Difference between revisions of "Talk:Freeganism"

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== Wiki quoting ==
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= Wiki quoting =
  
 
Hard to do much better than the wiki definition, history and policy impact. And if we could wouldn't we want to change the Wikipedia definition also? In such a circumstance is it ok to copy verbatim or should we keep in quote and reference form?
 
Hard to do much better than the wiki definition, history and policy impact. And if we could wouldn't we want to change the Wikipedia definition also? In such a circumstance is it ok to copy verbatim or should we keep in quote and reference form?
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*Introduction - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freeganism
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*History - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freeganism#History
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*Impacts - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freeganism#Impacts
  
 
Not sure if this is how other small mediawiki operations do it, but seems we can copy verbatim without quote-marking:[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Verbatim_copying_under_the_GFDL]
 
Not sure if this is how other small mediawiki operations do it, but seems we can copy verbatim without quote-marking:[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Verbatim_copying_under_the_GFDL]
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For the purposes of this discussion, Wikipedia is considered to be a Collection of Documents. (An alternative interpretation could be that Wikipedia is a single Document, which invalidates the discussion on this page.)</blockquote>
 
For the purposes of this discussion, Wikipedia is considered to be a Collection of Documents. (An alternative interpretation could be that Wikipedia is a single Document, which invalidates the discussion on this page.)</blockquote>
  
== Page Layout Ideas? ==
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--[[User:NonZeroSum|NonZeroSum]] ([[User talk:NonZeroSum|talk]]) 18:42, 18 July 2017 (CEST)
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= Page Layout Ideas? =
  
 
Keep going with facts & information, activism and alternative perspectives? --[[User:NonZeroSum|NonZeroSum]] ([[User talk:NonZeroSum|talk]]) 06:29, 15 July 2017 (CEST),
 
Keep going with facts & information, activism and alternative perspectives? --[[User:NonZeroSum|NonZeroSum]] ([[User talk:NonZeroSum|talk]]) 06:29, 15 July 2017 (CEST),
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Sounds like a good general guideline.--[[User:BrimstoneSaladWiki|BrimstoneSaladWiki]] ([[User talk:BrimstoneSaladWiki|talk]]) 02:01, 16 July 2017 (CEST)
 
Sounds like a good general guideline.--[[User:BrimstoneSaladWiki|BrimstoneSaladWiki]] ([[User talk:BrimstoneSaladWiki|talk]]) 02:01, 16 July 2017 (CEST)
  
== To Draw from ==
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= To Draw from =
  
=== Forum Threads ===
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== Forum Threads ==
  
Hyperlinks [https://activistjourneys.wordpress.com/working-progress-resource-library/]  
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* [https://philosophicalvegan.com/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=3315 How Much Food Can You Find In A Dumpster? (Vegan Gains)]
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* [https://philosophicalvegan.com/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=3078 Vegan makes profit from roadkill]
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* [https://philosophicalvegan.com/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=2490 Is it okay to eat meat that you did not buy?]
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* [https://philosophicalvegan.com/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=1834 Part Vegan Part Freegan? The concept of use?]
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* [https://philosophicalvegan.com/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=1734 Eggs and Veganism]
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* [https://philosophicalvegan.com/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=114 Backyard rescue hens]
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* [https://philosophicalvegan.com/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=1573 Veganism and Dumpster Diving]
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* [https://philosophicalvegan.com/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=337 FREEGAN VEGAN BEEGAN’S!?]
  
*How Much Food Can You Find In A Dumpster? (Vegan Gains)
 
*Vegan makes profit from roadkill
 
*Is it okay to eat meat that you did not buy?
 
*Part Vegan Part Freegan? The concept of use?
 
*Eggs and Veganism
 
*Backyard rescue hens
 
*Veganism and Dumpster Diving
 
*FREEGAN VEGAN BEEGAN’S!?
 
  
=== External links ===
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=== Foraging ===  
  
Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freeganism]
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I have considered eating wild plants for a long time, but for some reason decided that doing so was extremist and nasty somehow. I have always feared that I am going to eat some poisonous plant.
  
