COMMONS MAGAZINE
Updated from the book All That We Share: A Field Guide to the Commons, published by The New Press
From the Fox News-Wall Street Journal-National Review Information Link—North American edition
SOUTH BEND, INDIANA (USA)—Posted: August 3, 2040 2:38 p.m.
Updated from the book All That We Share: A Field Guide to the Commons, published by The New Press
From the Fox News-Wall Street Journal-National Review Information Link—North American edition
SOUTH BEND, INDIANA (USA)—Posted: August 3, 2040 2:38 p.m.
Good health means more than good medical care.
Many other things affect how long we live and how healthy we feel—conditions in our housing and neighborhoods, the social and physical environment of our communities, economic opportunities and the levels of stress in our lives.
According to a landmark University of Wisconsin study, the state of our overall health is attributable to four major factors:
• 20 percent—access to and quality of clinical health care
Good health means more than good medical care.
Many other things affect how long we live and how healthy we feel—conditions in our housing and neighborhoods, the social and physical environment of our communities, economic opportunities and the levels of stress in our lives.
According to a landmark University of Wisconsin study, the state of our overall health is attributable to four major factors:
• 20 percent—access to and quality of clinical health care
The Great Lakes Commons has recently released their Charter Toolkit. Rooted in the Commons Charter Declaration, this toolkit can support people, communities, and campaigns collaborating on protecting and caring for the Great Lakes.
The Charter Toolkit includes:
Tonetta Graham, an leader in the Strawberry Mansions neighborhood, sees Civic Commons as a way to bring investment to low-income areas without gentrification.
For decades the “Philadelphia Story” was about steady economic decline. That story is being rewritten today as many Americans rediscover the advantages of cities—inviting public spaces, rich cultural diversity and a creative environment that fertilizes start-ups and attracts talent.
Repeal of the Affordable Care Act would represent a serious retreat for social justice and basic human decency in the United States. Alarmed by this step backward, artist and BMC alum Tona Wilson joined Our Next 4 Years, a team of animators volunteering their skills to make short videos on health care and other important issues of the Age of Trump.
This one, with a score composed by Jeremy Mage, zeroes in about what repeal of Obamacare really means.
Repeal of the Affordable Care Act would represent a serious retreat for social justice and basic human decency in the United States. Alarmed by this step backward, artist and BMC alum Tona Wilson joined Our Next 4 Years, a team of animators volunteering their skills to make short videos on health care and other important issues of the Age of Trump.
This one, with a score composed by Jeremy Mage, zeroes in about what repeal of Obamacare really means.
Repeal of the Affordable Care Act would represent a serious retreat for social justice and basic human decency in the United States. Alarmed by this step backward, artist and BMC alum Tona Wilson joined Our Next 4 Years, a team of animators volunteering their skills to make short videos on health care and other important issues of the Age of Trump.
This one, with a score composed by Jeremy Mage, zeroes in about what repeal of Obamacare really means.
(Photo by Roadside Pictures under a Creative Commons license.)
Have you ever lived in a mobile home? Not me. Until the age of 24, I had never set foot in one. But two years later, I’d been inside hundreds. My first job out of college was to work with mobile home owners who rented their home sites in private parks around New England. The goal was to help them organize and buy their parks as resident-owned cooperatives.
(Photo by Roadside Pictures under a Creative Commons license.)
Have you ever lived in a mobile home? Not me. Until the age of 24, I had never set foot in one. But two years later, I’d been inside hundreds. My first job out of college was to work with mobile home owners who rented their home sites in private parks around New England. The goal was to help them organize and buy their parks as resident-owned cooperatives.
(By Wally Gobetz under a Creative Commons license)
(By Wally Gobetz under a Creative Commons license)
Many things leap to mind when someone mentions walking: fitness, fun, fresh air, relaxation, friends and maybe your most comfortable pair of shoes. But a word that rarely arises is “power”.
That will begin to change after the 2017 National Walking Summit (held in St. Paul, Minnesota September 13-15), which is themed “Vital and Vibrant Communities—The Power of Walkability”.
Photo by Morning Calm Weekly New under a Creative Commons license
In October 2015, when he was a very, very long shot for the Republican nomination, Donald Trump the businessman promised to make the military “much stronger than it is right now” without increasing military spending. “But you know what?” he declared, “We can do it for less.”
The founding fathers minced no words about their distrust of the masses.
Chuck Collins, a former OTC board member, has devoted most of his life to the cause of making the American economy more fair. As co-founder of Wealth for the Common Good and co-author (with Bill Gates Sr.) of Wealth and Common Wealth: Why America Should Tax Accumulated Fortunes, he’s a leading advocate that people who have benefited so handsomely from America’s economic system owe the nation so
Jonathan Tasini—who was a national surrogate for the Bernie Sanders campaign and author of the book The Essential Bernie Sanders—recently launched a new Podcast: The Working Life. He describes it as, “the political revolution delivered to you every week: politics, work, the economy, the voices of real workers (a segment devoted to workers and their jobs is going to be Studs Terkel-like…look it up if you don’t know the name), Robber Barons, corporate power, greed…you know, the light stuff. Plus, sports!”
On November 10, the federal court in Eugene, Oregon decided in favor of 21 youth plaintiffs in their “groundbreaking” constitutional climate lawsuit against President Obama, numerous federal agencies, and the fossil fuel industry. U.S. District Court Judge Ann Aiken completely rejected all arguments to dismiss raised by the federal government and fossil fuel industry, determining that the young plaintiffs’ constitutional and public trust claims could proceed.
Old MacDonald of E-I-E-I-O fame would feel right at home on Essex Farm, a 600-acre spread in upstate New York where the future of American agriculture is being radically reconceived.
For the past 60 years, farmers have been encouraged, seduced and coerced by agribusiness and federal policies to become ever more specialized. So it’s surprising to walk through a modern farmyard and hear a moo-moo here and an oink-oink there, and see 50 different kinds of vegetables growing in the fields.