Agree with Gray's view. Also, a recent guess presentation by FtW went beyond the basics of their approach (see below), covered many sustainability bases, including three different general ways to look at environmental problems, the basic income idea, and even the over-consumption issue which I've found challenging to do. Besides this, they were ahead of just about anyone in New Jersey on calling for zero carbon and have that unique way of approaching it. While I don't agree with every point, I think it's important to support them. I admire their persistence to keep knocking on the public awareness door, willingness to ask hard questions about more popular approaches, be the contrarian, openness to suggestions and evolution, as they continue to get better at presenting a not-easy message.
I was intrigued by the "coaching" video and by Rezwan's goal to get to zero carbon, as opposed to simply more renewables and less fossil fuels. Plus I admired her research, the emphasis on solutions rather than just the problem, and the harsh realities of what we have to do. I recommend getting to know fp2w, and getting to work with fp2w, to everyone concerned about climate change!