freegans? legit counterculturalists or just cheap garbage pickers?

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http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/21/garden/21freegan.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

some highlights:
She said she became a freegan both for environmental reasons and because “I’m not down with capitalism.”

She added, “Most people work 40-plus hours a week at jobs they don’t like to buy things they don’t need.”

lol...start a fight club.

johnny crunch, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:04 (eighteen years ago)

lol fight club 'defined a generation'

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:04 (eighteen years ago)

that article is has fucking ridiculous point of view and i just read the first page

rrrobyn, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:07 (eighteen years ago)

the funny thing about living off of other people's waste is that, well, it requires other people to be wasteful.

sorta counter-intuitive there. These folks would be better served spending time learning how to build and make stuff.

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:07 (eighteen years ago)

fuck a labelling people and fuck a focusing on 'freaks' of society
irresponsible missing-the-point journalism
xpost
where is eye-roll emoticon?

rrrobyn, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:10 (eighteen years ago)

I only read the first page, did anyone actually interviewed mention Fight Club? If so, then I want to punch them. However, I've long known people who do this sort of thing and I think it's pretty good if you can pick up something through this method - saves money and waste. Anybody who feels the need to become a spokesperson is usually an idiot, but to just go ahead and do it is both financially and ethically sound, so I can't see why anyone would have a problem with it. Oh, and yes, it does require other people to be wasteful, but the fact is that they are wasteful. Does the US have freecycle, which encourages the seeking out of people to take stuff rather than just junking it?

emil.y, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:16 (eighteen years ago)

Most people work 40-plus hours a week at jobs they don’t like to buy things they don’t need.”

is very nearly a direct Tyler Durden quote.

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:18 (eighteen years ago)

There's almost an argument to be made that picking through trash is countercultural. Almost.

Anyway, not throwing perfectly good stuff away is a good idea regardless of whatever idiotic label some journalist or would-be spokesperson slaps on it.

Oilyrags, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:19 (eighteen years ago)

building and making stuff is fine and good but requires, y'know, materials with which to build and make. fixing or rebuilding stuff that already exists makes sense re: environmental footprint, etc.
and it wld seem true that 'people are wasteful' but people are wasteful in a society of an abundance of things, most of which are built to break and be easily and cheaply replaced by more things that will break. and go where? landfills? just because people need things to spend their money on?

xpost
pretty sure people were saying stuff like this long before fight club

rrrobyn, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:20 (eighteen years ago)

sells papers tho :/

rrrobyn, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:21 (eighteen years ago)

Actually most people spend most of their 40-hour money on housing, food, utilities, healthcare, etc., and all the "stuff they don't need" is just gravy. I'd say "fuck you" to this person but she's only a dumb kid.

Hurting 2, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:21 (eighteen years ago)

johnny crunch are you on the UA mailing list? because they are talknig about this right now also.

Will M., Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:24 (eighteen years ago)

Dumb kid? Ms. Nelson, who is 51, spent her 20s working in restaurants and living in communal houses, but by 2003 she was earning a six-figure salary as a communications director for Barnes & Noble.

Also please to begin unpacking the word "need," Ms. Nelson.

Phil D., Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:25 (eighteen years ago)

I can't actually bring myself to read through this, but I will say that NYC is fairly amazing on this front, and that there's nothing "counter-cultural" about it -- there's a basic common culture of people leaving things out on the street and assuming that someone will make some use of it. I mean, people label this stuff. There'll be an A/C unit on the curb with a note that says "don't bother, it's broken." There'll be another A/C unit on the curb with the number of BTUs taped to the side, just in case you need to know. I once claimed a pristine leather loveseat (with friendly note attached) and then wasted an hour under cloudy skies calling everyone I knew in the neighborhood and asking if they wanted an awesome leather loveseat. (I also appreciate the people who keep their mattresses wrapped on the sidewalk and spray-paint BEDBUGS on them just in case.)

You compound this with thousands of students vacating the same block at the same time, and it's a bonanza of unneeded things changing hands -- nothing weird or counter-culture about this in the least, unless you consider your older sibling's hand-me-downs or getting furniture from your parents some kind of underground gesture.

nabisco, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:25 (eighteen years ago)

I mean I've read my Thoreau. I know a lot of what we think we "need" is socially constructed. But if you want to see what living with less is really like go live in the Delhi slums. Don't fool yourself into thinking you're "living deliberately" because you get some 2-day expired Humboldt Fog cheese out of the Whole Foods dumpster.

xpost - sorry, I assumed the quote was from the girl in the pic -- didn't read the article yet

Hurting 2, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:26 (eighteen years ago)

(Reasons for this, around here, should be pretty obvious: (a) trash goes on the sidewalk, not in an alley; (b) people have small-ass apartments and storing stuff is expensive; (c) people don't have cars and the streets are crowded, so moving stuff around is often more trouble than it's worth; etc.)

nabisco, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:27 (eighteen years ago)

FWIW I have a couple of (formerly) good college friends who became freegans. One of them gets food stamps too.