Very thorough, we can probably reference to their history overview. --[[User:NonZeroSum|NonZeroSum]] ([[User talk:NonZeroSum|talk]]) 06:29, 15 July 2017 (CEST)
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Lately I have been looking into it again, possibly considering Clover and Dandelion as something to try out. Not for any magical healing BS or anything, but just to see what it is like, and possibly as a free food source. -- NerdyScienceGirl
  
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Thoughts? Have you ever done this?
 +
 +
:It can be excellent as a free food source, although these foods are not palatable to most people, and you may want to take care to research oxalates and considerations from eating a large amount of them.
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:Plants that grow in the wild are usually tougher, physically and chemically, which makes them less delicious. Our cultivated plants are particularly soft, made so to serve as a human food source, although that also makes them extremely vulnerable to pests. --[[BrimstoneSaladWiki]]
  
Trashwiki [https://trashwiki.org/en/Freeganism]
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=== Edible gardening ===
  
This site is the go to that every freegan uses for maps and information on big cities when they don't know their way around or have someone to show them. Helplful 'last checked' dates also. Interesting recorded Freegan News and Events also.[http://trashwiki.org/en/News_and_events] --[[User:NonZeroSum|NonZeroSum]] ([[User talk:NonZeroSum|talk]]) 06:29, 15 July 2017 (CEST)
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For a long time I've been considering starting my own garden instead of having to constantly go to my local farmers market to buy my vegtables. I would like to start my garden by next week but I don't know the first thing to gardening nor do I know anything about keeping my plants healthy and products I should use to get the most out of them.
Freeganism is a practice and ideology of limited participation in the conventional economy and minimal consumption of resources, particularly through recovering wasted goods like food.[1] The word "freegan" is a portmanteau of "free" and "vegan".[2] While vegans might avoid buying animal products as an act of protest against animal exploitation, freegans—at least in theory—avoid buying anything as an act of protest against the food system in general.
 
  
Freeganism is often presented as synonymous with "dumpster diving" for discarded food, although freegans are distinguished by their association with an anti-consumerist and anti-capitalist ideology and their engagement in a wider range of alternative living strategies, such as voluntary unemployment, squatting abandoned buildings, and "guerilla gardening" in unoccupied city parks.[3]
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Anyone who has experience in this please give me as many tips as you can. From time to time if all goes aswell I will post pictures of my on going plant adventure and will eventually make a another thread describing my experience. --[[Neptual]]
  
'''The Ultimate Guide To Dumpster Diving'''
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:I currently have a big garden, with which I sustain myself.
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:You don't need anything special to make plants grow: no manure, no pesticides, no fertilizers. Manure is not necessary, unlike many people believe (I know because I never used it, but my plants always produce more than what I expect), and pesticides are only useful to make your vegetables/fruits look perfect, without dents (like the ones you see in supermarkets; however, biological agriculture doesn't use fertilizers and pesticedes). To get the most out of them, just make a research on the plant/vegetable you wish to plant (inserting the name on Google gives you planty of information); check if it needs sun more than others or not, what are the best temperatures for it to grow, if it needs a special pH, etc.
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:Another important thing is to make the best use you possibly can out of the space you have at your disposal. Some vegetables/plants have a bad production/space ratio(i.e. pumpkins), while some others are the opposite (i.e. Brussels sprouts). Consider this factor to have the most efficient garden. Take also in consideration that some things like spinaches have high nutrition values (in the case of spinaches: vitamin A , vitamin C, vitamin E, vitamin K, magnesium, manganese, folate, betaine, iron, vitamin B2, calcium, potassium, vitamin B6, folic acid, copper, protein, phosphorus, zinc, niacin, selenium and omega-3 fatty acids; so they're perfect for a healthy diet, and yes I love spinaches).
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:In the end, if the plant you're looking for needs anything special, any valid site should tell you. Water the plants regularly, and remember that most vegetables need atleast 6 hours of sunlight daily.
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:If you want a book, I don't have any good suggestions, since I only have italian books. However, I recommend buying one, it's very useful. --[[thebestofenergy]]
  
Coyping this in full so I can see my progress editing it down and into new document.
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::Thanks for your helpful tips! I've only invested a small amount of money for garden space area and making sure that it is sufficient for what I need but have also combined your tips along with others in order to start the growth of a healthy garden :) I wasn't worried about the usage of manure because there is a horse stable nearby and they allow to take as much manure as I'd like to. On the other hand I am thankful that I won't have to use my time to gathering all of that manure, and even more thankful that I won't have to spend extra money on buying pesticides. --[[Neptual]]
  
Before I dive in, I need to offer a few obligatory disclaimers.
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:::I don't have anything intelligent to add to the conversation, but I'm kind of excited for this thread. I too want to start my own garden full of the staples I normally buy, and it would be great to see your experience first hand like that. I already have a compost started, simply because the soil is so dry and dead where I live. Hoping that I won't have to use fertilizer though, and I definitely was not going to use pesticide. What is your soil like over there, thebestofenergy? --[[itsund3rmykilt]]
  
