Wednesday, December 3, 2008

I return! More powerful than before!

Ah, yes. So, I apparently won the game. I mean, It's not like there was a win condition, but I sorta got a lot of honors and attention, which was what I was after, so yay. 

So now I'm a SEHI 19,  which is hugely awesome and, in some ways, the ultimate gotcha. "You wanna tell us how to run the game, smart guy? Here you go. You do better." It's Ironic that I got the "most responsive" award, seeing as I had to go AFK the last 2 weeks. I'm really proud of my "most Wuffie" award. I might just put it on my resume. 

Anyway, Now we're all going "whats next?" At least, those of us still around. The S19 have been taalking up  a storm on recnstruct, but I've only seen a little other activity otherwise. We certainly haven't picked up our GM mantles and gotten things rolling yet either. This is pretty understandable, because we had no warning we were going to be put in charge, so there was no plan for the "transition of power." Also, It's holiday season, and everyone is pressed for time. 

Rest assured, though, that we do plan on doing something wth our new toy, assuming we still have an audience. We're kind of in 2 camps at the moment: those who want to keep the current game going (and right now), and those who want to wait until later to give everyone a break, and maybe make some changes to  the game before the relaunch. Now, one does not preclude the other, because we can work on both at once. But I'd kind of like to hear from the players at large on this. Go  you want more superstruct right now, or do you want to wait for a superstruct sequel early next year? Let me know in the comments. 

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Where I've been.

OOC moment: I've been swamped with overtime from my office. I simply haven't had the time to superstruct, and I won't have any time until well after superstruct is over. Fiction is getting in the way of reality for me. The fictional world of superstruct has kept me from my real life. The fiction of having to participate in society is getting in the way of working on the real problems we face. All that jazz. Sadly, earning my paycheck so I can eat today has to take precedence over figuring out how we all can eat 10 years from now.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Your 3 superstructs and Reconstruct.

OK, so Ineffabelle has thrown together a new site where we can do some of our superstructing. It's a good tool for actually collaborating, unlike the main site. So if you want to get a badge for something, you want to put it here, but if you want to actually talk with your fellow superstructers and collaborate, I'd suggesting checking out reconstruct. Of course, any open-authored online tool is only as good as the people using it, and we need to fill a lot in if we're going to make serious use of reconstruct.

Avantgame just added a new mission to our plate, challenging us to pick our top 3 superstructs. This is great, because it helps us separate some of the more useful structs out of the hundreds we've got lying around. But putting our lists into stories that we post isn't the most effective way to choose which structs to work on, is it? It doesn't effect their ranking in the struct list on the main site, it doesn't stand out right away, you have to go looking for it manually. We can do better.

In fact, we can kill two birds with one stone. When you join reconstruct, I encourage you to go create your top 3 superstructs. That way, we fill out reconstruct's superstruct pages, and we do so only with the best superstructs in the game. So lets get to it. When I log on to reconstruct this weekend, I'll know who's still working hard to save the world, what they think will help, and have a better means to communicate directly with them. Lets get cracking!

The Minimum Bound of the acceptable Future.

I'm going to take us on an imagination exercise today. The purpose is not to propose any one thing as a solution to a problem. The purpose is to remove a few blinders, stretch your definitions of an acceptable future. Or at least get certain boundaries aknowledged.

Lets suppose that, for whatever reason, we're reduced back to the stone age. That's right, we lose all civilization. Through a combination of resource depletion, mass die-offs and loss of records, our descendants live a hunter-gatherer lifestyle amid the ruins of our civilization. How Bad is this scenario?

Making some wild assumptions, lets assume that the population of our future culture has relearned the necessary skills. That's not too far-fetched, as there are hobby groups that practice most of them today. Lets also assume that the ecosystem is still intact enough to support people. This isn't a safe assumption, but honestly if the oceans go anaerobic we're all screwed anyway.

So lets imagine it. You (the reincarnated you, because this is a few hundred years from now, after the end of civilization) live in a group of 50-150 people, a group of probably a dozen families each with a dozen members. The young men hunt for meat, everyone else either gathers food plants or does camp chores like caring for the young, preserving yesterday's food, tanning hides, etc. A few dedicated flintnappers make new blades. In the evening everyone gatheres around a fire to eat the day's catch, share stories, play music, and retire for the evening when they get tired. All your possessions fit in a bag, your entire village is moveable so yo ucan follow the food and leave problem areas.