Hurting 2, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:28 (eighteen years ago)

http://farm1.static.flickr.com/213/512722152_229470270c_o.jpg

rrrobyn, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:29 (eighteen years ago)

(my super old tv!)
(there is a thread)

rrrobyn, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:30 (eighteen years ago)

"We live in a contradiction: a brutal state of affairs, profoundly inegalitarian—where all existence is evaluated in terms of money alone—is presented to us as ideal. To justify their conservatism, the partisans of the established order cannot really call it ideal or wonderful. So instead, they have decided to say that all the rest is horrible. Sure, they say, we may not live in a condition of perfect Goodness. But we're lucky that we don't live in a condition of Evil. Our democracy is not perfect. But it's better than the bloody dictatorships. Capitalism is unjust. But it's not criminal like Stalinism. We let millions of Africans die of AIDS, but we don't make racist nationalist declarations like Milosevic. We kill Iraqis with our airplanes, but we don't cut their throats with machetes like they do in Rwanda, etc"

latebloomer, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:31 (eighteen years ago)

That thread was lovely rrrobyn, and nabisco is otm. There is less of a culture of it here in the UK, which is why things like freecycle have taken off, I think - it makes it more normal for anybody to do it, rather than being a marginalised activity.

xpost

emil.y, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:34 (eighteen years ago)

As a general cultural activity I'm totally in favor of there being as much of that as possible, obv.

Hurting 2, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:36 (eighteen years ago)

there's a basic common culture of people leaving things out on the street and assuming that someone will make some use of it.

whoah gotta catch up on this thread a bit but hey, my neighborhood is TOTALLY like this and I've seen it in action (and participated in it as well) more times than I can count. I'm just sayin building an ideology or "movement" out of it is stupid, because its not productive or proactive - its inherently REACTIVE.

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:43 (eighteen years ago)

anyway Hurting OTM (particularly with his Delhi zinger)

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:45 (eighteen years ago)

These folks would be better served spending time learning how to build and make stuff.

http://agualisa5.blogs.sapo.pt/arquivo/ipod.shuffle.chinese.cultural.revolution%5B1%5D.jpg

Tim Ellison, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:46 (eighteen years ago)

That Delhi zinger is a good encapsulation of my idea for a reality show to pitch to MTV - The REAL Real World.

Oilyrags, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:47 (eighteen years ago)

sorry shakey. but maybe there's enough building and making stuff going on already. maybe some people don't want to build and make stuff.

Tim Ellison, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:47 (eighteen years ago)

Well, in a way it is, but freegans aren't going to convince everybody to be less wasteful, so why not take advantage of that and reclaim goods that would otherwise go to landfill? As my first post on this thread states, I do find the people who proclaim themselves to be creating a movement pretty nauseating, but at the same time, I'd rather they were self-righteous than apathetic.

xpost to Shakey

emil.y, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:49 (eighteen years ago)

I guess the best argument to be made for it is just "that much less stuff being wasted." Which is fine with me.

Hurting 2, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:50 (eighteen years ago)

xpost

Yeah don't worry, Shakey, that's kind of what I meant! The idea of a committed Dumpster-diving counter-culture is probably far less useful right now than the idea of normal people having a common culture where they take decent care of things and make an effort to pass them on to others who could use them. To be honest people generally do have this mentality in high-density city areas and in small communities, and when it comes to clothes I've met nary a middle-aged midwestern lady who's not trying to pimp someone's old things to someone else's child -- those goods-conservation habits die hard -- but a kind of resurgence of that stuff among young people could certainly help (especially in an age where -- have you seen this? -- you can buy packages of microwavable hot dogs that are already in a bun).

nabisco, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:50 (eighteen years ago)

in case it isn't clear I am all for the elimination of planned obsolescence in product design, recycling, reclaiming abandoned/used materials, etc.

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:52 (eighteen years ago)

maybe some people don't want to build and make stuff.

fuck a lazy people

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:52 (eighteen years ago)

how is this categorically Reactive? it seems clear to be that it is also productive and proactive
again, the labelling is coming from media reactions/interpretations, not nec the people actually involved. sure this is portrait of some kind of loose 'community' but it doesn't take into account all the other people who do this too. why? because it's a newspaper article.
xpost

rrrobyn, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:53 (eighteen years ago)

the world is already fucking overflowing with goddmaned stuff made by humans! fuck a stuff.

Tim Ellison, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:53 (eighteen years ago)

The only thing that skeezes me a little is the idea of leftist kids combing Dumpsters and pulling out giant "wastes" of food material that's been deemed non-for-sale via other, deader leftists' hard work to make sure corporations can't sell you rotten crap.

Reactive, productive, eh: people are throwing out perfectly good stuff they don't need anymore; other people are snagging it and making use of it; this is normal and good!

nabisco, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:54 (eighteen years ago)

the "stuff" just needs to be better made, that's all. the world is floating in crap because the materials used and the products being created ARE SHIT.

and you learn to make better products by, y'know, knowing how to make things.

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:55 (eighteen years ago)

Unfortunately the quality and usage-life of most products is continuing to decrease. We live in the age of the $15, 2-year toaster.

