All posts by Candice

Edges of Light

 

Four drawers, old skeleton keyholes in the top of each, round wooden knobs, rounded on their fronts too, all the color of a chestnut highlighted by the sun.

Tug at the drawers a little and they give in to opening, their bottoms a thin piece of wood with a little bit of daylight showing at the edges.

They’re just the right size for holding all the little miscellaneous items, all those little things that can collect over the years, a Bible from Aunt Edna given to Grandma and passed down.  Little pictures and unwanted jewelry that were special when given but now just faded memories.

Defining and Entering into a Post-Social Society

Note: Normally capitalized words for groups of people are intentionally left in lower case.

A couple of terms that I had to familiarize myself with were industrial and post-industrial society.  Industrial society is where the majority of wealth is generated from manufacturing and a post-industrial is one where the majority of wealth is based on service. Interestingly, Alain Touraine coined the term “post-industrial”.

My bedtime reading is a book called After the Crisis from the French sociologist Alain Touraine.  In it he gives examples of current societal issues, conflicts between different groups fighting for their rights,  the future of society and defining it going forward.  I haven’t finished reading the book, but so far to me he is theorizing on ways to help people create a new model of Human organization and calls it the  “post-social” civilization.

Touraine lays the foundation and context by showing our society lives in a global economy which is without global regulations and also that like a zit on a face (my own metaphor), is the concentrated wealth in the hands of so few.  The global economy pushes down on the individual, such that the old social constructs or groupings don’t work anymore, white, black, gay, straight, jewish, muslim, christian, etc.  I admittedly don’t have this quite right, but in my defense I am still trying to understand all of this.

What I’m understanding as he builds his theory for a path forward, is one based on Human rights, not any one group’s rights but rights for all, universal rights, the right of each Human to security and freedom.  This makes a lot of sense, because at the basic physical level of atoms, we are all one, we all have two arms, two legs and a head, although some seem to have two tongues, but it’s late.

We all live in a virtual world, our networks aren’t physical but virtual through facebook and twitter and tv, etc.  How many of us hang out with our physical neighbor(s)?  I suspect it’s very few.

The approach of universal human rights cascades into forcing old economic models to not work.  For instance, obliterating indian lands and sacred burial grounds to lay pipelines in the name of progress, stomping on their rights or at least just the boldness in trying. The indians have the right to clean water, water is a Human right. This theory would then force the energy company to find another solution.  Another example comes to mind with the kids suing the U.S. over the right to clean air. Clean air is a Human right.

As I’m reading and absorbing all this, what comes to mind is the foundation that Eleanor Roosevelt laid out almost 70 years ago at the UN, …..  “all human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights”

http://www.humanrights.com/what-are-human-rights/international-human-rights-law/

Photo by Ryoji Iwata on Unsplash

Recycling in New Hampshire

Yes, Virginia there are buyers for different recycling content and money can be made!

Revenue Board
Monthly revenue statistics (July 2015).

Peterborough New Hampshire has a very impressive and well-run recycling center.  There were bay windows for the big types of contents, e.g., newspapers, cardboard, plastic bottles and then lots of little containers for the little stuff, even down to ink cartridges and CDs and DVDs!  It has areas for brush and a large metal trash bin for all different kinds of glass.

Organization and Process

Customers drop their sorted recyclables into the designated bins.  Personnel are on hand to help with any questions for the occasional odd materials.  For anything that can’t be recycled, the car is weighed before and after and the customer charged for the difference in weight.

Windows for different materials
Windows for different materials

Inside the building are balers for the different materials.  Below is a baler for aluminum cans.

Baler for Aluminum cans
Baler for Aluminum cans

In the picture above, at the left, the box with lines in it, that’s where the aluminum cans are squished into.  Wire is wrapped around the bale, and then it’s pushed out the end.

Bale of Recycled Cans
Bale of Recycled Cans

Below are pictures of balers for other materials, e.g., cardboard and the different plastics.

Baler for Cardboard
Baler for Cardboard
Balers for different kinds of plastics
Balers for different kinds of plastics

Revenue

After they get sorted materials baled, they have a broker who finds customers on the open market wanting to buy the commodity.  He didn’t know who buys this, but manufacturers come to mind who would recreate the material into new packaging for products.

All photos by C.D. Guillaudeu