With lucid exposition and gorgeous graphics, anthropologist Stephen Lansing exposed the hidden structure and profound health of the traditional Balinese rice growing practices. The intensely productive terraced rice paddies of Bali are a thousand years old. So are the democratic subaks (irrigation cooperatives) that manage them, and so is the water temple system that links the subaks in a nested hierarchy.
When the Green Revolution came to Bali in 1971, suddenly everything went wrong. Along with the higher-yield rice came "technology packets" of fertilizers and pesticides and the requirement, stated in patriotic terms, to "plant as often as possible." The result: year after year millions of tons of rice harvest were lost, mostly to voracious pests. The level of pesticide use kept being increased, to ever decreasing effect.
Zeitgeist: Addendum attempts to locate the root causes of this pervasive
social corruption, while offering a solution. This solution is not based on
politics, morality, laws, or any other "establishment" notions of human
affairs, but rather on a modern, non-superstitious based understanding of
what we are and how we align with nature, to which we are a part. The work
advocates a new social system which is updated to present day knowledge,
highly influenced by the life long work of Jacque Fresco and The Venus
Project .
'Zeitgeist, The Movie' were created as
Not-for-Profit expressions to communicate what the author felt were highly
important social understandings which most humans are generally not aware of.
The first film focuses on suppressed historical & modern information
about currently dominant social institutions, while also exploring what could
be in store for humanity if the power structures at large continue their
patterns of self-interest, corruption, and consolidation.
The Trap: What Happened to Our Dream of Freedom is a BBC documentary series by English filmmaker Adam Curtis, well known for other documentaries including The Century of the Self and The Power of Nightmares. It began airing on BBC Two on 11 March 2007. The series consists of three one-hour programmes which explore the
concept and definition of freedom, specifically, "how a simplistic
model of human beings as self-seeking, almost robotic, creatures led to
today's idea of freedom."