New Thinking To Save The Earth
This week, spring fever takes the form of the fever pitch to which concern over global warming is rising. Last Saturday was the National Day of Climate Action, a campaign organized by writer Bill McKibben, aimed at getting Congress to "step it up" and cut US carbon emissions 80 percent by 2050. Next Sunday is Earth Day -- part festival and part political demonstration, always a call to action for the environment.The urgency of such events comes from recent scientific reports that make impending ecological catastrophes more vivid than ever. Nations and municipalities must begin now to plan for effects on drinking water, sea levels, toxins, and various social dislocations that already seem inevitable. Not even the Bush administration any longer argues that climate change is a minor issue, unrelated to human activity.
As individuals, we set about collecting batteries, recycling cellphones, buying energy-efficient light bulbs, choosing paper instead of plastic, not topping off the gas tank, supporting wind power, picking up after the dog with biodegradable baggies, writing to Congress, sorting the trash into yet more categories, investing in eco-responsible companies -- always looking for ways to reduce the newly named "carbon footprint."
Such adjustments can seem like nuisances at one end or monumental challenges at the other, but behavioral responses to potential ecological disaster are the easy part. Far more challenging is the task of revising the way we think about basic aspects of how we live. If the earth is to survive as a human habitat the meaning of subjects like these must be transformed:
Nature. We Americans, speaking generally, see a gulf between ourselves and "nature." From created worlds of concrete, we make occasional forays into given realms of trees, rock, sand, or sea. We go "back to nature" as if we left it behind when, say, we put clothes on or built cities. But this sense of detachment allows us to imagine we can trash nature without trashing ourselves. Conversely, nature's mechanism for saving itself includes human ingenuity. We humans are not above nature or apart from it. We are of nature.
Nation. A 19th-century notion of national sovereignty allows sub groups to pursue agendas without regard for their effects on the whole. But this wrongly assumes that the health of the whole is a matter of indifference to the group. The United States has long refused to temper its claim to radical independence from all other nations, but that both defines the source of America's disproportionate ecological destructiveness and impedes every effort to mitigate it. There will be no stopping environmental degradation until nations stop thinking of independent sovereignty as an absolute. Climate change respects no borders.
Property. In America, where full citizenship was originally granted only to property owners, we are what we have. The pursuit of happiness equals the accumulation of possessions. This cult of "more" drives an economy that defines its health by growth, its market by the globe. In families, the success of a second generation is defined only by its surpassing in affluence the first. This merciless consumption divides people into "haves," "the have less," and "have nots," but it also eats the environment alive. Sufficiency, simplicity, and a sense that the treasures of the earth are the property of all people must become notes of the new America.
Power. Once, this nation took for granted that its power in the world depended on the sway of the American idea -- liberal democracy, freedom, opportunity, equality. But in the middle of the 20th century that changed, a move away from influence to imposition. Power came from an arsenal, and ultimate power from a nuclear arsenal. Today's Pentagon budget is at Cold War levels without the Cold War because we Americans no longer believe in the power of our own idea. But military power is an illusion, as Iraq shows, like Vietnam before it. Resisting populations cannot finally be coerced, only killed. Meanwhile, nuclear weapons still threaten the environment more than anything.
Global warming can prompt a terrible fatalism, as if forecast catastrophes are certain to befall the planet. But the future is not an extension through time of what is already perceived. That's the point of revised thinking about everything from nature to power, since history shows that thought is the soul of creativity, and therefore of creation. Human choices brought the earth to this brink of ultimate harm, and human choices, informed by changed ideas, can rescue it.
James Carroll's column appears regularly in the Globe.
© Copyright 2007 The Boston Globe
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48 Comments so far
Show Allballerina,
If that link doesn't work here, try it outside this website.
ballerina,
Very wise comments, but it's worse than we like to imagine: As the human population grows and the economy expands, the pollution is seeping into every living thing on Earth as described at http://www.ewg.org. This means the human race must immediately begin to recycle 100% of its industrial and human waste. If not, something similar "The Handmaids Tale" will come true in our lifetimes, or we could simply pass into extinction like all the thousands we have wiped out since evolving on this planet of predation where life must devour life to live.