Hurting 2, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:56 (eighteen years ago)

(2 years if you're lucky)

Hurting 2, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:56 (eighteen years ago)

how is this categorically Reactive? it seems clear to be that it is also productive and proactive
again, the labelling is coming from media reactions/interpretations, not nec the people actually involved. sure this is portrait of some kind of loose 'community' but it doesn't take into account all the other people who do this too. why? because it's a newspaper article.

I think we all agree this is a stupid article that is tryign to promote the idea that this is a "movement" with an ideology (and there are people quoted in that article who def. seem to have formed an ideology around this behavior). I'm just sayin that ideology is basically stupid and reactionary - the end result IS Delhi, where you have the majority of the population living in shit conditions off of shit, sans any skills or knowledge about how to improve their environment.

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:57 (eighteen years ago)

people should make good stuff if they want to but not be told by leftists that they SHOULD BE MAKING STUFF. that they should be good little workers.

Tim Ellison, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:58 (eighteen years ago)

I mean yes lets all recycle stuff and re-use everything and trade with our neighbors YES YES YES but lets not pretend that that's the sole behavior you can build a functional future for humanity on.

x-post

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:58 (eighteen years ago)

what's the alternative Tim, that they sit around mindlessly consuming stuff?

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 21 June 2007 23:59 (eighteen years ago)

a world cleared of the drive for money would put a whole different perspective on exactly how much STUFF needs to be made and how many people need to be involved in manufacturing it.

Tim Ellison, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:01 (eighteen years ago)

maybe people should build their own toasters
but really, a lot of stuff that's built to break is full of bits that can be made into other things - just that most people aren't going to do that - until apocalypse time obv
xpost

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:01 (eighteen years ago)

what's the alternative to working in a factory? everything else in life.

Tim Ellison, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:02 (eighteen years ago)

when did I say anyone should be working in a factory? I think its weird that you assume my conception of "people making stuff" = state-capitalist factory slavery. Which is not really what I meant to imply at all - I prefer furniture made by my friends, for example, or food that comes from someone I know who knows how to farm, or a homemade musical instrument, or handmade clothes, etc.

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:05 (eighteen years ago)

(ie things produced via "everything else in life")

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:06 (eighteen years ago)

building stuff is fun but building stuff in mass quantity not so fun at all

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:06 (eighteen years ago)

which would you prefer as a skill, dumpster diving or sewing?

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:06 (eighteen years ago)

Just to be clear, I certainly didn't mean to imply that Dehli's slums are the result of people *wanting* to live off the waste of others and not *knowing how* to better themselves. I'm not sure if that's what Shakey meant either though.

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:06 (eighteen years ago)

so many x-posts

no that isn't what I mean Hurting, those folks aren't there by choice. I'm just saying if you wanna see a culture of people living off waste, there's a prime example and it isn't pretty (or fun, or "rebellious" or "countercultural")

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:08 (eighteen years ago)

that's fine shakey, but many people in the world are not furniture builders nor farmers nor musical instrument makers nor makers of clothes and don't want to be told that they should be.

Tim Ellison, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:08 (eighteen years ago)

HEAR ME PEOPLE OF THE WORLD GET OFF YOUR ASSES

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:09 (eighteen years ago)

sorry Tim wasn't aware I was oppressing people with my internet posting

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:09 (eighteen years ago)

yeah we need more stuff plz

Tim Ellison, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:10 (eighteen years ago)

x-post

Tim Ellison, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:10 (eighteen years ago)

Shakey, I think that you have a point (although the resurgence in knitting amongst women scares me somewhat), but that point isn't really related to what these people are doing. And also, I imagine that most of the people who do this as a lifestyle are also people who will champion the idea of home-made stuff, so you're building a straw man argument against them.

emil.y, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:12 (eighteen years ago)

many xposts..

yeah, agree w/ rrrobyn, others re: the creepy article pov & group id'ing of some of these people...I guess if you need to call it a lifestyle or whatever, fine. have fun with that. don't dilude yourself that your really sticking it to capitalism by eating day old bagels or claiming someone's yaffa blocks.

don't know what a UA mailing list is...

johnny crunch, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:13 (eighteen years ago)

if people made more stuff on their own>>>> less demand for factory-produced crap>>>less low quality goods>>>>less garbage

argh so many xposts

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:13 (eighteen years ago)

whereas the freegan argument goes:

people living off garbage >>>> less garbage

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:14 (eighteen years ago)

Right, but OTOH how the fuck do you make a table in a Manhattan studio apartment? (not to mention how do you make a toaster at all)

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:15 (eighteen years ago)

But I don't think that is their argument, Shakey, or at least not the entirety of their argument.

emil.y, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:17 (eighteen years ago)

exactly. and the answer is that you don't but you can get a cheap one at a yard sale or something. the world is already full of stuff.

x-post

Tim Ellison, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:17 (eighteen years ago)

I kind of have a chip on my shoulder about this subject myself because of my friend who basically stopped hanging out with me because I was too bourgeois or something.

