
There's this guy named David. He goes by "Waterguy". He's not at all shy about what he believes in but in about everything else, he's kind of like, the guy who just watches things and speaks up sometimes at the wrong times.
He's about as suave and adept in social settings as a goose protecting his brood.
My kind of guy. It's why we hired him to do One World Theater in Austin.
He doesn't give a rat's ass about who likes him or who doesn't.
He's one of those guys who are so into the truth of his prophetic message, that he's blind to the climbing, clinging hierarchy of power-hungry governmental weedy, greedy vines. The ones who use "the way it was" to keep things "the way they are."
This guy is the most consistent and insistent proponent of doing it "green" that I've ever met. Sustainability to him is gospel.
I've been reading his Bible for years and quote from his verses often.
"Therefore, I say unto you, why build it big and expensive and event-sensitive, when you can build it small, inexpensive and decentralized?"
David's motto is something like, "Your shit is my business," and he takes everybody's shit seriously.
He gets off taking care of our waste, in the least wasteful way imaginable.
He's a water and waste-water engineer who, for thirty years, has been screaming to decentralize things, to keep things simple, to keep things affordable and in the hands of private enterprise, not in the infernal wastelands of layered governmental complexity.
My kind of guy.
David is going to slay the Goliath of "Feed the Greed" by slinging the small stone of "Home Gardening". Genesis, perhaps, for a new Living Paradigm.
David also goes by the name, "Gardenguy", the Softer Side of "Seer".
The Urban and Suburban Farm, "Micro Organic Neighborhood Farming", is emerging as a viable means to ground development into meaningful and sustainable culture.
Mark my words.
This is where things are headed, thank goodness, thank God.
Plant good things now or forever hold your peace.
