b'Perhaps this is the final chapter in the story of capitalism. Its not about parts per million or parts per billion, per se. Its not about soil carbon or organic food, per se. Its not about getting local food consumption up from a few percent to a few more percent, per se. Its not about macro-economic indicators, per se. Its about taking back control of some of our money and putting it to work directly, personally and locally. Its about knowing, and prioritizing, the value of community. Its about the possibility of a broad-based movement of reconnection and regrounding, robust enough to help us navigate some of the days most daunting systemic challenges.This must be the final chapter in the story of capitalism: In Which Homo Sapiens Brings Money Back Down to Earth, Celebrates Making a Living over Making a Killing, and Otherwise Makes Peace and Love, Once and for All.Somewhat less grand than that: A new sector of finance called nurture capital that goes where venture capital and philanthropy, 20 th -century- style, do not. Less grand but no less important than that: A new generation of organic farms and corps of folks coming together across the land to support them.Even closer to home and more enjoyable than watching someone sipping borscht during a Zoom meeting: Making a 0% loan to a local organic farmer, in concert with a few friends.It just may prove that the only way to health and peace is to stop focusing on political maps and financial power, and to focus, rather, on the whole living kit and caboodle and our place in it. This will require a 22'