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:19 (eighteen years ago)

i was obv being tongue in cheek re: toaster building
not that we really 'need' electric toasters in the first place, but they are nice to have, as many things are
which is obv part of the over-production/over-consumption problem

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:20 (eighteen years ago)

the real issue wld be that there are always "better" toasters coming out and even if the old toaster hasn't broken yet the better toaster is needed
(where toaster could be many things, i mean)

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:21 (eighteen years ago)

we should probably distinguish the multiple definitions of "making stuff", as there's a bit of difference between "creating" and "manufacturing"

kingfish, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:22 (eighteen years ago)

toasters are grebt but we probably don't need MORE of them, do we? if we could get a count on the number of currently functional toasters in the world it wd be interesting 2 me.

2x-post: what are the benefits of new and improved toasterz?

Tim Ellison, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:22 (eighteen years ago)

Part of the problem is that the same system that gives us stuff like toasters that we don't really need is also the system that makes it so that we never have to worry about whether we'll have bread to toast. (of course obviously there are a lot of different shades of that system, and I'm not convinced that the most unabashedly consumerist version is the best one)

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:24 (eighteen years ago)

and getting stuffed fixed has become less and less popular - people just buy new stuff, as has been said above
xpost

toasters, TVs, ipods, cars, washing machines, etc etc

xpost - yes, kingfish, the dif btwn small scale and mass scale

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:24 (eighteen years ago)

Right, and the new purchase rather than repair is usually based mainly on "It's just as cheap to buy new" and "I don't have time to sit around waiting for the repairman/take it to the shop" - i.e. it makes good short-term economic sense and terrible sense in every other way.

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:28 (eighteen years ago)

(and at some point so many people are thinking this way that you can't even find someone to repair your toaster if you want to)

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:28 (eighteen years ago)

i think i want to be a crazyass repairman when i grow up
xpost! i wld fix toasters even!

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:29 (eighteen years ago)

plus the crappy stuff breaks quicker now

Tim Ellison, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:29 (eighteen years ago)

i had only heard about freeganism w.r.t. foods. i had some friends in boston that did this for awhile, only ate dumpster-dived food. some of them got hepatitis. obviously i thought that was like the dumbest shit ever.

i never would've thought to attach the "freegan" label to hand-me-down furniture. i mean, isn't that the whole point of craigslist's "free" pages? maybe i've been around college towns / grad school students / big extended family for too long, i'm surprised someone thought to attach a label to this.

moonship journey to baja, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:31 (eighteen years ago)

the hilarious thing was that these freegans were in some sort of mime/juggling troupe that did street theatre about nutritition for at-risk kids in urban neighborhoods. classic.

moonship journey to baja, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:32 (eighteen years ago)

ohgod
the ones i know just make films and music

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:33 (eighteen years ago)

Both of those posts made me laffle.

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:34 (eighteen years ago)

i have never bought furniture! and i have a lot of it!

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:34 (eighteen years ago)

some of it is even nice!

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:34 (eighteen years ago)

the interesting thing about this counterculture is that THE ENEMY is much younger - i bet as far as "wastefulness" goes, the under-30s and gen-x'ers are way way waaaaay more wasteful than the boomers and other pre-gen-x'ers.

i went to my grandma's for lunch yesterday and for dessert she tried to give me a week-old churro that she'd taken home from work (she works in a high-school cafeteria).

moonship journey to baja, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:35 (eighteen years ago)

we should probably distinguish the multiple definitions of "making stuff", as there's a bit of difference between "creating" and "manufacturing"

but even the drive to create, create, create can be tiresome

Tim Ellison, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:36 (eighteen years ago)

but:
create vs produce?

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:38 (eighteen years ago)

creating is not all abt production, is what i mean

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:39 (eighteen years ago)

or it shouldn't be

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:39 (eighteen years ago)

i'd like to see more of an emphasis on simply LIVING. buckminster fuller had this famous calculation about the amount of work needed to be done to sustain the human race and it amounted to, i think, one hour of work per person on the planet per year. i'm certainly not saying that work needed to sustain the human race is the only work that should be done, but that figure is very interesting.

Tim Ellison, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:41 (eighteen years ago)

i like that figure
but creating can be, like, creating music, art, etc, which is part of living - one doesn't have to do it all the time of course but i wouldn't want to not do it

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:43 (eighteen years ago)

btw this is a really good and interesting program in vancouver bc - Quest Food Exchange
- that is starting to get some recognition, inspire other programs, etc

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:44 (eighteen years ago)

I think the drive to over-consume (beyond just enough to feel safe, well-fed, warm, etc.) really does come frm feelings of emptiness, lack of satisfaction, lack of community etc. I used to think this was just a lefty canard, but I've really experienced the feeling. The more unhappy and isolated from other people I feel, the more money I feel like I need.

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:45 (eighteen years ago)

Although it's also insecurity - when you live in the States at least, there's always that feeling that being sick without health insurance could be just around the corner, and that's part of what keeps me on the hampster wheel.

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:46 (eighteen years ago)

ugh the u.s. health care thing is awful - i have been avoiding that thread

i change my mind and wld now like to be a crazy fit-it repairman/doctor

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:53 (eighteen years ago)

robyn, even the drive to create art can become tiresome if the need to keep doing it relates to your income or maintaining your identity as a creative person as opposed to inspiration

Tim Ellison, Friday, 22 June 2007 00:56 (eighteen years ago)

i agree - that's what i mean by Production! i mean 'creativity' that is caught up in system of production, where you are 'creative person' who 'creates' as in that is your 'job'/'societal role' - it is all very ugh

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 01:00 (eighteen years ago)

I kind of have a chip on my shoulder about this subject myself because of my friend who basically stopped hanging out with me because I was too bourgeois or something.

