PODCAST · society
The Common Good Podcast
by Lee Van Ham
The Common Good Podcast is a production of Jubilee-Economics.org, a 501 c3 organization dedicated to One Earth Economics for the Common Good.
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Simpler OneEarth Living Episode 0122—Chuck Collins
Most people feel on the outside of extreme wealth. Some aspire to it. Many are offended by it and consider it immoral—even evil. For most of us it's a sideshow. But Chuck Collins, our guest today, says, "No! It's not a sideshow. It's the main show. It affects all of us." We pay the taxes that build what everyone uses. They avoid taxes, sometimes paying none, taking no responsibility for the common good though they benefit from it. Who makes all this work? That's what our guest today explains. Definitely worth staying with us. We hope you can. Our guest, Chuck Collins, is Director of the Program on Inequality and the Common Good, co-editor of Inequality.org at Institute for Policy Studies. I first became familiar with him through the book, Robin Hood Was Right: A Guide to Giving Your Money for Social Change, co-authored by Chuck in 2000. Then I was greatly impacted by a book he wrote with Felice Yeskel, Economic Apartheid in America: A Primer on Economic Inequality and Insecurity (2005). That book so clearly explains how the economic system can lessen the economic divides in our society and how it can increase them. Subsequently, I established a relationship with Chuck at the Solidarity Economic Forum in Amherst, Massachusetts, in 2009. When I wrote my first book, Blinded by Progress, Chuck agreed to write the "Foreword." I'm grateful for that. A good way to appreciate why Chuck can speak with authority to our topic today, inequality and the radical wealth divide, is to scan titles of his writings. He is author of the popular book, Born on Third Base: A One Percenter Makes the Case for Tackling Inequality, Bringing Wealth Home, and Committing to the Common Good (Chelsea Green) There's also: Is Inequality in America Irreversible? (Oxford, UK-based Polity Press). He's also written 99 to 1: How Wealth Inequality is Wrecking the World and What We Can Do About It. He is co-author with Bill Gates Sr. of Wealth and Our Commonwealth, (Beacon Press, 2003), a case for taxing inherited fortunes. Chuck's work with wealthy persons led to co-founding Wealth for the Common Good, a network of business leaders, high-income households and partners working together to promote shared prosperity and fair taxation. This network merged in 2015 with the Patriotic Millionaires. Most recently, Chuck has written, The Wealth Hoarders: How Billionaires Spend Millions to Hide Trillions. And a short article appeared in "YES! Magazine" entitled, "Helping the Rich Give Away Their Wealth."
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Ep. 1221--Della Duncan
So many voices tell us that saving life on our planet requires a whole different economy. A whole different way of thinking. Consider renegade economics and doughnut economics? How might staying in the dough of the doughnut be a model for us in our work in the world? In the Simpler OneEarth Living Podcast we're committed to living well AND not to exceed the capacities of our one planet home. We want to live in full interdependence with trees, soils, plants, water, animals--all the eco-systems that sustain life. We experience the sacred in all that is. Humanity needs a lot of help to get to such OneEarth living. So we seek out others with a similar commitment and invite them to be guests on this Podcast. Della Duncan describes herself as a renegade economist. Her goal is to create islands of alternative economics in the ocean of capitalism. We hosts think of ourselves as being one of those islands. Della hosts theUpstream Podcast about economic systems change. She is also a Right Livelihood coach, a Senior Fellow of Social and Economic Equity at the International Inequalities Institute in the London School of Economics, the Course Development Manager of Fritjof Capra's Capra Course on the Systems View of Life, a co-founder of the California Doughnut Economics Coalition, and an Alternative Economics Consultant. Visit: Donella Meadows' Leverage Points essay Doughnut Economics Action Lab Upstream Podcast How to Implement Doughnut Economics in Your Community by Della Duncan
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Simpler OneEarth Living Episode 1121--Lauren Van Ham
This episode tells how religions are working together to forge new possibilities in ecology, economics, and women's empowerment—all are making real difference in their communities. Listen too for the importance of organizing as circles in the practice of cooperation. Our previous podcast episode presented the circles of Jubilee. This time we present the circles of cooperation in United Religions Initiative as we talk with Lauren Van Ham in her work with United Religions Initiatives to form and empower Cooperation Circles around the world.
