Helena Norberg-Hodge discusses how economic decisions stand in the way of personal happiness in this timely interview, which is destined to skim off the kitchen linoleum like a common house fly with damaged landing gear. Keep reading for how all this relates to One Southern Indiana's most recent catastrophic public spectacle.
“Localization is the Economics of Happiness,” at Yes!
... What's the economy for, anyway? Do the rules and policies we create to govern the flow of money and goods exist to create ever more money and goods, or to improve our lives? And if we decide we'd like to prioritize the latter, how do we rewrite the rules to do that?
The thoughts of Norberg-Hodges that struck me hardest follow below, and those who had the painful misfortune to hear Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer speak to the faith-based acolytes of One Southern Indiana at the latter's annual back-slapping-orgy last week know exactly why (italics are mine):
... We need to be shortening distances and creating more accountable and visible arenas, basically decentralizing and localizing our economies. But because of deregulation of both trade and finance at the global level, businesses are being pressured to grow faster and faster, to become more global, to increase in scale at any cost. The idea is either you go big and global or you die. But for our real needs, relatively small businesses closer to home can actually provide for our needs more efficiently and sustainably.
Courtesy of WFPL, here's what Fischer told the oligarch support society last week:
“We must internationalize all of us. If your business has the capacity to export and your not exporting I would say your days are probably numbered because the world is rapidly shrinking and rapidly changing and your foreign competitors are exporting right away.”
Now look back at the
Tribune's unquestioning coverage of 1Si's down home camp meeting, with special emphasis on Jeff Gillenwater's comments:
Regionally speaking: Louisville mayor talks about regional initiatives at One Southern Indiana event
(JG): "As it stands, 1Si staging an event is front page news but 1Si misleading the public with billions of dollars and decades of consequences at stake isn't even treated as news. When that changes, this region's chances of improvement via honest dialogue and transparent interaction will correspondingly increase."
3 comments:
speaking of local - what is your platform potential councilman-at-large?
Gina, trust me: I'm working on it. It's hidden somewhere here in 4,000-plus blog posts. Finding it is a chore.
I totally understand. I'll offer some framing: 1. Sustainability...all the good new urbanist stuff we all so desperately want to recreate in New Albany. 2. Transparency: until a effort is undertaken to move all city budgets on-line, there will never be an honest budget in New Albany. 3. Code Enforcement: This is not going away until every homeowner in our town feels safe in their persons and investments. 4. Schools: anything...God help us. 5. Public infrastructure: less paving, more 21st century modes of transport, like bikes, trains, walking, etc.
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