Pressing World Issues

From Open Source Ecology
Revision as of 19:50, 24 October 2021 by Brad (talk | contribs) (fixed 7 typos)
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About

Systems inertia works by preserving the System as it is. Many well-intentioned individuals fail to approach the edge of the System sufficiently close to make actual change.

Any effort, from the open source ecology (without capitals) perspective, must include collaborative open source, and thus modular and Distributive solutions as the stated core. Time scales of change must be on the generation scale (about 2 decades).

The natural outcome of such an approach is transformation via Distributed Market Substitution on the house-keeping (economic) front.

Global Grand Challenges

HintLightbulb.png Hint: Disclaimer: This page is a work in progress, and items are not listed in order of importance. The meaning of some of the following items may be different than what you may think, so please limit your assumptions. Further explanations will be provided and published in a forthcoming book, after being vetted and peer reviewed for general consensus and best practices

  1. General ecocide (Whole World issue)
  2. Disparity of wealth. High Gini Coefficient
  3. Democracy under siege - see Freedom House
  4. Fractional Reserve Banking with high leverage ratios providing for instability
  5. Desertification
  6. Deforestation
  7. High Cost of Living, preventing honest pursuit of Self-Determination by most people (a First World issue)
  8. Standing armies
  9. Genocide
  10. Enforced Mediocrity
  11. Political Ponerology, or promotion of evil within institutions
  12. Medicine for Profit
  13. Resource scarcity - water rights, clean air, clean food (Whole World issue)
  14. Patent system and other legal fictions for enclosing public knowledge
  15. Lack of public access to published journals. Solution possibility: cross subsidization or institution only pay for the service
  16. Limitation of liability (ie, fundamental unaccountability baked into the operation of enterprise)
  17. Biodiversity loss
  18. Alienation from work (related to high Cost of Living
  19. Access to healthcare
  20. Illiteracy, and especially collaborative illiteracy
  21. Innumeracy and Scientific Illiteracy
  22. Corporate funded research which encloses the intellectual output of public institutions
  23. Pollution, especially water pollution
  24. Corrupt institutions
  25. Economic system based on proprietary development as opposed to open source product development
  26. Training as opposed to education
  27. Disciplinary thinking, as opposed to systems thinking which acknowledges that things are connected.
  28. Agricultural monoculture
  29. Fossil fuel energy instead of renewable energy
  30. Global supply chains via cost externalization
  31. Externalization of social, environmental, and lifetime costs
  32. Slavery, including wage slavery
  33. Consequences of Colonialism + Neocolonialism
  34. Depression
  35. Insurance Racket
  36. Corrupt Officials and Bribes

Housing

Biodiversity

  • [[Biodiver

Causes

  1. Fear

Human Structures

  1. Financialization

Psychography of Macrosocial Phenomena

This is an entertaining take on the relationship between nature and the power flows of society. We think that this is a brilliant encapsulation of the human psychology that makes the world what it is today. In particular - that both the cause and the solution is within each of us - we have the ultimate responsibility, not some 'tyrant on high'.

Universal Solutions

  1. Universal access to education (upgrading the operating system in peoples' heads)
  2. Circular Economies
  3. Mass creation of right livelihood, unjobbing, and conversion of people from employees to entrepreneurial agents
  4. Open Source Product Development
  5. Transparency
  6. Ethical Economics
  7. Distributed Production - Distributed Manufacturing - and especially Distributive Enterprise
  8. Democracy
  9. Afforestation - planting trees. For example, transitioning from fossil fuels to biofuels can be accomplished by repurposing wasteland and other use to Integrated Polyculture biomass production
  10. Agricultural perennial polyculture
  11. Renewable energy
  12. Regenerative development of land
  13. Economics based on full cost accounting
  14. Building of (Renewable and self sustaining) Economies + Medical Systems + Infrastructure in Developing and/or Island countries, Or rural areas of ones that do not fit those prior conditions, yet face similar problems
  15. Unlimited Liability Company
  16. Termination of Public Offering which separates agency from the executive role, ie - enforces conflict of interest between owners and operators. (this is a longer discussion)
  17. Just Internet - for Web 3.0, we need to start considering libre hardware chips. The internet runs on hardware. That hardware is proprietary and non-transparent. Step 1 for an open internet is open source hardware for the internet. This way, there are no back doors, as you can examine what everything does.
  18. Biodiversity loss - solution at scale would be creating local microfactories and food systems to eliminate cause: resource predation. Secondary would be acquisition of desertified/destroyed/clearcut land and settling it with stewardship.

Prizes

Solving pressing world issues is noble work. Here is a list of prizes that honors such work.

  1. Berggruen Prize

Other Viewpoints of a Better Future

  • WEF prediction - [1]

Links