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Ep.1021-Encuentro
Jubilee OneEarth Economics is not focused on just one issue, but on a worldview—a way of viewing the world and living in it. That is a strength, because we need this worldview to save us from the devastation of life happening from the practice of the MultiEarth worldview that prevails today. But worldviews are big and reach into all areas of life. That makes them challenging to describe. This worldview of OneEarth Jubilee guides us in ways similar to how Indigenous peoples have been guided to live sustainably on the Earth for millennia. The Bible also presents this worldview as an alternative to kings and empires. In the Bible, it goes by various names—the Kingdom of God, living acceptable to God, and Jubilee. But in the name of progress, civilization came along and proposed improvements. Some of the ways of progress worked in close interdependence with nature, but most have violated nature and the evolved systems of creation, bringing us death and repeated disregard for life. And now it's taken us to within a few years of destroying our planet's capacities to sustain life. Scientists are alarmed. Yet, corporations from pharmaceuticals to banks and meat producers race ahead, valuing billions of dollars over life itself. Indigenous ways continue to suffer, being thought of as in the past or outdated, and the Jubilee worldview has been forgotten from the biblical narrative. But not everyone. In this episode, four people understand that the situation of life is dire and that just as surely there is a worldview that saves life. Two of the four are from Mexico; two from the U.S. They are part of circles of other people who share a devotion to living the OneEarth Jubilee worldview in radical contrast to the reckless gamble the powers in charge are making with life on the planet. Angelica Juarez is a physician and artist in the village of San Mateo, Puebla, MX. Lindsey Mercer-Robledo is a community organizer in the city of San Cristobal, Chiapas, MX. John Michno is a former IT person who now directs Jubilee Economics Ministries in San Diego, California, USA. Lee Van Ham is a co-founder of the nonprofit OneEarth Jubilee Economics, and has worked to deepen his understanding and practice of the Jubilee worldview for over 20 years. They tell how the Jubilee worldview came to appeal to them, and how they're devoted to put it into practice daily. For them, it is a spiritual path for living in the midst of the breakdowns happening in the current crises. Notable Quote: "Immigration. When people see how people live day by day, sometimes they don't have enough even to eat, you can be touched. Tools for people to develop their income. You don't have to go to other places. They can live here, and stay together as a family. In the pandemic, in this time fewer people have gone to the United States." OneEarthJubilee.com -- Living Within Our One Planet's Capacities SimpleLivingWorks.org
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Ep.0921-- Eric LeCompte, Jubilee USA Network
If you are part of a family struggling with student debt, you likely know that student debt now totals nearly $1.7 trillion, exceeding both total car loans and credit card loans. Only mortgage loans are a bigger part of economic debt. Rugged individualism holds that I must pay off the debt I incur. But that fails to recognize the structures of debt. Debt is not structured by individuals, but by powerful financial and political groups that make repayment strenuously difficult. For many, impossible. Such debt is immoral and destroys creativity to the extent that all, not just the debtor, suffer. That's why, in a Jubilee worldview, debt is forgiven after a reasonable period of time. Jubilee refuses to marginalize people in perpetuity because of debt. All people must be treated as kin in the human family and that disallows any perpetual separation into loan makers and borrowers. We pray, "Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors." And for all who pray the "Trespasses" version, remember that the greatest trespasses are the structural ones that separate people from one another, dividing us into categories like have-gots and have-nots. With either version of the prayer, we're praying to forgive economic evils that separate us from one another and from our souls.
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Ep.0821-Brenda Wyss
With every year that passes, evidence mounts that the current economic and political systems cannot deliver the social and ecological justice that is necessary to sustain life on our planet. Where then do we turn? Women are an obvious and undervalued source—an answer hiding in plain sight. Women are creating systems that are far more just, and far more life-giving than the ones which currently stress the planet and most people. Let me clarify one point. Today's podcast conversation is not about women elevated to positions of leadership in male oriented paradigms. Rather, our conversation is about women who can act boldly in expressing the wisdom of the feminist ways of running households, businesses, societies, economies, and political policies. Today you'll hear such a woman—a feminist economist who focuses on economic justice as a primary measure of a healthy economy. She recognizes that focusing on economic growth can never get us to the economy we need in the 21st century. So with hundreds of other women in the economy who are intent on feminist economics, Dr. Brenda Wyss [weess], our guest, points us to the way through, where currently there seems to be no way. Lee met Brenda 15 or so years ago. He was staying in her home because her husband, Barry Shelley, and Lee were attending and leading a workshop in the Solidarity Economy Network conference happening in Amherst, Massachusetts. Lee's introduction to feminist economics was just beginning at the time. In this podcast conversation Lee asks Brenda, "What is feminist economics?" She gives us a thorough answer. It's clearly her passion. Lee also asks her about evaluating an economy by measures other than growth. Her answers are really important. Brenda Wyss is professor of Economics and Coordinator of Development Studies at Wheaton College in Norton, Massachusetts. In her own words, Brenda says: I am particularly interested in issues of economic justice and I bring that commitment to my research, teaching, college service, and my life off campus. I strive to make economics exciting and accessible and to introduce students to a range of viewpoints, issues and questions often left out of economics courses. I've been teaching a course about women in the U.S. economy for 30 years. I also teach Foundations of Political Economy which highlights how power shapes the economy and economic outcomes. I've worked with the Center for Popular Economics (CPE) since the 1980s, providing economic literacy training and analysis to social change activists and grassroots organizations. For more information, visit these sites: Center for Popular Economics Amartya Sen - His Nobel Prize winning work was on development and freedom. Please tell us your thoughts on these subjects. Leave a message on Jubilee OneEarth Economics and/or Simple Living Works! Facebook pages.
