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7 votes
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Iceland has authorised whale hunting for the next five years, despite welfare concerns
11 votes -
Norway wants to open its Arctic seabed to mining for critical metals – the WWF is suing the state in a bid to halt exploration
9 votes -
Iceland's president urged to intervene over Europe's last whaler – conservation groups are asking for the decision to allow Hvalur to hunt to be put on hold until after election
5 votes -
The boy who kicked the hornets' nest – Stieg Larsson's double life as an anti-far right activist in Sweden
13 votes -
Poking Holes in Potatoes: An excerpt from Brian Taylor Cohen's book, SHAMELESS
7 votes -
Sea Shepherd founder Paul Watson, known for his decades-long fight against Japanese whaling, arrested in Greenland in July, has asked France's president for political asylum
12 votes -
Telegram: Why the app is allowed when other social media is censored in Russia
19 votes -
Trans activists release 6,000 crickets on transphobic LGB Alliance conference
60 votes -
Slow change can be radical change
6 votes -
Fact check: Greta Thunberg ‘vegan grenades’ TV interview is deepfake
18 votes -
I met the activists getting arrested for fighting fossil fuels
20 votes -
Thousands protest against lithium mining in Serbia
21 votes -
Léna Lazare is the new face of climate activism—and she's carrying a pickax
26 votes -
A network of community activists in small towns and huge cities are helping get food to the people who most need it
17 votes -
Climate hero or villain? As it rapidly adopts clean technologies while drilling furiously for oil and gas, Norway is a paradox.
11 votes -
Anti-whaling activist Paul Watson arrested on an international arrest warrant issued by Japan in Greenland
33 votes -
Credit at last for female screenwriter airbrushed from Hollywood history
12 votes -
The death squads hunting environmental defenders
34 votes -
Artists, activism and AIDS
7 votes -
Iceland's government has issued a license to the North Atlantic nation's last fin whaling company to hunt and kill 128 fin whales this year
13 votes -
Norway sued over deep-sea mining plans – WWF says the government has breached the law without adequately assessing the consequences
6 votes -
Why don't we do more food-based activism?
In the past few months I have been reading a lot about historical food culture. It's kind of amazing how much things have changed here in the US. Over the last century or so we have basically...
In the past few months I have been reading a lot about historical food culture. It's kind of amazing how much things have changed here in the US. Over the last century or so we have basically eliminated communal eating and massively changed the economics of prepared meals. At one point we had automats and cafeterias which skipped out on most of the "front of house" service and focused on serving large volumes of people to keep prices low. There were also diners, which are much different from what we consider to be a diner today; they were very small places that only prepared simple things that needed very little labor to prepare; things like hash browns, sandwiches, or pancakes, so the food was still very cheap. But because they were small, they were able to serve smaller markets that other restaurants were not able to capitalize on. Compare that to today, where diners are just restaurants that have 50s style decor.
But the thing I think is much more unusual is how rare we see food used in service of a message. It's something that has a long history across the globe. Most notably, religions operate food kitchens that help to bring poor people into their folds. Some religions actually have a built-in food culture that includes feeding your neighbors. It's really effective too; there's a small chain of restaurants where I live that has inexpensive food which has some bhuddist texts at the dining tables, and honestly it had me considering joining a religion for the first time. If I spoke Chinese they might have got me! Eating food requires a baseline of trust, so if you can get someone to eat at your restaurant you will bypass a lot of the caution that people approach the world with.
With that being said, why isn't food-based activism a lot more popular? I'm sure that it would work for much more than religion. A restaurant that acts as a messaging platform doesn't necessarily need to be funded by food sales, so they can undercut the competition on price and reach an even greater audience. Given the ways I have seen religions use food to further their means, I think that it could even go farther than changing people's minds about topics and actually motivate people to take action and join communities who are actually making real change. Food is both relatively inexpensive and it's something that everyone needs to survive, so it seems to me that food-based activism is the single largest missed opportunity for community organization.
20 votes -
First Nations woman one of seven global winners of prestigious Goldman prize for environmental activism
9 votes -
Bid to secure spot for glacier in Icelandic presidential race heats up – decade-old idea for Snæfellsjökull has snowballed into a full-blown campaign
5 votes -
Norwegian court finds police acted unreasonably in fining activists who blocked government buildings
15 votes -
Climate movement elders revive monkey wrench tactics to save an old forest in Washington
12 votes -
Trans men enter Miss Italy pageant in droves after trans women are told they can’t compete
76 votes -
Plans for regulator illustrate inherently political nature of football
4 votes -
Olof Dreijer on the Knife, Swedish nationalism and dancefloor activism
4 votes -
Avian teachers: on what we can learn from birds - Excerpt from Birding to Change the World
4 votes -
Remembering trailblazing LGBTQ+ civil rights activist James Baldwin this Black History Month
16 votes -
Greta Thunberg and four other climate activists are due to appear in court today after being arrested at a protest outside a gathering of fossil fuel bosses in London
22 votes -
Greta Thunberg marched with activists to protest against Farnborough Airport expansion, which mainly serves private jets – planned increase from 50,000 to 70,000 flights per year
20 votes -
Norway is to allow mining waste to be dumped in its fjords after the government won a court case against environmental organisations trying to block the plan
29 votes -
How social justice activists lost the plot
40 votes