• Sign in
  • Sign up
Elektrine
EN
  • EN English
  • 中 中文
Log in Register
Modes
Overview Search Chat Timeline Communities Gallery Lists Friends Email Vault VPN
Back to Timeline
  • Open on climatejustice.social

GeofCox

@GeofCox@climatejustice.social
mastodon 4.5.7-stable+ff1

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation.

I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

0 Followers
0 Following
Joined April 26, 2022

Posts

Thread context 2 posts in path
Parent @ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us Open
on zirk.us
Open ancestor post
Current reply
Boosted by Charlie Stross @cstross@wandering.shop
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social · 4h ago
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us I was struck by this: "In the 1950s about 70% of manual workers voted Labour and the same percentage of non-manual workers voted Conservative. Today, education and age both predict voting affiliation better than class." It is an example, I think, of the myopia of centrist or 'liberal' thinking. It misses the point that the current association of education and age with political affiliation comes out of the expansion of higher education in the 60s and 70s, then the generational inequality perpetrated by the single-generation handout of neoliberal privatisation, that has produced a society in the UK (and to some extent elsewhere) in which lots of well-educated young people don't have any assets to fall back on - which is really what being working class means - rather than having a regional accent or liking chips, as 'liberals' would have it - and lots of older people living longer that are less well educated but have both assets and relatively generous pensions. What is 'social class' supposed to mean if not the difference between having no choice but to keep working all hours for somebody else, or conversely receiving unearned asset income ? But naturally 'centrists', 'liberals', whatever you call them, must never see this, because if they did they would have to admit the economic interests (in preserving the status-quo) that really lie behind their own supposedly a-historical 'ideas' and 'values'.
View full thread on climatejustice.social
5
0
7
0
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social · Mar 15, 2026

This can only be described as a rant from Simon Tisdall - but an understandable and justified rant, full of moral outrage...

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/mar/15/us-iran-war-donald-trump-failure

View on climatejustice.social
2
0
3
0
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social · Mar 13, 2026

Almost 50 cities in France have already done away with paid tickets... "Nearly three million people in France can now use urban public transport without paying a fare. That number is likely to grow after the municipal elections... given the proliferation of proposals to make urban transport at least partially free."

https://www.lemonde.fr/en/economy/article/2026/03/12/french-cities-steady-march-toward-free-public-transport_6751388_19.html

View on climatejustice.social
503
0
538
0
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social · Mar 06, 2026
This article - https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/mar/06/uk-death-healthy-life-expectancy-decline-state - makes 2 points about the current decline of health, well-being and lifespans in the West. One, arguably, is obvious: it's worse in less equal societies like the US and UK, while in the most egalitarian societies, in Scandinavia for example, healthy lifespans are still increasing. Obvious because the larger the percentage of the population you exclude from access to health services, good diet, clean air, etc, the more they bring down all the health outcome averages. The second point is more obscure, but much more revealing... Epidemiologist Michael Marmot: “If our health and life expectancy is in decline, it’s about as clear a sign as you can get that our society is in decline.” "In the 1980s, Marmot studied the Soviet bloc and saw illness increase. That’s one way you could tell those societies were on the verge of collapse. Now it’s starting to happen in hypercapitalist countries."
View on climatejustice.social
30
1
45
0
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social · Mar 04, 2026

RE: @alberto_cottica@mastodon.green

Link to an excellent article - the UN joining up the dots between "the interwoven crises of rising inequality, ecological collapse and resurgent far-right politics" and preparing "proposals to be outlined in April ... backed by leading economists and academics, UN bodies, trade unions and NGOs."

View on climatejustice.social
12
0
12
0
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social · Feb 16, 2026

It used to be said that the British are only good at the Olympic events you can do sitting down (rowing, horse-riding, etc...). But it's getting really relaxed now - two gold medals in skeleton, which you actually have to lie down for.

View on climatejustice.social
2
1
0
0
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social · Feb 11, 2026

Somebody asked yesterday if advertising really works in these days of ad-blockers etc... My answer was that if it wasn't working on most people, big business wouldn't be spending 1.4 trillion dollars on it every year.