That sucks... one of the only things that really bugged me about the article were these couple of quotes:

“If a person chooses to live an ethical lifestyle it’s not enough to be vegan, they need to absent themselves from capitalism,” said Adam Weissman, 29, who started freegan.info four years ago and is the movement’s de facto spokesman."

Arggh, the preachinesss and rigid stance implied here is the same kind of thing that turns many people off from ever considering becoming vegetarian or vegan...Purer than thou smugness, black and white thinking, etc.

Mr. Torres said: “I think there’s a conscious recognition among freegans that you can never live perfectly.”

Arggh, again...the mentality of aspiring to "live perfectly" seems unhealthy (e.g. anorexia) or on a broader scale, disquetingly absolutist.

dell, Friday, 22 June 2007 01:01 (eighteen years ago)

I mean seriously where the fuck does a guy who has a website get off telling people to absent themselves from capitalism???

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 01:04 (eighteen years ago)

My favorite detail there is that (predictably) he doesn't work and lives with his retired parents. I wonder if THEY "absented themselves from capitalism."

Oilyrags, Friday, 22 June 2007 01:05 (eighteen years ago)

I'm sure it was a bit unfair of the writer to set him up as the "defacto spokesman" for "the movement" though.

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 01:06 (eighteen years ago)

that is true, and i still think the article is poorly written/thought-out
but also, one can't 'absent' oneself from capitalism! esp not in the middle of freakin new york city! one can just play the game differently and see if it catches on

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 01:11 (eighteen years ago)

spending time on ilx = emphasis on simply living

for example

Tim Ellison, Friday, 22 June 2007 01:13 (eighteen years ago)

where is raised-eyebrows emoticon?

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 01:19 (eighteen years ago)

I almost revived a dumpster diving thread last week - I've been reading a bunch of Ebay seller topics from people who dumpster dive and almost make a living off retail cast-offs.

It's very tempting, but I can't get past the dumpster aspect. In my heart, I'm bougie as hell, I guess. (and the idea of diving for food on principle rather than out of necessity is just vile)

milo z, Friday, 22 June 2007 01:28 (eighteen years ago)

(I am a big fan of Bucky btw Tim)

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 22 June 2007 01:36 (eighteen years ago)

Yeah, I mean, I think the idea of freeganism is great, (barring hepatitis and mime troupes) and I personally have an enormous boatload of grievances concerning the way capitalism is practiced, and, furthermore, I'm sure that the guy they are pinning as the "spokesman" is a decent, well-meaning fellow and so forth.

But speaking of capitalism, the dude would seem to need some p.r. people to help him couch his beliefs in a way that is not going to alienate most everybody who happens upon his rap.

dell, Friday, 22 June 2007 01:37 (eighteen years ago)

http://www.maebrussell.com/Manson%20Family/Garbage%20bin%20dine-out.gif

dell, Friday, 22 June 2007 01:44 (eighteen years ago)

sorry, couldn't resist. DUDE, MANSON WAS A FREEGAN! JUST LIKE NAZIS WERE VEGETARIANS!

dell, Friday, 22 June 2007 01:46 (eighteen years ago)

it's the freegan weekend and I'm about to have me some fun

milo z, Friday, 22 June 2007 01:47 (eighteen years ago)

I get ALL my health care from Dumpsters.

nabisco, Friday, 22 June 2007 02:16 (eighteen years ago)

"its a shame people be throwing out a perfectly good white boy like that"

moonship journey to baja, Friday, 22 June 2007 02:26 (eighteen years ago)

IT'S FREEGAN STOOPID IS WHAT IT IS AMIRITE GUYS?

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 03:11 (eighteen years ago)

Dumpster diving in Sili Valley can yield some tasty morsels. Back when SGI owned the Google building in Mountain View, dot-commies with $100K+ salaries could be seen with their feet sticking out of SGI's bins.

libcrypt, Friday, 22 June 2007 03:54 (eighteen years ago)

BTW, I have a microwave and an old PC if anyone in SF wants to freegan it from me.

libcrypt, Friday, 22 June 2007 03:56 (eighteen years ago)

i heard tell that someone found a herman miller eames chair on the street in palo alto once but that might be lies (i've certainly never seen anything but ikea - and lots of it - for free on the street)

moonship journey to baja, Friday, 22 June 2007 03:57 (eighteen years ago)

seriously though, if there is one facet of capitalism that deserves freegan rage and scorn it's MAGAZINE PUBLISHING

in the close to 10 years that i worked in bookstores i don't know if i ever saw less than 50% of the store's magazine stock get stripped (the cover gets ripped off) and recycled. and more often than not it was closer to 75%. i don't know if maybe i just worked in stores that sucked at moving product or what but that's how it went.

though i guess that's because we're all "freegans" when it comes to newspapers and magazines right?

moonship journey to baja, Friday, 22 June 2007 04:02 (eighteen years ago)

GUYS WHEN I POSTED A THREAD ABOUT THIS 2 YEARS AGO NOBODY CARED

TREGAN.

