00:00:10
so
00:00:25
[Applause]
00:00:44
[Music]
00:01:07
the
00:01:08
underpinning core ideology that we are
00:01:11
fed in the west is that we are
00:01:13
competitive
00:01:15
selfish that this is human nature you
00:01:18
know that is in many ways the
00:01:20
the religion of neoliberalism that's
00:01:23
where it comes from you think you know
00:01:24
what it is to be human but you don't
00:01:27
all you know is how a human behaves in a
00:01:29
power over paradigm but what if you were
00:01:31
to plug that human being into a
00:01:33
completely different paradigm
00:01:36
[Music]
00:01:42
[Music]
00:01:48
[Music]
00:01:50
for the past few hundred years
00:01:53
and especially in the last four decades
00:01:56
people on every continent have been
00:01:59
increasingly at the mercy of a colonial
00:02:02
globalized economy
00:02:04
we've been imprisoned in a consumer
00:02:06
society in which our needs are met by
00:02:08
distant anonymous corporations
00:02:12
in which external ideals of success
00:02:14
are imposed upon us
00:02:17
this
00:02:18
competitiveness
00:02:20
that uh you have to prove yourself by
00:02:23
how much
00:02:24
faster you can climb and push down the
00:02:27
others and
00:02:28
and it's been a deformation of the human
00:02:31
spirit i do believe
00:02:41
for
00:02:41
hundreds of thousands of years we
00:02:44
evolved
00:02:46
for a very different type of living
00:02:48
tribalized i don't mean tribalized as in
00:02:51
ideological oppositionalism
00:02:54
i mean tribalized as
00:02:56
i live with these 150 people my survival
00:02:59
is dependent on their survival my
00:03:01
contentment is dependent on their
00:03:03
contentment
00:03:05
there's no
00:03:06
brain system
00:03:07
that supports competition
00:03:10
there's no brain system that's all about
00:03:12
aggression
00:03:14
all these
00:03:15
assumptions that
00:03:17
this society
00:03:20
ascribes to
00:03:21
human nature they don't exist in our
00:03:23
neurophysiology
00:03:25
and there's an ache now
00:03:27
for people to discover who they are
00:03:30
[Music]
00:03:34
we human beings didn't evolve
00:03:37
for a hyper individualized competitive
00:03:40
way of being
00:03:42
for most of our time on this planet
00:03:44
we lived in collaborative
00:03:47
intergenerational communities
00:03:50
deeply connected to the land and the
00:03:52
waters that sustained us
00:03:55
this is why you can now see across the
00:03:58
world
00:03:59
people have been pushed into this
00:04:01
unnatural
00:04:03
high-rise way of living
00:04:05
disconnected from each other and from
00:04:07
the earth
00:04:08
they're now developing a natural and
00:04:10
almost biological hunger
00:04:13
for community
00:04:15
and connection to nature
00:04:17
i see that the more interests among
00:04:19
young people
00:04:21
about farming and moving especially
00:04:24
moving outside
00:04:26
of big cities
00:04:29
they are very very uh
00:04:31
hungry for communal bonds so i see some
00:04:36
something very important is happening
00:04:38
here
00:04:39
and the young people in brazil are
00:04:41
already
00:04:42
showing that they want this um
00:04:46
ecological future and local future
00:04:49
locally based and deeply weaved within
00:04:52
territory to exist
00:04:54
and they
00:04:56
came together within a movement that we
00:04:59
called localization
00:05:03
[Music]
00:05:08
beyond the mainstream media
00:05:10
on the ground on every continent a quiet
00:05:13
revolution is emerging
00:05:16
people are seeking community
00:05:18
collaboration
00:05:19
ways of life that nurture the natural
00:05:22
world instead of destroying it
00:05:24
farmers markets
00:05:26
small business alliances
00:05:28
transition towns
00:05:30
mutual aid networks community banks
00:05:34
agroecology schools
00:05:36
alternative education
00:05:38
permanent culture eco-villages and more
00:05:42
collectively these diverse initiatives
00:05:45
demonstrate a new path forward for
00:05:48
humanity
00:05:49
it's a path that localizes rather than
00:05:52
globalizes
00:05:54
connects rather than separates and shows
00:05:57
us that human beings need not be the
00:05:59
problem
00:06:00
we can be the
00:06:04
solution we are
00:06:07
facing
00:06:08
an emerging global civilization
00:06:11
and the danger of global mono culture
00:06:15
and it is
00:06:16
this danger that can be countered by
00:06:20
the localization movement
00:06:23
it is localization that can enable the
00:06:25
emergence of diversity
00:06:28
identity autonomy and resilience
00:06:42
so
00:06:56
[Music]
00:07:03
this is a time for localization it's
00:07:06
modest it's simple
00:07:08
almost beguilingly simple
00:07:12
but it's also complex
00:07:14
it also means that we have to
00:07:15
shape-shift
00:07:17