Basically, an endless camping trip. Some of you will hate this idea. I think more than a few will think it sounds fun. But this is pretty much how all our ancestors lived, from the beginning of our evolution to the invention of civilization 10,000 years ago. This is the type of living that we evolved doing, and you'd be surprised how easily we adapt to it. Going native is one of the easiest things to do. Historically, civilized settlers would often rapidly go native in a new land. Maybe you've heard of Roanoke, its one of the better examples. The thing is, this is the baseline of Human existence. And it ain't all that bad. It's not that stressful, for one. Hunter-gatherers work about 2 hours a day to meet their needs. When you fail to catch something, you know your tribesman will share his catch, just as you share when you bag the food.

There are still arguments and evil people and violence, but I think still is the operative word there. Civilization never got rid of any of that stuff, it just channeled it into wars and sports teams and political parties. The amount of unpleasantness, at the very least, remains the same. I'm giving a bit of a truncated sales pitch on primitive living, but there are so many more eloquent advocates that I'll just leave it to them.

I'm not advocating returning humanity as a whole to the ancestral state (though if you want to, there is ReWilders.) What I'm asking you to do is consider the Minimum Bound of acceptable future. This society is sustainable. It lacks high tech, low tech, global understanding, the internet, multiculturalism, and million other things we like, but it also lacks pollution, Intrusive government, economic inequity and a million other things we hate. And we know, from millions of years of experience, that this works.

I accepted the possibility of this being the future back around 2005, and it does a world of good. I'd be happy in this society, at least happier. But more importantly, I can build the society I really want to live in from the ground up. If I can accept a society that lacks EVERYTHING we have come to rely on as civilization, Then I am free to discard whatever needs to go.

I'm not attached to, say, cars. Or computers. Or Electricity. Oh, I like the last two, but if the making of them turns out not to be sustainable in the long run, I'll survive. I like living in cities, but if that level of concentration of people is unsustainable or damaging, I can live without it. Because I know this wasn't a bad life, I don't have to accept the bad things civilizations do because of the argument that "well, we can't do without it." In fact, we can.

When I imagine a sustainable society, I start not from our current one, but from this. I ask, not how we can change a system we depend on to being sustainable, but how we can add a system we want to a tribal culture without making it unsustainable. Compared to becoming Neoliths again, Most other reactions to the crisises we face today seem a lot less radical.

So ask yourself. Could you live with being a stone age survivor? What do you want out of a society that isn't included in such a culture? And, most importantly, how could you maintain those things you want in a sustainable fashion?

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Crazy as a FoxP2

(I typed this up last night under the influence of some homemade FOXP2 drugs. I thought about deleting the post, but then though maybe it would be a decent cautionary tale. I kinda learned the hard way on this, such is curiosity, maybe I can help a few people learn the easy way.)

I'm not sure I should be typing right now. I don't think what I'm going to talk about will come across well. It's fragmented, like I try to say something and I don't really have words. Or I have words, and they don't arrange themselves right. Like trying to talk in only one dimension. Wait, that's not a metaphor, that's what I'm trying to do. I mean like, ah, fuck it. I'm abusing hyperlinks already. (Not that that has anything to do with metaphor. Why and I skipping ahead in my reasoning just to come back and fill in the blanks?)

A friend of a friend hooked me up with an open source formula for the FoxP2 drugs for my son's autism. (Spelled it wrong before. Why didn't I notice? I guess I never cared much for accurate language before. If you knew what I meant... Whoo, tangent.) So I procured the necessary equipment and ingredients for the experiment. After a few days my first batch were finished. (I'd link the instructions, but in a minute maybe you see why I don't. Or maybe you see already. Or maybe you hear. I taste it right now, synesthesia is like that.) (I'm sure they, I mean you, can find them if you want to anyway.) Before giving weird homemade drugs to my son, however, they needed to be adequately tested. So I've taken some myself.