But I was reminded of a friend of mine, a student of Russian, that went to study in Moscow in the early 80s. He got what he called an 'eerie' feeling walking around the city, in the metro, etc. At first he thought it was the stories about foreigners being watched - but eventually he worked out what it really was: the absence of advertising - no bill-boards, posters, vehicle liveries, shop window displays, etc...

We swim in an ambient sea of advertising - and its effects go way beyond its immediate purpose of extracting our hard-earned money so that we keep working hard for more, surrounded by mountains of stuff we could easily do without.

The most pernicious effects of advertising are, precisely, ambient...
1. It makes us unhappy. That's the whole point. It is fundamentally based on making us feel we'd be better, more attractive, popular, successful, etc, if only we buy this or that latest cosmetic, car, whatever; and
2. It shapes social expectations - it makes having new, more expensive things, holidays, etc, look and feel desirable, it associates happiness with wasteful consumerism, so we come to really believe that striving for a 'luxury lifestyle' - big house, fancy car, swimming pool, jet-setting, etc - is the meaning of our lives, is better than living simply, contentedly in caring families, communities and the natural world.

View on climatejustice.social
101
0
95
0
Boosted by Philip C James @PhilipCJames@mas.to
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social · Feb 02, 2026
I was interested in this story that the enormous French multinational Capgemini immediately decided to sell off a US subsidiary when it discovered it was contracting with ICE - https://www.lemonde.fr/en/france/article/2026/02/01/french-it-giant-capgemini-to-sell-us-subsidiary-after-row-over-ice-links_6750021_7.html Is the US becoming a toxic investment environment even to multinational corporations ?
View on climatejustice.social
28
0
37
0
Thread context 2 posts in path
Parent @ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us Open
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us
Most of the commentary on national economies focusses on debt in the public sector as a risk to (fiscal) stability... but for many countries levels of private (household) debt are of similar magnitude
Current reply
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social · Feb 02, 2026
@ChrisMayLA6@zirk.us I guess the economists', and the wealthy's prejudice against public debt, and in favour of private debt, is influenced by an underlying misconception, and an undoubted fact... The misconception is that money created in the private banking sector goes into 'investment' (factcheck: it doesn't, it goes mainly to inflate asset values); and that money created by the government is just spent, badly (factcheck: it isn't, it is invested mainly into things like the education, health and safety of us all). The undoubted fact is that money created in the private banking sector goes mainly to the already wealthy...
View full thread on climatejustice.social
1
0
4
0
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
GeofCox
GeofCox
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social

I'm an activist working in social enterprise, with particular interest in how it can contribute to social and environmental transformation. I'm English, but work internationally, and have lived in France for the last 13 years.

climatejustice.social
@GeofCox@climatejustice.social · Feb 01, 2026

I'm tired of analyses of the housing crisis locked inside housing policy - https://www.lemonde.fr/en/opinion/article/2026/01/30/europe-s-housing-crisis-is-a-democratic-time-bomb_6749946_23.html

Yes, yes - the decline of public housing provision, the growth of airbnbs... But the bigger - much bigger - issue is not housing: it's inequality.

The fact is that while living standards have stagnated for most people for 20 years or so - 50 in the US - the wealthy and privileged have continued to get much wealthier. About half of all house purchases in the UK now are for 'additional dwellings' - second homes, buy-to-lets, etc - because 10% of the population can outbid everybody else, drive up asset prices, and when it's something people can't live without, like a home, force them to pay unreasonable rents - further increasing inequality, both directly and indirectly, by sucking money out of local economies into elite enclaves.

View on climatejustice.social
36
0
47
0
313k7r1n3

Company

  • About
  • Contact
  • FAQ

Legal

  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • VPN Policy

Email Settings

IMAP: imap.elektrine.com:993

POP3: pop.elektrine.com:995

SMTP: smtp.elektrine.com:465

SSL/TLS required

Support

  • support@elektrine.com
  • Report Security Issue

Connect

Tor Hidden Service

khav7sdajxu6om3arvglevskg2vwuy7luyjcwfwg6xnkd7qtskr2vhad.onion
© 2026 Elektrine. All rights reserved. • Server: 15:00:01 UTC