schmorp

bog creature

  • 84 Posts
  • 794 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 12th, 2023

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  • Why should the homeless have no right to organize? It’s funny that the only places with (rough but efficient) functioning self-organization I could find so far were among the homeless and the small folk. Those with stuff left to protect are too much up their own arse to want to play well with others.

    Also, the plans to get off the street are real, most of the time. Every kindness you show is a seed that one day will point towards the right direction.

    I’ve been hanging out with the homeless as a kid, and lived on the streets for a few months as a young adult, travelling and panhandling. I met many very kind, and often very damaged people. They are on the streets because it’s for a variety of reasons the only option they can manage, not because they enjoy scamming you out of a few coins and do nothing all day.

    If you are concerned about your money look at the suit wearing people, most of it ends up with them.









  • Hmm, the farmer interviewed in the article farms 570 ha - maybe consider a restoration of smaller-scale farms and restoration of the commons before complaining about criminals roaming lands the size of an entire village?

    The concentration of ownership into fewer and fewer hand means that smaller farmers had to sell out to the big guys, a process that has been going on for very long. When there is nothing left but large swatches of land owned by single persons what is normal folk supposed to do? Turn into serfs again? It’s not even possible anymore because most farmers will just import the cheapest farmhand from other countries because nobody can live a dignified life from the pittance they pay workers.

    Not to forget, with large areas of land in a single hand comes monoculture and all the destruction associated with it.

    Fuck it, distribute the land to the crime gangs and teach them how to garden.





  • a picture of the brush

    Only in August, when it’s the time for picking the grass. It’s still green, and I as the green brushmaker got verbal instructions about its making while stumbling over a sun-baked plateau, by a person who had walked the path we were on since he was five. So he started with a whole set of memories about him on the path on the way to sell cheese, about which lands around belong to which village, and which village is stupider, and the plants we were wading through. Me and kid just happened to be there and were a happy, interested public for his flashback and geography session. It’s absolutely worth a bit of sunstroke, although I do think there must be healthier ways of getting some etnobotanical and other landscape knowledge from the old folk around. Inviting the to a slower walk at an earlier hour just to talk about plants might be a good idea.

    mushroom-growing ants

    There’s the famous leaf-cutter ants, those were the first we knew to grow mushrooms. In the meantime there’s been studies about ants also propagating other species, for example Macrolepiota and Leucoagaricus. My garden is full of Leucoagaricus and ants - and I’d like them to rather grow something I would eat, I’m sure we can come to some agreement.


  • I’m still quite torn between creating coop, or association, or both, or neither. There’s a mix of different factors at play - the fact of being geared towards being a for-profit (for the member-owners) in case of the coop, and a non-profit (in service of something intangible) in case of the association makes me tend towards the association. Then again, for people running small businesses a coop might be really useful and needed. Then again, running a small business as a independent worker might actually be the solution with less overhang. Then again, everything might crumble so fast we won’t even care anymore in 5 or 7 years from now and we should work on creating community in whatever formless way we can, as quickly as we can.

    On that note, how crumbly does it feel where you are?

    To create either coop or association, there’s the longer winded option to visit a notary (and other places, and send letters to somewhere, and ???) with even more bureaucracy and costs (and apparently time) involved. I’ll attack this indecision one of these days and sit down with a local friend who knows accounting. I also have to take things slow and rest some, sometimes. 😅



  • schmorptocollapse of the old societyThe War On Weeds | NOEMA
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    2 months ago

    Where I live Mimosa kills everthing where it grows, so does Eucalyptus. But watching (and unsuccessfully fighting it) during two decades I find that it ultimately can’t outgrow the native species, it finds a more humble place in the landscape with time. Yes we shouldn’t stupidly introduce new stuff left and right, but the idea that invasives could be removed entirely feels entirely impossible (how? and where to draw the line?), and also frighteningly fascist, to me. Managing a landscape by building diverse ecosystems where the ‘invasives’ have place and function seems to be a more fruitful (!) thing to do imo.




  • Farmed insects have negligible emissions and negligible cruelty. Insect death is unavoidable in plant farming anyway. Thus insects are also considered “legally vegan” for the purposes of these new rules.

    A landscape consists of all its inhabitants. I don’t like this hand-waving away of insect and small mammal deaths - and the obsession with wanting to call an insect-eating or dumpster-diving (sorry expiry-date-based) lifestyle vegan - it’s not, full stop. I’m aware that seeing every species (plant, animal, fungus, microorganism) as conscious and with a right to exist is more complex than saying ‘I won’t eat it because it looks too similar to me’ - but that is a complexity I believe we have to face when we decide to be a part of landscape.

    I do believe agriculture needs a deep restructuring to the point where we wouldn’t recognize it as agriculture anymore. And even as non-vegan I do agree that for the time being your rule would be beneficial for society. Do away with the ‘meat is a part of every meal’ mindset, get used to some alternatives.

    However, as an anarchist who’d rather live in a common-sense community where decisions are taken based on situational context, not rules, I probably shouldn’t comment in here, as I don’t believe in creating rules. For who anyway? Who’s gonna adhere to them? Should we rather spend the time to teach our kids how to be excellent to others and take no shit?