This is not the first time I've tried a cognitive enhancer. This is reminding me why I never kept on them. I don't think my family is really noticing the difference (Because it's in my head. Get it?) But I can tell I'm more fragmented than normal. When it first kicked in I had the right words for things, but then soon I ran out of words, or the words were inadequate, or I couldn't talk in one sentence at once, and it all collapsed back on itself (like this sentence and the first paragraph.) I became incoherent. I don't think my family is really noticing the difference.

This is not the first time I've been a little unhinged. Noone lives with me this long without meeting the me that does the things that I don't do. Normally, abnormally, The normative is not formative and the formant remains dormant. I mean, we're all mad here. You'd have to be crazy not to be mad. I'm just saying, They've seen me like this before, and they probably won't connect it to the drug. Hell, It's mostly language based, and my reasoning in that department is always a little fuzzy.

I don't think I'll be giving these to my son. I can rule out the idea they were cut, since I made them myself. I know I'm not on a trip or a hallucinogen. I think that boosting your brainpower can have unintended consequences. Like how when someone with ADHD takes ritilin, it calms them down (Because stimulants stimulate the normally inactive regulatory parts of the brain into working), but if you give them to someone normal they start acting hyper. It giveth with one hand and taketh away with the other. I think that maybe a drug meant to treat autism wil have very weird effects on a person who is normal. Or even me. Hell, drugs meant to treat what I do have always had weird effects, Bipolar disorder and ADHD interact strangely on their own, and in the end it was easier to quit the world everyone else had than it was to adjust. But I can't rule out that I did something wrong in production either. (And maybe this is something else, it's not like you have a control group for your experiment, dumbass.) Science, I'm doing it wrong.

So I'm thinking this wasn't a good idea, and this isn't a good idea, and that maybe we can't decide we should get smarter because we're not smart enough to know if being smarter is a smart thing to do. I'm not sure being smarter is wise. A lot of things make sense that don't normally, but not in ways that I can articulate, which makes me wonder, because I thought articulation would improve. I don't think it's the faculties but the language I'm using. And this pesky linear idea transmission. (Oh dear, we're back to the beginning.) I mean, maybe I'm enhanced but I'm not functional. The new features broke the program. I don't know if the bugs can be fixed or if the project should be scrapped. But I think I'm not willing to try the homemade thing anymore.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Scaling Up.

OK, so a few posts ago I talked about not talking about gardens. In her last video, Jane suggested we need to look at structs beyond the grassroots level, top down as well as bottom up. And My Nightsoil collection agency got me in deep trouble and almost got our garden torn up. Put all these together, and I've decided to take a different tact to ensuring that human waste gets properly treated.

My mother has decided that if the city leaders think threatening community gardens is a good use of resources in the face of our crisis's, then she can do a lot better job than they do. So she's running for city council. I thought maybe having her son be arrested for sabotaging city equipment, but it seems that on the PR side, the city is getting the flack and I'm kind of a folk hero now (ain't got a song yet, but there's time). Part of her platform was going to be allowing the night soil service, but I thought, hey, if we're gonna be in charge of what the city does, why not go big?

Hence, the Anaerobic Activists. We're going to replace our city's waste treatment plant with Methane Digesters and make the compost freely available when it's ready.

Mask of the Moon Moth.

The title for today's post comes from a short science fiction story I read in college. (It starts on p. 116 of this book) The basic concept of the story is a society where everyone wears masks, and people change identity with a change of the mask. Everyone knows that everyone else has more than one mask, but it is considered improper to acknowledge that it's the same person beneath different masks. Thus, everyone takes for granted the mask presented them.

St. Louis isn't a ReDS zone yet, but with the state of things down river (Check out the story disease central in stories, I can't link directly), the city is being extra cautious. Assembly12 has closed down a lot of business and called of many events. The old city hospital has apparently been refitted as a ReDS Hotel. And Masks have become the latest fashion.

I'm sure in your own cities you've seen the face covers being used, and now stores carry designer masks, Walmart has masks with your favorite characters on them. Hell, Even I wear one, though I still consider myself above petty germophobia. I've exposed my immune system to enough that I'm confident of it's Darwinian excellence. I just hate the bad pollution days, and I don't seal myself in an air-conditioned bubble so I have to deal with it more than most. Walking down the street in St. Louis these days is like walking in Singapore during the bird flu scares. Over half the people you see will be wearing a mask of some kind. Combine the mouth and nose covering with sunglasses and a hat, and you can barely see anyone's face.

