Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Change Everything Now
One of the nation's most mainstream environmentalists says it's time to get a lot more radical. An interview with Gus Speth.
James Gustave "Gus" Speth's office at Yale reeks of Old World charm, with a high ceiling and dark, wood-paneled walls adorned with souvenirs from his travels in Africa and Asia. Speth, sixty-six, the dean of the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, is a tall, genial man who wears conservative striped ties and speaks in a quiet southern drawl. If America can be said to have a distinguished elder statesman of environmental policy, Speth is it. Before he arrived at Yale, he cofounded the Natural Resources Defense Council, one of the most powerful environmental groups in the U.S., then went on to serve as a top environmental policy advisor to President Jimmy Carter. In 1982, he founded the World Resources Institute, an environmental think tank, which he headed for a decade. He also served as a senior advisor to President-elect Bill Clinton's transition team and spent seven years as the top administrator in the Development Programme at the United Nations.
It's not surprising that Speth would end up in a wood-paneled office at Yale. What is surprising, however, is that he uses his bully pulpit in academia to push for a 1960s-style take-it-to-the-streets revolution. His new book, The Bridge at the Edge of the World (Yale University Press), is nothing less than a call for an uprising that would reinvent modern capitalism and replace it with, well, a postmodern capitalism that values sustainability over growth, and doing good over making a quick buck. Sound idealistic? It is-but that's part of the book's appeal. Speth goes beyond finger-wagging to indict consumer capitalism itself for the rape and pillage of the natural world. His proximate concern is global warming and the impact it will have on civilized life as we know it. But unlike, say, Al Gore, Speth is not concerned with details of climate science or policy prescriptions for the near-term. He is after bigger game-the Wal-Martization of America, our slavish devotion to an ever-expanding gross domestic product, the utter failure of what Speth disparagingly calls "modern capitalism" to create a sustainable world. What is needed, Speth believes, is not simply a tax on greenhouse gas emissions, but "a new operating system" for the modern world.
I spoke with Speth at Yale earlier this year. Jeff Goodell: In the opening chapter of your new book, you say, quite bluntly, that "something is wrong" in America. What exactly do you mean?
Gus Speth: Well, I think we have to face up to the paradox that while the environmental community has become stronger and more sophisticated over the years, the environment is going downhill so fast that we're facing a potential calamity down the road. All we have to do to leave a ruined world to children is just keep doing what we're doing today-the same emissions of pollutants, the same destruction of ecosystems, same toxification of the environment-and we'll ruin the planet in the latter part of this century.
And yet, we know we're not just going to keep doing what we're doing. We're going to grow phenomenally. At the current rates, the world economy will be twice as big as it is today in seventeen years. That carries the potential for enormous additional destruction. The environmental movement has a lot of wonderful things about it, and it's accomplished a lot. But it's not up to this challenge of dealing with this amount of environmental loss and destruction.
The fundamental thing that's happened is that our efforts to clean up the environment are being overwhelmed by the sheer increase in the size of the economy. And there's no reason to think that won't continue. So we have to ask, what is it about our society that puts such an extraordinary premium on growth? Is it justified? Why is that growth so destructive? And what do we do about it?
Capitalism is a growth machine. What it really cares about is earning a profit and reinvesting a large share of that and growing continually. Profits can be enhanced if the companies are not paying for the cost of their environmental destruction-so they fight [paying it] tooth and nail. The companies themselves are now quite huge, quite powerful, quite global, and no longer just the main economic actors in our society. They are the main political actors also.
And so all of these things combine to produce a type of capitalism that really doesn't care about the environment, and doesn't really care about people much either. What it really cares about is profits and growth, and the rest is more or less incidental. And until we change that system, my conclusion is that it will continue to be fundamentally destructive.
JG: So our engine of progress has become the engine of our destruction?
GS: Well, it's certainly the engine of environmental destruction. And what is also becoming apparent is that this so-called engine of progress is also not really improving people's lives very much either. And here I'm speaking entirely of the advanced, industrial, affluent societies, not the developing world, which does need to grow.
In the West, we're seeing that people's own sense of subjective well-being has not been going up with all of this growth that we've been experiencing. Per capita income goes up, but happiness doesn't, satisfaction with life doesn't. It's just flatlined, for decades now. And there are certain pathologies that have increased. A sense of loneliness in our society, bipolar disorders, other problems, stress and disintegration of communities.