Obviously, getting food from dumpsters isn’t the most sanitary thing you can do, so don’t do it if you are immunocompromised. Never eat food that smells, looks or tastes weird.
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::::I have a large place (more than 20'000 m^2), so the soil is noticeably different depending on the zones. I place certain plants where the soil is 'better', because they require so, while other plants don't ask for anything specific. Again, not making researches on the vegetables you're planning to plant is a way to start on the wrong foot, and you can easily find the pH a plant needs. Remember that the pH doesn't always necessarily have to be precise, it's usually just what the plant prefers.
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::::I find this site very helpful regarding pH (how to measure it, how to change it, what it is, etc.) and the best type of soil http://milkwood.net/2014/03/17/how-to-t ... e-harvest/
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::::And I find this site http://www.garden.org/ to be very useful for researches in general. --[[thebestofenergy]]
  
Avoid meat and dairy. Avoid cooked food. Be careful when climbing in and out of dumpsters. Wear gloves to protect your hands from sharp objects.
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:::::For veganic gardening you can buy ground rocks that essentially leach nutrients into the earth. cow manure is widely used so I think that avoiding that shit (hahaha) is pretty crucial. There is a dude that does veganic gardening on youtube and while he may be all spiritual and "californiad" out, his tips are very useful.
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:::::https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qt6hDgyIY6U -- [[Twizelby]]
  
BE THAT AS IT MAY
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== External sources ==
  
Much like pre-owned materials, dumpster food faces illogical prejudices.
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Need to change the titles of everything quoted and give them a how it relates to veganism focus to give us enough room to change without copying. I'll probably reach out to trashwiki and say they have permission to use material from this page if we can borrow back from them, as 99.99% is going to be from the same angle, just be interesting to see what they come up with and where they diverge on the anti-consumerist stuff. --[[User:NonZeroSum|NonZeroSum]]
  
Our natural human disdain for eating rotten food has been warped by the unreasonable hygienic standards of our times. In our current day, we have developed a paranoia of anything with blemishes, fuzz or past it’s “best before” date.
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:It's not practical to vary copyright and permissions on a page-by-page basis. It's best to just keep their stuff minimal and in quotes if it isn't public domain, and possibly link to it as a reference for further reading.--[[User:BrimstoneSaladWiki|BrimstoneSaladWiki]] ([[User talk:BrimstoneSaladWiki|talk]]) 22:33, 22 July 2017 (CEST)
  
These have little to do with whether food is edible and safe. Nonetheless, food is routinely thrown out due to these reasons. It’s gotten to the point where 40% of all food created is sent to the landfill.
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::Don't think I've quoted them at all, they're pages are pretty chaotic, I just thought about updating some of their sections with what I'd written, and asking if their stuff is public domain. It would be interesting to see what they left the same and where they diverged and the discussion that could be gained from that. --[[User:NonZeroSum|NonZeroSum]] ([[User talk:NonZeroSum|talk]]) 08:52, 23 July 2017 (CEST)
  
A large portion of the food thrown away is not dangerous or inedible. As you’ll see in this post, much of it has no issues at all.
 
  
According to the Center for Science in the Public Interest, food poisoning seems to be twice as likely in restaurants than at home. Yet we do not regard it as gross or odd that a person should go to a restaurant – even though their chances of getting sick from that food are real and documented.
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=== Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freeganism]===
  
However, I repeat, if you are elderly, a child and/or immunocompromised, I’d say avoid dumpster diving. Otherwise, enjoy dumpster diving with joyful care!
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Very thorough, we can probably reference to their history overview. --[[User:NonZeroSum|NonZeroSum]] ([[User talk:NonZeroSum|talk]]) 06:29, 15 July 2017 (CEST)
  
'''The Dumpster Diving Code'''
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=== Trashwiki [https://trashwiki.org/en/Freeganism]===
  
As I learned during my initiation into the dumpstering community, there is a code of conduct to which all dumpster divers adhere. If you fail to adhere to the code, you risk having the owner of the dumpster lock the bin, pour bleach on the food or wait for you to return and shout at you for being a dirty hippie. None of that is fun, so read carefully.
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This site is the go to that every freegan uses for maps and information on big cities when they don't know their way around or have someone to show them. Helplful 'last checked' dates also. Interesting recorded Freegan News and Events also.[http://trashwiki.org/en/News_and_events] --[[User:NonZeroSum|NonZeroSum]] ([[User talk:NonZeroSum|talk]]) 06:29, 15 July 2017 (CEST)
 
 
'''Rule 1: Dumpster discretely'''
 
 
 
You don’t want to draw attention to yourself while you are dumpstering. People might get spooked and call the cops, or you might get shooed away. Keep noise to an absolute minimum. Speak with an inside voice, don’t throw things around and avoid knocking things over loudly. Go during the cover of night if you can.
 
