I feel somewhat churlish for taking issue with “abundance” when most people who have ever walked the Earth never once had nearly enough. But the whole discourse, in all its variants, still feels marked by a scarcity mindset to me. I’m trying to articulate what truly getting past scarcity would look like, and I strongly suspect it is not that.
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𝚝𝚓𝚠
in reply to Adam Greenfield • • •Alberto Cottica
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in reply to Alberto Cottica • • •Lorraine Lee
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Adam Greenfield
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in reply to Adam Greenfield • • •Preston Austin
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in reply to Adam Greenfield • • •ophiocephalic 🐍
in reply to Adam Greenfield • • •> just about everything good in a culture is downstream from decent, affordable shelter and cheap space for cultural experimentation
This. As an observer of the slow death of San Francisco the cultural hotspot, will point out that each of the countercultural developments the city nurtured so well in the 20th C. - beatniks, the psychedelic revolution, gay liberation, the punk and rave scenes - tended to be centered on a neighborhood in which it was affordable to live and/or congregate.
This is why SF's days as a superpower cultural metropole are over. Not only has the urban cleansing forced out most of the artists and activists and erased much of the diversity, but there are simply no more cheap neighborhoods for cultural movements to gravitate to. In these circumstances the liberation struggle is a battle to claim and hold physical space itself
Adam Greenfield
in reply to ophiocephalic 🐍 • • •Luis Villa
in reply to Adam Greenfield • • •I live in one of the richest places on earth and also we literally can’t house everyone who graduates from high school here, much less the people who want to move here for the opportunity to do self-actualization.
Abundance (flawed as it is) comes from that core observation: we’ve often made it unnecessarily, counter-productively hard to provide things at the bottom of Maslow’s pyramid to have-nots, in the name of protecting the top of the pyramid for haves.
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Lorraine Lee
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Adam Greenfield
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Nelson
in reply to Adam Greenfield • • •What if we end scarcity by simply making infinite paperclips? Not only will people never run out of paperclips, if they have any problems in their lives, they can solve them by throwing enough paperclips at the problem.
Oh, you're worried we'll run out of birds and trees? Don't worry, you can make fake trees out of millions of paperclips.
Adam Greenfield
in reply to Nelson • • •Lorraine Lee
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Adam Greenfield
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