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Episode 0721--Matt Brennan
Matthew Brennan is the VP of Sales at CollectiveSun®, LLC. He is a solar installation expert with experience in both residential and commercial projects. In addition to being a talented entrepreneur, Matt has a strong engineering and technical background. His experience includes founding SanDiegoSolarPower.com, a solar sales and procurement company with extensive market reach. Prior to SanDiegoSolarPower.com, he worked as an industrial engineer for a network equipment manufacturer, a sales engineer for electronic equipment manufacturers and an operations manager for an industry-leading mechanical engineering magazine. Now he's brought his passion for solar power to CollectiveSun®, where Matt manages all aspects of installer relationships and project development. Matthew received a Bachelor of Science degree in mechanical engineering from the University of New Hampshire.
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Ep.0621-Carrie Radloff
It's far too easy to assume that not much good is happening in states that are fertile ground for the growth of right-wing ways of doing things. The states of Iowa, Nebraska, and South Dakota have been just such fertile soils. And yet, precisely in the area where those three states come together along the Missouri River, this effective activist on environmental concerns helps us break through this stereotype that not much good can happen in areas dominated by right-wing politicians and profit-hungry corporations.
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Ep.0521-Neddy Astudillo
As an eco-minister and eco-theologian, Neddy directs Green Faith in Florida and in Latin America. Be sure you go to the GreenFaith.org to learn far more about Neddy's accomplishments and hopes. How they frame their work: Religious and spiritual communities everywhere generate a moral awakening to the sacredness of Earth and the dignity of all people. Together, we are building resilient, caring communities and economies that meet everyone's needs and protect the planet. The era of conquest, extraction, and exploitation has given way to cooperation and community. The good life is one of connectedness—with each other and all of nature. It is a world of flourishing life that replaces despair with joy, scarcity with shared abundance, and privilege with justly distributed power.
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Ep.0421-Robin Rivet
in the continuing urgent work of reversing the climate crises—and who isn't?— you will find one great ally in this podcast episode. Let's call her Tree, a great ally in pulling CO2 out of the air, in cooling where you live, in saving energy, in giving you healthy food, and that's just some of what she does. You don't need to pay lots of money to enlist Tree's help either. Maybe none at all. Let's see if we can match that level of concern when we learn of the tremendous loss of environmental wealth, or natural capital as it is also called, in the annual net loss of trees. Robin will tell us more about the wealth and treasure in our trees—a kind of wealth our systems and our eyes have not been trained to see. We can all commit to do something really meaningful as we gratefully celebrate Earth Day and Arbor Day. And, please, listeners, promote this important conversation to others. More info https://www.linkedin.com/in/robin-y-rivet-0a004420 https://sdhort.org/Sys/PublicProfile/7644008 https://www.sdhortnews.org/search-results-page/Robin%20Rivet
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Ep.0321-Mike Little: Faith and Money Network
How Lee has benefited from Faith & Money Network Ways we've collaborated Linking money to faith, when it affects ALL our uses of money and not just our giving, is itself a radical position. Having this conversation while the U.S. economy is being exposed for its inability to deal with grotesque income and wealth gaps—to wit, the stock market is at all time highs but the people without work and others who are underpaid are much too high for our economy to meet the standards of faith, financial morality, or an economy to hold up as a model. The education and training done in F&MN Signature quote:"A change of heart or of values without a practice is only another pointless luxury of a passively consumptive way of life."- Wendell Berry. How is F&MN linking change of thinking values to change of practice? Instances where someone's change of practice goes as far as changing the economic and faith paradigms by which they live, e.g., is Christian faith naturally linked to the values of capitalism's economic model. Do you see people shifting their faith and economic models?
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Ep. 0221--Economist Barry Shelley: Economic Assumptions and Initiatives for Change
The U.S. economy stumbled badly under the weight of the coronavirus pandemic. The new administration in Washington has inherited the worst jobs market in modern times. The challenge to find paths of recovery for households, small businesses, states, and more has been engaged. Here on the Simpler OneEarth Living podcast we pursue an economic model we call OneEarth Jubilee. Today we talk with an economist about assumptions that underlie the current national economy and initiatives people are taking that show different assumptions and economic models are possible. This episode took me into conversation with economist, Barry Shelley, senior lecturer at Boston University. In Jubilee Economics Ministries we benefit greatly from Barry because he is an economic advisor to JEM's understanding and practice of an alternative economy rooted in creation more than wealth accumulation or maximization of profits. This conversation with Barry focuses in three areas: (1) the underlying assumptions of the prevailing economy and the challenges in moving our economy in new directions, (2) the discussions happening among professional economists about changes and different economic models, and (3) local initiatives he considers important in showing that alternative sub-economies can be created within the larger, prevailing economy. Barry Shelley is senior lecturer at the Pardee School of Global Studies at Boston University. He went to that work after three decades of experience as a practitioner, teacher, and researcher focusing on the political economy of international development and the environment,particularly in rural areas of the Global South.
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Ep.0121-Grace Dyrness
Working with people in poverty is central to spiritual practices, but how we do it challenges us all, poor and non-poor alike. When you see poverty in a neighborhood, whether it's urban or rural, do you assume that the people living there just don't have what it takes to improve their lives? Most cities develop a poor neighborhood by gentrifying it with lots of financial investment and new buildings. But that displaces all the people and businesses who were there before. Where do they go? There's also the argument that poor people simply have to help themselves; that aid takes away their incentive to improve their situation. What approach do you believe works best? Stay with us to hear an approach that really does change people as well as their situations.