it also means we have to be different
00:07:21
in local economies
00:07:23
people can see their impact on others
00:07:26
and on nature
00:07:28
this is a human scale where the
00:07:30
structures create transparency and
00:07:32
accountability and bring out the best in
00:07:35
people
00:07:37
this for me is the strongest argument
00:07:39
for localization
00:07:41
when people work locally
00:07:43
they look after what they're working
00:07:45
with
00:07:46
they have a longer horizon
00:07:49
they're not thinking to the next
00:07:51
shareholder meeting
00:07:53
to the next quarterly
00:07:55
profits
00:07:56
review they're thinking what would this
00:07:59
be like for my children and
00:08:00
grandchildren
00:08:02
that kind of long-term vision
00:08:04
is profoundly ecological
00:08:07
people
00:08:08
want
00:08:09
to
00:08:11
experience their responsibility
00:08:14
and that means that you carry yourself
00:08:17
with pride and dignity because you
00:08:20
matter
00:08:21
what makes a human being happy
00:08:24
i don't want to trivialize that question
00:08:26
but i would say that it is
00:08:28
multi-dimensional relationships
00:08:31
relationships to each other to other
00:08:33
people
00:08:34
to non-human beings to a place
00:08:38
you
00:08:39
create together
00:08:40
you
00:08:41
meet
00:08:43
physical needs for each other
00:08:46
you are
00:08:48
embedded
00:08:49
and you could say of
00:08:51
a place not just a separate self
00:08:55
but you are part of a circle
00:08:58
of a circle of circles of circles of
00:09:01
circles of relationships
00:09:03
therefore you know who you are therefore
00:09:05
you have a sense of belonging
00:09:07
so what mahatma gandhi called swadeshi
00:09:10
meaning economics of the place and we
00:09:13
celebrate the diversity of cultures and
00:09:16
diversity of religions and diversity of
00:09:18
languages but we keep ourselves rooted
00:09:22
in the place where we live
00:09:24
when it comes to food when it comes to
00:09:26
the way that we organize power when it
00:09:27
comes to the way we organize health and
00:09:30
even i would say issues as
00:09:32
potentially complex as justice we need
00:09:35
to localize where possible
00:09:45
thanks to globalization the food we eat
00:09:48
travels thousands of miles
00:09:51
shrimp from scotland is shipped 6 000
00:09:54
miles to thailand just to be peeled then
00:09:57
shipped back to be sold in the uk
00:10:02
meanwhile
00:10:03
countries routinely import and export
00:10:06
huge quantities of the same product
00:10:10
in 2020
00:10:12
germany was the world's second largest
00:10:14
importer of milk
00:10:16
and also the world's second largest
00:10:18
exporter of milk
00:10:22
that same year the us imported 3.5
00:10:26
billion dollars worth of beef
00:10:28
and exported 3.75
00:10:32
billion dollars worth
00:10:34
many countries engage in this kind of
00:10:36
redundant trade
00:10:38
this is insanity in an era of climate
00:10:41
chaos but global trade rules actually
00:10:44
encourage it
00:10:47
all the international money team and air
00:10:50
transportation the emissions from this
00:10:52
are not accounted by any country
00:10:55
just think of all those vessels with all
00:10:58
kinds of commodities from china to
00:11:00
everywhere
00:11:01
from mining with soy with oil with
00:11:04
liquefied gas
00:11:06
those emissions are nobody's emission
00:11:09
because one of the key assumptions of
00:11:11
the climate policy is that you cannot
00:11:13
harm trade
00:11:14
[Music]
00:11:22
the global market pressures towards vast
00:11:25
chemical intensive
00:11:26
monoculture-based
00:11:28
farming
00:11:30
these monocultures actually produce less
00:11:32
food while eliminating biodiversity and
00:11:35
destroying small farmers
00:11:37
[Music]
00:11:39
local markets on the other hand
00:11:41
require a variety of different products
00:11:45
and so they unleash the productive and
00:11:48
truly regenerative power of small-scale
00:11:51
diversified farming
00:11:57
permaculture has contributed to that
00:12:00
acknowledgement and importance
00:12:02
of
00:12:04
these
00:12:05
smaller localized economies for
00:12:09
radically reducing ecological footprint
00:12:12
it's desperately important that we take
00:12:15
control
00:12:16
in our communities of our food to
00:12:20
eat
00:12:21
food grown locally as much as possible
00:12:24
saving seeds learning from our nature
00:12:27
learning from farmers
00:12:28
we can grow enough food to feed all of
00:12:31
india twice over
00:12:33
by conserving biodiversity regenerating
00:12:36
the soil regenerating the water and
00:12:38
healing the broken climate cycle
00:12:43
agriculture uses half of all habitable
00:12:47
land
00:12:48
so a shift from global monocultures to
00:12:51