The Earth is now starting to take her revenge on a species that has become like a cancer within her. It is a species which has moved beyond need to greed. As I said before in response to an earlier article, specio-centricity will probably kill us off, but the Earth will abide. Who knows, there might have been life as we know it on Mars a few billion years ago and it might have even looked kind of like us, but then they blew it, but Mars is still there putting along. Maybe Venus will be the next habitat for life to evolve on.
But seriously, I think there is hope to save the planet and I know there are scientists working on very interesting projects which will be part of the solution. Meanwhile, we have got to get over this greed thing because it's killing us in so many ways.
I'm always drawn to the variant of the old saying "The race is not always to the swift of foot .... but that's the way to bet."
While we are indeed risking mankind's future and we must immediately alter our ways, the smart line is that mankind loses big. There is nothing out there to make the odds get anything except worse as time goes on. I'll do what I can to do the right things but I am resigned to what seems to be an inevitable outcome. There is no future.
Mr. Hausle,
Hi, I'm with you all the way when it comes to taking action, never giving up, and being hopeful in a realistic way. I learned about James Carroll's "new" meanings long ago. Yet Carroll's idea of property, for instance, would never go over in the US, figuratively or literally; no one really "owns" anything, we share equally with all, etc. We'd soon be hearing, unfairly, calls of communism or socialism, a hateful word in the US. The majority, I don't beleive, wouldn't even go for Jesus Christ's idea of "communism".
Concerning climate change. Of course, probabilities are not inevitabilities (all respectable scientific studies acknowledge this, they are not religious fundamentalists predicting the end of times).
Regards,
Robert
Mr. Lightfoot,
I must respectfully disagree with your opinion that it is too late to "make a dent at this point". Furthermore, I don't know how you can KNOW this because humanity (at least in a collective way) has yet to learn how to live in cooperation with life. It is my sentiment that just because humanity hasn't learned yet, doesn't mean it can't be learned, and if humanity begins to live in an ecologically reverent manner, the possibilities are wonderful and changes could happen most rapidly. It seems to me that there is tremendous potential in what people think. If we think we can improve things, then we are part of the way there.
I suspect I am most familiar with many of the "areas of science" you refer to, but I recognize that science is about probabilities based on the best information/knowledge at hand. Probabilities are just that: chances, likelihoods, risks, etc. They are NOT inevitabilities.
Aware, caring, and knowledgeable individuals are going to be the ones who find solutions if there are solutions to be found. None of us know the future, but if we think a bleak future in inevitable then the likelihood of such increases.
I will remain hopeful --- not blissfully hopeful, nor running into windmills hopeful --- but, hopeful that people can begin to work together to find solutions. This is my choice, and the way I see it, it increases the likelihood of finding solutions, plus it gives me hope.
If hope is lost, then what is left?
Ken
P.S. jp, my earlier statement regarding choice wasn't so much directed at you as much as at the conversation between you and kivals. I apologize for any confusion I caused.
Mr. Hausle,
"Don't you want things to get better?" Why wouldn't I?
There are verifiable facts put out by scientific communities in all areas of science, you can google them yourself, which show how deep we are in this problem which, if you realized their extent, even as you say "Hope coupled with action can be meaningful," will not make a dent at this point.
The problem with people on the whole is that they sometimes refuse to accept the inevitable ways of Nature. It's good to be hopeful, to take action, and to never give up.
kivals
i thnk it takes a supreme divorce from the actual world, as well as a kind of arrogance that got us right where we all are to assert that the earth has no self-concern - remember that 18th century vivisectionists said that the dog's cries of pain were a biological automation and did not signify real pain. i am not very interested in a whole bunch of philosophizin' that starts off with such an insupportable supposition, for one, and the dying marine species come to me each night in dreams and demand soemthing better, for another.
jp,
As you may have moved on, this may not reach you, but I cannot help but respond.
I understand that groups besides those based on socio-economic status may have much value and validity. If there were no justification for such groupings, they would not provide opportunities for the corporate elites to use them so successfully. I just see them as an unaffordable luxury and as offering an invitation to manipulation and division.
