Through independent journalism and multimedia storytelling, Noble Earth seeks to find and spread the ideas missing for us to build a better world
What if the recipe for a Noble Earth was hiding in the stories all arround us?
Change begins when we see clearly.
When the old story fades, new possibilities appear — and action suddenly feels obvious.
We want to engage with the most pressing and fundamental problems that we perceive our world to be facing:
PROBLEM
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Here we talk about new democratic systems that embrace the idea of populations making active governmental decisions through dynamic mandate.
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Here we talk about the monopoly of platforms that we have seen in democratic systems.
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Here we talk about the issues with our faux concern with the environment. Through market and lobby interests the peoples right to be free of poision and pesticides are second to the markets right to overproduce and pollute.
SOLUTION
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By developing and implementing de-centralised digital voting systems that are: Verifiable, Anonymous, Timestamped, Immutable, we can give our democracy a long overdue update. This would allow for continuous moving of mandate as every citizen would be able to place and replace their vote whenever they see fit. Combined with a staggered process for arbitration and regulation, this would ensure majority rule regardless of corruption or external pressures.
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While open markets have proven great for people all over the world, they have -in combination with increasing lobbying power and privatised media platforms- become open only in name. As tech giants begin to own the digital real estate on which we operate we are bound by their tithes and whims. This shifts political power into the hands of capital rather than education. It also creates a hostile market for potential competition since so much of this infrastructure is driven on national and international investments (High speed fiber cable lines, expanded electricity grids, etc).
We need to explore systems that embrace the life and death cycle of nature, just as trees that grow too large fall and provide nutrients for the soil that can sprout an even bigger tree in the future. -
Rather than creating arbitrarily complex systems of carbon credits and social capital indexes, we need to reframe our collective need for production. This would require a larger focus on not leaving resources wasted, minimising transport and phasing out unsustainable monoculture for healthier permaculture solutions.
These solutions have to be challenged, tested and wrapped in a story of a world trancending this momentary ecological and financial collapse.
By implementing systems that have integrity by design rather than having to rely on trust, we are setting ourselves up for a world that actually reflects the values of the stories we have been raised on. This newfound clarity will serve as inspiration and impetus for engaging action.
-Niels M.
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