Curt1s Stephens, Friday, 22 June 2007 04:05 (eighteen years ago)

Guys, I have an awesome idea - a personal trash shopper. A person of means can live an ethical lifestyle AND provide employment.

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 04:11 (eighteen years ago)

All without having to get dirty and smelly.

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 04:11 (eighteen years ago)

Has science perfected the eco-friendly carbon-neutral decontamination chamber yet?

libcrypt, Friday, 22 June 2007 04:31 (eighteen years ago)

FWIW, I sent an e-mail to freegan.info asking them (without getting too snarky) to explain the apparent contradiction of opposing capitalism by mooching off of it. If I get a response, I'll post here.

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 05:02 (eighteen years ago)

curtis i like yr thread

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 05:06 (eighteen years ago)

they are abstaining from paying "corporations" for the items they consume, just as vegetarians abstain from eating meat

xpost

Curt1s Stephens, Friday, 22 June 2007 05:09 (eighteen years ago)

thanks rrrobyn :D

Curt1s Stephens, Friday, 22 June 2007 05:10 (eighteen years ago)

they are abstaining from paying "corporations" for the items they consume, just as vegetarians abstain from eating meat

The key point here is that freegans could not exist without consumer culture, whereas vegetarians could exist without meat culture.

libcrypt, Friday, 22 June 2007 05:21 (eighteen years ago)

no they couldn't

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 05:33 (eighteen years ago)

i mean, then they would just be people

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 05:33 (eighteen years ago)

we are all gans in the end

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 05:34 (eighteen years ago)

Yeah, but the point is if more and more people gradually became freegans, eventually there would be this tipping point where "Oh shit, not enough stuff in the dumpster"

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 05:35 (eighteen years ago)

and that's when ya gotta start killing cows

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 05:36 (eighteen years ago)

Or tipping them

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 05:36 (eighteen years ago)

circle of life

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 05:37 (eighteen years ago)

i long for the day when there is not enough shit in the dumpster, tbh

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 05:38 (eighteen years ago)

y'know, wake up time

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 05:39 (eighteen years ago)

hmmm, yeah this is going to be a problem for the freegans.

perhaps we can devise a system whereby freely rummaged trash can be exchanged between freegans for other items of trash. we'll need some method for them to figure out the value of this trash - maybe we'll let them sort it out themselves by trial and error. of course, some freegans will probably accrue more trash than can be immediately used for their own benefit, so we'll also have to devise some sort of system whereby the accrued surplus value of these rummaged goods can be transferred between freegans.

hmmm ...

moonship journey to baja, Friday, 22 June 2007 06:14 (eighteen years ago)

hehe

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 06:24 (eighteen years ago)

- i will give you 20 bruised bananas, half a tube of premium brand toothpaste, and this GE portable cd player in exchange for hip replacement surgery
- okay but your new hip is made out of sardine tins

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 06:30 (eighteen years ago)

- that seems fair

rrrobyn, Friday, 22 June 2007 06:31 (eighteen years ago)

Das Krapital.

libcrypt, Friday, 22 June 2007 10:56 (eighteen years ago)

I don't see a contradiction or mild hypocrisy in freegans 'mooching' off consumer capitalism. Consumer capitalism is going to exist with or without them - by engaging in freeganism they're taking themselves out of that loop, diminishing the impact ever so slightly.

milo z, Friday, 22 June 2007 12:32 (eighteen years ago)

This article seems apposite On the mend. Warning! Contains a picture of John Harris.

Billy Dods, Friday, 22 June 2007 12:35 (eighteen years ago)

I don't think it's mooching. It's not utopian, though, unlike veganism and other philosophies. One cannot build a perfect world upon freeganism, since it relies upon the existence of an imperfect world. Which, perhaps, makes "freeganism" somewhat more postmodern than veganism.

libcrypt, Friday, 22 June 2007 12:44 (eighteen years ago)

DUDE, MANSON WAS A FREEGAN! JUST LIKE NAZIS WERE VEGETARIANS!

He even wrote a song about it!

Tom D., Friday, 22 June 2007 12:44 (eighteen years ago)

http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y49/picturesref/Crimth.jpg

Sébastien, Friday, 22 June 2007 12:50 (eighteen years ago)

makes me think of when people move house, and shift all this furniture with them for no reason, they should leave it in the house for the next person

696, Friday, 22 June 2007 12:53 (eighteen years ago)

ugh, crimethinc

hstencil, Friday, 22 June 2007 12:54 (eighteen years ago)

ppl bitching about dumpster diving/freeganism/whatever in this thread seem to be operating under the same to-hell-with-it-then delusion milo had about michael moore being irrelevent if he doesnt change america into a utopian socialist paradise with every film - yes, dumpstering rich ppls old shit wouldnt be feasible if everyone did it, but neither would any alternative practiced by anyone on this thread

and what, Friday, 22 June 2007 13:39 (eighteen years ago)

and yeah ppl talking about it as a movement or whatever sound dumb, just like self-appointed representatives of any cultural trend sound dumb in nyt articles, what the fuck ever

and what, Friday, 22 June 2007 13:40 (eighteen years ago)

The university where I work turns move out time into a campus wide free garage sale. NYU needs to get with the times.

