mwfogleman + environment   43

Twin Oaks Intentional Community Homepage
Twin Oaks is an intentional community in rural central Virginia, made up of around 85 adult members and 15 children. Since the community's beginning in 1967, our way of life has reflected our values of cooperation, sharing, nonviolence, equality, and ecology. We welcome you to schedule a visit.

Our 3-Week Visitor Program: The three week visit is a structured program designed to give the visitor some general education and experience in living at Twin Oaks. It is an opportunity for the visitor to consider membership and for the community to consider prospective new members, but you don't have to be interested in membership in order to participate in the program. The visit is a prerequisite to applying for membership, and visitors who are accepted for membership need to spend at least a month away from Twin Oaks after the end of their visitor period.

The fee for the three-week visit is on a sliding scale of $50-$250. This is used to pay for outreach and to offset expenses of the visitor program. We strongly encourage people with significant financial resources to pay at/towards the high end of the scale. If you can't afford to pay at the low end of the scale, we can make arrangements for a reduced fee.
community  environment  green 
14 days ago by mwfogleman
BBC NEWS | UK | Attenborough warns on population
The broadcaster Sir David Attenborough has become a patron of a group seeking to cut the growth in human population.
BBC environment analyst Roger Harrabin said population was a fraught area of debate, with libertarians and some religious groups vehemently opposing measures by governments to influence individual fertility.
In turn, the Trust accuses policy makers and environmentalists of conspiring in a "silent lie" that human numbers can grow forever with no ill-effects.
science  economics  atheism  environment  nature  bbc 
april 2009 by mwfogleman
The Future of Our Cities: Open, Crowdsourced, and Participatory - O'Reilly Radar
Imagine now what would happen if cities did throw their weight behind this kind of innovation? The landscape of those cities would change virtually overnight, with legions of new applications springing up to provide residents with every sort of information conceivable, making their decisions more informed, making their movements more coordinated, and ultimately making the cities themselves work better. This change would happen at a fraction of the cost of any proposals for change currently being considered by cities around the world. And much of that cost, for development and operation, would be offloaded from the city itself to the individuals building and using these services.
internet  o'reilly  cities  opensource  grid  infrastructure  business  web2.0  future  community  collaboration  environment  architecture  crowdsourcing  city 
april 2009 by mwfogleman
The Nuclear Option
So you're against nuclear power. Do you know why?
nuclear  energy  environment  power  politics  green  science 
april 2008 by mwfogleman
TED: David Keith: A surprising idea for "solving" climate change (video)
Environmental scientist David Keith talks about a cheap, effective, shocking solution to climate change. Keith discusses why it's a good idea, why it's a terrible one -- and who, despite the cost, might be tempted to use it.
globalwarming  climate  climatechange  sustainability  research  science  politics  ted  environment  future  philosophy  ethics 
december 2007 by mwfogleman
TED: Stephen Petranek: 10 ways the world could end (video)
Stephen Petranek reveals the question that occupies scientists at the end of the day (and the beginning of happy hour): How might the world end?
environment  psychology  ted  video  world  physics  science 
october 2007 by mwfogleman
TED: Al Gore: 15 ways to avert a climate crisis
With the same humor and humanity he exuded in An Inconvenient Truth, Al Gore spells out 15 ways we can address climate change, from buying a hybrid car to inventing a hotter brand name for global warming.
ted  gore  environment  sustainability  globalwarming 
august 2007 by mwfogleman
TED: Will Wright: Toys that make worlds
In a friendly, high-speed presentation, Will Wright demos his newest game, Spore, which promises to dazzle users even more than his previous masterpieces.
education  environment  game  ted  evolution  spore  videogames 
august 2007 by mwfogleman

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