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  • #31
    Re: spotting anti-materialism

    The man who lives without money

    Mark Boyle gave up using cash over a year ago and loves his new lifestyle.



    By Jessica Salter
    Published: 12:54PM BST 18 Aug 2010
    7 Comments


    Mark Boyle, the moneyless man


    Mark Boyle, 31, gave up using money in November 2008. He lives in a caravan that he got from Freecycle (uk.freecycle.org), which is parked at an organic farm near Bristol, where Boyle volunteers three days a week. He grows his own food, has a wood-burning stove and produces electricity from a solar panel (it cost £360 before the experiment started). He has a mobile phone for incoming calls only and a solar-powered laptop. Boyle, who has been vegan for six years, set up the Freeconomy in 2007 (justfortheloveofit.org), an online network that encourages people to share skills or possessions and now has 17,000 members. The Moneyless Man: A Year of Freeconomic Living (Oneworld Publications, £10.99) is out now.

    It all started in a pub. My friend and I were talking about all the problems in the world, such as sweatshops, environmental destruction, factory farms, animal testing, wars over resources. I realised they were all, in their own way, connected to money.
    I decided to give up cash. I sold my houseboat in Bristol and gave up my job at an organic food company. I made a list of everything I bought and tried to figure out which I could get in another way. For toothpaste I use a mixture of cuttlefish bone and wild fennel seeds. Things like iPods you just have to knock off the list, but birds in the trees around my kitchen have become my new iPod.
    Everything takes more time and effort in a moneyless world. Handwashing my clothes in a sink of cold water, using laundry liquid made by boiling up nuts on my rocket stove, can take two hours, instead of half an hour using a washing machine.
    It was meant to be just for a year but I enjoy the lifestyle so much that I’m just going to keep living like this. I’ve never been happier or fitter.
    I had a very normal childhood. I think at first my parents wondered what on earth I was doing. But now they totally support me and they say that they may even try it themselves.
    Sometimes it is frustrating trying to socialise with no money. I grew up in Northern Ireland where it’s a show of manliness to buy your mates the first round. But I invite them back to my caravan instead to have homemade cider around the campfire.
    I am single at the moment, but because of the book and my blog a few women seem interested in me. Just being a vegan cuts down the number of women I’m compatible with, never mind being moneyless. I’ll be lucky if there’s one woman in the whole country who wants to give up cash for life – and I might not even fancy her.
    So the conclusion he draws here is evidently based on simplistic reasoning and totally false but the outcome means he gets to become an early adopter.

    Comment


    • #32
      Re: spotting anti-materialism

      Originally posted by Chris View Post
      I am single at the moment, but because of the book and my blog a few women seem interested in me. Just being a vegan cuts down the number of women I’m compatible with, never mind being moneyless. I’ll be lucky if there’s one woman in the whole country who wants to give up cash for life – and I might not even fancy her.
      No. Maybe this is the reason:

      For toothpaste I use a mixture of cuttlefish bone and wild fennel seeds.
      Last edited by Chris; August 20, 2010, 07:29 AM.

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      • #33
        Re: spotting anti-materialism

        Originally posted by Chris View Post
        So the conclusion he draws here is evidently based on simplistic reasoning and totally false but the outcome means he gets to become an early adopter.
        I've been working on becoming more minimalistic so it isn't such a shock to the system if we do go through a major economic shift. I'm still unsure about deflation, inflation, disinflation but I figure providing the majority of my family's food will help in any of those situations. It is nice in many ways. I try a lot more recipes that I never would have before. Quite honestly, we use to do a lot of eating out. This afternoon I'm going to try roasting cherry tomatoes and making a sauce from them. I know pancakes made from freshly ground wheat and fresh blueberries from the garden taste much better than anything from IHOP. My children are definitely getting a lot of enjoyment out of having chickens in the backyard to feed and both enjoy the eggs we get from them. Hopefully with all the money we're saving in the process, my husband will be able to retire in 5 years or less.

        Comment


        • #34
          Re: spotting anti-materialism

          Death of the 'McMansion': Era of Huge Homes Is Over


          Thursday August 19, 2010, 2:15 pm EDT

          http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Death-...33821.html?x=0

          They've been called McMansions, Starter Castles, Garage Mahals and Faux Chateaus but here's the latest thing you can call them - History.
          .
          .
          Of course, the question becomes, what do we do with all these McMansions that have already been built?


          It's tempting to make jokes about what you might do with a former McMansion but with crime on the rise in neighborhoods littered with abandoned McMansions, Christopher Leinberger, in an article for the Atlantic, asked a sobering question: Is this the next slum?


          Luckily, people are starting to get creative: A film collective in Seattle has taken over a 10,000-square foot McMansion there, using it for both living and work space. They turned a wine closet into an editing room and tossed a green screen in the garage. And in a suburb of San Diego, one couple turned a former McMansion into a home for autistic adults.


          The demise of the McMansion has stirred a growing chorus of murmurs in the real-estate community about the possibility that it may force a dramatic redesign of the suburban McMansion tracts into mini-towns of their own, turning these icons of excess into more practical spaces like offices, banks, grocery stores and movie theaters.