I also see moral systems, and virtually all developed human behaviors, as originating in survival and procreation needs. But of course the current environment may not be the optimal place for some of those behaviors to develop. As for protecting the weak, or helping the needy, the groups that took care of other members of their groups had an evolutionary advantage, as such behavior would inevitably increase group solidarity.
But I do concede the point made by Ken as I suspect our agreements are much greater than our disagreements. Our disputes remind me of the Monty Python characters in The Life of Brian who are in an anti-Roman group that ends up fighting other anti-Roman groups, over trivial differences of course, more than it fights the Romans.
Ken,
I must move on to today's article, but wanted to respond to your post. This is a great forum for people like me who have boring jobs and access to a computer!
I actually enjoy kival's posts, which are often provocative and interesting, and I also enjoy the intellectual give and take. I consider these exchanges a good opportunity to clarify and analyze my own thinking.
I am sorry if you think these arguments are obstructionist, I think just the opposite, since they help to articulate the issues that divide. Perhaps the discussion will point the way to greater understanding.
I am a bit confused about your post: "Hey jp, it is my choice. Ken"
I don't see what choice I am trying to take away from you. Can you explain?
See you in Tuesday's articles,
jp
LeeAnn,
I sent you a note from my other new e-mail address, but I'm not sure it went thru. So to be safe I'm sending you this note. The bottom line is I want to help.
Please send any future correspondence to this address (khausle@carolina.rr.com), and I will offer whatever I can. What do you have to lose?
If I don't hear from you sooner, I will try to get back to you in a few days with any other ideas I have. Personally, even if you signed some sort of obscure "land use legal language" at your closing, I think there are certain privileges you should be given by virtue of the fact that you are the current "keeper of the land".
Mr. Lightfoot, you are certainly entitled to your opinion, but why you would have the opinion you do is a mystery to me. Don't you want things to get better?
Ken Hausle, PE
The revised thinking for James Carroll's subjects are important but it seems we humans have woke up too late. Also, too late to change the habits of over 6 billion people, or make corrections we could have made fifty years ago, and even fifty years ago who knows if that would have made a difference?
As one poster noted, it is arrogant to think we can save the planet. We may have technical knowledge and untried theories on how to save the planet but I believe Mother Earth has already decided its course. The earth also doesn't need humans to survive, so I don't see this as fatalism here only realism unless one believes the human race is so superior to the cosmos it believe it can control this too. The combination of human interference, human stupidity, and the processes of nature itself has, I believe, tipped the balance earlier than Mother Nature had planned since she works in cycles. The melting of the ice caps are only the beginning for radical weather changes and ultimately the next ice age. Maybe we need it.
Ken - I don't believe there is any problem with storm water. I live on a hill far above the drill site. I've got a 1,000 foot driveway to get to my house, and the well is 800 feet from me down near a creek.
There are drains under the road that runs next to my property, and there does not seem to be a problem with flooding or backup from the creeks or runoff. I suppose this could possibly change with the drilling operation, but I don't foresee that as an issue.
I've written to you on the address you posted above. I'd like to keep in touch and hope maybe you can help me come up with some more ideas. All are welcome.
jp,
Why are you and kivals arguing/debating (at least it seems that way to me). I think you should get together, and then work together. And then accomplish some real good.
I know I have no call to interject, but it seems to me both of you are obviously very intelligent. Well lets find some basic things we all agree upon and go from there.
As an aside, I would not worry about beings that are "less powerful" because it seems to me, power is a tricky thing to define. In fact, I suspect many of the apparent "less powerful" are just biding their time.
Regardless, why don't we all focus on what we can accomplish, and how we can most usefully utilize our time, and lets start now.
Ken
kivals, I am arguing that the "success" of our species has had consequences that are now threatening our survival. My moral imperative comes from a recognition that we are a dangerous species that is capable of doing a great deal of harm to each other, to other beings, and to the planet. I don't hate humanity, but recognize that the planet is at risk because of human activities. What I see as a moral imperative is based on a belief that the planet and other beings that are less powerful and also less destructive than we are have a right to live as much as we do. At some point, these are values that rest on nothing other than personal conviction or faith. This applies to your personal conviction that our "moral sense" arose from our hunter gatherer origins. There are other narratives that would posit a more sedentary attachment to place, perhaps those that place greater emphasis on gathering than hunting. "Origin of morality" narratives are pretty loaded with preconceptions.
