RESILIENCE

JUNE 11. 2025

Food Makes Babies

It seems to me we got swept up in the currents, now imperiling the world. Along the way, a lot of food made a lot of babies—packing the stadium for the great spectacle of collapse under the weight of the assembled crowd.

Remember the Future?

Whether we like it or not, we must live with the unknowability of the future, its capacity to humble us and take us by surprise, our inability to control it.

JUNE 10. 2025

A Poison Like No Other: Excerpt

If you were to somehow instantly remove all the particles from ocean waters and sediments, they’d live on by transferring from gut to gut. Everything eats, everything gets eaten, and microplastics go along for the ride.

Energy and debt: How does energy and debt affect economic growth?

Complexity has strong links to energy which means that the combination of increasing energy costs and increasing complexity is a potential game changer. Even more so if the energy system also requires high levels of complexity such as nuclear power or a electric grid run on renewables.

Sankofa Part One – History’s Most Challenging Moments

This article, which is the first of two, applies the concept of Sankofa to consider the critical, and perhaps pivotal, moment in history in which we find ourselves currently. Sankofa originates from the Akan inhabitants of Ghana, and broadly describes the importance of remembering and incorporating knowledge from the past in order to move forward.

JUNE 9. 2025

Buzzzzzzzzz

Put up some solar panels, and add some plants that only need to be mowed once a year or so and you see an explosion of life.

Defending Ancestral Forests from Corporate Plunder: Boki Women Lead the Way

As Boki’s forests disappear in plain sight, the deeper crisis is not deforestation alone - it is neglect. The world watches, largely indifferent, while the Banyinyi women’s struggle keeps echoing a painful truth: we do not lack solutions, we lack the courage to abandon the myths of progress that blind us to them.

Jack Kloppenburg on Sharing Seeds in a World of Proprietary Agriculture

The Open Source Seed Initiative, founded in 2012, has been a key vehicle and voice in reclaiming the right to share seeds and strengthening all the benefits that flow from seed-sharing: healthier soils, empowered farmers and communities, biodiversity, more robust seed innovation.

Why Every Student Needs Human Ecology Education Now

From resilience to resourcefulness, human ecology education offers the life skills our schools forgot—equipping the next generation to navigate adulthood, climate challenges, and complex social systems with confidence, care, and collective strength.

What scientists have learned from 20 years of microplastics research

At the broadest level, Thompson, other scientists, and environmental advocates are supportive of measures to limit overall plastic production and ban the most problematic categories of plastic, both of which would indirectly reduce the generation of microplastics.

JUNE 8. 2025

Trade war vise grip: China is squeezing rare earth supply and it’s hurting

I warned in March that in response to the Trump administration's trade war, China would likely resort to squeezing supply of critical materials it controls. Now it's happening.

JUNE 6. 2025

Zak Stein — AI’s Unseen Risks: How Artificial Intelligence Could Harm Future Generations

In this episode, Nate is joined once again by philosopher of education Zak Stein to delve into the far-reaching implications of technology – especially artificial intelligence – on the future of education.

A World Without iPhones? Who Can Even Imagine It Any More? Well, Let Me Try

So, I am turning my iPhone off. It makes my present different. Will it make the future any different? It won’t hurt to try!

Root and branch

My primary influences for navigating out of the present mess these days are distributism, civic republicanism, agrarian populism and Thomism, or maybe immanentism … which not a lot of people have heard of. One reason not a lot of people have heard of them is that we’re so caught up in mainstream modernist politics like neoliberalism and socialism that they get no airtime, which I think is regrettable.