Bet the cops feel really silly about paying for that expensive facial recognition software for the public security cameras now, don't they?

That's all well and good on it's own, but something else interesting is happening. Many of those people are currently using Augmented Reality goggles as well, and they are broadcasting their Personal profiles so that other people who look at them in AR can get their name, etc. This isn't new either, AR enabled social software has been in use by a lot of people for a year now. It's the intersection which has gotten interesting. Since people can't see your face, but they CAN see your public profile in AR, they are forced to accept that you are who you say you are. Switch Profiles, and you switch names, interests, personality. Public interaction IRL is starting to take on the same pseudonymous quality as Internet interaction has.

I've been experimenting with this as I walk around town today. A few different profiles, and I can do some pretty interesting things. I spent a half hour talking to a woman in the loop, then walked around the block and changed profiles. When I came back to her she didn't recognize me, even when I waved. People who snubbed me with one profile greeted me as a compatriot with a changed one. I spent the afternoon flirting with dissociative disorder. I'm already thinking of a few dozen ways this new development could be used or abused. Is anyone seeing this anywhere else? Who else has fun ideas?

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

You have no idea where I stand.

Now to the disagreements. This it probably the only post where I'll directly talk about what he wrote. But this is a problem specifically with what he said about me, so it's unaviodable that I talk about words rather than ideas.

You have no idea where I stand, Ruud. I've read Guembe's stuff. Of the three options you presented, he's talking about option 3. To throw me in with him because I don't choose to continue the same growth-based strategies that got us here is intellectually dishonest. You didn't even respond to my conclusion that gardening and homesteading are political choices, about choosing decentralization and self-sufficiency instead of dependance on a vast system you have little control over and less understanding of. You just reasserted your beleif that if I do that everyone is going to die. You seem to have missed my point that your options are a false choice, and that there are several others options available.

And I told you what of your three options I would choose, if I had to choose, just to point out that we have different visions of an acceptable future. And I put forward another possible scenario. But at no point did I "clearly [state] that we collectively should aim for a model where humans, at least in the US where you live, should self-organize into small gardens."

What I said is that everyone should have access to the means to do so, should they so choose. That implies nothing about making them do so. And I'm actually more concerned about people in 3rd world areas, or the poor wherever, not just people in the US like me. People who lack food due to economic reasons, for whom homsteading is a viable economic decision. Also, people like me, who specifically want to homestead even though it's not the best economic decision.

But no, we collectively should do nothing. Parse that again, I guarentee you read it wrong. I'm not advocating inaction. I'm advocating a lack of collectivity on this. We need to ride the black swan. This means we need to different groups of active people to choose as many of the above options as possible, and make up a thousand more. We need to pursue every strategy, even (Especially) the ones that conflict. The more things we try, the more likely we'll find something that works. I feel that to pursue such stragegies requires extensive freedom, of the sort that I feel can only be offered by ensuring that, no matter what risks they take, they always have access to the neccesities. I feel that freedom is encouraged by the ability to opt out, to unplug.

I have a vision of the world I want to live in. In that world, I have as much freedom as is possible, in part because I have control over the means to provide all my needs. It looks a lot more like the US in 1900 with ruins than your technocratic future, and I prefer that because I prefer empowerment to physical comfort. But what my vision really looks like is Unplugged farmer-scientists trading with rewilded nomads, on the edge where his bio-remediated orchards blend into forests left to reclaim the land, while in the distance a self sustaining arcology sits where once a city did, and over the hill a million things I can't yet imagine are going on.

"We don't need a silver bullet, we need silver buckshot." -whoever said that.

(As an aside, I really hate that style of internet debate where whole posts are are quoted with comments inserted. This doesn't invalidate any of his points, I'm just saying that, please, make your point and quote my text sparingly. I know what I wrote, you know what I wrote, and this is the internet. Anyone can go back and look what was written. All this style accomplishes is breaking your own point up into pieces, making it harder to follow the narrative. )

Lets stop talking about home gardens.

