Inside investment: The Super Glue generation

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Inside investment: The Super Glue generation

The economies of developed nations are now dangerously dependent on consumption funded by debt to spur growth. Turning the clock back to make do and mend won’t be painless but it is both inevitable and long overdue.

In 1878 a group of Presbyterians from Mercer, Pennsylvania, formed a gentlemen’s fishing club on an island in a vast lake in the northern reaches of Ontario, Canada. It was in the territory of the Dokis Band of the Ojibwe Nation. The original campers were men of substance as well as faith but they chose to live in tents for a six-week sojourn and to enjoy the rigours and privations that such conditions entailed.

They brought their provisions with them for the most part, including live chickens that were settled on a smaller island nearby to provide eggs and meat should their piscatorial skills prove insufficient and to vary their diets. After a few years, their ladies joined them on these aestival excursions. The location is remote to this day. There is no electricity at the camp except for a generator that runs a few hours each night. Mobile phones do not work and there is no internet access.

Cabins have replaced tents and wholesome common meals are provided in a clubhouse perched at the highest point on the island. The club has refrained from adding other amenities, such as proper paths.

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