localized diversified food systems
00:12:54
would literally transform the face of
00:12:57
the earth
00:12:59
[Music]
00:13:14
[Music]
00:13:28
[Music]
00:13:48
[Music]
00:13:58
[Music]
00:14:19
as people recognize the multiple
00:14:21
benefits of local food economies
00:14:24
community initiatives are springing up
00:14:27
across the world
00:14:34
we have over
00:14:35
1500 urban gardens and farms now all
00:14:40
across the city of detroit we are going
00:14:43
to build a local ecosystem of food
00:14:45
entrepreneurs and we are about to build
00:14:48
the most delicious love food economy on
00:14:50
the planet
00:14:52
[Applause]
00:15:26
number of young people from the city
00:15:29
want to come back to the farm is
00:15:31
increase they have strong intention that
00:15:33
they want to do organic farming
00:15:35
now we do a lot of training mainly
00:15:37
people from the city come and many most
00:15:39
of them ready to quit their job many of
00:15:41
them looking for land many of them
00:15:43
bought the land already
00:15:45
we have a madness in this world
00:15:48
where
00:15:49
food that is grown around our cities
00:15:52
is largely exported to other areas
00:15:55
either within the country or even
00:15:57
outside the country
00:15:59
and um
00:16:01
wouldn't it be so much better
00:16:03
if
00:16:04
the local farmers had the opportunity to
00:16:06
work with the local communities to bring
00:16:09
their food into the city as was
00:16:11
traditionally done
00:16:13
[Music]
00:16:16
bristol was once fed by
00:16:18
peri-urban horticulture projects
00:16:20
like suburban market gardens basically
00:16:22
since 85 the amount of land given to
00:16:25
this kind of agricultural production
00:16:27
suburb and horticulture has declined by
00:16:29
almost 30 percent in this country it's
00:16:31
really difficult for
00:16:32
farmers especially kind of new entrance
00:16:35
to farming to get access to land so
00:16:37
bristol food producers is running a
00:16:39
scheme of land matching where it tries
00:16:41
to get people who want to have access to
00:16:43
land to apply through bristol food
00:16:45
producers and then it tries to match
00:16:47
people with available land we take
00:16:49
pleasure in our day's work here and
00:16:51
enjoy turning out plate food and
00:16:52
watching people enjoy it knowing that we
00:16:54
know patrick that's growing the mushroom
00:16:56
that's on that plate
00:16:58
to use
00:16:59
the products in the shop and to sell
00:17:01
them but also to celebrate the bristol
00:17:03
food movement which is
00:17:05
amazing
00:17:06
[Music]
00:17:10
my name is nelson mujinga
00:17:13
i'm a small older farmer in the shasher
00:17:16
block of farms
00:17:18
we are demonstrating and showcasing many
00:17:22
of the practices that will relate to
00:17:24
our local
00:17:26
our processes of producing food and this
00:17:29
at the same time
00:17:31
managing our environment
00:17:33
we believe
00:17:34
it is a movement that is connecting
00:17:37
different people in many different
00:17:39
communities
00:17:41
they cannot survive in isolation they
00:17:43
would like to connect for them to be
00:17:45
able to participate meaningfully and
00:17:48
effectively in the politics about food
00:17:50
systems
00:18:05
[Music]
00:18:36
[Music]
00:18:51
me
00:18:56
[Music]
00:19:10
we are a group of friends in budapest
00:19:12
involving different activities dealing
00:19:13
with sustainability and more social
00:19:15
justice we met and decided to launch an
00:19:18
ambitious project for better well-being
00:19:20
called cargonomia we would like to
00:19:21
distribute healthy local food in
00:19:23
budapest with our self-manufactured
00:19:25
cargo bikes
00:19:25
[Music]
00:19:36
we bring all that food and also eggs
00:19:39
beers to cargonomia in the city center
00:19:41
of budapest from there we distribute it
00:19:44
to people in budapest with our cargo
00:19:46
bikes made in teclanomia
00:19:48
[Music]
00:19:56
there's this widespread belief that we
00:19:58
need big farms and ever more technology
00:20:02
to feed the world
00:20:04
actually exactly the opposite is true we
00:20:07
need small-scale diversified farms
00:20:11
everywhere
00:20:13
supporting this turnaround
00:20:16
is an essential step in transforming the
00:20:19
entire economic system
00:20:22
and is something that we can all
00:20:23
contribute to
00:20:25
right now wherever we are
00:20:28
local food economies are essential for
00:20:31
restoring our health and the health of
00:20:33
the planet as a whole
00:20:35
but to build those kinds of economies we
00:20:37
must recapture our rights from global
00:20:39
corporations beyond this uh
00:20:42
community efforts a localization must
00:20:45
advocate for structural changes in the
00:20:48