Ruud has updated his arguments. The new stuff is at the bottom.

There's a lot there, and some of them are concepts that are going to need their own posts. Plus, frankly, I don't want this to be a back and forth between the two of us as you as an audience. I'm posting his stuff so that you guys will see it, and I want to hear your responses. Read it. Parts will probably make you angry. I know I past back and forth madly muttering before sat down to write. But it's good that it made me angry, it's good if it makes you angry, because he's challenging our ideas. And ideas need to be challenged, to me made stronger or, if they prove bad, to die. There's more to Ruud's response than just farms vs gardens. At points he challenges some of the core concepts of superstruct, things like decentralization, or large scale collaboration without designated decision makers. I think we need to answer these things. And don't leave it all up to me, I have limited free time.

That said, before I get to the points of contention, I want to talk about the points where I agree with Ruud.

Victory gardens are a nice start, if you are a 1st worlder. They suppliment your store bought diet. You can certainly replace all your veggies this way, and not have to quit your day job either. Butyou aren't gonna get your grains that way, you definately won't get any meat or dairy this way. Even if you go full vegitarian, you aren't going to get all your calories this way, not without moving to the next level, which is the Homestead.

The homestead is the leveled up version of the garden. This is what I talk about, not the victory garden, when I talk about personal scale agriculture. If you are a first worlder, this is actually a bad idea, from an economic standpoint. You, as a first worlder, have access to the market and the means to purchase food that way. Homesteading is a full time job, and your effective pay is too little to justify it. Vegetables are a high priced item right now, so an hour spent planting and tending them pays for itself against the going rate. But grain foods are still cheap, so if you are growing corn or potatoes, you'd be better off spending your time working a minimum wage job and buying it. Ask yourself how much effort goes into personally farming potatoes, versus how much they cost. Do you fancy working for a few cents an hour?

I have a homestead, and I do it for completely political reasons. I don't want to be a first worlder, despite having been raised one. I want to be self-sufficient. I want my food, as well as my other needs, provided from as close to me as possible on my Seraa map. But from an economic standpoint, it's a poor decision.

Now for the rest of the world, the 3 billion who live in rural areas, and who's wages are somwhat less that 100 dollars per year, Homesteading becomes a great option. But if you are reading this on a computer, chances are you aren't one of those people. Well, thanks to initiatives like OLPC, chances have gotten better that you are one of those people. And these are the people that I'd like to help homestead. Because as Ruud points out, they currently don't really know how. And they also lack access to the tools. And the land. When I say ensuring that everyone has access to the means of production, that's what I'm talking about: Tools, land, seeds, training.

But there's another part of the world, the first world, that will be far better off continuing to get their food from the store. And this is the main point I want to make, the main area I agree with Ruud on. Not enough of superstruct's focus has been on large scale agriculture and the food distribution system. Remember, it's a systemic, economic issue we're dealing with, not a production one. Both those systems are what feed those of us that don't farm, and we're not going to make everyone a farmer. We still need people to do other jobs.

Your garden is a good start. It's a valuable piece of the puzzle, one of many co-existing and mutually inclusive strategies to meeting this crisis. But I think we've got it mainly figured out, at least as well as we can in conversation. It's time to set it aside and work on the other strategies we'll need.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Mission: Input-Output.

So one way to organize a system organically is to think about the contents of that system in terms of it's inputs and outputs. This is something I learned from permaculture. You take, say, a chicken, and then determine all the things it needs to continue (Food, water, air, shelter, dust, grit, other chickens), All the things it produces (Eggs, meat, feathers, manure, methane, co2, body heat), and all the behaviors it exhibits (Scratching at the ground, foraging, some flying, fighting). You then repeat this process for everything on the farm. Then you start finding out where there are outputs of one part of the farm that are met by another part.

Anywhere you see a need that some other part of your system doesn't provide, You have to provide it. That's more work for you. Anywhere you see an output that isn't put to good use, that's pollution. And anywhere you see a behavior that isn't somehow planned for, you have disruptions.

