Valor Hipotético Futuro del negocio IA https://t.co/jghhvkOy9J pic.twitter.com/zpZCgK8wsC
— Guillermo Ruiz Zapatero (@ruiz_zapatero) August 14, 2025
#WENDELLBERRY #MANIFESTO1: LAUGH https://t.co/9jUEY3Tgin @wendelldaily
— Guillermo Ruiz Zapatero (@ruiz_zapatero) January 1, 2022
Every day do something
That won't compute
Denounce the government and embrace
The flag.Hope to live in that free
Republic for which it stands
Expect the end of the world.Laugh
Laughter is immeasurable pic.twitter.com/Z7PIlTAGHX
Cada día haz algo que sea incalculable
Denuncia al gobierno y abraza
la bandera.Anhela vivir en aquella república
libre que representa.
Espera el fin del mundo. Ríe
La risa es inconmensurable
WB
I am ashamed that #American government should have become the chief cause of disillusionment with #American principles
#wendellberry
#thinklittle 1972
For most of the history of this country our motto, implied or spoken, has been Think Big. A better motto, an essential one now, is Think Little.
(…)
The lotus eaters of this era are in Washington, D.C., Thinking Big. Somebody perceives a problem, and somebody in the government comes up with a plan or a law. The result, mostly, has been the persistence of the problem and the enlargement and enrichment of the government.
But the discipline of thought is not generalization; it is detail, and it is personal behavior.
(…)
Odd as I am sure it will appear to some, I can think of no better form of personal involvement in the cure of environment that that of gardening.
(…)
Amid the outcries for the liberation of this group or that, we will know that no person is free except in the freedom of other persons, and that our only real freedom is to know and faithfully occupy our place-a much humbler place that we have taught to think- in the order of creation.
(…)
The principles of ecology, if we will take them to heart, should keep us aware that our lives depend upon other lives and upon processes and energies in an interlocking system that, though we can destroy it, we can neither fully understand nor fully control. And our great dangerousness is that, locked in our selfish and myopic economy, we have been willing to change or destroy far beyond our power to understand. We are not humble enough or reverent enough.
(…)
Sometime ago , I heard a representative of a paper company refer to conservation as a “no-return investment”.
(…)
Consider in contrast, the profound ecological intelligence of Black Elk, “a holy man of the Oglala Sioux”, who in telling his story said that it was not his own life that was important to him, but what he shared with all life:
“It is the story of all life that is holy and is good to tell, and of us two-leggeds sharing in it with the four-leggeds and the wings of the air and all green things…”
(…)
“And I saw that it was holy”
(A continuous Harmony: Essays Cultural and Agricultural (1972))
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