I would also argue that moral systems developed precisely because human attachments are limited to the immediate group. Whoever tries to expand the circle of moral concern beyond that group is regarded as a "traitor" until, for whtaever reason, the group has to expand and embrace those who were once excluded. Moral systems also developed to prevent the weak from exploitation by the more powerful.
As for your belief that group identities other than class consciousness obscure the common peoples' real interests under capitalism, that is too reductive. Class is just one facet of human identity and I don't believe that false consciousness is the basis for other liberation movements.
Furthermore,
If there are no applicable provision associated with possible contamination of your well with polluted stormwater that derives from the corporation's actions, then there da gonnit ought to be.
Ken
OK LeaAnnG,
Here is a first idea.
Stormwater.
If they are going to do construction on a site with your land, they better da gonnit manage the stormwater so that there is no detrimental effect for your well being.
Ken
LeeAnnG,
I do not have direct experience with what you are describing, but I do have considerable experience associated with government agencies/individuals, corporate individuals and practices, and the consultants that seem to always be involved. I was a consultant (environmental consulting primarily involved with Clean Air Act & associated regulatory provisions).
Some of what you are describing seems of crtical significanct to me and I would like to help if I possibly can. I can be reached at buffalo_ken@kjh-es.com. (I think this address will work -- I just set it up).
Even if you do not want my help, lets keep this conversation going. Not just here at Common Dreams, but in our neighborhoods and with our family members and whomever else should hear.
Ken
26 years ago, I moved from a large PA city to rural West Virginia. When I purchased my 72 acres, I was aware that the mineral rights including coal and gas were either owned or leased by a large corporation. However, due to the unscupulous machinations of the coal companies early in the 1900s - now the large energy corporations, it was almost impossible to purchase property with those rights, and I seemed to be far enough away from cities and towns to be OK.
I proceeded to build my own home and have a water well drilled. At first, I attempted to get it near my house, but being at a fairly high elevation, I was unable to find water closer than 800 feet away. However, it turned out to be a substantial source of water, which I try not to waste.
For the past 26 years I have tried to live in harmony with nature. Last year I reached my goal of growing all my own vegetables except for those that need to be fresh. This year I will have a greenhouse with lettuce and other fresh greens. I use no artificial fertilizers, herbicides, or any kind of pesticides. My husband and I encourage wild birds to take care of insects for us by feeding them through the winter and providing shrubs and bushes in our flower garden.
We turn off the lights when we are not using them. We recycle as much as possible. We buy our eggs and some of our meat (and working on more) locally. In other words, we are attempting to live ecologically productive lives.
Then, a few months ago, we got a call from a company called Petroedge, apparently an affiliate of Cabot Gas and Oil. They want to exercise their right to drill a gas and/or oil well on my property. Although I told the representative that the place they wish to drill is right next to my water well, they seem determined to proceed.
After Petroedge sent me paperwork that indicated they had filed for a permit to drill, I contacted the WV Department of Environmental Protection with a letter of protest. I let them know that the location of my well, being in the only low-lying area of my property, is likely to be the single place where I will find water should my well be fouled and that the representative from Petroedge had no answer when I asked what they would do if my well was ruined and they could not find water for me elsewhere. I told Petroedge, among other things, that I do not want them to test my water until I find out what the DEP is going to do about my protest.
I contacted a lawyer to search the title and lease agreements since there was no record of any lease in the papers sent to me or on the page cited for the lease agreement in the records room. I am waiting for the results.
At this point, I don't know if my stonewalling is going to stop the drilling for gas or not. It is likely to pollute the entire aquifer under my property and four of my neighbors - one of whose entrance to his home will also be torn up.
Anyway, I just wanted to vent about big companies taking advantage of real people, to point out that sometimes we have no recourse to defend the environment except to either spend thousands of dollars fighting for what is likely to be a lost cause or attempt to make it too much of a nuisance for the company to proceed. I don't have thousands of dollars to fight Petroedge, nor do I have enough years left in my life to win if I did.