Ms Misery, Friday, 22 June 2007 13:44 (eighteen years ago)

But it seems like this Weissman guy, by claiming freeganism is essential to an *ethical lifestyle*, is necessarily claiming that it IS something everyone should adopt.

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 13:47 (eighteen years ago)

I have no problem with it as an alternative lifestyle or whatever, I just don't like the moral superiority that can potentially come with it.

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 13:55 (eighteen years ago)

if that's the case then that's stupid. I didn't read the article b/c I've heard of this before, I just assumed that the point of freeganism wasn't so much about "EVERYONE SHOULD ADOPT THIS LIFESTYLE"

Curt1s Stephens, Friday, 22 June 2007 13:57 (eighteen years ago)

for me the point of dumpster diving food and books and furniture and shit is that me and my friends are too poor to get shit like that otherwise and its fun to go looking for stuff

and what, Friday, 22 June 2007 14:01 (eighteen years ago)

I'm sure the point is different for different people.

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 14:01 (eighteen years ago)

kind of like... everything

and what, Friday, 22 June 2007 14:07 (eighteen years ago)

http://www.k12.hi.us/~loogata/artonline/graphics/thinker.jpg

Curt1s Stephens, Friday, 22 June 2007 14:08 (eighteen years ago)

hahaha

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 14:08 (eighteen years ago)

TRASH PICKING: WHAT YOU TAKE AWAY FROM IT IS YOUR BUSINESS

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 14:10 (eighteen years ago)

actually could be an example of this?

New Austerity Aesthetic and the decline of Conspicuous Consumption: When?

696, Friday, 22 June 2007 14:16 (eighteen years ago)

also why shouldnt people encourage others to re-use existing stuff instead of throwing away and buying new?

696, Friday, 22 June 2007 14:17 (eighteen years ago)

They should, obv.

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 14:20 (eighteen years ago)

I don't think anyone here is arguing against that.

Hurting 2, Friday, 22 June 2007 14:20 (eighteen years ago)

then good, and lets hope we can all manage not to get too upset by associated moral superiority

696, Friday, 22 June 2007 14:21 (eighteen years ago)

one month passes...

http://observer.guardian.co.uk/foodmonthly/story/0,,2149141,00.html

didn't read it all the way through but: £320 worth of perfectly edible groceries out of the skip behind M&S in one go!

"Marks & Spencer's policy - if it is a policy - of leaving open access to the bins gets a thumbs-up from the freegans. At other supermarkets in this city they've found the food has had rotten milk, blue dye or even bleach poured over it. Sainsbury's compact all the waste food before binning it, while Tesco keep their bins locked until the rubbish trucks come. The freegans had only two complaints about Marks & Spencer. One is about the grotesque amount of packaging - virtually nothing is sold loose, it seems. The lunch I cooked did generate a fully stuffed carrier bag full of plastic and polythene. The other concerns all the packets of peeled and sliced fruit and veg that turn up in the bin - 'They do it for lazy lunchtime customers, and it's gone off by evening. It's very annoying.'"

koogs, Tuesday, 21 August 2007 15:43 (eighteen years ago)

"I did, in the end, warn the guests for the freegan lunch in advance. My friend Holger, who is a bit of a hippy, approved: he only wanted to remind me that he didn't eat meat. So he got a Haddock Mornay Meal for One (£2.99), complete with individual compartments of pre-made mash, peas and carrots. Vegetarians always eat worse."

am beginning to doubt the quality of the journalism on this one. or the quality of the vegetarian.

koogs, Tuesday, 21 August 2007 15:49 (eighteen years ago)

A lot of odd attitude in this thread. Some people get some stuff out of the garbage. Some of those people think this is a lifestyle. What's the problem?

Ned Trifle II, Wednesday, 22 August 2007 08:40 (eighteen years ago)

Also But if you want to see what living with less is really like go live in the Delhi slums. is kind of missing the point. There's a big difference between living with less and wanting to live in a slum.

Ned Trifle II, Wednesday, 22 August 2007 08:44 (eighteen years ago)

haha! M&S garbage has too much garbage? It's nice that they leave the bins open though.

I kind of forgot that materialism is kind of bad and I've been consuming more than usual this year. Whoops.

Maria, Wednesday, 22 August 2007 13:34 (eighteen years ago)

lots of missing the point on purpose in this thread

river wolf, Wednesday, 22 August 2007 14:19 (eighteen years ago)

I fucking wrote an amazing short story about this many years ago and completely sat on it. Back when I was kind of 'making it up.' Except the characters took it a step beyond, three roommates. One worked in grocery, and him and another guy worked together to steal groceries from their workplace. Another guy worked in cable, and black-boxed himself for free TV and stole internet from the neighbors. The third was fucking the landlord for free rent for all of them (which conveniently included heat/power). One starts getting obsessed with it and strives to make the house zero-upkeep, one desperately wants to quit doing it, and one who thinks the other two are going mental.