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Ep.1220--Will O'Brien
Much of what we assume about the birth of Jesus has to be unlearned if we are to get at how that birth posed a threat to empires and superpowers everywhere. Will O'Brien speaks to the politics and economic alternatives to empire that were announced in the birth stories of Jesus. He's ability to take apart ideas presented to us by our culture, and find, instead, the nuggets of truth that subvert the cultural understanding. He continually shapes a discipleship in the way of Jesus that is daring in how it seeks justice in politics and economics. That's what we'll hear in this episode. Also learn about the Alternative Seminary he hosts in Philadelphia and what he means by the politics of Christmas.
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Ep.1120-How Empowering Women Changes the World
Women are being empowered toward fuller personhood through the work of Jubilee Circles. Women in Mexico are learning their rights instead of obeying patriarchal norms shaped by machismo. Some are being trained in the power of civic action and political candidacy. Others in economic self-reliance. These examples from Jubilee in Mexico relate to all of us, wherever you are listening. Hear these strong real life stories as told by Angelica and Lindsey.
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Ep. 1020--Scott Klinger
Scott's current thinking is about how the world could be different, if we all invested in creating the world we want to live in, rather than investing to maximize our financial returns. What would Maximizing Our JUSTICE Returns look like? We can contrast it with Indigenous Peoples values around money. Wealth is held collectively....there are usage rights to the Earth, not ownership as white society thinks of it. We talk about legal barriers to bringing this sort of world about, and some concrete ways that listeners can invest their own assets, and ask questions of pots of money they influence, with their employers, with their churches, with their community foundations." Fascinating Announcements Jubilee OneEarth Economics has begun to post short videos for free on YouTube at "OneEarth Jubilee." You can be a promoter of Jubilee living. Watch for information about a new Jubilee School and a certification course. In our previous podcast episode we interviewed Lane Van Ham on the power of immigrant advocacy. You can get his new book "Composite Nation: A History of Immigrant Advocacy in the United States," directly from OneEarth Publishing, a service of Jubilee OneEarth Economics. During Advent, the four week period before Christmas, read and use Lee's new book "The Liberating Birth of Jesus: A Birth Story Able to Reverse the Earth's Perils." Read more here // Hear more here, and at TheOneEarthProject.com/books. Order a copy directly from Jubilee or from various suppliers on the internet.
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Ep. 0920--So Much We Learn from Outsiders: Immigrant Advocacy
Thousands of people and organizations advocate for immigrants. Even so, the best advocates are the immigrants themselves. Immigrants are archetypally the strangers in a strange land. Enormous creativity is being generated by these strangers—today and throughout human history. It is the strangers in a strange land, far more than the privileged in the land, who envision the world that makes space for all of us; the only world that can save life on our planet today. Immigrant advocates change systems from the bottom up. From the margins outside of borders. They force rethinking of what "border" means and how it gets used politically, racially, and religiously.
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Episode 08/20—Leaving Superpower Ways for Earth-Size Living
Can the current economy handle the global pandemic that increasingly shows it will be with us for a long time? Month by month signs intensify to unveil the economy's weaknesses, leaving many to conclude that this economy is not flexible enough to bring wellbeing, but is delivering suffering instead. How, then, can we live according to a new economy?
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Episode 07/20—As This World Ends, the Light at the End...
"Within just a few weeks—faster than the blink of an eye in geological time—a tiny, microscopic entity brought the global monolith of human civilization, the captains of industry, the might of the world's militaries, the financial juggernauts of money and manufacturing, to their knees."--Ahmed Systems are being exposed, leading to profound transformation: Healthcare systems Farming and food systems Economic systems depending on growth, fossil fuels Political systems and intergovernmental systems Trade and travel systems Social systems structured for racial inequalities and class Arundhati Roy described it poignantly: "Historically, pandemics have forced humans to break with the past and imagine their world anew. This one is no different. It is a portal, a gateway between one world and the next." More than that, the pandemic is a crucible, burning away and altering the structures that comprise the old paradigm, remaking who and what we are. The four phases of the "adaptive cycle"-- Growth Conservation Release Reorganization The crucible invokes the truth that The Only Way Is Through. We need to cross the threshold and step into the crucible rather than fight to hold on to what we had.
