Our current economy is failing us, but there are alternatives. The roots of small-scale, local economies are in place. We can make them grow.
Lisa Gale Garrigues offers some rants against
those tempted to cross borders.
The Charlotte Maxwell Complementary Clinic provides all-around care including alternative treatments for low-income women diagnosed with cancer.
When Katrina hit New Orleans, medics on bicycles toured the city bringing relief where other agencies failed to show.
In the 2004 election, more than 3 million
ballots were never counted. Palast explains where they went,
but also provides an example of hopeful voting reform in New
Mexico.
The costs of health care and prescriptions in
the U.S. are graphically compared against the rest of the
world. Why do U.S. drugs cost more?
Being poor may be as great a risk factor in personal health as the consumption of cigarettes or junk food.
The United States pays far more than Canada per capita for its health care services, yet Canadians get better care, according to various experts.
Americans spend the most, get the least, and have no health care security. The solution is not that difficult.
Why is all this gloom and doom appearing in èßäÉçÇø? The first step toward a positive future at the individual, community, society, or global level is to address seriously the problem at hand and take meaningful action.
The Great Turning invites us to lift our eyes from the cramped closet of short-term thinking and see the larger historical landscape.
The Lincoln-Dameron neighborhood in Prescott,
Arizona, encompasses roughly two blocks, including two
apartment buildings and 30 houses, the majority built in the
1930s. The neighborhood, which is built around the floodplain
of nearby Miller Creek, is home to six greywater systems, two
rainwater cisterns, five organic gardens, 25 heirloom fruit
trees, and (at last count) 57 chickens. Welome to Prescott's
"EcoHood".
Hopi and Iroquois prophecies draw on long
cultural memories, offering practical approaches to surviving
hard times.
Graphics showing climate change, financial
meltdown and peak oil
They don't like the occupation or the militias, and they aren't signing up for any political or religious faction. Instead, these Iraqis want to live with their neighbors in peace.
The work of peace building in South Africa and elsewhere is largely a rehumanizing process, calming fears by destroying dehumanizing stereotypes.
These are not simple. Reduce the economic insecurities that are fueling the anti-immigrant backlash in the United States.
In danger of losing their vote and voice, Americans are demanding a return to the founding principles.
On èßäÉçÇø! Magazine's 10th anniversary, we look at trends that are changing our culture, our relationship to the earth, and our sense of self.
In growing numbers, Americans are rediscovering that the real meaning of the good life doesn't come from things they can buy but from things they can feel.
Why are farmers’ markets, community supported agriculture, direct farm-to-household marketing, organics, and humanely raised meats all on the increase?
As signs of climate change grow, and leaders lack political will to change course, people are acting in community to create a world that works for all.
A nonviolent army stands fast, watching over human rights in the midst of conflict, a model of courageous peace.
In post-Katrina New Orleans, will casinos, big business, and tourism displace people and the culture of the Big Easy? How will the city protect itself from future storms and rising seas? New Orleans could be rebuilt to serve its residents, poor and rich, and prosper in harmony with its watery ecosystem.
A Jewish Ugandan coffee farmer partners with Christian and Muslim neighbors to produce jobs, understanding, and a great coffee. Thanksgivingcoffee.com
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