WE Network- Our Instant Co-op Eco Village Engine
- May 27
- 4 min read

WE Network is a cooperative initiative rooted in the principles of Gaian Religion, focused on building sustainable Co-op Homestead Pioneer Villages to heal the Earth and humanity. Founded by Ivy in the United States, WE Network aims to eliminate waste in all its forms — wasted lands, towns, and people — by revitalizing ghost towns, supporting distressed farmers, providing a haven for the homeless and shunned religious communities, and fostering a minimalist, community-driven lifestyle. The initiative operates on a cooperative model, sharing resources, labor, and profits to make radical sustainability accessible to all, while promoting gender equality, free education, and spiritual healing.
Mission and Structure
WE Network’s mission is to create sustainable, self-sufficient villages that embody Gaian principles, addressing environmental degradation, societal inequities, and the health crisis caused by toxic corporate systems. The network operates on a cooperative model, with a membership fee of $3.33 per month, generating revenue that is split equally among three key areas: web technology, farmers, and ghost town revitalization projects. At 100 members, this results in $111 per month allocated to each sector, ensuring financial support for the community’s core needs. The initiative is guided by the matriarchal teachings of the Kilbillion and the unedited Ethiopian Bible, which emphasize the divine feminine, community cooperation, and stewardship of the Earth.
WE Network’s villages are designed to eliminate waste in multiple dimensions:
Wasted Lands and Towns: By revitalizing ghost towns and unused lands, the villages transform neglected spaces into thriving, sustainable hubs.
Wasted People: The network provides a sanctuary for the homeless, distressed farmers, and shunned religious amish, etc.. anyone …who have nowhere else to go, offering them housing, purpose, and a supportive community.
Material Waste: Through advanced waste management systems, the villages repurpose materials like plastic into plastoline (a sustainable vehicle fuel), organic waste into compost or biogas via methane digesters, and metals and miscellaneous items into raw materials for trade shops via EcoJunk processing.
Practices and Village Design
WE Network’s Cooperative Homestead Pioneer Villages are inspired by historical pioneer towns but reimagined for sustainability, reflecting Gaian principles through the classical elements:
Earth (Connection to the Planet): The villages feature silvopasture forest gardens, healing gardens, and sustainable agriculture practices like rewilding and plateau domestication to restore ecosystems and provide chemical-free food. Buildings are constructed using natural and waste materials, such as palletable cobbins (a combination of pallets and cob, a mixture of clay, sand, and straw) and earthship-inspired designs with recycled tires and bottles. These materials are used to create multi-story tiny houses, with trade shops on the ground floor and minimalist living quarters upstairs, reducing environmental impact.
Water (Community and Helping Others): The villages operate as cooperatives, fostering community through shared resources, labor, and profits. They provide a haven for marginalized groups, including the homeless, who receive housing; distressed farmers, who gain access to sustainable farming resources; and shunned religious communities, who find an egalitarian space free from patriarchal oppression. WE Network hosts “Gaian Weekend Warrior Fellowship meet ups” every weekend, inviting locals to learn sustainable practices, participate in trade shop activities, and engage in healing rituals, strengthening community bonds.
Fire (Spiritual Dimension): Spiritual practices are central to WE Network, with villages offering Kundalini-inspired mindful meditation sessions, similar to the methods of Dr. Joe Dispenza, to connect members with Gaia’s life force and promote healing. These meditations often incorporate reflections on the matriarchal teachings of the Ethiopian Bible, particularly the Book of Mary, to honor the divine feminine. The inclusive environment provides spiritual healing for those who’ve been marginalized, aligning with Gaian beliefs in past lives and the presence of ancestors.
Air (Knowledge): WE Network prioritizes free education, rejecting societal barriers like costs that prevent learning. Every trade shop in the villages offers apprenticeships, providing hands-on training in sustainable practices like plastoline fuel production, weaving, and metalworking. The weekend meet ups further this mission by educating locals, ensuring knowledge is shared freely and equitably.
The villages embrace a minimalist lifestyle, prioritizing community experiences over material possessions. For example, residents prefer enjoying coffee with friends at a village coffee shop rather than owning a personal coffee maker, fostering social interaction and reducing environmental impact.
Cultural and Environmental Impact
WE Network has made significant strides in demonstrating a scalable model for radical sustainability and social inclusion. By revitalizing ghost towns, the initiative transforms “wasted” spaces into vibrant hubs, supporting local economies through trade shops that produce goods like woven baskets and metal tools for sale at markets. The villages’ closed-loop waste management systems — producing plastoline fuel, biogas, and raw materials — reduce environmental harm and provide sustainable alternatives to corporate products, aligning with Gaian rejection of toxic systems. The inclusion of marginalized groups ensures that no human potential is wasted, offering a path to healing and self-sufficiency for the homeless, distressed farmers, and shunned religious communities.
Notable Developments
On May 22, 2025, at 10:00 AM EDT, WE Network, led by founder Ivy, announced the relaunch of its online platform during a virtual gathering. Gaian Weekend Warrior Fellowship meet ups — recurring weekend events where local communities are invited to join Gaian villages to learn, shop, and heal. The relaunch focused on fostering community, sharing knowledge about natural living, waste elimination, sustainable fuel production, minimalist village design, and support for marginalized groups, while spiritually grounding the initiative in Gaia’s energy and emphasizing a deep connection to the land.
Criticism and Challenges
Critics argue that WE Network’s radical sustainability practices, such as rejecting corporate products and relying on natural materials, may be impractical for widespread adoption due to the significant lifestyle changes required. However, the Cooperative Homestead Pioneer Villages address these concerns by providing communal infrastructure, resources, sustainable fuel alternatives like plastoline, minimalist housing, free education through apprenticeships, accessible weekend meet ups, and support for marginalized groups, making Gaian living more feasible. Some view the spiritual aspects, such as the belief in past lives and the use of the Kilbillion and Ethiopian Bible, as unscientific, but WE Network maintains that its holistic approach is essential for addressing climate change, ecological degradation, and social inequities.
See Also
Gaian Religion
Gaia Hypothesis
Deep Ecology
Ecovillage Movement
Indigenous Environmental Knowledge
Sustainable Agriculture
Rewilding
Kundalini Meditation
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WE Network founder building co-op villages with food forests & silvopasture. Revitalizing ghost towns, supporting farmers, & creating a sustainable future
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