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Ep. 06/20–Pandemic and Food
CoronaVirus is revealing breakdowns and lack of resilience in our food supply systems. Which links in the chain are broken? Rather than fixing them, what are new and better choices for us in how we bring food from soil to savory, healthy eating? This is the third successive podcast episode in the midst of the global coronavirus pandemic. By the end of May, over 100,000 people have died in the U.S.—a horrific, emotional and spiritual wrenching of lives, hundreds of thousands of people across the nation are hurting, grieving. Surely, this experience of death and suffering—the largest in our lifetimes—is releasing the commitment to new life in enough of us to take leaps in the direction of change—the changes that our planet says we must make in this decade of the 2020s. Not to do so will form calluses on our souls and decay in who we are. Covid-19 abruptly stopped the fragile food supply system we've been depending on. The system that's broken down is driven by industrial agriculture, global markets, trade breakdowns and corporate control. At Least 9 Million US Households With Children Are 'Not At All Confident' They'll Be Able to Afford Food Next Month, Census Survey Finds. Excellent sources that (1) explain the breakdown and (2) help us identify the systems we need going forward. Richard Heinberg wrote The End of Growth: Adapting to Our New Economic Reality. The final chapter is loaded with things people are doing to adopt practices of OneEarth living and economics measured by wellbeing, not growth. He is senior fellow at the Post Carbon Institute and continues to share the wisdom of that think and action group in his Museletter on his website, https://richardheinberg.com. I interviewed Richard for this podcast, Ep. 109. In 4/20 Museletter #326, "Fraying Food System May Be Our Next Crisis" summarizes flaws in the current system. https://richardheinberg.com/museletter-326-pandemic-response-requires-post-growth-economic-thinking "Experts who study what makes societies sustainable (or unsustainable) have been warning for decades that our modern food system is packed with ticking bombs. The ways we grow, process, package, and distribute food depend overwhelmingly on finite, depleting, and polluting fossil fuels. Industrial agriculture contributes to climate change, and results in soil erosion and salinization. Ammonia-based fertilizers create "dead zones" near river deltas while petrochemical pesticides and herbicides pollute air and water. Modern agriculture also contributes to deforestation and biodiversity loss. Monocrops—huge fields of genetically uniform corn and soybeans—are especially vulnerable to pests and diseases. Long supply chains make localities increasingly dependent on distant suppliers. The system tends to exploit low-wage workers. And food is often unequally distributed and even unhealthful, contributing to poor nutrition as well as diabetes and other diseases." Heinberg: five of the links that are breaking down currently in the food supply chain's "wicked complexity." These five give us a big picture of what corporations and globalization have been creating in recent decades. 1. Vulnerable Food Workers 2. Fragile Distribution Networks 3. Broken Global Supply Chains 4. Bankrupt Farmers 5. Vanishing Affordability Solutions We Suggest 1. Growing more of our own. — growing more of their own food. // Baker Creek seed company, 2. Rationing. — At the national level, food price controls have an uneven history of success. Stan Cox: Any Way You Slice It: The Past, Present, and Future of Rationing // Supplementary Nutrition Assistance Program 3. Shorten supply chains. LINKS: capture atmospheric carbon and sequester it in soil, that build healthy and biologically rich topsoil // nutritious and affordable food // fair to farmers and farmworkers. 4. Guides for how Our Choices can reconfigure food supply post-Covid-19 (mid-Covid-19) From the Reader Supported News website, an article on young adults turning their grief to action: Anna McClurkan a. Local supply—growers, retailers, markets. Focus in communities instead of corporations. b. Reduce Meat by at least 50% c. Organic—no pesticides, herbicides 5. The Land Institute, Salina, KS, — reconfiguring farming (notes from Panel with Stan Cox, 5/23/20) Detailed Show Notes at http://simpleliving.startlogic.com/SLW-PODCAST/?p=2371
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Ep. 05/20--Life With Covid-19
CoronaVirus is reshaping life and society, moving in the direction of ecological living. We also acknowledge the intense resistance to that move as many of the powers want to get back to normal.
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Episode 04/20—CoronaVirus
So much desolation has been caused by human incursion. We've even given it holy sounding names like Manifest Destiny. In some cases humans carry disease to other cultures that have not developed immunity, such as Europeans invading the Americas. "Perhaps the most important message the coronavirus offers is that the natural world is conspiring to save us from ourselves, to slow our materialistic greed and reign in our aggressive, self-centered, short-term, and xenophobic tendencies." --John Perkins, co-founder of the Pachamama Alliance Lee and Jerry talk about what the virus has to teach us and share pertinent thoughts from experts.