If anyone out there has any suggestions for me as to what I can do should the permit be granted, I would surely appreciate it. I am sick about the possibility of losing my excellent source of water, having my neighbors subjected to the noise and stink of the drilling, or having anyone lose access to their property. (I have a friend whose neighbors were subjected to drilling on their place. Their access road was so damaged, and the company so adamant about not fixing their mess, the family finally had to move.)
It is surely imperative that each and every one of us does his or her part to keep our footprints to a minimum, but many times it's not individuals who are doing the damage, it's (once again and no surprise) large corporations with immunity from prosecution or citizen action.
jp,
I did not say our success as a species depended on spoiling the environment or on maximizing the population, but just on survival, as individuals and as a group that we as individuals feel a strong connection to.
I still do not understand where your moral imperative evolved from. Humans evolved as hunter gatherers moving from place to place, so it seems likely they developed a great ability to become connected to their family groups, and not nearly as much of a propensity to become connected to their environments.
I sometimes think that the most powerful story tellers of the capitalist culture, in their efforts to disconnect the common people from each other, as connected the common people could pose a threat to the existing order, actually encouraged people to become connected to anything else or on the basis of any other concerns that would pose less of a threat -- animal rights, the worship of the earth, any religion, racial groups, gender groups, age groups, small issue-based groups where the issue has little to do with capitalism, and any number of other possibilities.
We did evolve in small groups and merging into larger groups has always been a challenge, and there will always be people trying to take advantage of such transitions for their own smaller groups. But with the growth in technology and in human population, the merger is unavoidable. We might not survive this challenge, and if we do not focus on human survival, it appears unlikely it will happen.
kivals, I am arguing that the behaviors and propensities that have allegedly evolved for our survival have not served us well if the mess we are in today is any proof. I mean this in regard to how we treat each other, how we treat our environment. If you argue that our success as a species is evidenced by our overpopulation, our ability to ruthlessly exploit the natural world, which we construct as an "out there" that we are separate from, then I would argue that "success" is a very amiguous concept. In fact if, as you maintain, our moral systems are themselves an evolutunalry survival mechanism, then I would argue that out of self interest, we had better evolve a lot more and pretty quickly at that.
I must be a mutant, because I feel a strong emotional attachment to the natural world, probably stronger than I feel for the human. I do not believe this is because I live a privileged life and the attachment I feel is simply nostalgic self indulgence. I believe many people who live closer to the natural world than I do also feel this attacment and respect for other beings and the earth. My gut feeling is that we are "designed" to live in small groups that limit the damage we do and which enable us to grasp the reality of our relationships to other beings and the earth.
As for your thought experiment, I would think very carefully about the damage I do to my new planet, since I believe I have a moral imperative to limit the damage I do.
Say all you want, but it is my choice.
Ken
Hey jp, it is my choice.
Ken
pangolin (and others),
So true. So sadly true.
An excellent book that deals in depth with much of what is discussed here is David Korten's "The Great Turning". This book speaks of the imperative need to reject "Empire" (i.e. domination) for an "Earth Community" lifestyle (i.e. cooperation).
It seems to me that there are many who do recognize what is coming around the bend, but fatalism is creeping in. Personally, I refuse to give up my hope for a better future, but I also know that hope by itself is of limited value. Hope coupled with action can be meaningful.
If humanity begins to differentiate between needs and wants & begins to actively learn how to live in an ecologically reverant manner, then our dire situation can begin to improve. I'm not saying this is easy nor am I saying suffering will be avoided. All I'm saying is I'm not going to GIVE UP.
What will it take for others to wake up? Does there have to be some sort of calamity, or can we begin to learn how to live cooperatively with life? I think most people would actually choose to live cooperatively, and I know we can learn.
I plan on doing my part.
Peace,
Ken
Fatalism is coming in a close second to apathy, with hypocrisy running third. Positive action towards change is running dead last.
My little university town had an eco-film fest last weekend; all films free. I would say the majority of attendees were grey heads with very few under 30 present. Meanwhile every night that weekend the bars were full and the streets rang to carousing youth and their boom-vroom SUV's and pick-ups. Apathy and fatalism.