social and production relations between
00:20:52
farmers traders and landlords we hope to
00:20:55
contribute in the building and
00:20:57
strengthening
00:20:58
of a global movement that will challenge
00:21:00
the monopoly control of dnc's over food
00:21:03
and agriculture it starts with simple
00:21:05
questions actually of where does my food
00:21:08
come from where does my water come from
00:21:10
who controls these systems how are
00:21:12
decisions made around these
00:21:14
and it starts to connect to larger
00:21:16
social movements who are actually trying
00:21:18
today to defend our territories to
00:21:20
defend the water resources to defend uh
00:21:24
uh control over our own knowledge
00:21:26
systems
00:21:41
foreign
00:21:45
[Music]
00:21:50
and we need policy reforms that supports
00:21:53
localization and agroecology and
00:21:56
community supported agriculture the need
00:21:59
to have strong
00:22:01
uh mass movements of farmers and small
00:22:05
food producers of workers and consumers
00:22:09
and all their advocates so
00:22:11
we need to support and strengthen such a
00:22:13
strong people's movement
00:22:17
[Music]
00:22:27
how is it that we have allowed control
00:22:30
of our food systems and our entire
00:22:32
economy to be put into the hands of
00:22:35
giant global institutions
00:22:38
so from the time of colonization there
00:22:40
was historical structuring or
00:22:43
re-orientation of domestic agriculture
00:22:46
and food production towards sources of
00:22:48
cheap raw materials for the industrial
00:22:50
needs of the colonizers
00:22:53
so it continued with the neoliberal
00:22:55
globalization of the past four decades
00:22:58
and they've used um instruments like wto
00:23:02
bilateral agreements ftas as well as
00:23:06
restructuring required by the
00:23:08
international financial institutions
00:23:10
such as world bank and imf
00:23:14
[Music]
00:23:18
since the 1980s
00:23:20
governments worldwide have been signing
00:23:23
on to trade treaties that give
00:23:24
multinational banks and corporations
00:23:28
more and more freedom and power
00:23:32
these treaties now even allow
00:23:34
corporations to sue governments for any
00:23:37
social or environmental protections that
00:23:40
might threaten their profits
00:23:43
this makes a mockery of democracy
00:23:47
you know what did globalization do
00:23:49
it tore down all the rules
00:23:52
that allowed
00:23:54
justice in society democracy in society
00:23:57
equality in society tore it all down and
00:24:00
made it all possible to accumulate so
00:24:03
you get the tech billionaires emerging
00:24:05
you get the black rocks and the
00:24:07
vanguards this year blackrock is 9.5
00:24:11
trillion
00:24:12
9.5 trillion
00:24:15
in a decade
00:24:16
they own the media and they of course
00:24:19
own the whole financial infrastructure
00:24:21
and and so basically almost any aspect
00:24:23
of our life today is dominated by these
00:24:26
global corporations and what's so
00:24:28
terrifying about it is that
00:24:30
they
00:24:31
are structured legally
00:24:34
with one mission above all which is to
00:24:36
increase shareholder profit shareholder
00:24:38
value as fast as possible
00:24:46
they want to reinforce the current
00:24:48
unsustainable global system with the new
00:24:50
technology
00:24:52
now as we move forward with this
00:24:54
localizing movement we have to be very
00:24:57
very careful with this world new
00:24:59
technology
00:25:01
because now multinational corporations
00:25:03
are taking over our food system with
00:25:06
that
00:25:06
[Music]
00:25:09
can you imagine a future where
00:25:11
multinational company servers on the
00:25:13
other side of the world
00:25:15
automatically manage the robots
00:25:17
blowing the farming
00:25:19
the world economic forum has set the
00:25:22
goal
00:25:23
of digitalizing the whole world
00:25:26
in fact a yale has already collected 24
00:25:30
million
00:25:31
hectares
00:25:32
of digital data from all over the world
00:25:38
saudi aramco
00:25:40
where energy is opportunity
00:25:42
[Music]
00:25:46
governments on both left and right are
00:25:48
rolling out the red carpet for these
00:25:50
corporate giants
00:25:53
they're freeing them from regulation
00:25:55
they're freeing them from paying taxes
00:25:58
and they're subsidizing the expansion of
00:26:00
globalizing infrastructure
00:26:02
[Music]
00:26:05
at the same time
00:26:07
citizens small businesses and even
00:26:10
national industries are squeezed for
00:26:12
taxes and burdened by ever more red tape
00:26:16
and bureaucracy
00:26:19
that's why products from the other side
00:26:21
of the world generally cost less than
00:26:23
local products
00:26:25
it's why the gap between rich and poor