Will M., Wednesday, 22 August 2007 14:31 (eighteen years ago)

post it!

Maria, Wednesday, 22 August 2007 14:38 (eighteen years ago)

That Delhi zinger is a good encapsulation of my idea for a reality show to pitch to MTV - The REAL Real World.

I always wanted something like this only it would have to be super high-concept: "find out what happens when we take people's money away and also stop filming them or allowing anybody to pay any attention to any of their problems no matter how pressing"

J0hn D., Wednesday, 22 August 2007 14:39 (eighteen years ago)

Freeganism: a lifestyle built upon the same bedrock as middle-American mothers' post-prandial clean plate club recruitment drives.

river wolf, Wednesday, 22 August 2007 14:57 (eighteen years ago)

ie There are people starving in etc.

river wolf, Wednesday, 22 August 2007 14:58 (eighteen years ago)

I doubt I still have the story anymore-- I did it at my parents house, so if it exists in soft copy, it's on their old, broken computer. This was a fair bit before Gmail :(

Will M., Wednesday, 22 August 2007 16:26 (eighteen years ago)

i have done a fair amount of high-class (farmer's market) dumpster diving (not really dumpsters - end-of-the-day boxes of discarded, often totally perfect fruit&veg) in the last couple of months. it has been pretty awesome.

i still do not have another tv. and that is okay. internet is good.

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 22 August 2007 16:32 (eighteen years ago)

Totally, rw. Anyone who survived the Depression would call it "life", or possibly "making do". For instance, my great-grandmother called it "making god-awful ugly house slippers out of every single mismatched color of reclaimed yarn I can find in Detroit and its outlying suburbs because it's perfectly good yarn, how could people waste this??".

Laurel, Wednesday, 22 August 2007 16:34 (eighteen years ago)

yeah, maybe the neatest thing, besides foooed, about dumpster diving at the market is meeting the other people who are doing it and trying to figure out the whys of it all - i can see the depression-era mentality for sure. but totally all kinds - dudes on beat-up bikes, chinese women with their kids, old italian couples, middle-aged french ladies, pretty girls in their 20s, etc etc. all friendly and into sharing stuff.

also, i am becoming a bit obsessed with Detroit or the idea of detroit

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 22 August 2007 17:26 (eighteen years ago)

Buy my friend's book!!

http://www.randomhouse.com/images/dyn/cover/?source=9780385511407&height=300&maxwidth=170

Laurel, Wednesday, 22 August 2007 17:38 (eighteen years ago)

omg

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 22 August 2007 17:40 (eighteen years ago)

two years pass...

so how do we feel about this post-recession then

thomp, Saturday, 6 March 2010 17:58 (fifteen years ago)

It is my contention that the USA is destined in the next couple of decades to become the world's most stupendous garage sale bazaar, with people traveling here from all over the world to scavenge the slow disengorgement of all the stuff that has accumulated here. If all goes according to plan, the Chinese and Indians will become avid collectors of Americana, and a reverant Warhol Museum will be opened in Shanghai.

Aimless, Saturday, 6 March 2010 18:12 (fifteen years ago)

Lots of my friends dumpster dive, and they'll discover half-day old vegetables and unopened pasta and all kinds of good stuff and cook up a huge meal. I see nothing wrong with this. The idea that it enables consumer waste is some massive BS.

Adam Bruneau, Saturday, 6 March 2010 19:08 (fifteen years ago)

I'll leave the dumpster food to the people who really need it to survive.

Jeff, Saturday, 6 March 2010 19:09 (fifteen years ago)

It is my contention that the USA is destined in the next couple of decades to become the world's most stupendous garage sale bazaar, with people traveling here from all over the world to scavenge the slow disengorgement of all the stuff that has accumulated here. If all goes according to plan, the Chinese and Indians will become avid collectors of Americana, and a reverant Warhol Museum will be opened in Shanghai.

― Aimless, Saturday, March 6, 2010 6:12 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark


pawn shops are apparently doin' great business right now

but yeah, Americans have so much (expensive/desirable/useful) shit, and are about to have so little money

some pretty girls make bigger graves than others (bernard snowy), Sunday, 7 March 2010 00:33 (fifteen years ago)

I'll leave the dumpster food to the people who really need it to survive.

― Jeff, Saturday, March 6, 2010 7:09 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark

^^^^^^

you gone float up with it (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Sunday, 7 March 2010 01:37 (fifteen years ago)

Is there that much competition for it?

probably a sock!! (╓abies), Sunday, 7 March 2010 01:39 (fifteen years ago)

depends on where you live but i feel like there's enough to go around

harbl, Sunday, 7 March 2010 01:41 (fifteen years ago)

Yeah, I'm willing to bet that about 95% of the edible dumpster food goes to waste. It's not like slipping into a soup kitchen for a free meal.

ENERGY FOOD (en i see kay), Sunday, 7 March 2010 01:55 (fifteen years ago)

socialized food would be a nice utopian idea...i mean besides food stamps and soup kitchens.

Ballistic, Sunday, 7 March 2010 01:58 (fifteen years ago)


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