Is Al Gore still flying everywhere on a jet? His house is HUGE! Hypocrisy.
Positive action, new renewables as a percentage of total power use is so low as to be drowned in the noise of daily weather fluctuations. Compare the numbers of people daily at your local WalMart to the weekly farmers market (if you have one).
More than a few think that we are well past population overshoot right now. Check the Peak Oil message boards for yourself. Or http://www.culturechange.org for the pessimist veiw.
Looking at it from the doomer viewpoint we should be parking 9/10ths of our cars permanently tomorrow and converting the other tenth to plug-in hybrids. We should be planting our lawns in potatoes NOW on the understanding that soon there will be crop failure somewhere soon. We should be converting our economy to zero-carbon output NOW.
If we convert and the doomers are wrong we all get a bit more exercise, cleaner air and cheaper power bills in the long term. If continue as is and the doomers are right you'll need a good recipe for long pork.
Choose.
It is remarkable that it took the Al Gore's documentary "Inconvenient Truth", and now the recent conclusions from the intergovernmental Panel on Cli mate Change , to alert many to the impending dangers from global warming--which has been obvious to anyone who had made even minor efforts to be informed.
The evidence linking carbon pollution to warming is as close to certain as science can be. Its causes, consequences, and mitigation requirements have been documented by the scientific community, many dedicated environmental organizations including The Union of Concerned Scientists, and chronicled in the press for years.
The dangerous manipulation of essential scientific data used by this administration to conceal and derail corrective measures for this threat and other vital environmental reforms has also been apparent. Th gullibility of so many who are influanced by them is more alarming than the scientific manipulation itself.
Contrary to their assertions, measures to reduce greenhouse gases could only improve our economy by lessening our trade deficits, and improving our security by reducing our dependance on foreign oil. We could also regain some of our lost world respect that has resulted from our opposition Kyoto while arrogantly contributing disproportionally to carbon pollution. With our involvement, China & India could then be compelled to join the rest of the developed world.
Often overlooked is the fact that the same measures needed to mitigate global warming would be necessary even if it were not an issue. Conservation, alternative energy development, anti- pollution refinements, etc are essential for other vital environmental reforms such as air and water quality, reductions in toxic waste generation, land preservation, etc.
The environmental and social damage from our indifference to (and even denial of) carbon pollution and its effects can only worsen if we allow these destructive policies of this reckless and unlearned president and his financial supporters to continue.
It would take a fraction of the money we now spend exterminating people in the tropics to purchase all the tropical grasslands and farms, replant them with trees, and feed and house the people displaced by the replanting. Might postpose the extinction of the species by a generation or two.
How do you stop the NUKE that was droped on Japan after its already left the bay?
SAVE THE HUMANS!
lets face it - the last round of revolutionary power was crushed in the seventies
"look at mother nature on the run" said neil young - nixon went down as sacrificial - but the power tightened its grip and good people died and fled and otherwise got the living sh*t scared out of em by a violent goon squad that could go where it wanted - and it did and it has and it does and soon, o i believe it, will collapse and die
Ah, geneman, re. going back to the 70's:
"As I read the story of what we've done and do,
My heart breaks in sorrow, my head bows for shame.
We have killed all our yeasterdays and tomorrows
And today - TODAY -- is busting into flame!"
-- Crazy Bird, 1972
I have been nursing this mad theory: capitalism depends on growth, including population growth. Were the global population to stabilize, or decline, corporate capitalism would weaken. So the old problem is that we're mammals that are endowed with the drive to procreate, and we're 6.5 billion strong and climbing. The elites are leveraging our very nature to profit. And the by-product of this game is the destruction of our environment. Just like the oil moguls don't want to let petroleum go because there's so much left to sell, they don't want to promote too much family planning because there are supposed to be like 9.5 billion of us by 2050, and think of the market!
Sorry kivals, I would argue that it is precisely because the human species privileges itself and pits itself against every other species, plant or animal, that has gotten us into the mess we are in.
I also reject your contention that because we cannot "communicate" with other forms of life, we have less moral responsibility toward them. If our ability to communicate through language is what empowers us, then we have a responsibilty to use that power constructively and creatively so that we limit the harm we do, which we know is great. Indeed, we have more responsibility to beings who do not have the kind of power that we do because we see all around us the results of our arrogance.