00:26:28
is so extreme
00:26:30
it's a completely unfair economic
00:26:33
playing field
00:26:36
we have a system that actively
00:26:39
undermines the social network
00:26:42
and destroys communities because it
00:26:44
throws people out of jobs without any
00:26:45
thought to the impact
00:26:47
of what that will have on the local
00:26:48
community
00:26:50
when a walmart can come in and
00:26:55
completely
00:26:57
obliterate small local businesses
00:27:01
that is huge impact on people's
00:27:03
connection to each other and therefore
00:27:04
on their health
00:27:06
one of the many reasons that the
00:27:08
technological
00:27:10
expansion in the west and now all over
00:27:12
the world
00:27:14
over the last
00:27:15
few centuries is so toxic is that it has
00:27:18
been intimately linked with the
00:27:19
destruction of community and this is a
00:27:22
breeding ground for all kinds of
00:27:24
insecurities
00:27:26
according to facebook's own research
00:27:28
reported by the wall street journal
00:27:29
their platforms make body image issues
00:27:31
so if you look at the statistics and the
00:27:33
number of people that are lonely they've
00:27:35
gone way up in the last 34 years
00:27:38
the
00:27:38
real epidemic of mental health
00:27:40
conditions amongst the youth increased
00:27:42
youth suicide depression anxiety
00:27:44
all of which actually reflect
00:27:47
the the consequences of a system
00:27:50
that denies children's developmental
00:27:52
needs and fails to provide children or
00:27:54
adults with a healthy connected
00:27:56
environment
00:27:58
ultimately these corporations only get
00:27:59
their power by having to push down the
00:28:03
actual deep instinct in every human
00:28:05
being every human infant that's born to
00:28:08
love to be connected to be part of
00:28:10
community to be part of life they have
00:28:12
to actively stop that from growing but
00:28:15
people themselves want nothing more than
00:28:18
to be part of community part of life to
00:28:21
feel desired within their community to
00:28:24
feel that they're making a meaningful
00:28:25
difference to others around them
00:28:28
[Music]
00:28:31
but will it lead to wage rises
00:28:34
we've assumed so before
00:28:36
the majority of people are getting
00:28:38
poorer
00:28:40
governments are getting poorer
00:28:42
and even ceos are running faster and
00:28:45
faster in fear of losing their jobs in a
00:28:48
merger
00:28:49
so why is anyone still going along with
00:28:52
this globalizing madness
00:28:55
the system has become so vast so global
00:28:59
that it's almost impossible to see its
00:29:02
contours
00:29:03
and no one has been charged with
00:29:05
stepping back to look at the big picture
00:29:08
instead economic pressures have been
00:29:12
demanding ever more specialization an
00:29:15
ever more narrow perspective
00:29:17
[Music]
00:29:18
so this means that the problem is not so
00:29:20
much about evil greedy people in charge
00:29:25
it's much more about a lack of awareness
00:29:28
about ignorance
00:29:30
from the grassroots to the very pinnacle
00:29:32
of power
00:29:34
this is actually quite good in many ways
00:29:37
because
00:29:38
the antidote to ignorance
00:29:40
isn't complicated
00:29:42
it's about raising awareness
00:29:45
[Music]
00:29:49
the globalized economic system that
00:29:51
dominates our world is like the pied
00:29:54
piper who led the children of hamline to
00:29:57
their doom
00:29:58
with its enchanting glamour of media
00:30:01
consumerism and big business
00:30:03
globalization has led us to so many
00:30:06
crises like climate change
00:30:08
ecological disasters widening gap
00:30:11
between the rich and the poor
00:30:13
and increasing social violence and
00:30:15
illnesses of all kinds what gives us
00:30:18
hope is the millions of deep thinkers
00:30:21
and their initiatives that promote
00:30:23
localization as a major systemic
00:30:26
solution that we need to arrest our
00:30:29
civilizations
00:30:30
free fall to disaster when we think
00:30:32
local and we consume local
00:30:36
it makes for a healthier planet because
00:30:38
the the ripple effect it causes um and
00:30:41
and the um this community spaces that it
00:30:44
creates
00:30:45
is just beautiful i'm trying to shift
00:30:47
away from contributing to the fossil
00:30:50
fuel economy in any way possible
00:30:53
it makes so much sense because the only
00:30:55
people making money in the whole economy
00:30:57
seem to be the people who are extracting
00:31:00
from
00:31:01
the system millions of local initiatives
00:31:03
already exist in india for local
00:31:06
agriculture innumerable local crafts
00:31:09
creating local economies and much more
00:31:12
93 percent of our total workforce of
00:31:15
