Crazy Town  By  cover art

Crazy Town

By: Post Carbon Institute: Sustainability Climate Collapse and Dark Humor
  • Summary

  • With equal parts humor and in-depth analysis, Asher, Rob, and Jason safeguard their sanity while probing crazy-making topics like climate change, overshoot, runaway capitalism, and why we’re all deluding ourselves.
    © 2024 Post Carbon Institute
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Episodes
  • Escaping Imperialism: Where Does Darth Vader Get His Lithium?
    May 15 2024

    Perhaps no community has undergone more versions of imperialism than the tiny island nation of Nauru, which has morphed from being "Pleasant Island" to the mined-out home of offshore banks, discarded refugees, and deep sea mining interests. Jason, Rob, and Asher take a bad trip to wrap their heads around Nauru, the topic of "psychedelic imperialism," and imperialism's new frontier - the clean energy transition.

    Warning: This podcast occasionally uses spicy language.

    Sources/Links/Notes:

    • "A Dark History of the World's Smallest Island Nation" tells the tale of Nauru.
    • S.J. Gale, "Lies and misdemeanours: Nauru, phosphate and global geopolitics," The Extractive Industries and Society, vol 6, July 2019.
    • FAQs of the Metals Company
    • Eric Lipton's New York Times article about imperialistic mining of the Pacific Ocean floor.
    • Mining Watch Canada questions the claims of the Metals Company.
    • Elham Shabahat's article in Hakai Magazine, "Why Nauru Is Pushing the World Toward Deep-Sea Mining"
    • Definition of imperialism from the Cornell Law School
    • J.A. Hobson's book Imperialism: A Study
    • Jason Hickel et al., "Imperialist appropriation in the world economy: Drain from the global South through unequal exchange, 1990-2015," Global Environmental Change, vol 73, March 2022.
    • Critique of lithium extraction in the Atacama Desert
    • Indigenous people's response to lithium mining in Nevada
    • How the Sami people are protesting Sweden's "green transformation"
    • Episode 3 of the Holding the Fire podcast, featuring Sami leader Aslak Holmberg
    • Cobus van Staden on "Green Energy's Dirty Secret: Its Hunger for African Resources"
    • Jim Robbins in Yale Environment 360 on "How Returning Lands to Native Tribes Is Helping Protect Nature"
    • "Indigenous Land Return Announcement by Sogorea Te’ Land Trust and Movement Generation!" -- article by Ines Ixierda
    • "New Zealands's Maori fought for reparations -- and won

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    1 hr and 13 mins
  • Escaping Capitalism: How to Replace the "Logic" of Psychopaths, Pharma Bros, and Private Prisons
    May 8 2024

    Capitalism ruins SO many things, from key sectors like college sports all the way down to novelties like people's health and the environment. Jason, Rob, and Asher rely on their keen insight and otherworldly investigative talents to somehow unearth a few flaws of capitalism. But rather than wallow in the world of profiteering and privatization, they explore the solidarity economy and other alternatives to the "greed is good" way of running things.

    Warning: This podcast occasionally uses spicy language.

    Sources/Links/Notes:

    • Wikipedia page “Nike and the University of Oregon”
    • Joshua Hunt book: University of Nike: How Corporate Cash Bought American Higher Education.
    • Erik Olin Wright, How to Be an Anticapitalist in the Twenty-First Century, Verso 2019.
    • Thomas Piketty, Capital in the Twenty First Century, Harvard University Press 2014.
    • Robert Heilbroner, The Worldly Philosophers: The Lives, Times and Ideas of the Great Economic Thinkers.
    • Jeffrey Sachs, “Twentieth-Century Political Economy: A Brief History of Global Capitalism,” Oxford Review of Economic Policy, Vol. 15, No. 4.
    • Summary of End Hedge Fund Control of American Homes Act
    • David Bollier, The Commoner’s Catalog for Changemaking
    • Lobbying to defeat bills that prohibit private prisons
    • More lobbying in support of private prisons
    • Incredible drug price increase after hedge fund manager acquires it
    • Annual report of Weaver Street Market
    • Donnie Maclurcan's explanation of not-for-profit enterprises
    • Ranking of the world's happiest countries
    • Boston Ujima Project
    • Alfie Kohn, No Contest: The Case Against Competition, Houghton Mifflin, 1992.
    • B Corps and B Lab
    • Definition of the solidarity economy from the New Economy Coalition

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    1 hr and 11 mins
  • Escaping Growthism: Wendigo Economics, Mystery Houses, and Becoming the Bear
    May 1 2024

    Grow or die. It's the governing principle of companies, investment portfolios, national economies, and even philanthropic foundations. Oh, and cancer. Asher, Jason, and Rob lay bare the stats on everything from human population, energy consumption, global GDP, greenhouse gas emissions, and the size of cars and cruise ships, before concluding that the global economy should be named after the Wendigo from Algonquian folklore. They turn to the natural world for examples of self-regulation, along with promising new economic frameworks and on-the-ground models, for how to end Wendigo economics before it ends us.

    Warning: This podcast occasionally uses spicy language.

    Sources/Links/Notes:

    • Timeline of Sarah Winchester's story
    • Timeline of the largest passenger boats
    • Parks and Rec clip on soda sizes
    • Kaitlin Smith, "More Than Monsters: The Deeper Significance of Wendigo Stories"
    • Winona LaDuke discusses Wendigo economics in a Yes! Magazine online conversation.
    • Hannah and Kevin Salwen, The Power of Half: One Family's Decision to Stop Taking and Start Giving Back
    • CBS news story about a family giving away half their income
    • SparkToro, an unusual tech company that doesn't believe bigger is better
    • Report: Resilient Biocultural Heritage Landscapes for Sustainable Mountain Development, which contains information about Peru's Potato Park
    • Krystyna Swiderska, "Here's why Indigenous economics is the key to saving nature"
    • Al Bartlett lecturing on exponential growth

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    1 hr and 3 mins

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