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Episode 03/20—Dave Gardner of GrowthBusters and World Population Balance
Simple Living Works and OneEarth Jubilee work on the crises caused by the explosion of human beings on the planet in the past century and on an economics of endless growth on our wonderful planet's limited resources. Colleagues: GrowthBusters (Dave Gardner)--film and podcast; World Population Balance // OverPopulation Podcast; Post-Carbon Institute programs + CrazyTown podcast (SLW! Ep. 109–Richard Heinberg); CASSE: Center for the Advancement of the Steady-State Economy (The Common Good Podcast Ep. 46–Brian Czech); Center for Sustainable Economy; and Population Connection (SLW! Ep. Ep. 72: John Seager of Population Connection, Part 1; Ep. 73, Part 2); Bill Ryerson of the Population Institute and Population Media Center (SLW! Ep. 113: Part 1--Population Crises; TCGP #97: Part 2--Reducing Population Using Methods that Work)
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Episode 0220: John Michno—Adding Leadership for the 2020's Climate Challenge
For Jubilee OneEarth Economics, part of positioning ourselves to meet the challenges of the 2020's is adding John Michno to the leadership team. For Jubilee OneEarth Economics, part of positioning ourselves to meet the challenges of the 2020's is adding John Michno to the leadership team. John's Values Environmental and human sustainability are so important. I can see that the Pearl of Great Price Jesus talks about -- is the ecosystem -- Earth, our home. Earth provides the right amount of oxygen, water and plant nutrients. This delicate balance is changing, due to the unconscious way that we over- consume. The Good News is, we are creating a new culture of sustainability. John's Work & Business I started work as a Fellow with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, researching mathematical models of sea pollutants and overfishing. With a degree in Physics from UCSD, I worked as a software engineer for a former division of General Electric. I became a software sales consultant to Global 500 corporations, saving building & vehicle operations costs and energy use. Advising a leadership team at the Federal Aviation Administration, I facilitated a $5.2 million software purchase. As a project manager, I directed 44 software engineers, gathering requirements from thirty US Navy managers. I eventually headed a team of twelve software engineers working for the National Science Foundation. We were a $20 million program for earthquake and structural engineering research from a consortium of fifteen universities around the world. John's Human-Valued Mission As this work drew to a close, I was weary of moving up the ladder. My ambition had always been to earn another promotion, challenging myself. But in the competitive world of business, I was wanting more kindness and coaching to develop my growth possibilities. I had been an Intervarsity Bible Study leader and a camp counselor with inner city Latino and African American youth. I started to study Nonviolent Communication (NVC), a conflict intervention process with roots in the work of psychologist Carl Rodgers, who emphasized the beauty of the individual. I joined a circle of Unitarians, Buddhists and activists who hosted communication workshops. My friends invited me to co-facilitate a monthly NVC practice group. We added Appreciative Inquiry, Open Space Technology, mindfulness and Heart Math. I was invited to teach at various universities, synagogues and churches. After the election of 2016, I became more aware of the bullying of Muslim, Hispanic and other school children. I joined an interfaith team and liaised to social workers at Trauma Informed Care Team. With the school district, we created new procedures and curriculum to protect kids from bullying. As the climate emergency became apparent, I worked as the Interfaith Coordinator for 350, seeking to reduce the worst impacts of climate change. My job was to form relationships with clergy of all faiths, inviting them to take joint action on climate change, through education about the science of climate change, and through Creation Care circles in their faith communities. I worked with Catholics, Brethren, Episcopalians, Methodists, UCC, Religious Science and Ba'hai. Through these experiences, I increasingly valued the diversity of spiritual practices, the insight of science, the preciousness of our environment, and of individual humans. We are bringing these gifts to nourish our planet and our peoples. In 2020, we'll be holding special events recognizing the 20th year for Jubilee Economics Ministries -- A delegation to southern Mexico to learn communitarian practices from the JEM Circles there, 6/6-13; a conference in San Diego, 9/19-20, featuring scholar Wes Howard-Brooke; a 20th anniversary party in San Diego toward the end of the year. The 2020's 1. Hopes and challenges of OneEarth (low growth/no growth) economics in the face of unbridled capitalism. Using communitarian (not communist!) models exemplified among the Zapatistas. Colleagues: GrowthBusters (Dave Gardner)--film and podcast; World Population Balance + OverPopulation Podcast; Post-Carbon Institute programs + CrazyTown podcast (SLW! Ep. 109–Richard Heinberg); CASSE: Center for the Advancement of the Steady-State Economy (The Common Good Podcast Ep. 46–Brian Czech); Center for Sustainable Economy 2. Future of voluntary simplicity; being replaced by minimalism Overconsumption and Overpopulation as the primary drivers of the Climate Crisis For Earlier Episodes, visit http://simpleliving.startlogic.com/indexoth.php?place=podcast.php
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Episode 0120: David Hoferer—Birds, Insects, Big Ag and Spirituality
http://simpleliving.startlogic.com/SLW-PODCAST/ | [email protected] Biology professor David Hoferer at Briar Cliff University, Sioux City, IA, an activist with the Sierra Club and Audubon Society, talks about the reasons for and the effects of a huge, precipitous drop in bird populations. Jerry met David through the NorthWestern Iowa Group of the Sierra Club, where he serves as an officer. He also leads the local chapter of the Audubon Society. He knows birds--how important they are to the web of life and how threatened they are in the climate crisis. Only a few months ago Lee began reading reports on the loss of birds, nearly ⅓ of all birds in 50 years. That's less than his lifetime. The skies are emptier, the woods and our yards are quieter. Hanging bird feeders in our yards was once a kind of hobby. Now it's radical, spiritual activism in resistance to the prevailing behavior of our species. A New York Times article from 9/19, entitled "Birds Are Vanishing from North America" reviews an article in the journal "Science" that reports on an exhaustive study of bird populations. It left scientists in sad astonishment at the rate of decline. They remind us with urgency of what we're losing. It's not only that many birds have nice songs and entertaining behaviors. Common bird species are vital to ecosystems, they control pests, pollinate flowers, spread seeds and regenerate forests. https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/19/science/bird-populations-america-canada.html
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Ep. 1119--The Liberating Birth of Jesus: A Story Able to Reverse Our Planet's Perils
In this episode, Jerry interviews Lee about his new, 130+ pages book on how the perils of our planet can be reversed by the story of the birth of Jesus as told in the Gospels. The Gospels give us a story of new creation. Matthew and Luke give us riffs on Genesis, a collection written to protest the Babylonian Empire. Genesis and the Gospels give us stories that radically counter the stories of superpowers. Their stories are about the creation of the Earth and new life, and they do so in defiance of the superpower domination and death they were experiencing from Babylon and Rome respectively. Those stories give us what we need in 2020 to live by a different story from the superpowers of today's world that are destroying life for so much of our planet. The interview flows through a series of topics: why Lee wrote the book how the birth story in the Gospels and the Christmas story exist in two different paradigms the significance of the selective, mixed-gender genealogy Matthew gives us at the start of his gospel the significance of dreams in the birth story and in our new creation story today why cosmology keeps the creation story much larger than historical versions do actions we can take to live in the new creation The new book is The Liberating Birth of Jesus: A Birth Story Able to Reverse Our Planet's Perils. It's available both on Amazon and Powell's Books. It grows out of blogs Lee wrote in Christmas seasons during past years. This is Lee's fourth book. See http://theoneearthproject.com/books/ for descriptions of his earlier books.