 
 
'''Rule 2: Leave things better than how you found them'''
 
 
 
Dumpster diving can be messy, smelly business, but you’ve no right to go mess up someone’s garbage area. Avoid tearing bags open, tossing trash on the floor or leaving bags outside the dumpster. If you do need to tear the bags, make sure you tie them back up.
 
 
 
Not only is it rude to leave an area messy, you might attract raccoons and other pests, creating a problem for the innocent dumpster owner. Breaking this rule is a huge motivation for owners to lock their dumpsters, preventing future generations of divers to benefit from the cornucopia of food.
 
 
 
'''Rule 3: Is dumpster diving illegal?'''
 
 
 
In the province of Ontario, Canada, where I live, anything you put into your trash is public property, and so anyone can help themselves (including the Police, FYI).
 
 
 
From my research, it seems like dumpster diving is legal in most parts of the USA. It is illegal in Britain. Here is a good page for information on the legality of dumpster diving.
 
 
 
Never break any locks, climb fences or otherwise force yourself into a dumpster.
 
 
 
Obey all signs. If a sign says “no trespassing”, let it be and go. If someone tells you to leave, then leave. If they tell you to never come back, then never come back.
 
 
 
And that’s it!
 
 
 
Other than these 3 rules, you nearly can’t go wrong.
 
What can you find while dumpster diving?
 
 
 
In this age of over-consumption and thoughtless waste, you can find anything and everything in dumpsters, including:
 
 
 
    Clothing
 
    Furniture
 
    Food
 
    Electronics
 
    Building materials
 
    Raw materials (wood, metal, etc.)
 
    Recyclables
 
    Books
 
    Baby supplies
 
    And so much more…
 
 
 
The sky is really the limit! The focus of this article is on food. You can find the rest of that stuff cheaply and easily in thrift stores, or on online classifieds.
 
 
 
 
 
'''What gear do you need to dumpster dive?'''
 
 
 
Dumpster diving is a messy business.
 
 
 
You’ll want to ensure that you are well-equipped for the job so that the task is as pleasant as possible.
 
 
 
Long sleeve shirts and pants. I recommend that you equip yourself with a long sleeve shirt and pants. There is a risk that you might splash something nasty on yourself, and it’s better that it should end up on your clothing than your skin. What’s more, long sleeves and pants will protect you from any sharp objects and keep you warm.
 
 
 
A headlamp. If possible, you want to go dumpster diving during the cover of night to avoid detection and drawing attention to yourself. A headlamp is essential for freeing your hands for maximum flexibility and digging. Trust me, the light of streetlamps will not be sufficient to give you the required visibility for optimum diving.
 
 
 
Thick gloves. You’ll want some gloves for protection and warmth. Getting your hands covered in trash water is unsettling, and also, will get your hands freezing, especially if you are dumpstering at night. Gloves will also protect you from sharp edges, glass and other dumpster hazards.
 
 
 
A face mask. This is optional, but helpful for novices. Even though a large portion of the food retrieved from dumpster is fresh, rot may have settled into a some. If you’ve got a strong sense of smell, a mask can help you stay strong in the light of unpleasant odors.
 
 
 
Close-toe shoes. Leave your dandy sandals at home. Get yourself a sturdy pair of shoes to take with you diving. This will help you jump and walk over the dumpster and its content.
 
 
 
Bags. To take home your haul.
 
 
 
A wheelbarrow/cart. To help carry your enormous, delicious haul
 
 
 
A small knife/scissors. Helpful for cutting into bags and boxes to view the insides, or even cutting away the bruised bit of an apple for a quick snack.
 
 
 
 
 
'''The Best Places to Dumpster Dive'''
 
 
 
For finding food, grocery stores dumpsters are your best best, but I’d generally avoid larger or discount chains, such as Food Basics (Canadian chain) or Costco (US chain). These large chains typically have the time and money to use food compactors. This makes their thrown-out food inaccessible.
 
 
 
However, not all large chains are bad.
 
 
 
Walmart may work well – I’ve seen many Walmarts simply toss their food into regular (and accessible) trash cans.
 
 
 
Places like Trader Joes and Whole Foods also tend to not have compactors, and leave their food in unlocked dumpsters and regular trashcans. Really excellent places to get organic goods.
 
 
 
Corner stores are also excellent – these are smaller places and neither have the time or staff to effectively throw out food. If you live in a city, you’ll find a lot of success by going to downtown and checking behind and on the sides of small, corner grocery stores. Often, you can get a lot of good stuff by just skimming the top.
 
 
 
Remember, dumpster diving is a hunt. Don’t give up if the first few places you visit don’t have what you were looking for.
 