This is basic systems analysis, and this is what your challenge from me is. For at least one superstruct you are a member of, I want you to figure out what the inputs and outputs of that superstruct are. What does your struct need to do what it is supposed to? What products or service does it provide, and what are any other byproducts of the struct? Write it out in the "How this superstruct works" section. Then let me know. I guarentee I will rave any superstruct that does this. And it will make facilitation so much easier.

Anatomy of a griefer, part 2

I read back over anatomy of a griefer, and I think it came off a little weak. I think I know why too. I was trying to keep it general, when I'm actually trying to make a very personal point.

I'm a griefer. Maybe I don't unplug people's life support over the internet, but I did plant Kudzu and fill the golf course holes with concrete. And that's just what I'll cop to here, since I already mentioned it before I started watching myself. So I'm speaking from my own insight into my own motivations when I talk about why I think griefers do what they do.

So what makes a person decide they're going to attack a system that millions depend on? For no reason other than to break it?

I think at the core, most griefers are simply people who want to make a difference. But the systems we have only have so much capability to absorb change. Because of how they are designed, with decisions being made at the top then handed down, and because of Dunbar's number, only so many people can actually be invovled in decision making. They systems we have seem specifically designed to block bottom up power, and what that means for the potential griefer is that they have no way to make a difference WITHIN the system.

You don't beleive me? How long have the experts known about climate change. Nearly 50 years at this point. How long did it take us to get serious about it? OH, maybe next year? What about our dependance on oil? Didn't we know from the beginning that one day we'd have to change to more renewable? Why wasn't that our priority? Every superthreat could have been prepared for better, some were preventable, and we knew all were coming. But changes are slow if non-existent. How many of us have known our entire lives that we had to make changes, but have not been in a position to do anything?

That's where the griefer comes from. With no legitimate way to make changes, we resort to working outside the system. And after a while it doesn't matter the changes we make are good changes, so long as we have the ability to make change somehow. If there is one most important phrase to take away from this, it is the next sentence. Griefing is empowering. The systems the griefer grew with are disempowering, and hurting them, bringing them down, is empowering. Even if it objectively makes everything worse. Even if it makes things worse for the griefer himself.

Understand that key thing about griefing, that it isn't about the systems or their goals, but entirely about feeling empowered, is the key to stopping this superthreat. Because if we want to stop making griefers, we simply need to give people who want to make a difference legitimate ways to empower themselves.

And by simple, I mean we need to re-envision every how every level of society is organized.

The problem with Superstruct and Increased Food Production.

OK, so Ruud has tossed the gauntlet, and I intend to pick it up. He came out saying that basically, we need mass government control and vast energy to survive the food crisis and other superthreats. It seems like this has been unpopular, because people have been ignoring it. Well, ignoring things we don’t like is part of what got us into this mess, so lets see if we can come up with something better.

Like any decently thought out argument, the problem lies not in how he reaches his conclusions, but in the assumptions he’s working from. Lets see if we can identify a few.

Population: Ruud argues that it’s impossible to feed 7.7 billion people on this planet. This is essentially the first half of the Malthusian argument: that the more people you have, the more food you need. It doesn’t really get to the second half, which is the more food you produce, the more people you get. A lot of people dismiss Malthusian arguments out of hand, or by saying “We’ll always come up with ways to feed more people.” I think Ruud may fall into this trap as well, because he seems to argue that we need to make more food. But the more food you produce, the more people you get. He also proposes population controls, of the top-down variety. I’m not going to argue with Ruud’s ideas about population control or Euthanasia, not because I agree with them, but because I think they are a sidetrack from the real issue.

Ruud states that most of the 3rd world lies outside of what you call “Decisive Humanity.” Well, they’d probably agree. Except that they do have a way of making their desires known on the world stage, and that is the very problem we’re talking about here: Birthrate. See, in a democracy, as the world nominally functions, demographics are everything. These groups got the shaft in colonial times because they were small tribes that got overpowered by empires. They learned their lesson, that bigger is better. Also, the more people you have, the more say you have. The War nerd put it best a long time ago, Birthrate is a weapon . It’s how the disenfranchised people of the world are making themselves, as you say, decisive. In a way, they are griefing the system that discludes them.

