Systemic change is needed to move us on to the right side of history. Marc Buckley talks with the game-changers on a mission to get us there as fast as possible.
In these Video Podcast, Marc Buckley talks with game-changers on a mission to get us there as fast as possible. Thought leaders who are creating Resilient Desirable Futures for Everyone. Dialogue and friendly discussion. The objective and ambition are to remove bias and help with sense-making. Some Topics; Resilience, Sustainability, Social Entrepreneurship, Environmentalism, Philanthropy, Global Food Reform, Regenerative practices, Systems thinking, Foresight, Critical Thinking, & Behavioral Psychology.
Marc is an Advocate for the SDGs, member of the World Economic Forum Expert Network, and award-winning Global Food Reformist.
This podcast is available on RU-vid and across a range of platforms, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Audible, Amazon Music, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, Breaker, Overcast, and Radio Public.
Loved the book. Such a great argument for returning to the land. My only suggestion is to talk about community farming. We do it as a small 11 person commune and it makes the work so much lighter and funner.
My life view changed in the 1980s after reading The Turning Point. I have 2 copies because the first is tattered from use. I see the dominant culture resist the shift to ecological principles and hope and work through activism towards this shift. My nearly finished novel is about this concept and includes Capra, Margulis and Lovelock as inspiration to the main character. I am so grateful to have listened to this podcast. Every second spoke to me. I need to take the Capra Course! Thank you both!
No "call to action" yet and I'm half way through and wondering. We need to discuss nuts and bolts solutions and how to inspire. Focus on giving people something they can use.Then they can think about that while you talk about yourself and who you all know.
Wonderfully inspiring. Let us not be afraid of the sacred dimension of reality - together with holistic, systems thinking in science it has the power to magnetize the human heart.
More and more , every single situation we are facing is log jammed because of a thinking problem , not a resource problem - There is something keeping our brains from facing facts . I really know that everything Allan Savory is saying is so clear . I believe that the problem may be in the term secondary narcissistic personality disorder , which is the prevalence of people with personalities that are detached from a physical reality . They only can strategize , not manage . I am really enjoying discovering the life work of Mr Savory .
France, Germany and Italy want to deport all the illegal refugees that are moving to europe. The UK wants to send their refugees back to Rwanda. Why is there no interest to educate these people in simple methods of ecosystem restoration, so that they receive the self-empowerment to change situations in their countries of origin??
Jehne essentially proposes the same thing as Liu. Think it is our strongest approach. It is cheap (especially over time), it's effective, it's durable Think coupling it with restorative ag (different from "regenerative ag") as described by Mark Shepard is our best approach to regreening adds motivation to implement as well as adding needed resiliency. Emphasizing freight and passenger rail (over high speed rail) is more useful and a better use of resources than the primary push to larger EVs.
Most regenerative practices are still pretty conventional than "regenerative." Think restoration agriculture a la Mark Shepard is the better way to produce food, biomass, and useful materials according to our needs. We need a lot less grain, whereas healthy, diverse foods, healthy environments, restoring watertables and soil, helping wildlife, adding resiliency, etc are vitally important. As an aside we need more/denser rail, especially publicly owned rail. Most large countries have poor rail coverage, yet have the biggest need for coverage. More rail will lessen the deepening fissure between the rich and the poor. Publicly owned rail opensup competition, breaks up monopolies; while promoting the efficiency of privately owned rail. We need to promote rail like Eisenhower did the freeway/highway system. We need to consider ghe bigger picture in the future. The high speed rail push is badly conceptualized. It continues to suck up public monies with low value return. It fails to create the real impacts we need to improve our outcomes for both rural and urban communities.
I was wondering if Dr. Buchmann knows a source of meloponine, bees and specifically the Royal Lady variety. Apparently the Australians also have a few companies that actually sell the complete kit, bees and hive. However, the trick is getting these things over the border. Is there a way? I am building a medium-sized green house and would like to close it up to keep out nuisance insects. The trade off is that I have to have pollinators and am allergic to bee stings. These little bees sound like just the ticket! The question is, how to get them?
Thank you! Yes, all episodes available under Inside Ideas with Marc Buckley. Spotify, iTunes News, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, Audible, Stitcher, Google Podcasts, Anchor, Player FM, Radio Public, Breaker, Castbox, Overcast, Get Podcasts, and Pocket Casts. Enjoy!
At 13.30 you asked a stupid question regarding "removing all walls, borders etc". There is not one big island we all live on. You cannot let 6 billion people on planet earth all go where they want to go since you want to remove all walls & borders, that's absurd, do not all speak the same language now. The fact that any nation does not produce it's own food is absurd and asinine in itself. How stupid are we that we have all these machines called tractors, computers etc and can't feed the people within our own nation? It's fuckingstupid. It's very simple, a small group of smart evil crooked people setup a banking system and use the mechanism of money to fuckhumaintyover. Until this gets addressed we will continue to be a bunchofstupidmoronic human beings on planet earth.
Mr Toensmeier, you are my hero! I think Mark Shepard adapted carbon farming in a cost effective with longer-to-establish plants that many could easily adapt. He certainly can keep himself and his community better fed than his neighbors can. Complaining about the food that goes to livestock when we have food that goes to feed cars is a no go... The hub idea could bring back rotting food for biochar or fuel production, instead of landfill. Bill Gate's carbon farming sounds pretty dubious. To me I would suspect him of coal mining in the name of carbon farming. Just a clever twist on words...
Capra y Maturana, et al, son interesantes; esperaria que nosotros en América Latina no estaremos excluidos de la difusión y ampliación de estas relaciones.
I happen to be reading this book and am finding it a very useful resource, providing an overview of the history of systems thinking and a great/powerful introduction to the ecological approach to the many challenges facing our species and the planet.
Reading about people grabbing multi-figures monthly as incomes in investments even in this crazy days in the market. Any pointer on how to reinvest my earnings. I would appreciate.
I believe that the secret to financial stability is having the right investment ideas to enable you earn more money, I don’t know who agrees with me. Either way I still recommend real estate or cryptocurrency and stocks.
I agree with you but when it comes to trading, I don't trade myself, I invest with a professional assigned by a cryptocurrency company that trades for people and returns profit on weekly basis for me. You can invest your capital and get weekly returns on investment (ROI) without any extra fees attached.
I love what Mark Shepherd is talking about, but what I'd like to know is if I can do it myself in my (City lot backyard)?!? Are there any books that I can buy that help me in this endeavor?!?
@@gaynellbowie8379 container gardening is absolutly not restoration Ag which is what Mark does. Contanier anything is resilience or subsistence at best and then very much dependent on what type of system you are using.
@@gaynellbowie8379 You can sustain and produce a good amount of food and also make super starts to turn your garden or lot into a food forest with little space.
I imagine that the decay rate, composition, chemical/thermal/hydro context, and "organic half-life" of various roots, the way they impede or progress seed progress through the subsoil, etc. is just as complex as the above-ground cellulotic/woody structures/canopy strata. Mastering the manipulation of edge effect subsoil would be the foothold to the next step in the holistic management of sunlight+mineral=energy resources. Wonderful talk, thank you for sharing your expertise, insight, and experiences.
Wild! I picked up this book at the Library yesterday when the book I was looking for was not in yet. Having never heard of it before, or Elkingtin (apart from the TBL/3P). About 50 pages in this morning, I wanted to see if there were any recent interviews. Feels like an crossing of fates. Thanks Marc & John for this interview.