  
For stores closely positioned to a street, you may need to walk down to an alley and turn into it. Many cities will have compost-only bins, typically colored in a shade of green. These are perfect. They separate the food away from the non-food items, making it easy to find the grub you seek.
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=== The Ultimate Guide To Dumpster Diving [http://www.alternet.org/food/heres-how-dumpster-dive] ===
When Should you go Diving?
 
  
When is just as important as where.
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As it says in the title, think this is a great go to article, just a few naturalistic fallacies didn't want to copy over, the rest in the process of rereading and drawing from in my own terminology.
  
Try to time your dumpstering adventure close to garbage day in the area you are targeting. You can easily find this information on a municipality’s website.
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=== Food Waste & Freeganism (Unnatural Vegan) ===
  
You can definitely find good stuff during other times, but if you want the biggest volume of things to choose from, go before or on garbage day (before the garbage is taken away, of course).
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The first of UV's videos on food waste and the second half of this one can probably be termed moving towards zero waste not freeganism, but it's all good listening. An introduction as to how it relates to veganism and use of the term.  
  
You might find it easier to dive during the cover of night as you’ll minimize the chance of getting detected. But I don’t give a damn, so I go at noon during FULL SUN.
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Still be useful as I said in the beginning to get an educational video out there on how these networks of self-supporting freegans can reduce the need to consume on things like cat food, can organize to efficiently feed people on the cheap in the street and advocate for change in industry practices and the law through documenting, media and petitioning industry, councils and politicians.
  
'''How to Pick Good Dumpster Food'''
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==== Stealing ====
  
You might find food right at the surface of the dumpster. This is the best situation, and one which many would prefer.
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Freeganism started out as anti-consumerist ethic sees stealing as hurting the bottom line of all companies, creating irregular demand and no profit, as well as taking free animal products from strangers as some kind of gift economy that is commendable, so it is something we have to fight for the definition over, or use freegan-vegan instead. --[[NonZeroSum]]
  
Other times, you may need to remove a few layers of bags and do some more exploration before hitting gold.
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:The "stealing is OK" mantra seems to be dying, probably because it's illegal and people don't want to promote that in the mainstream, but it's also ethically inconsistent (it hurts retail stores and consumers: the stores which have to restock benefiting the companies making that product because the retail store has to pay for spillage, and the consumers because most of the cost gets passed on to them as markup), I think it's worth fighting over for simplicity's sake, and making arguments against those practices as fake freeganism in the article. We could have different articles on freeganism, zero-waste, and minimalism--[[User:BrimstoneSaladWiki|BrimstoneSaladWiki]] ([[User talk:BrimstoneSaladWiki|talk]]) 22:33, 22 July 2017 (CEST)
  
In order to conserve energy and effort, follow the steps below:
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::Hmm I just think it would be historically inaccurate to call theft fake freeganism, the founding propaganda 'Why freegan?' including theft and employee scams, also the freegan movement ethic that it's better to steal from a multi-national franchises than a small independent to survive and the desire to see them rid of out of communities by putting pressure on them so they aren't financially viable - [https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2011/apr/22/bristol-riot-police-injured]
  
Feel the outside of the bag to understand the shapes of things inside. Slightly lift the bag to get an idea of the weight. Are you feeling some boxy shapes? Is the bag lightweight? In this case, the bag may be full of empty containers and not worth the effort into opening it.
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::It might be appropriate to call taking food offered to you fake freeganism because of a misguided understanding of it being a free-diet like vegetarian to free..g..an, but IMO the theft thing will just have to be dissuaded in the criticism section. --[[User:NonZeroSum|NonZeroSum]] ([[User talk:NonZeroSum|talk]]) 03:28, 23 July 2017 (CEST)
  
A few important points about dates, those dreaded indicators of food lifespan:
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:::Stealing animal products still triggers the demand from the supplier that salvaging from a dumpster does not. This makes it fake freeganism; you're driving demand none-the-less. I could understand stealing non-animal products as an act of assault against a corporation just as would be any form of property damage. I don't agree with it for a number of reasons both in principle and in terms of logistics, but I can see why those anti-capitalist freegans would see it as preferable to purchasing. That doesn't reduce or negate the harm to animals from animal products, though, thus fake freegan (unless the stolen items are legitimately vegan, which is something we could address in the criticism section). (Also, no need to post wiki content on the forum now, I don't want Google's cache to get confused once this is live which we should probably do pretty soon) --[[User:BrimstoneSaladWiki|BrimstoneSaladWiki]] ([[User talk:BrimstoneSaladWiki|talk]]) 07:28, 23 July 2017 (CEST)
  
Best Before Dates: In North America, these have nothing to do with the safety of the food in question. It is an estimate placed by manufacturers as to how much time a food will remain “fresh” – that is, retain it’s best flavor and texture. Even though many stores and people will dump food that has passed its “best before” date, this date should not dissuade you from recovering food. The LSTG rule applies here.
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::::No problem, I already conceded we can probably call using any animal products from exploitation that aren't waste - not vegan, hence not freegan and a confused simple face understanding of the word freegan like free-diet-etarian.  
  