Political, social, and economic equality will do a lot to mitigate this. Birth rates are lower the higher one’s standard of living. Most of these demographics would stop breeding so much if they had other ways of making themselves important. The best way to lower population growth is to raise the standard of living and allow for greater participation politically.

Food Production: I get into some of the why increasing food production is pointless above, but I really want to hammer home the point here.
Firstly, Ruud says that there is no way to feed everyone in the world with current production. That may be true, that we don’t produce enough to feed everyone. But what definitely isn’t true is that we can’t produce that food. We DO have enough production capacity to feed everyone, it’s just that we use it for other things.

The USDA seems to think that food production is actually increasing faster than population is. For now, at least.

Estimation is that it takes somewhere between 3 and 20 acres to feed one person a year. That’s a huge range, but it depends heavily on diet. The 3 is from India, where diet is mostly vegetarian, while the 20 is for beef fed Americans. With the census above estimating that 13% of the world is arable, then we get roughly 4.8 Billion acres. This supports Ruud, except that, wait, much of that land is more productive than the baseline. And improved farming methods in some of those places produce loads more. Oh, and much of the area considered non-arable, is quite suitable for ranching, producing meat on land that can’t support grain. Oh, and then there is fishing, which makes use of the ocean instead of land. That last one might not be much use for long though, we’re definitely overfishing.

And a lot of that arable land is currently growing things other than food. Things like poppies, because apparently a quarter million acres of them were planted last year in afganistan alone . I couldn’t find figures on tobacco. Cotton takes up 76 million acres worldwide, apparently. I’m just pulling little bits of facts off the internet for this, but I’m trying to show that we’re not even close to using the full production capability of the world for feeding people.

Gardens actually produce More food per square foot than Farms do. Farms plant in rows, with large gaps, in monocrop situations that make it easy to harvest. Industrial farming is the most efficient in terms of labor, it takes less people to farm. But it’s not very efficient in terms of land or energy use. This is the type of farming that takes 20 acres to feed a person. According to John Jeavons, you can make a garden that feeds one person for a year, with a healthy, varied vegan diet, on around 4000 square feet. This requires a lot of interplanting, and cannot be mechanized, so you need a lot of human labor. But ironically, what we’re looking at is a decrease in the available amount of energy, and an increase in the population. The one type of energy we have in abundance is people power. And this increases the number of people that can be fed from one acre 30 times.

So it’s not that we lack the capability to feed everyone. Sure, the methods involved might be unsustainable, but that’s not the point yet. The point is that right now, if we wanted, we could feed everyone. Why don’t we?

Food production, as we noted above, competes with other crop products for space in our agriculture. Heck, even food plants like soy and corn are being diverted away from feeding people and into producing things like ethanol. These uses are more profitable to the farmer than growing food to sell to his neighbors. Once the 1st worlders are fed, they want other things, like cotton clothes, smokes, gas for their cars and opium for the weekend. They’ll pay lots of money for these things. It’s simple for the farmer: an acre of poppies nets a fortune, an acre of tomatoes doesn’t. It’s more profitable to sell corn to the ethanol distillers than the tortilla makers. The “decisive” people in the first world pay a lot for cash crops. That’s what makes them decisive, they have the money.

Now at some point, if you don’t produce food, the supply diminishes, while the demand remains constant. Then the price of food goes up, until it is profitable to grow it again, etc. etc. The free market eventually reaches a price equilibrium. But that price equilibrium prices out vast swaths of the population of earth. The reason people starve, then, is not a supply issue, but an issue of purchasing power. If the starving had enough money to influence the market, you can bet your retirement fund that new ways of producing enough food to feed them would become prevalent.

Farming sucks:
This seems to be another point Ruud makes, which I think is a huge stretch. He is really saying that HE would not want to be a farmer. That’s valid. But to assume that others share that stance isn’t valid. I can tell you one thing subsistence farming sucks less than, for certain, and that’s starving.

But if he wants to talk about how boring, how monotonous farm work is, I’d like to direct his attention to work on the assembly line. If he wants to talk about soul-deadening, I’d like to direct his attention to working a meaningless job shuffling paper from one cubicle to the next. Or working fast food, or working retail selling people things they don’t need for so little you can’t afford to shop where you work even with the employee discount. If he wants to talk about a job you wouldn’t wish on your worst enemy, then lets talk about working in a call center.

