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Author: TheKuboQueen

Cars — Optional

Pike’s Place Market is an iconic tourist stop in Seattle, yet the pedestrian visitors still have to dodge traffic around it.

Why do Americans drive their cars everywhere? Unfortunately, many areas in our country are built for them, not built for the comfort of people. Large parts of cities are zoned for single-family houses, for instance, meaning businesses and transit hubs probably aren’t within walking distance of home. When businesses are within walking distance, the way there is likely to be along a busy road full of high-speed cars, and the store is probably surrounded by a large parking lot. To make matters worse, many motorists aren’t even looking out for pedestrians. I’ve been cut off while in the crosswalk more than once. Trying to bike anywhere in these types of cities carries similar inconvenience and risk.

Is the Kubo Rich Life Green?

The very green Bavarian countryside. Our German friends took us to tour the two famous castles in Bavaria.

Here at the Kubo, we’ve been what might be labelled frugal for quite a while. For the most part, Kubo King doesn’t care for a closet full of clothes or the latest iPhone, and I’ve been a penny-pincher since I went away to college and had to start paying my own rent. Over time, our natural tendencies to resist being consumers have been reinforced — by learning about investing and financial independence on his part; and by learning about the minimalist movement on my part. At the intersection of these two movements, we have found common ground on handling our money.

In 2018, though, a third motivation to reduce consumption was brought to our attention.

The Merchants of Doubt and Their Dangerous Product

The conclusion of Merchants of Doubt begins with this scene:

Imagine a gigantic banquet. Hundreds of millions of people come to eat. They eat and drink to their hearts’ content — eating food that is better and more abundant than at the finest tables in ancient Athens or Rome, or even in the palaces of medieval Europe. Then, one day, a man arrives, wearing a white dinner jacket. He says he is holding the bill. Not surprisingly, the diners are in shock. Some begin to deny that this is their bill. Others deny that there even is a bill. Still others deny that they partook of the meal. One diner suggests that the man is not really a waiter, but is only trying to get attention for himself or to raise money for his own projects. Finally, the group concludes that if they simply ignore the waiter, he will go away.

Who among us wouldn’t be reluctant to pick up that tab? But the above anecdote isn’t about an imaginary feast at all — it’s actually about industrial civilization’s feast on energy from fossil fuels. And the bill? It’s also real. It’s the environmental consequences of this feast, which include global warming. But actually, how can the authors make such a bold statement about global warming when the science behind it is still mired in controversy?

A Kubo Rich Wedding; or, Our Less Than $2K Wedding

Our hotel suite, the morning after our wedding.

Kubo King and I got engaged in May of 2017, when we had been together for just over five years. We had talked about getting married for a while, but we were still in school and we thought that getting married required a lot of money. When we did get engaged, we decided to have the wedding a full year later, so that it could happen over summer vacation and we would have time to save money for a big wedding with Kubo King’s family in Hawaii.