india is from the unorganized sector
00:31:18
which includes small and localized
00:31:20
businesses
00:31:24
[Music]
00:31:30
gandhiji said
00:31:31
india needs production by the masses not
00:31:35
mass production
00:31:36
and that we need grams barrage
00:31:39
which really means respect for
00:31:41
localization
00:31:43
india is a country that still has over
00:31:46
20 000 varieties of rice
00:31:49
over thousand kinds of hand looms
00:31:52
over 120 major living languages and we
00:31:56
have diversity of all kinds
00:32:01
[Music]
00:32:05
we still need to follow the wisdom of
00:32:08
gandhiji
00:32:10
[Music]
00:32:12
sabemos
00:32:26
america
00:32:57
[Music]
00:33:10
[Music]
00:33:20
foreign
00:33:28
worried customers have been snapping up
00:33:30
everything in sight store shelves
00:33:32
nationwide or dwindling or totally empty
00:33:35
we needed a pandemic to show us how
00:33:38
resources need to actually flow and how
00:33:42
localized action
00:33:44
can create amazing local responses based
00:33:48
on a new
00:33:50
relatedness in an emergency we're kind
00:33:53
of hardwired to help each other and
00:33:56
small-scale approaches are a very
00:33:58
effective way to build relationships of
00:34:01
trust and meaning while serving needs
00:34:05
so one of the
00:34:07
really dramatic consequences of the
00:34:10
coronavirus pandemic
00:34:12
is the rise all over the world
00:34:15
of
00:34:16
community-based mutual support groups
00:34:19
some of them are amazing at the same
00:34:21
time there's a growth
00:34:23
in response to the
00:34:25
longer term crisis of
00:34:28
neoliberal capitalism which has been
00:34:30
devastating for 40 years
00:34:33
there's a growth of
00:34:34
worker-owned enterprises
00:34:38
collectives
00:34:40
community-based services
00:34:43
spreading all over one of the things
00:34:45
that happens in
00:34:47
the midst of large-scale shocks and
00:34:49
crises is that we realize very quickly
00:34:52
how vulnerable
00:34:54
our globalized supply chains are
00:34:57
and in the rocky world of climate chaos
00:35:00
we're seeing many more examples of this
00:35:03
localization in this context is survival
00:35:07
we will be facing more shocks more novel
00:35:10
viruses
00:35:11
more cataclysmic storms
00:35:13
our communities must prepare
00:35:16
by becoming more self-sufficient more
00:35:18
able to provide for our basic food
00:35:21
energy and medical needs
00:35:23
self-sufficient is not the same as
00:35:25
isolated or parochial or insular i'm an
00:35:28
internationalist
00:35:30
but more sturdy more ready and more
00:35:33
resilient communities is what we need
00:35:35
for when the next shock comes
00:35:37
[Music]
00:35:43
in the modern world
00:35:45
we have been made to believe that
00:35:47
globalizing economic development is
00:35:50
inevitable
00:35:51
cookie cutter houses bigger highways
00:35:55
homogenized main streets
00:35:57
concrete and high rise and corporate
00:36:00
logos on every corner
00:36:02
we have called it progress and treated
00:36:05
it as some kind of evolutionary force
00:36:07
beyond our control
00:36:09
but all around the world communities are
00:36:12
exploring a diversity of place-based
00:36:15
alternatives we have to rebuild our
00:36:17
local economies our local societies our
00:36:20
local politics and there's incredible
00:36:22
millions of movements around the world
00:36:24
which are actually saying no we are the
00:36:26
power we claim the power where we are
00:36:28
we're not going to give it to
00:36:28
politicians or corporations
00:36:31
a community decides to manage shared
00:36:33
wealth in ways that are participatory
00:36:35
fair and peer governed and this happens
00:36:38
outside of markets outside of the state
00:36:40
it's people driven we see it in
00:36:42
cooperatives and local currencies and
00:36:44
time banking we can see it in community
00:36:47
forest and community supported industry
00:36:49
the commons and localization are not
00:36:51
faded to be small or uninfluential
00:36:54
because they're small the strategy is to
00:36:57
emulate and federate to federate
00:37:00
horizontally so we can coordinate and
00:37:03
trade knowledge and grow a bigger
00:37:05
footprint while keeping the appropriate
00:37:07
scale
00:37:08
and there is a master plan for
00:37:09
developing the area and we've looked at
00:37:11
it and thought well it's exactly as a
00:37:13
master plan would be in the late 20th
00:37:16
earlier 21st century
00:37:18
and
00:37:19
we as a community have come together and
00:37:20
thought we can do better than this so
00:37:22
what we're looking at is how we can
00:37:24
co-design a neighborhood that's going to
00:37:26
be
00:37:27
answer the questions of growing
00:37:28
inequality climate change
