(Not) buying stuff: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 10:38, 22 November 2024
There are multiple reasons why we use reasonable effort to get the things we need without buying them. This cultural aspect has a history going back to pre-Kanthaus times. Instead of buying, we try to rescue, repair, borrow, produce and receive gifted the things we need.
Reasons why not-buying is our default approach
- money is a relatively scarce resource for us as a donation-based, non-commercial project
- every purchase creates additional book-keeping work
- more generally, working with money increases internal bureaucracy, which can threaten working towards primary aims
- decision simplicity: since buying things creates market demand, we consider many factors when we do. Not-buying allows us to ignore many of those factors.
- through borrowing and receiving gifts, we grow and strengthen our social network and contribute towards a culture of sharing
- through rescuing and repairing, we learn skills of resilience for facing future uncertainty
Factors we consider when buying things
- Production
- prefer used
- environmental impact
- worker conditions
- Properties
- durability
- repairability
- cleanability
- disposal