to gravitate toward something that makes you feel contained.”

Cusato designed her first small home after hurricane Katrina as “a dignified alternative to the FEMA trailer.” Her models, which the government is considering for Katrina-ravaged areas, range from a 308-sq.-ft. studio to a 434-sq.-ft. two-bedroom version and feature full-size porches shaded by eaves. Already, Cusato says, she is in negotiations with a large retail chain to sell her houselets to the public as well.

Dennis Fukai in Archer, Fla., drew the inspiration for his tiny homes from squatter cottages in Chile, which he studied as a Fulbright scholar in 1992. Fukai has designed six 65- to 133-sq.-ft. homes, which he calls Nests, for about $5,000 each.

Small homes make sense not just for the frugal or displaced but also for single city dwellers like students or business travelers. …

… “When you build smaller, you can put in a lot more quality than you can in a larger space,” says Geoffrey Warner of Alchemy Architects in St. Paul, Minn. Warner’s weeHouses, shaped something like shipping containers, start at $69,500 for a 364-sq.-ft. studio with bamboo flooring, built-in cabinetry and floor-to-ceiling sliding glass doors

Early Warning Signs of Fascism

Posted on 11. Авг, 2006 by Park Girl in public interest

(I copied the following from a poster hanging in an office at EcoVersity.)

Early Warning Signs of Fascism

Powerful and continuing nationalism
Disdain for human rights
Identification of enemies as a unifying cause
Supremacy of the military
Rampant sexism
Controlled mass media
Obsession with national security
Religion and government intertwined
Corporate power protected
Labor power suppressed
Disdain for intellectuals & the arts
Obsession with crime & punishment
Rampant cronyism & corruption
Fraudulent elections

Laurence W. Britt wrote about the common signs of fascism in April, 2003, after researching seven fascist regimes. Those were Adolph Hitler’s Nazi Germany, Benito Mussolini’s Italy, Francisco Franco’s Spain, Antonio de Oliveira Salazar’s Portugal, George Papadopoulos’s Greece, Augusto Pinochet’s Italy, Mohamed Suharto’s Indonesia. These signs resonate with the political and economic direction of the United States under Bush/Cheney. Get involved in reversing this anti-democratic direction while you still can!

Poster #P590CW SCW(c)2005. Early Warning Signs of Fascism Text by Laurence W. Britt. Design SCW. Available as a poster and t-shirt. TOOLS FOR CHANGE catalog, Syracuse Cultural Workers (SCW), Box 6367, Syracuse, NY 13217 USA 315-474-1132. FREE fax 877-265-5399 www.syculturalworkers.com Printed by union labor on recycled paperr containing postconsumer waste.

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Our permaculture teacher Scott Pittman offers an extremely important addition to Britt’s list, and points out that, like the above-mentioned conditions, it is very much happening NOW: “Government operates at the pleasure of corporate structures.”

Consider the man on horseback

Posted on 14. Июнь, 2006 by Park Girl in public interest

“Consider the man on horseback, and I have been a man on horseback for most of my life. Well, mostly he is a good man, but there is a change in him as soon as he mounts. Every man on horseback is an arrogant man, however gentle he may be on foot. The man in the automobile is one thousand times as dangerous. I tell you, it will engender absolute selfishness in mankind if the driving of automobiles becomes common. It will breed violence on a scale never seen before. It will mark the end of the family as we know it, the three or four generations living happily in one home. It will destroy the sense of neighborhood and the true sense of Nation. It will create giantized cankers of cities, false opulence of suburbs, ruinized countryside, and unhealthy conglomerations of specialized farming and manufacturing. It will make every man a tyrant.” — R.A. Lafferty

(According to Adbusters magazine, this was written in the late nineteenth century. Adbusters put this quote on the back of a “Violation Notice” designed to be placed on the windshields of cars like a parking ticket. On the front, the slip of paper looks just like a real ticket!)