consumerism

Just Fair-Weather Friends of the Environment

As long as it isn't expensive, noisy, inconvenient, uncomfortable or labour-intensive, we're eager to save the environment.

Little wonder our greenhouse gas emissions keep climbing. Little wonder Canada produces more municipal waste per person than any other country. Little wonder we rank among the world's top consumers of fossil fuels. (The oil-rich Gulf states are worse.)

Our 20-year quest to preserve the ecosystem – without changing our lifestyle – has led to a succession of unrealistic plans, missed targets and ineffectual initiatives.

Forget Shorter Showers: Why Personal Change Does Not Equal Political Change

Would any sane person think dumpster diving would have stopped Hitler, or that composting would have ended slavery or brought about the eight-hour workday, or that chopping wood and carrying water would have gotten people out of Tsarist prisons, or that dancing naked around a fire would have helped put in place the Voting Rights Act of 1957 or the Civil Rights Act of 1964? Then why now, with all the world at stake, do so many people retreat into these entirely personal “solutions”?

Posted in consumerism, water

E-waste: America's Electronics Feed the Global Digital Dump

The landscape of Guiyu, a remote town in China's Guangdong province, embodies a collision between past and future. Amid acidic plumes of smoke and vast mountains of trash, migrants scour for valuable scraps using their bare hands and simple tools. Yet Guiyu's apocalyptic wasteland is a byproduct of the Information Age: the workers have eked out a living from dissecting cell phones, computers, televisions, and other toxic debris of the electronics industry.

Waste Not, Want Not

Once a year or so, it's my turn to run recycling day for our tiny town. Saturday morning, 9 to 12, a steady stream of people show up to sort out their plastics (No. 1, No. 2, etc.), their corrugated cardboard (flattened, please), their glass (and their returnable glass, which goes to benefit the elementary school), their Styrofoam peanuts, their paper, their cans. It's quite satisfying-everything in its place.

Posted in consumerism

Consumption Dwarfs Population as Main Environmental Threat

It's the great taboo, I hear many environmentalists say. Population growth is the driving force behind our wrecking of the planet, but we are afraid to discuss it.

It sounds like a no-brainer. More people must inevitably be bad for the environment, taking more resources and causing more pollution, driving the planet ever farther beyond its carrying capacity. But hold on. This is a terribly convenient argument - "over-consumers" in rich countries can blame "over-breeders" in distant lands for the state of the planet. But what are the facts?

Toward a New Sustainable Economy

The current financial meltdown is the result of under-regulated markets built on an ideology of free market capitalism and unlimited economic growth. The fundamental problem is that the underlying assumptions of this ideology are not consistent with what we now know about the real state of the world. The financial world is, in essence, a set of markers for goods, services, and risks in the real world and when those markers are allowed to deviate too far from reality, "adjustments" must ultimately follow and crisis and panic can ensue.

Why More of the Same Will Not Work

A visit to Western Europe in early March provided some slightly different -- if unsettling -- insights into global economic arrangements and their socio-cultural co-ordinates.  As the crisis unfolds, people everywhere are questioning current economic institutions and processes, and naturally enough their fears, insecurities and concerns also affect their visions for the future.  The fundamental issues relate to income and resource distribution (don't they always?) but in this time of global crisis, the expression of these issues can become sharper and even more openly divisive in

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 11, 2009
2:33 PM

CONTACT: Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood (CCFC) and Center for SCREEN-TIME Awareness
For CCFC: Josh Golin (617.278.4172; jgolin@jbcc.harvard.edu)
For CSTA: Robert Kesten (202-641-6310; rkesten@screentime.org)

Advocates Ask PBS Sprout to Put 'The Good Night Show' to Bed;

Television Is Not a Sleep Aid

WASHINGTON - March 11 - Citing evidence that television viewing before bed undermines healthy sleep habits, advocates for children are urging PBS KIDS Sprout to stop packaging its evening programming as The Good Night Show.  In a letter to Sprout President Sandy Wax, the Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood (CCFC) and Center for SCREEN-TIME Awareness wrote, "there is no justification for luring preschoolers to the Good Night Show by implying to their parents that the show will help chil

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The Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood is a national coalition of health care professionals, educators, advocacy groups and concerned parents who counter the harmful effects of marketing to children through action, advocacy, education, research, and collaboration. CCFC is headquartered at the Judge Baker Children's Center in Boston. www.commercialfreechildhood.org

 

The Center for SCREEN-TIME Awareness is the leading nonprofit organization focused exclusively on the impact of electronic media on health, education, families and the workplace. The organization encourages children and adults to control the use of electronic tools to promote healthier lives and communities - reclaiming time for families, friends and ourselves. Since 1995, more than 50 million people have participated in Turnoff Week. (April and September 20-26, 2009) http://www.screentime.org.

 

Posted in children, consumerism

We Are Breeding Ourselves to Extinction

All measures to thwart the degradation and destruction of our ecosystem will be useless if we do not cut population growth. By 2050, if we continue to reproduce at the current rate, the planet will have between 8 billion and 10 billion people, according to a recent U.N. forecast. This is a 50 percent increase.

Planet Overload

If you write about the environment you become used to a measure of unfriendly criticism. In the main, it's pretty innocuous stuff - charges of miserabilism and so on. But since concentrating on the issue of human population growth, I have found the criticism noticeably darkening. The other week, after helping to launch a campaign encouraging couples to "stop at two" (children, that is), I received an email accusing me of "real, hard-hitting fascism" and adding: "The Nazis . . .

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