00:37:31
and poor design and fragmented
00:37:33
communities
00:37:34
we like to think of the transition
00:37:35
movement as being a movement of
00:37:37
communities who are reimagining and
00:37:39
rebuilding the world and they do so with
00:37:41
a particular focus
00:37:42
on localization
00:37:45
[Music]
00:37:50
share is an empty shop that has been
00:37:51
converted into a library of things
00:37:54
i am one of eight
00:37:56
apprentices
00:37:58
that have created share a library of
00:38:00
things so the share shop is basically a
00:38:02
physical hub for people to lend items to
00:38:05
each other similar to a library you can
00:38:08
borrow stuff but it's not just books but
00:38:11
also yeah why items
00:38:13
tools leisure holiday equipment all of
00:38:16
that kind of thing reduces the amount of
00:38:19
stuff that we need to have ourselves you
00:38:22
can come
00:38:23
to the shop repair your bike if it's got
00:38:25
a puncture
00:38:27
you know if you've got something else to
00:38:28
fix just to come down there's such a
00:38:31
huge range of possibilities of what this
00:38:34
shop could be
00:38:35
[Music]
00:38:39
when we treat economies and communities
00:38:42
as local as opposed to global we have a
00:38:45
chance to exercise
00:38:46
real power over the way our lives are
00:38:48
run this is going to require great
00:38:50
regulation of many of these centralized
00:38:53
uh institutions
00:38:55
the eg in the corporate world
00:38:58
in government let's create a fair
00:39:00
playing field let's stop giving
00:39:02
subsidies to big business let's get the
00:39:04
tax code fair so that local economies
00:39:07
have a fair chance to thrive let's stop
00:39:09
using the farm bill to give 90 of our
00:39:12
farm subsidies to the biggest farms you
00:39:14
know if we go down the list there are so
00:39:16
many ways in which policy
00:39:19
is working in favor of the big guys and
00:39:21
if we level that playing field and if we
00:39:23
recognize the various benefits that
00:39:26
local businesses bring i think we'll get
00:39:27
very different outcomes
00:40:10
[Music]
00:40:20
a little bit of a different voice of
00:40:22
hope
00:40:23
uh the voice from
00:40:25
what probably most people think is an
00:40:26
unlikely quarter to have voices of hope
00:40:28
and that's the business world so when we
00:40:31
live and work in the same community we
00:40:33
see every day the people that are
00:40:35
affected by our decisions whether
00:40:37
they're our employees or our neighbors
00:40:39
our customers our suppliers our our
00:40:42
environment and we're more likely to
00:40:44
make decisions from the heart as well as
00:40:46
from the head
00:40:47
imagine if a grassroots movement of
00:40:49
local people decided that we could make
00:40:53
and grow and invest in the goods and the
00:40:55
services that our communities need
00:40:58
that jobs and wealth are better in the
00:40:59
hands of the many
00:41:01
rather than the few
00:41:03
that is manufacturers
00:41:04
family farmers independent retailers as
00:41:07
energy providers or as community bankers
00:41:09
that we could all just decide
00:41:11
that it was all right to care for each
00:41:13
other
00:41:14
here at bali the business alliance for
00:41:17
local living economies
00:41:18
we know that real prosperity is local by
00:41:22
its very nature
00:41:23
from seattle to cincinnati asheville to
00:41:26
minneapolis new orleans to vancouver bc
00:41:29
bali is celebrating and recognizing
00:41:32
supporting and connecting the leaders of
00:41:35
a new economy most communities in the
00:41:37
united states with the highest density
00:41:40
of locally owned business
00:41:42
there is the highest per capita
00:41:44
job growth rate that in those
00:41:46
communities with the highest number of
00:41:49
locally owned businesses
00:41:51
there is the highest per capita income
00:41:54
growth rate in other words the best way
00:41:57
of reducing poverty increasing equality
00:42:01
is to go local
00:42:03
we also know that local businesses are
00:42:06
extremely profitable
00:42:08
this is from canada and what it shows is
00:42:12
the most profitable businesses have 10
00:42:15
to 20 employees
00:42:17
the least profitable businesses are
00:42:19
those that are traded on the toronto
00:42:22
stock exchange
00:42:23
how can we get the 99
00:42:26
of us
00:42:27
to start putting money
00:42:29
into great local businesses because if
00:42:33
we do
00:42:34
we unleash
00:42:36
not only
00:42:37
great local economies but we take the
00:42:40
fuel
00:42:42
out of the monsters of global capital
00:42:45
in nova scotia there are communities
00:42:47
that are now allowed to create local
00:42:51
pension funds and there are maybe i
00:42:54