If we are to get out of our rush toward destruction, we need to rethink our relationship toward earth and other beings, whether that is "practical" or not. If not, nature has a way of biting us in the ass in the end.
seems like we are where we are because them making the big calls have ignored their bonds of cooperation with the other species -
it seems like the reason we have a preponderance of ford explorers and shopping plazas in this world is because we failed to count the vote of all -
who doesnt know how a mountain's or a river's or brown bear's or a pelican's vote would count if it were counted. if human beings are to get through this mess we better look beyond our humanity and get help from those who are wiser, and older. Maybe there have been loons for 60 million years.
The fundamental question the article prompts me to ask is "What group interests should we focus on in the face of this crisis?"
The family?
To some extent, as we all need the daily doses of love and warmth from those we know best and trust, and whose lives are woven together with ours in the most intimate ways.
The nation?
To a lesser extent, as national boundaries are arbitrary and were determined, in a self-serving manner, by powerful leaders of the predominant social groups in the territory. In the past Americans have needed to band together to counter threats such as the Nazis, but more often in these times the US government is the aggressor, and Americans are manipulated into killing in the interest of predators pulling the strings. But of course there are political structures in place in the nation, and we have the opportunity to use these to improve the lives of our fellow citizens and people around the world.
The human species?
To a great extent, as we have the capacity to communicate with and understand each other, with all our similarities and common needs. And with the interactions we are now merging to form a world culture, for better or worse. We can coordinate activities with humans all over the world to form common goals, and to create positive feedback loops or circuits of benefit to all. And if we isolate others, they can form their own positive feedback loops completely inconsistent with our interests, possibly to our detriment. And they are as capable and intelligent as we are, so that can be extremely dangerous in that event. And more than ever we need to work together to solve global crises, such as global climate change.
All vertebrate animal species?
To a small extent, but since we cannot communicate much with other species and have much less in common with them, the cooperative activity is limited and the positive feedback loops that we can consciously initiate are limited, though we obviously are involved in cooperation that we evolved into and did not consciously choose, generally we are not even aware of such activity. Also, we evolved to consciously work with groups of humans, not with non-human groups of animals.
All animal and plant species?
Even less so, as the communication and cooperative activity is even more limited, though of course there are cooperative activities we did not choose and may not be consciously aware of.
The earth?
The earth is a rock with a thin covering of life. It will continue with us or without us.
It seems we really need to start thinking of ourselves as members of the human family if we are going to successfully confront this crisis and find more satisfaction in our lives. That is not to totally disregard feelings for other group memberships, but to recognize that we have to decide where to focus our energies before it is too late. We need to reach out to people across the globe and try to form common goals that we can as humans agree upon and work to accomplish. In the past, we were dependent on international organizations formed by elites. The Internet has freed us from that.
Ah if we could magically transport ourselves now back to the 1970's and really work on those the problems of today back there.
But We cannot!
It is just too late for us and most of the plants and animals .
Like someone else stated here. The Earth Will Survive.
Even one Earth Day a year gets next to no attention.
So I say again Soylent Green is Tuesday.
As a species, we have simply worn out our welcome on the planet.
kivals,
I pretty much agree with you. All three factors interact, and the push for corporate growth seems to be one of the key factors encouraging population growth, for instance. Your comments make a great deal of sense.
incidentally - James Carroll's piece is a pretty well written bit of mass media and one reason why the boston globe is still a good newspaper, thinks me - and to look at another 19th century idea that might be of interest and even good use is Emerson's long essay Nature. here's an interesting website that has a study version posted
http://www.vcu.edu/engweb/transcendentalism/authors/emerson/nature.html
jp,
What is your basis for thinking you have a moral obligation to the non-human world?
Virtually all human behaviors and propensities toward certain behaviors were developed through evolution for survival or reproduction. Morals are rules humans developed over time for dealing with each other in order to survive better as part of a human group. There is a place in some moral systems for caring about the ecosystem, but that is primarily because if it was affected that would affect the human group. We did not evolve to make strong emotional attachments to the ecosystem as we do to other humans.