This should be a time when we really can take this fabulous amount of wealth that we've generated and enjoy it, and yet we seem to be caught in a system where it's either up, up, and away or down, down, and out. And we seem to careen from crisis to crisis-personal crises, national crises, economic crises.
JG: I know lots of people working on clean energy technology in places like Silicon Valley who would argue that the forces of progress need to be accelerated, not slowed down.
GS: Well, I do stress the need to ditch the old technologies that have gotten us into this trouble and bring on as fast as possible new technologies that are designed with the environment in mind. That's all accurate, I think. And I'm delighted to see the renaissance of environmental concern in the country.
But having said that, I just don't believe it's enough. What you're really describing is what can be thought of as kind of a dematerialization of the economy, of the movement toward every kind of gloriously high-tech economy with just electrons moving around-
JG: A Google economy.
GS: Yes, a Google economy. But there's still huge impacts, even with all of that, and as these new companies grow in size, those impacts become ever larger. And right now there's been very little dematerialization of the U.S. economy. It's gotten more efficient, it creates less pollutant per unit of output in our economy. But still, we're using a huge amount of stuff and releasing almost all of it back as waste into the environment in some form.
Changes of the type that would bring on this technological nirvana are just too slow and too partial. They need to be combined with other things that basically slow the current up. And that means taking the priority off of growth. It means finding a new set of laws for corporations-to change their incentive structure. It means us consumers becoming more interested in living more simply.
JG: Of course, when you talk about taking the priority off growth, it's no longer a technological issue. It's a political one.
GS: Yes, but the trouble is, our politics simply won't sustain the changes that we need. And so we really need to create a mighty force in our country that seeks to reassert popular control over our politics before it's too late.
We're in a vicious circle where the more powerful [certain] interests get, the less able we are to reassert control, and those that have enormous power and wealth in the country [become even more] able to assert even more. And I think that the environmental community needs to see political reform as central to its agenda, and it doesn't now. That's not what the environmental groups do. And that's a huge mistake, because right now they're playing a loser's game, and they keep losing. Winning some battles, but losing the planet.
The other thing that needs to happen is that there needs to be some fundamental challenge to our dominant values. It's been addressed by religious organizations and psychologists and philosophers and countless others for a long time. But until we reconnect in a more profound way with ourselves and our communities and the natural world, it seems unlikely that we will deal successfully with our problems.
JG: You quote Milton Friedman as saying, "Only a crisis produces real change." What kind of crisis do you have in mind?
GS: I hope it doesn't take that. But I think if you have a crisis-a Great Depression, whatever-in a time of wise leadership, we can construct a new narrative that builds on the traditions of the country and its highest values, but also explains where we need to go in the future, and why we went astray in the past.
In the end, the thing that I hope for is a huge mass movement in the country before it's too late. I really don't know any other way to make the change happen other than a grassroots movement. The nearest thing we've seen to this in living memory was the civil rights movement.
JG: One of the paradoxes of this is that fear is not always a good motivator, especially when it comes to confronting an issue like global warming. People become immobilized and say, "What the hell, there's no point." How do you communicate the seriousness of the challenge we face without pushing people over into despair?
GS: I think people respond out of love and out of fear, fundamentally. We will never do the things that we need to do unless we understand how serious the situation is. So you've got to deal with the facts.
Do we need also to talk in positive terms, to say we can deal with these issues? Absolutely. And is being hopeful about the prospects for the future very important? Absolutely. But in order to make the deep changes that are needed, people need to sense the scale of the problem.
JG: Do you think the notion of sustainability on a planet that is heading toward 9 billion people is an impossible goal?
GS: Well, let me give you a personal example. My wife and I have offset all of our greenhouse gas emissions from our car, our house, everything. Before we moved into the apartment where we live now, we invested heavily in a big photovoltaic unit for our house, which produced about half of our electricity. I purchased two Priuses, gave one of them to one of my children. We do lots of recycling and other things. We've changed all our bulbs to CFLs. You do all those things, and your environmental footprint is still huge.
Moreover, not only is doing all the things that we are able to do ourselves woefully insufficient, it creates this false impression. It gives you the sense that the problem is an individual one, and it's on you, and you can solve the problem. Whereas the problem is really deeply systemic-it's only through political action that we will solve the problem.
JG: I visited scientist James Lovelock a few months ago, who has long argued that the Earth is beyond its carrying capacity for human beings. He basically says, "Look, if there were 100 million people on the planet, it wouldn't matter if we were all driving SUVs and burning coal-"
GS: And it almost wouldn't matter if we were back in 1950, with half the population that we have now. It still wasn't a full world at that point. Now it is a full world. Everything we're doing is on a scale that rivals the natural systems.
