As a Millennial, the warnings about climate change and the destruction of the world we live have been a constant background for my whole life. Sometimes I try to assuage my feelings of helplessness and rage by reading books like this one.
Curing Affluenza has a simple thesis - if we loved the stuff we already owned, we would spend the time and effort to repair and maintain it instead of buying new stuff that we don't need and thereby saving the environmental and human resources that go into creating, packaging, transporting, selling, and disposing of more stuff. I liked a lot of the ideas in the book about what a world that loved its stuff would look like, and I particularly liked the parts about leisure as a substitute for stuff. If we worked less, we would have more spare time (to fix, recycle, and create our own stuff) and less money to spend on buying new stuff. I also liked the argument that greater wealth equality, which can partially be achieved by people working less and therefore freeing up workdays for those who need them, is going to lead to less stuff overall because status symbols are ridiculous if everyone has the same amount of money. The book also had some great ideas that I'd never thought of before, like the idea that community-shared 3D printers can help to recycle broken plastic things and make them into new plastic things.
However, I was a little disappointed that the realities and practicalities of a world that was cured of affluenza weren't engaged with much. The author suggests that we don't really have to sacrifice anything in order to not buy new stuff, but I don't really think that's the case. We do have to sacrifice convenience and time in order for this kind of world to work, and that's okay - the point is that a) we don't have a choice and b) it will be worthwhile. More importantly, though, there was little discussion about how to change the world into one where affluenza is cured. At the moment, the reason that we buy new stuff when our old stuff breaks is fundamentally that it is either extremely (relatively) expensive or actually impossible to repair broken objects that are more than a few years old. It would have been helpful and inspiring for the book to contain some more specific, concrete suggestions for how various classes of things can be appropriately repaired in an ideal world, rather than the vague suggestion that communities should have repair workshops where things get repaired.
I was also frustrated by the lack of examples of communities who had implemented these kinds of changes and how they did it. It's hard to push for change if you don't know what the new world would look like and how others have achieved it. Additionally, there were multiple claims made without citations (e.g., that Canberra will be on 100% renewables by 2020). I believe the claims, but why not include a reference so the interested reader can easily find out more?
The book was an easy, light read, but it would have been improved with less repetition of points that had already been made and more detail about what a world cured of affluenza would look like and how we could get there.