

Begin with The Not So Hidden Costs of Consumption by Stephanie Kaza. The article is a little old, so some of the data may be slightly out of date, but the main points about the impact of affluence and technology on environmental degradation are explained beautifully.
This article by Michael J. Hanauer, Director of Zero Population Growth makes the case that overpopulation more destructive to the earth’s environment than overconsumption.
Read these FAQs on Buy Nothing Day.
Halfway down this web page there is a CNN interview with Kalle Lasn, founder of Buy Nothing Day. Play the interview. You’ll need a media player like QuickTime to run it.
One of the primary antidotes to overconsumption is the Voluntary Simplicity movement. Read this introduction to voluntary simplicity.
Affluenza.org has about a dozen links to the impact of over consumption on society and the environment. The one on the role that youth and overconsumption is worth reading.
Scroll down this page on time stress and read the statistics they have accumulated.
Go to buynothingday.org and click through all their links. It’s a devilishly clever website. Be sure to visit their Insecure Store to check out their tee-shirt offer.
Browse the New American Dream website. You’re sure to find something interesting here.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/worldbalance/material.html Material world photos and accompanying descriptions.
TV Addiction. It really does behave like a drug.
Join the Culture Jammers network:
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are a global network of artists, activists, writers, pranksters,
students, educators and entrepreneurs. We are downshifters,
shit-disturbers, rabble-rousers, incorrigibles and malcontents. We are
anarchists, guerrilla tacticians, neo-Luddites, pranksters, poets,
philosophers and punks. Our aim is to topple existing power structures
and forge a major shift in the way we will live in the 21st century.
Check out the I Buy Different website. It’s designed for youth that want to make a difference.
Prepared by Eric Pallant and Terry Bensel 9/05. Updated 9/06.