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Episode 94: Medicare for All
Listen to this high energy, informative conversation with Julie Trager & Ava Torres-Bueno, two advocates for single payer healthcare. Their backgrounds in healthcare bring deep knowledge to their convictions. They tell how all of us can be served better and cheaper through California's single payer plans. Julie and Ava answer the objections to single payer that we often hear and explain how those objections come from the money-interests (insurance, pharma) who want to keep the status quo … and protect their profits. After this podcast you'll be smarter about why and how single payer will serve us far better than the costly, confusing system we have now. You'll know how you can help make it real asap. We urge you to visit the website of California Health Care for All http://www.healthcareforall.org for helpful information and how you can help build momentum for this change in your area.
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Episode 93 :: Don Hall of TransitionUS
TransitionUS is part of the global Transition Town movement. The Transitions approach states that three dynamics underway require urgent action: Peak Oil, Climate Change and the Economic Crisis.
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Episode 92 :: Richard Lawrence
The author of "Light, Bright, Damn Near White: Stories and Reflections of a Multi-Racial Black Man's Battles with Racism in America" adds focus to February, Black History Month.
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Mid-Jan. BONUS: Walter Brueggemann
Biblical scholar Walter Brueggemann discusses four of his recent books.
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Episode 85 :: Actions for a Better World in a Time of Climate Change and U.S. Extremism
1. Candace Vanderhoff - water consulting and designing water harvesting systems, sustainable landscapes and water conservation products. Issue: Less than 1% of world's water is fresh; 50% of all fish species live in it; 70% of withdrawals are for ag. Fracking; no corporate takeover of water districts. SAMATLA in San Mateo. She is an entrepreneur creating businesses to do what her heart and ideals tell her to act on. She works with a deep sense of Spirit and love. Our own greywater system 2. Walter Brueggemann--Primal Power of Money & Possessions in Our Lives: Six Theses; connections between the six theses and contemporary politics. 3. Learning Resistance and Alternatives from Zapatistas and Jubilee's Mexico Partners. Issue: carving lifeways amid violent systems. 4. Kelly Siefken - Sacramento Food Bank and Family Services; VP for Communications and Marketing. Issue: failures of food system. Food - a primary door to OneEarth living 5. Hazel Henderson: Reforming Economies to Work for the Wellbeing of All Creatures -- Hazel Henderson is a world renowned futurist, evolutionary economist, a worldwide syndicated columnist, consultant on sustainable development, author of Beyond Globalization, and seven other books. Her editorials appear in 27 languages and more than 400 newspapers. 6. Patricia St. Onge (Haudenosaune). Issue: How Indigenous and non-Indigenous relate to one another to empower change in systems and love for all species.
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Episode 84 :: Patricia St. Onge
Resistance to the Dakota Access Pipeline in North Dakota catapulted Indigenous peoples into major news stories. The prayerful, nonviolent actions of the Standing Rock Sioux and thousands who stood with them, First Peoples and others, showed the power of spiritual activism in the face of powerful corporations intent on domination. Our guest on this podcast, Patricia St. Onge, a Haudenosaune, went to North Dakota and interpreted the actions there in countless conversations. She is a consultant and coach, with Seven Generations Consulting, a business she and her partner, Wilson Riles, founded. It's a great treat for us to bring to the Common Good audience this conversation with Patricia St. Onge. Patricia is the founder and a Partner in Seven Generations Consulting and Coaching, where all of the work is culturally based. Here's how she describes her consulting and coaching work: "Deeply rooted in the concept of Seven Generations, we honor the generations who have come before us, are mindful of those yet to come, and recognize that the impact of the decisions we're making now will last for seven generations."