Farming is energy intensive, but that energy can come from a lot of places. Right now, about the only energy we have in abundance is human labor. I said earlier that modern farming wasn’t land use efficient, and that by using people to plant and harvest instead of machines we could get up to 30 times more per acre. If food production was the issue, that would about solve it, no? Discounting the idea of using more people in food production because you don’t want to pick food for a living is kind of shortsighted.

More energy needed: It’s obvious that farming currently uses a lot of energy. But using a new type of energy to meet that need is only one way to fix this, and perhaps not the best way. What might be a better choice is methods of creating food that are less energy intensive. Yes, whatever energy is needed should be produced in a sustainable fashion. But that’s a lot easier if we need less of it.

Throwing more energy at the problem isn’t going to make thing better, for exactly the reason making more food won’t help. It’s not the problem. Hell, with ethanol, farming has been more of the solution to the energy crisis than the other way around. And agriculture still has to compete with other uses of energy, just like it has to compete with other uses of land, which means that it will drive food prices and people will get priced out of food again.

The Conclusion:

Rudd gives us three options, which I will paraphrase. One is that a strong government forces changes in society and creates a large scale sustainable agriculture that feeds the people who matter. The second is a return to a medieval lifestyle amidst the ruins of our industrial age. The last is total collapse. I’ll probably horrify him and others by stating that among those options, I prefer the second, not the first. But it hardly matters, because the base assumption he makes that the problem is one of supply. It isn’t. It’s a matter of purchasing power and about being “decisive.” First worlder’s aren’t growing victory gardens because they are starving, they’re growing them because they are starving, they are growing them because at the current price of fresh produce, it’s cheaper to grow tomatoes than buy them. Third worlders aren’t starving because there isn’t enough food production, but because we can pay more for the corn as ethanol than they can for corn as food.

The drive to localize food, to make each person a gardener, then, is not a question of producing more food. It’s a political decision. The large scale farmer can note that it’s more profitable to grow opium than food. But the small scale farmer will always feed his family. As Marxist as this sounds, It’s all about making sure the individual and the community have access to the means of production for food. And Water. And the means to manage their waste. Everything it takes for survival, everyone should have local access to what they need, which they have political control over. This is the real reason to go local, not for economic reasons, not for environmental reasons, but for reason of power over what you depend on. Because if someone else controls the food production, they may decide not to feed you.

So here’s my option 4. Every person on earth has access to the tools, the land, and the knowledge required to produce their own food. People in cities still work at normal jobs all day, and buy their staples from a grocery store. Many supplement with food grown on rooftops or balconies, or buy or barter with those who do so, but the majority of their food still comes from farms outside the city, farms that are large scale, but use more human labor than industrial farming, less energy, less waste, more sustainable practices in soil control especially, companion planting and a variety of other techniques to be more productive closer to the city on less land. Between the big farms, in abandoned suburbs and wherever else they want, others work small plots of land to feed themselves, either because they want to or because they had no other option. Many of them have other part time jobs, some have spouses who work full time while they stay home. These small scale homesteads use different techniques than even the sustainable farms, techniques designed not for ease of business but for ease of labor and efficient use of land. It may not be idyllic for some, but it beats having no food. No one is coerced. No one has their survival trumped by someone else’s buying power. And no one goes hungry.

The problem with Superstruct and victory gardens.

Ruud Dirven has written an excellent essay on why victory gardens won't feed all of us.

Read it. I plan to respond to it sometime in the next few days, with my own essay, and it would help if you've read it. It's a good challenge on it's own as well, though, and it should remind you what Ravenous is all about. It's not about making sure you have food. It's about all the chaos that happens when large sections of the world don't get food. This is what I realized when my garden first got raided by those young boys, and which became even more obvious when the community garden was threatened. This is bigger than making sure I have food. This should be a game changer for Ravenous.

Ruud initially posted much of this as a discussion called Why I feel the way I do about decentralized gardening (longer), and any raves, badges, or props should go his way. I'm merely providing this so that he can format his thoughts in a better way to be read, and to make sure that anyone who reads this also reads that.