don't know 50 60 of these pension funds
00:42:57
in new brunswick they just implemented a
00:43:01
50
00:43:02
tax credit every dollar
00:43:05
that you put
00:43:07
into a local business above a thousand
00:43:09
dollars generates 50 cents of reduction
00:43:13
in your taxes in provincial in
00:43:16
provincial tax obligations these are
00:43:19
serious serious reforms
00:43:23
localization addresses people's mounting
00:43:26
concerns with the cost of living with
00:43:29
their financial security
00:43:31
[Music]
00:43:33
simultaneously
00:43:34
it reduces emissions
00:43:37
and other environmental destruction
00:43:40
it's a vision that bridges social and
00:43:43
environmental issues
00:43:45
the rural and urban divide
00:43:48
and the political left and right
00:43:52
it's a unique opportunity
00:43:54
to to build a broad-based movement that
00:43:58
could bring about fundamental systemic
00:44:01
change
00:44:03
and i think we're seeing that a lot of
00:44:05
pushback a lot of people
00:44:06
pushing more to the right in their
00:44:08
politics right around the world is this
00:44:09
cry out for more empowerment at a local
00:44:11
level they're sick of these decisions
00:44:13
being made by corporations that are
00:44:15
thousands of kilometers away from their
00:44:17
own region where they understand the
00:44:19
nuance and what's required in their
00:44:21
particular community
00:44:22
so the more that we can localize and
00:44:24
give people back that power at that
00:44:25
local level i think we're going to see
00:44:28
huge changes not only environmentally
00:44:29
but also to the social fabric of what
00:44:31
we're creating
00:44:37
[Music]
00:44:43
only the tiniest fraction of the global
00:44:45
population is actively involved in
00:44:47
promoting the continued globalization of
00:44:50
the economy
00:44:52
by contrast those working for a
00:44:55
fundamentally different future can be
00:44:57
numbered in the hundreds of millions
00:45:03
[Music]
00:45:17
[Music]
00:45:27
[Music]
00:45:30
m
00:45:32
[Music]
00:45:38
[Music]
00:45:51
this is a vital time to do
00:45:53
different kinds of activisms different
00:45:55
kinds of work
00:45:58
so power needs to change our notions of
00:46:00
power need to change if power is always
00:46:03
at a distance then we will frame
00:46:05
economics
00:46:06
and the economy as
00:46:10
food coming from far away
00:46:12
and we will valorize refine ordain and
00:46:17
celebrate a system
00:46:18
that
00:46:19
denies us the immediacy of our
00:46:22
surroundings
00:46:26
so do you see that the mission of this
00:46:28
movement is bigger than ever before
00:46:32
let's keep moving for localizing the
00:46:34
whole world
00:46:36
so that one day we can brag to our
00:46:38
children or grandchildren
00:46:41
that
00:46:42
we did not give up the critical moment
00:46:45
to protect the future
00:46:47
in a planet
00:46:49
and in brazil we say decolonizing our
00:46:52
imagination stop thinking that
00:46:54
industrialization is the only way to go
00:46:56
and technology is the only way to go
00:46:58
there are other ways of living that it's
00:47:00
going to make us if maybe even more
00:47:01
happy we have to
00:47:03
take a stand for what we are recognizing
00:47:07
as
00:47:07
important and essential to our full
00:47:10
human beingness
00:47:14
[Music]
00:47:18
move people away from
00:47:20
this idea that
00:47:22
we're in a kind of darwinian struggle
00:47:24
one against the other
00:47:26
into the notion that we live in
00:47:28
communities and we must help each other
00:47:30
in communities
00:47:35
i'm not saying let's smash down cities
00:47:37
and throw our iphones out the window
00:47:38
let's keep them but there's not
00:47:40
prioritize the continual commodification
00:47:42
and the continual advancement of
00:47:44
consumer goods as the dominant idea for
00:47:48
our life
00:47:49
[Music]
00:47:56
[Music]
00:48:07
[Music]
00:48:12
[Music]
00:48:26
[Music]
00:48:29
the real change
00:48:31
does not come from the top
00:48:34
real change does not come from the
00:48:36
center
00:48:37
mahatma gandhi did not work from the
00:48:40
house of parliament or president's house
00:48:44
martin luther king did not come from the
00:48:47
white house we have to focus on building
00:48:50
grassroots movement stronger and
00:48:52
stronger and stronger and that is the
00:48:54
future for the local economy and human
00:48:56
scale paradigm
00:49:01
economic localization aligns with
00:49:04
fundamental principles of life
00:49:08
it protects and restores biodiversity
00:49:12
and it answers our deep innate human
00:49:16
need
00:49:17
for connection
00:49:19
it's an unstoppable force
00:49:23
[Music]
00:49:39
[Music]
00:49:50
so
00:49:54
[Music]
00:50:06
[Music]
00:50:14
[Music]
00:50:27
you