Sell Before Dates: These are used by stores to keep track of inventory, and give an indication of when this food should be moved off the shelf, and to the dumpster. Oftentimes, these ‘sell by’ dates may be many days before the ‘best before’ dates.
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::::I didn't think about the google catch thing, but I won't for every page just wanted to share to UV's patreon without giving the wiki address away, and get people on the forum more involved. I don't mind when the wiki goes up, I haven't done as much as I'd have liked because I was annoyed by the lack of transparency and working together that would have solved problems sooner. So killed the enthusiasm to commit, but will just carry on writing articles that interest me and expanding my reading through discussion. --[[User:NonZeroSum|NonZeroSum]] ([[User talk:NonZeroSum|talk]]) 08:31, 23 July 2017 (CEST)
  
Use By Dates: These dates indicate a manufacturers estimate as too how many days a product will be safe to eat. These dates are somewhat significant. However, it’s not like a food will suddenly be edible one day before the “use by” date, and then magically become inedible the next. These dates are usually conservative for the sake of safety and as protection from litigation.
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:::::I'm just worried about spammers from public posting, I think sharing on Patreon groups is fine as long as you ask people not to share the link where spammers can find it. I'll leave it up to your discretion where would be safe to share the link. Spam can be a serious problem on wikis and make them unusable fast https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Manual:Combating_spam I know from dealing with the forum that manual intervention doesn't cut it. I will go ahead and post a link on the forum in text people can type in and spammers probably won't get. I'm not sure how many more people will join in since only a few users expressed interest. We'll wait on a clickable link. I don't know what you mean about transparency.--[[User:BrimstoneSaladWiki|BrimstoneSaladWiki]] ([[User talk:BrimstoneSaladWiki|talk]]) 23:14, 23 July 2017 (CEST)

Latest revision as of 04:50, 7 December 2017

How it relates to veganism, how pragmatic it can be when done right, how the end goal should be bringing awareness to end food waste, but also how it can be a vital toolkit in cheaply running new projects, supporting the homeless and domestic animals which are obligate carnivores. --NonZeroSum (talk) 06:29, 15 July 2017 (CEST)


Wiki quoting

Hard to do much better than the wiki definition, history and policy impact. And if we could wouldn't we want to change the Wikipedia definition also? In such a circumstance is it ok to copy verbatim or should we keep in quote and reference form?

Not sure if this is how other small mediawiki operations do it, but seems we can copy verbatim without quote-marking:[1]

As of July 15, 2009 Wikipedia has moved to a dual-licensing system that supersedes the previous GFDL only licensing. In short, this means that text licensed under the GFDL only can no longer be imported to Wikipedia, retroactive to 1 November 2008. Additionally, Wikipedia text might or might not now be exportable under the GFDL depending on whether or not any content was added and not removed since July 15 2009. See Wikipedia:Licensing update for further information.

Verbatim copying under the GFDL is one of the ways to reuse Wikipedia articles and other material. You may only use this approach for pages that do not incorporate text that is exclusively available under CC-BY-SA or a CC-BY-SA-compatible license. See Re-use of text under the GNU Free Documentation License.

For the purposes of this discussion, Wikipedia is considered to be a Collection of Documents. (An alternative interpretation could be that Wikipedia is a single Document, which invalidates the discussion on this page.)

--NonZeroSum (talk) 18:42, 18 July 2017 (CEST)

Page Layout Ideas?

Keep going with facts & information, activism and alternative perspectives? --NonZeroSum (talk) 06:29, 15 July 2017 (CEST),

Sounds like a good general guideline.--BrimstoneSaladWiki (talk) 02:01, 16 July 2017 (CEST)

To Draw from

Forum Threads


Foraging

I have considered eating wild plants for a long time, but for some reason decided that doing so was extremist and nasty somehow. I have always feared that I am going to eat some poisonous plant.

Lately I have been looking into it again, possibly considering Clover and Dandelion as something to try out. Not for any magical healing BS or anything, but just to see what it is like, and possibly as a free food source. -- NerdyScienceGirl

Thoughts? Have you ever done this?