          Though, given some of the poor quality of materials and craftsmanship, it begs the question, would it be better to just tear them all down and start from scratch?
          Jim 69 y/o

          "...Texans...the lowest form of white man there is." Robert Duvall, as Al Sieber, in "Geronimo." (see "Location" for examples.)

          Dedicated to the idea that all people deserve a chance for a healthy productive life. B&M Gates Fdn.

          Good judgement comes from experience; experience comes from bad judgement. Unknown.

          Comment


          • #35
            Re: spotting anti-materialism

            Originally posted by Chris View Post
            Not quite true -- running a website takes money -- and also why does he have a book for sale? If he was truly moneyless, he would have just have it online free or for barter!

            The Moneyless Man: A Year of Freeconomic Living (Oneworld Publications, £10.99) is out now.

            Comment


            • #36
              Re: spotting anti-materialism

              You can see the happiness written all across his face.



              Comment


              • #37
                Re: spotting anti-materialism

                Originally posted by Rajiv View Post
                Not quite true -- running a website takes money -- and also why does he have a book for sale? If he was truly moneyless, he would have just have it online free or for barter!
                Perhaps he had an agreement with the publisher in which they kept the money and in return gave him a set number of copies of the book as an alternative to the 2-ply he was probably missing?

                Comment


                • #38
                  Re: spotting anti-materialism

                  Originally posted by marvenger View Post
                  evolving from material to digital consumption??

                  http://www.smh.com.au/digital-life/d...818-129er.html
                  While reading the article on minimalism, I noticed the attached advertisement for a stone crusher.



                  So I bought one of the small ones. What the hell am I going to do with a stone crusher?

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Re: spotting anti-materialism

                    you could make some toothpaste? Just add some fennel seeds.

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Re: spotting anti-materialism

                      "... the Gross National Product measures neither our wit nor our courage, neither our wisdom nor our learning, neither our compassion nor our devotion to our country. It measures everything, in short, except that which makes life worthwhile..."

                      Robert F. Kennedy, 1968

                      http://www.theoildrum.com/node/4110

                      The two top videos no longer work, but the parts I, II, and III [mistaken link] of RFK's last speech before he was assassinated do still work. See sidebar.

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Re: spotting anti-materialism

                        Originally posted by mooncliff View Post
                        "... the Gross National Product measures neither our wit nor our courage, neither our wisdom nor our learning, neither our compassion nor our devotion to our country. It measures everything, in short, except that which makes life worthwhile..."

                        Robert F. Kennedy, 1968

                        http://www.theoildrum.com/node/4110

                        The two top videos no longer work, but the parts I, II, and III [mistaken link] of RFK's last speech before he was assassinated do still work. See sidebar.
                        The two missing speeches

                        RFK on GDP

                        Ted Kennedy's Eulogy in which he reads RFK's speech

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Re: spotting anti-materialism

                          I've got some hippie relatives who've tried to live simply, they said the kids made it extremely difficult, kids don't like being different...just like most people. Probably more to do with the fact the husband just wanted to smoke weed all the time and the wife had to clean toilets to make sure the kids had enough to eat.

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            Re: spotting anti-materialism

                            Originally posted by Starving Steve View Post
                            Anyone want to discuss toilet paper and the concept of "small is beautiful" or "learning to live with less"? One-ply versus two-ply? World War I issue tp versus modern soft-issue tp?
                            I don't have the required expertise to discuss it at length, but a landlord once made a comment about the type of toilet paper his tenants were using making it more prone to toilet clogs, and I brought it up with a plumber a few years later.

                            Turns out, the larger, higher ply toilet papers are not only more expensive at the supermarket, but they actually cost more over the long run via clogs and "wear and tear" on the septic system. It doesn't matter how many gallons your toilet will flush: if the pipes it all goes into are all standard, then you are more likely to pay for it over time.

                            Here's the first thing I found on Google about this, I'm sure there are more resources:

                            Toilet paper brands like Charmin that offer more piles per sheet also failed to disintegrate and caused more clogs than other brands. You need to pay special attention to this if you have children who tend to use a lot of toilet paper or you have a septic tank.

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Re: spotting anti-materialism

                              we need a link on the web to determine that thick toilet paper clogs pipes?

                              wow.

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Re: spotting anti-materialism

                                from david brooks' column today, about david platt, a former megachurch minister who wrote a book telling people to throw away the material american dream:

                                Platt calls on readers to cap their lifestyle. Live as if you made $50,000 a year, he suggests, and give everything else away. Take a year to surrender yourself. Move to Africa or some poverty-stricken part of the world. Evangelize.

                                Platt’s arguments are old, but they emerge at a postexcess moment, when attitudes toward material life are up for grabs. His book has struck a chord. His renunciation tome is selling like hotcakes. Reviews are warm. Leaders at places like the Southern Baptist Convention are calling on citizens to surrender the American dream.

                                I doubt that we’re about to see a surge of iPod shakers. Americans will not renounce the moral materialism at the core of their national identity. But the country is clearly redefining what sort of lifestyle is socially and morally acceptable and what is not. People like Platt are central to that process.

                                The United States once had a Gospel of Wealth: a code of restraint shaped by everybody from Jonathan Edwards to Benjamin Franklin to Andrew Carnegie. The code was designed to help the nation cope with its own affluence. It eroded, and over the next few years, it will be redefined.

                                http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/07/op...s.html?_r=1&hp

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