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Episode 83 :: Hazel Henderson
Hazel Henderson is a world renowned futurist, evolutionary economist, a worldwide syndicated columnist, consultant on sustainable development, and author of Beyond Globalization, and seven other books. Her editorials appear in 27 languages and more than 400 newspapers. It's a treat to hear this interview with her by co-host Jerry Iversen. The challenges to the global economy glare at us: ecological breakdown, exaggerated rich-poor disparity, and the use of war to secure resources. Our guest, Hazel Henderson, has spent a lifetime promoting real alternatives. She has pursued economic reforms. She measures an economy's strength and merit by more criteria than whether or not it's growing. She created the Green Scoreboard online so we can all follow the trillions of dollars being shifted into the green economy year after year. She's a great cheerleader for cooperatives. She founded the Ethical Markets TV program where she interviews guests from different parts of the world who tell viewers how ethical markets and economics are working for them. Listen! It's a feast of encouragement ala Hazel Henderson. Visit EthicalMarkets.com for details of its programs and Hazel's bio. If you haven't already subscribed to TCGP, we hope you will now through iTunes or your favorite podcast service.
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Episode 82 :: Kelly Siefken: Sacramento Food Bank & Family Services
Have you visited the food bank in your area recently? If not, you may have an out-of-date picture of what a food bank is. Let Kelly Siefkin bring you up to date on this podcast. You'll appreciate her enthusiastic, articulate description of the impact Sacramento [CA] Food Bank & Family Services is making in Sacramento County. She's the VP for Communications and Marketing there and clearly believes in what she's doing!! Special thanks to Paul Taylor for arranging this interview with Kelly. TCGP interviewed Paul for episode #74. He's been a board member for 20 years at Sacramento Food Bank. Sacramento Food Bank & Family Services (SFBFS) offers compassionate support and a compass for families navigating difficult times. Immediate problems and pain are alleviated followed by services that move people towards self-sufficiency and financial independence. With 15 diverse programs and services, a staff of 82 employees, several thousand volunteers and the financial support of the community, SFBFS guides families on their journey through support and education. 135,000 men, women and children receive support from SFBFS every month. All services are provided at no cost to families seeking to change their lives. SFBFS welcomes families regardless of zip code, income, language or education level. Fifteen programs and services include Parent Education, Clothing, Adult Education, Health & Nutrition and CalFresh. See online for the 2015-2016 Impact Report. In 2015/2016, 8,271 volunteers gave 76,247 hours of service, equivalent to 36 full time employees. Contact Info: (916) 456-1980 or visit www.sacramentofoodbank.org
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Episode 79 :: Candace Vanderhoff
Candace Vanderhoff is an architect who designs water conservation and reclamation systems for homes and businesses. She has done field study of subsistence cultures and traditional architecture in the central Pacific islands. Currently working to develop projects and systems for simple regenerative living in the US, projects focused on water conservation and reuse, and regenerative building. She has interest in appropriate technology, material reuse, water conservation, off-grid living, indigenous architecture, Central Pacific islands, curriculum development, teaching, woodworking, nature, small houses and poetry.
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Episode 78 :: Susan Taylor
Susan Taylor, Just Money Advisors on Relating to Money in a Toxic Culture and Parenting Children about Money
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Episode 77 :: From Egos to Eden
[email protected] | http://www.casajubileo.org Lee Van Ham's From Egos to Eden: Our Heroic Journey to Keep Earth Livable This book is the 2nd of three in the series, "Eden for the 21st Century." How does the content of this book fit into that series? The book agrees with those who say that the current crises are beyond anything our species has ever faced. What is it about our current moment that makes it so daunting? As your subtitle indicates, the book's overall structure follows the sequence of a mythic heroic journey. How does that journey fit our task of keeping our planet livable? You attach a lot of importance to the experience of Call. Do you believe that our entire human species is being called to this heroic journey? What is the importance of speaking about our response to Earth's ecological crises as a Call? Quite a few First Peoples speak in your book—especially in the "Foreword" (written by a Haudenosaune woman) and in Chapter Seven where First Peoples are considered mentors and partners in OneEarth living. What is happening among Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples that make their voices important to our heroic journey? It's apparent that Carl Jung, the Swiss psychiatrist, has been important to how you understand our abilities as humans to move beyond what we've yet achieved. What is it about Jung that makes him so helpful in solving our ecological and civilizational crises? You speak about this as an apocalyptic time. Why do you find it helpful to speak of apocalypse? Many use that word to describe catastrophe. Every heroic journey is a quest for a treasure. What is the treasure that our heroic journey seeks in order to solve the crises we're in? You join with Thomas Berry, the late "geologian," and others in believing that we humans are capable of moving beyond greed, acquisitiveness, and domination and actually create a world beyond our current crises. On what do you base such belief? Heroic journeys take us on life-threatening adventures, but finally we arrive "home." What does home look like in our journey from egos to Eden? Lee's bio / Jubilee blogs / Lee's OneEarth blog Gerald's Vision of the Future / Gerald's Enough blogs for Jubilee OneEarth Economics (in process)
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
The Common Good Podcast is a production of Jubilee-Economics.org, a 501 c3 organization dedicated to One Earth Economics for the Common Good.
HOSTED BY
Lee Van Ham
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