It can be excellent as a free food source, although these foods are not palatable to most people, and you may want to take care to research oxalates and considerations from eating a large amount of them.
Plants that grow in the wild are usually tougher, physically and chemically, which makes them less delicious. Our cultivated plants are particularly soft, made so to serve as a human food source, although that also makes them extremely vulnerable to pests. --BrimstoneSaladWiki

Edible gardening

For a long time I've been considering starting my own garden instead of having to constantly go to my local farmers market to buy my vegtables. I would like to start my garden by next week but I don't know the first thing to gardening nor do I know anything about keeping my plants healthy and products I should use to get the most out of them.

Anyone who has experience in this please give me as many tips as you can. From time to time if all goes aswell I will post pictures of my on going plant adventure and will eventually make a another thread describing my experience. --Neptual

I currently have a big garden, with which I sustain myself.
You don't need anything special to make plants grow: no manure, no pesticides, no fertilizers. Manure is not necessary, unlike many people believe (I know because I never used it, but my plants always produce more than what I expect), and pesticides are only useful to make your vegetables/fruits look perfect, without dents (like the ones you see in supermarkets; however, biological agriculture doesn't use fertilizers and pesticedes). To get the most out of them, just make a research on the plant/vegetable you wish to plant (inserting the name on Google gives you planty of information); check if it needs sun more than others or not, what are the best temperatures for it to grow, if it needs a special pH, etc.
Another important thing is to make the best use you possibly can out of the space you have at your disposal. Some vegetables/plants have a bad production/space ratio(i.e. pumpkins), while some others are the opposite (i.e. Brussels sprouts). Consider this factor to have the most efficient garden. Take also in consideration that some things like spinaches have high nutrition values (in the case of spinaches: vitamin A , vitamin C, vitamin E, vitamin K, magnesium, manganese, folate, betaine, iron, vitamin B2, calcium, potassium, vitamin B6, folic acid, copper, protein, phosphorus, zinc, niacin, selenium and omega-3 fatty acids; so they're perfect for a healthy diet, and yes I love spinaches).
In the end, if the plant you're looking for needs anything special, any valid site should tell you. Water the plants regularly, and remember that most vegetables need atleast 6 hours of sunlight daily.
If you want a book, I don't have any good suggestions, since I only have italian books. However, I recommend buying one, it's very useful. --thebestofenergy
Thanks for your helpful tips! I've only invested a small amount of money for garden space area and making sure that it is sufficient for what I need but have also combined your tips along with others in order to start the growth of a healthy garden :) I wasn't worried about the usage of manure because there is a horse stable nearby and they allow to take as much manure as I'd like to. On the other hand I am thankful that I won't have to use my time to gathering all of that manure, and even more thankful that I won't have to spend extra money on buying pesticides. --Neptual
I don't have anything intelligent to add to the conversation, but I'm kind of excited for this thread. I too want to start my own garden full of the staples I normally buy, and it would be great to see your experience first hand like that. I already have a compost started, simply because the soil is so dry and dead where I live. Hoping that I won't have to use fertilizer though, and I definitely was not going to use pesticide. What is your soil like over there, thebestofenergy? --itsund3rmykilt
I have a large place (more than 20'000 m^2), so the soil is noticeably different depending on the zones. I place certain plants where the soil is 'better', because they require so, while other plants don't ask for anything specific. Again, not making researches on the vegetables you're planning to plant is a way to start on the wrong foot, and you can easily find the pH a plant needs. Remember that the pH doesn't always necessarily have to be precise, it's usually just what the plant prefers.
I find this site very helpful regarding pH (how to measure it, how to change it, what it is, etc.) and the best type of soil http://milkwood.net/2014/03/17/how-to-t ... e-harvest/
And I find this site http://www.garden.org/ to be very useful for researches in general. --thebestofenergy
For veganic gardening you can buy ground rocks that essentially leach nutrients into the earth. cow manure is widely used so I think that avoiding that shit (hahaha) is pretty crucial. There is a dude that does veganic gardening on youtube and while he may be all spiritual and "californiad" out, his tips are very useful.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qt6hDgyIY6U -- Twizelby

External sources

Need to change the titles of everything quoted and give them a how it relates to veganism focus to give us enough room to change without copying. I'll probably reach out to trashwiki and say they have permission to use material from this page if we can borrow back from them, as 99.99% is going to be from the same angle, just be interesting to see what they come up with and where they diverge on the anti-consumerist stuff. --NonZeroSum

It's not practical to vary copyright and permissions on a page-by-page basis. It's best to just keep their stuff minimal and in quotes if it isn't public domain, and possibly link to it as a reference for further reading.--BrimstoneSaladWiki (talk) 22:33, 22 July 2017 (CEST)
Don't think I've quoted them at all, they're pages are pretty chaotic, I just thought about updating some of their sections with what I'd written, and asking if their stuff is public domain. It would be interesting to see what they left the same and where they diverged and the discussion that could be gained from that. --NonZeroSum (talk) 08:52, 23 July 2017 (CEST)


