Chris Vreeland is a user on octodon.social. You can follow them or interact with them if you have an account anywhere in the fediverse. If you don't, you can sign up here.

I think we could provide everybody a sustainable and decent standard of living, but not without changes.

1. We need a more reasonable definition of "decent standard of living" that doesn't emphasize electronic devices and entertainment.

2. Planned obsolescence must end.

3. Consumer products should be designed for durability and ease of repair.

4. We must end reliance on automobiles without depriving people of mobility.

5. Kill the food industry.

arstechnica.com/science/2018/0

@starbreaker Yep. But:

1) Electronic devices are generally good as long as…

2) they're not replaced too often. Having an iPhone isn't a problem, getting a new iPhone every year is.

3) Yes, durability and ease of repair. Also upgrade where it makes sense without throwing away the still perfectly functional bits.

4) Yes. But also less motion would be good. Everything from shorter commutes to vastly less air travel. Buses and trains are only less-bad than cars and planes.

Chris Vreeland @Devils_Rancher

@edavies @starbreaker Food: as far as sustainability, Local+organic > local > organic, not local. Basically, the energy spent transporting organic avocados from Chile more than offsets the gains of growing them organically, so local is better for the environment. Plus I’d imagine they won’t rot in the produce drawer at home so quickly.

Electronic devices: yes! I’m on my 2nd IPhone in 8 years. Good for 2 more at least. Learning to lose my tech lust.

· Tootle for Mastodon · 0 · 0