Tech can also be disruptive and cause stuff not to last so long all by itself, because it becomes obsolete and its hard to future-proof things even if you wanted to.
True, but we can make things that don't last long last longer, thus reducing the energy required to re-use the materials.
My 2010 ipad won't run anything at all even though there is no wear and tear on the gadget except the battery.
Hahaha, yep, I gave up trying to use mine for the internet a few years ago. Last I know it was OK for casting to a TV.
As I said in another response if you can convince people to pay for the cost of shortened life for stuff and that is the only waste there is, then it isn't actually formally a waste and there is no system-wide loss. However that isn't the only waste there is and sustainability is about negative costs that nobody privately pays for and that therefore approximately nobody has a private incentive to cure (until it's "too late").
Just today on Facebook, I've seen a couple of people in Africa say they recycle everything in their country, and don't buy new things, and yet here they are, having free time on the internet (of things).
Innovations can also tackle one problem but create others, the agriculture green revolution doubled crop yields (which is efficient in my book) but trebled water use to get it (which is inefficient when water isn't free/valueless)
Not getting into the Green Revolution vs Organic debate, which is pretty much in the past anyway, as "conventional" becomes more sustainable, and "organic" becomes harder to define.
I can't tell from your replies - do you think we are in transition towards an eventually almost-circular economy, less growth-based capitalism, and away from plutocracy?
I don't think we've gone down the road yet in this thread about government/law.
I've been watching videos with Jeremy Rifkin and about his The Third Industrial Revolution and The Zero Marginal Cost Society.
He seems to be the visionary that outlined the blueprint for the EU and countries like Finland to be 100% no landfill by 2025.
I'm not sure who the visionary is for the future form of laws and government, though I've seen mention on that topic of "The Collaborist Era", and I think that hinted likening it to music/video streaming, copyleft, open source, green energy networks, compared to the top-down directed mega-corporations and coal powered state energy.
The answer may emerge out of networking.
I'm enjoying this discussion a great deal.

Really happy to have you participate.
