Black Gully Music Festival 2022
10am SAT NOV 9th

Every year Armidale folk gather at Black Gully (behind NERAM) to celebrate community, music and biodiversity
Armidale Vegetable Sowing Guide
This guide shows planting time periods that should allow you to get a crop in Armidale.
Lightbulb Moments
Take control of your electrical use & costs with this Resource Guide Online PDF and Print PDF for welfare agencies to assist clients, colleagues and community.

Progressive Cinema continues with ‘The Economics of Happiness’

a documentary film from the International Society for Ecology & Culture

at 7:30pm on Wednesday, 20th July,

at the Armidale Club, 91 Beardy Street

Turntables Restaurant will be open from 6pm.

The screenings are usually held on the second Wednesday of the month, but in July it will be the third Wednesday to avoid the school holidays.

The highly acclaimed documentary, The Economics of Happiness, shows how millions of people around the planet are already engaged in building a better world through re-creating more democratic, human-scale, ecological and local economies.

The film features a chorus of well-known voices from six continents calling for systemic economic change, including prominent authors and activists such as Vandana Shiva, Bill McKibben, Michael Shuman, Zac Goldsmith and Clive Hamilton. Their message is that the best defence against climate change and peak oil is to bring the economy home, and that in so doing we can restore our own sense of well-being.

The film is both hard-hitting and inspiring, connecting the dots between ever-expanding corporate power, climate chaos and economic meltdown and personal alienation and mental stress. It tells the story of a grassroots movement for localization that, all around the world, is growing out through the cracks of a faltering global economy to forge a very different future. It shows communities coming together to re-build on a more human scale, creating the ecological, local economies that are the foundation of ‘an economics of happiness’.

For more information call Bea on {mobile prefix O-four}58 752 680.

Please pass this on to others who might be interested.

All welcome, entry $5 concession, $10 regular or $15 solidarity.

1 comment to Progressive Cinema continues with ‘The Economics of Happiness’

  • cathie

    I found this film really inspiring and worth further discussion, hopefully moving towards some personal action plans. I’d like there to be a place (virtual or real) one could go to for further discussions. Probably means I need to learn how to use Facebook. Any ideas?