I agree that to the universe humans are not special, but to humans humans are special, and we better think that way or we will not survive. We have only made it this far by thinking that way. And I concede that many people do not think that way and that may be part of the reason we won't make it. Will the earth be better off if we are gone? Who knows and who will care? Humans may care about the earth, but with humans gone, there will most likely be no species, and no sentient being, caring about the earth. And the earth sure doesn't care about itself, any more than any rock under your feet cares about itself.
Thought experiment: You and your family are transported to another galaxy and onto an earth-like planet. Do you then still care about the earth and forget about your family members, spending all your time trying to get back to save the earth and ignoring their needs, and also ignoring the importance of maintaining a good environment on your new planet as you pollute it in building your rocketship to return to earth?
LOL, montemerrick, but I'm both too old and live too far north to take off my clothes.
JohnF,
I would think that addressing your (a) -- the corporate driven growth imperative -- could go a long ways towards addressing (b) and (c), though I will not elaborate here as that is not the point I intend. And to address (a), one must address corporate power and the corporate system, a self-perpetuating creature rising from the most putrid depths of the human mind.
To someone not under the spell of the corporate media and its consumer culture, it appears quite obvious that intellectual growth, with little resource cost, provides much greater potential for satisfaction than growth in wealth or in the number of consumer items in one's possession. However, everyone wishes for some level of comfort and security in availability of food resources and health care, and if one's income falls far below that of others then these goals are in jeopardy. So the money chase becomes imperative even for those who do not buy into consumer culture. So it seems the first step towards defanging the corporate monster, and creating a sustainable economy and a sustainable environment, is to remove these necessities from the reasons for the pursuit of wealth, and to guarantee decent living quarters, health care, and sufficient nourishment for all.
And I would guess that many in corporate boardrooms have come to similar conclusions, and that helps explain why they fight such policy proposals tooth and nail.
actually if we became a mass of luddites it would do a whole bunch of good
down with machines!
How much new thinking will it take to overcome the continued ripping up of the Amazon rainforest, or The Gambian jungles so ruthlessly traded without benefit to the starving, diseased, Africans who have no other comparable, valuable assetts to haul them from poverty so targetted by The G8, Bob Geldoff and Bono, under the watchful eye of The World Bank who administer the aid to these countries?
Whilst millions of us are rounding up batteries, recycling our junk, switching off our standby's and re-using plastic bags, these responsible crooks are laughing all the way to...The World Bank!! And they only want Wolfie out because he promoted his totty!! Never mind the lungs of the planet, or African poverty!!
Turn the air conditioning up Mother!!
Chuck Cliff: The question today is how do we change? At the moment our sum effort is that of a giant tick sucking the world dry. Yet, to turn into a mass of Luddites would hardly resolve anything.
The answer is in how we can use our technology to survive as a culture without destroying our "oasis", our Blue Mother.
Well said. I would venture that a key in figuring out how to use our technology in the way described is to recognize this trio of influences: (a)the corporate driven growth imperative which pervades our culture, (b) the ongoing growth of the human population (now double the size it was in the 1960s), and (c) our excessive and growing rates of consumption. I don't think there's any way we can avoid continued ecological devastation if we don't effectively confront all three.
I take issue with the title "save the planet."I know its a simple catchphrase and may not be intentional, but it smacks of human arrogance--suggesting that nature needs humans to save it. The planet itself isnt in danger--humans are.
"Human choices brought the earth to this brink of ultimate harm, and human choices, informed by changed ideas, can rescue it."
I guess we cant help but try to see ourselves as superior to the world, even when we dont intend to be.
Ray Bradbury had a haunting tale in "The Martian Chronicles" about a fellow who found himself stranded on this wonderful oasis on Mars that could make him the food he needed to live. However, each meal caused a portion of the oasis to collapse...
The end of the tale was that the man changed into something else that the oasis could support.
The question today is how do we change? At the moment our sum effort is that of a giant tick sucking the world dry. Yet, to turn into a mass of Luddites would hardly resolve anything.
The answer is in how we can use our technology to survive as a culture without destroying our "oasis", our Blue Mother.
"Meanwhile, nuclear weapons still threaten the environment more than anything."