Everyone was taught from birth all the basic things... medical training,
most languages, how math, language, letters, numbers, symbols, body language, and science works...biological function, gardening, building principles, physics, etc... no knowledge was off the table or inaccessible.
Then people started planting seeds...
Trees, fruit, bushes, weeds, flowers, ivy, vines, water plants, vegetables, herbs...anything you could think of...and not just once or twice, but stubbornly, until the soil& environments could hold or grow any more plants in the local area.
The birds came back.
Worms & earth-enriching bacterial cultures flourished again.
Humans were excited when the rabbits & deer came, but became scared when foxes, wolves & other larger animals began exploring the newly revived environments...
Humans that weren't scared of the larger animals guided, taught & eventually led a system of symbiosis with the animals...centuries of human interference taught us that these species could be trained & we did exactly that.
We had buildings & mini-homes built.
The buildings were for the economy & communities, and obviously the homes were for the people in the area & were offered for free, powered by a combination of solar, wind, tidal, geothermal, kinetic, biomatter-based, magnetic & naturalectric energy sources depending on geographic location.
Commerce was broken down but still global.
Each town had a hub Megabuilding that acted as a market where people could sell things they had made independently, or enter into a contract with the town to sell their makings in this town only for a set period.
Smaller buildings were available to long term town residents that wanted to specialize or own their own storefront.
Each Megabuilding had unique goods & traded/sold between each other.
Each smaller building could only trade in materials & supplies, not finished goods, though as an individual you could still trade finished goods with other individuals, whenever & wherever you like.
On vinyl for the first time courtesy of Geometric Lullaby, this dream synth epic spans moods and textures to create a soundworld all its own Bandcamp New & Notable Dec 2, 2022
The latest from the aptly-named bleak lives in the dark valley between musique concrete & power electronics, stark and harrowing. Bandcamp New & Notable Sep 19, 2021
This ambient pop album from Chute Records label head Jan the Man captures melancholy, contemplative moods simply, and without words. Bandcamp New & Notable Jun 15, 2021