Wikipedia [2]

Very thorough, we can probably reference to their history overview. --NonZeroSum (talk) 06:29, 15 July 2017 (CEST)

Trashwiki [3]

This site is the go to that every freegan uses for maps and information on big cities when they don't know their way around or have someone to show them. Helplful 'last checked' dates also. Interesting recorded Freegan News and Events also.[4] --NonZeroSum (talk) 06:29, 15 July 2017 (CEST)

The Ultimate Guide To Dumpster Diving [5]

As it says in the title, think this is a great go to article, just a few naturalistic fallacies didn't want to copy over, the rest in the process of rereading and drawing from in my own terminology.

Food Waste & Freeganism (Unnatural Vegan)

The first of UV's videos on food waste and the second half of this one can probably be termed moving towards zero waste not freeganism, but it's all good listening. An introduction as to how it relates to veganism and use of the term.

Still be useful as I said in the beginning to get an educational video out there on how these networks of self-supporting freegans can reduce the need to consume on things like cat food, can organize to efficiently feed people on the cheap in the street and advocate for change in industry practices and the law through documenting, media and petitioning industry, councils and politicians.

Stealing

Freeganism started out as anti-consumerist ethic sees stealing as hurting the bottom line of all companies, creating irregular demand and no profit, as well as taking free animal products from strangers as some kind of gift economy that is commendable, so it is something we have to fight for the definition over, or use freegan-vegan instead. --NonZeroSum

The "stealing is OK" mantra seems to be dying, probably because it's illegal and people don't want to promote that in the mainstream, but it's also ethically inconsistent (it hurts retail stores and consumers: the stores which have to restock benefiting the companies making that product because the retail store has to pay for spillage, and the consumers because most of the cost gets passed on to them as markup), I think it's worth fighting over for simplicity's sake, and making arguments against those practices as fake freeganism in the article. We could have different articles on freeganism, zero-waste, and minimalism--BrimstoneSaladWiki (talk) 22:33, 22 July 2017 (CEST)
Hmm I just think it would be historically inaccurate to call theft fake freeganism, the founding propaganda 'Why freegan?' including theft and employee scams, also the freegan movement ethic that it's better to steal from a multi-national franchises than a small independent to survive and the desire to see them rid of out of communities by putting pressure on them so they aren't financially viable - [6]
It might be appropriate to call taking food offered to you fake freeganism because of a misguided understanding of it being a free-diet like vegetarian to free..g..an, but IMO the theft thing will just have to be dissuaded in the criticism section. --NonZeroSum (talk) 03:28, 23 July 2017 (CEST)
Stealing animal products still triggers the demand from the supplier that salvaging from a dumpster does not. This makes it fake freeganism; you're driving demand none-the-less. I could understand stealing non-animal products as an act of assault against a corporation just as would be any form of property damage. I don't agree with it for a number of reasons both in principle and in terms of logistics, but I can see why those anti-capitalist freegans would see it as preferable to purchasing. That doesn't reduce or negate the harm to animals from animal products, though, thus fake freegan (unless the stolen items are legitimately vegan, which is something we could address in the criticism section). (Also, no need to post wiki content on the forum now, I don't want Google's cache to get confused once this is live which we should probably do pretty soon) --BrimstoneSaladWiki (talk) 07:28, 23 July 2017 (CEST)
No problem, I already conceded we can probably call using any animal products from exploitation that aren't waste - not vegan, hence not freegan and a confused simple face understanding of the word freegan like free-diet-etarian.
I didn't think about the google catch thing, but I won't for every page just wanted to share to UV's patreon without giving the wiki address away, and get people on the forum more involved. I don't mind when the wiki goes up, I haven't done as much as I'd have liked because I was annoyed by the lack of transparency and working together that would have solved problems sooner. So killed the enthusiasm to commit, but will just carry on writing articles that interest me and expanding my reading through discussion. --NonZeroSum (talk) 08:31, 23 July 2017 (CEST)
I'm just worried about spammers from public posting, I think sharing on Patreon groups is fine as long as you ask people not to share the link where spammers can find it. I'll leave it up to your discretion where would be safe to share the link. Spam can be a serious problem on wikis and make them unusable fast https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Manual:Combating_spam I know from dealing with the forum that manual intervention doesn't cut it. I will go ahead and post a link on the forum in text people can type in and spammers probably won't get. I'm not sure how many more people will join in since only a few users expressed interest. We'll wait on a clickable link. I don't know what you mean about transparency.--BrimstoneSaladWiki (talk) 23:14, 23 July 2017 (CEST)