I might be preaching to the choir here, but I feel a rant coming on, so bear with me.
I'm relatively new here, and far be it from me to tell anyone what to do, but why are we here?
Are we here to be an echo chamber of permacultural thought? To be information leaches, sucking down ideas but not giving back?
Sure, we give back to each other, but what are we giving to the world at large?
In the end, I feel like we are a church club, each person going to the next and passing around the same $5 bill, saying, "Hey, I just wanted to bless you with this."
This amounts to spinning our tires, not making progress, and everyone goes home with exactly what they came with.
I think we all need to ask ourselves, "Do I honestly believe that
Permaculture can change the world?" I know I do. "Can
Permaculture SAVE the world?" I figure it's the best shot we've got.
If you answered similarly, what the heck are we doing? Can anything else POSSIBLY be more important than establishing
Permaculture as the status quo on a global scale? I think not.
I don't think I'm alone in my
experience here, I found this site, lurked for quite a while, consumed LOTS of good information, dug a bit deeper and discovered I haven't even made it out of the GROWIES section yet, gasped at the sheer magnitude of this site, and started looking for other ways to read and learn and grow in my knowledge and experience and so I started listening to the podcasts nearly every moment I wasn't in front of a monitor.
The podcasts are a GOLD MINE of information (as are the forums), and I have been working my way through them all about as fast as I can.
I recently listened to podcasts 231, 232, and 233, where Paul answered some questions from Ben Lawson, and I have to say, it was difficult to listen to.
I have worlds of respect for Paul and what he is trying to accomplish, through the forums, through the podcasts, through video, through his articles, through various speaking engagements, and so on. He is a one-man revolution.
I can't begin to tell you how frustrated I was listening to these three podcasts. Paul does SO MUCH to advance the cause and raise the banner of
permaculture, but again, a one-man revolution. I don't say this as a tip of the hat to him, (although I do mean it that way) but rather, to encourage the rest of us to raise our commitment so that he doesn't HAVE to be a one-man revolution.
Paul has stated that in some communities, (I believe Reddit was named, specifically) self-promotion is frowned upon, and yet, if nobody steps up and promotes his stuff, he has no choice but to do it himself, consequences be damned.
In one of these three podcasts, he mentioned that many people consume the podcasts via itunes, which makes him hesitant to upload new podcasts because the slightly older podcasts get bumped off the list, making the listenership suffer.
I recently signed up for the daily-ish email under the
world domination list, but so far, haven't gotten any emails in that regard yet, so in the meantime, I would like to propose that we make a concerted effort to push some of the content he's created, on a regular basis.
I suggest that on the 3rd and the 12th of each month, we dot the internet landscape with all manner of permaculture landmines, so that the casual internet user will have a very high likelihood of coming across something interesting.
Why the 3rd and the 12th? Because I feel that once a month is not frequently
enough. Because there are three permaculture ethics and twelve design principles. (Paul might prefer to engage himself here on the 2nd and 12th instead, since he has such a special affinity for the 3rd ethic!) Because the word Permaculture has 12 letters, because Paul has a certain fondness for the number 12...Honestly, there's no particular reason behind it, so feel free to make one up or use one of mine, or choose any other days of the month you want, it's not like the links will disappear the day after.
We need to go back to some of our favorite podcasts, videos, articles, or forum discussions and "social share" them everywhere we can,
facebook, twitter, stumbleupon, pintrest, or even just a plain old email. Like I said, a GOLD MINE, no reason to leave it all rusty and dusty on the shelves of cyberspace.
I have some more thoughts to share, but it's getting quite late here, and I suppose it's best to wait and see how well-received this rant will be.