JG: Right. And you can say-as you do-that we consume too much, and that our economic system has become a slave to the idea of an ever-expanding GDP. But you could also just say, "Look, there's too many people on the planet-"
GS: Well, I think a lot of people believe that. I actually have a law, Speth's Law, and it is that the richer you are, the more you think that population is the world's problem. But the scale of the impact is really derived from the phenomenal amount of economic growth in rich countries, not from the phenomenal population growth.
JG: In your view, what's the alternative to pro-growth capitalism? Should we rethink communism?
GS: No, it's not that at all. But I do believe we should be looking for a nonsocialist alternative to today's capitalism. I think we do want to make changes that are sufficiently profound that when you look back on them, you will see that it's no longer the capitalism of the early twenty-first century.
JG: What would a revised capitalist system look like?
GS: Well, let's take the core of it-the corporation. Corporations right now are mandated to serve and promote the best interest of stockholders, by law. And anything it [a corporation] justifies in the nature of doing well in communities or doing well by society, that's also got to be justified that it's in the best interest of the shareholders. And maximizing shareholder wealth is a very fundamental part of the motivational structure of the corporate sector.
I think that needs to change fundamentally, so that corporations really are in the business of serving all of the factors that help generate wealth-all of the stakeholders, in effect. One way to describe what has to happen, and the way that the situation in the future would be different, would be to describe it as a series of transformations. The first would be a transformation in the market. There would be a real revolution in pricing. Things that are environmentally destructive would be-if they were really destructive-almost out of reach, prohibitively expensive.
A second would be a transformation to a postgrowth society where what you really want is to grow very specific things that are desperately needed in a very targeted way-you know, care for the mentally ill, health-care accessibility, high-tech green-collar industries.
A third would be a move to a wider variety of ownership patterns in the private sector. More co-ops, more employee ownership plans, and less rigid lines between the profit and the not-for-profit sectors. I mean, Google is an example of that now, they are moving in that direction, although I think it's small compared with what they've really got going.
JG: Do you think that this kind of change can be had with anything short of a real revolution in America?
GS: Well, I don't think it can be had without a real citizens' movement-a grassroots citizens' movement that shakes up people's consciousness and forces us to rethink what's really important, and what our role in the world and in nature really is. I think there is a growing sense that something is out of whack in the country, and that we're on the verge of losing something very important, not only spiritually but also environmentally. And if we don't change, we really could pass into some situation where it would be irretrievably lost.
JG: If I read your book right, you stop just short of calling for people to march in the streets.
GS: Oh, I will call for people to march in the streets. I said to my friend Laurie David [producer of An Inconvenient Truth] that it's time for a million-person march on Washington early in the new administration. We could really make the point that the climate issue has to be front and center in the first hundred days of the new administration. It's amazing what can be accomplished if citizens are to march in the footsteps of Dr. King. It's time to give the world a sense of hope again.
- Posted in



20 Comments so far
Show AllWe can't even get the government to protect human life so it's no wonder they don't have any respect for animals or the environment. What needs to change is the government, not just the people in the government.
Hoa binh
Considering that the average American uses something like 24 times as many resources as the average non-American, the problem *is* a rich economy, not population. The United States uses more resources than the rest of the world combined (easy to figure...300 million times 24 = more than the total population of the planet). As for a link to this statistic, it came from one of my Environmental Political Theory textbooks from last semester. It may be online, I'm not sure.
This million person march idea is interesting; Obama would have to show his true colors as he would be forced to fight progressives who think he's a good human being - it will expose him for the neo-con that he actually is!! Maybe it will WAKE PEOPLE UP!!
Perhaps the place to start the revolution is at the total collapse of the present world economy (we are in the middle of it now) and a return to a barter system and local fiat paper currencies. We could call it "creative destruction" or "beyond disaster capitalism." Insurance agents and bankers could be made useful by working the land for local farmers without access to Deisel oil and fertilizer. We could shut down all the sewer treatment plants and return to true human composting (now there's a taboo-laden issue for you...!). Business school professors could be made to manufacture solar panels in locally owned community low-tech factories. The surviving neocon pundits could be put to work erecting large greasy wooden statues of Rush Limbaugh. In the 110-degree heat of the early evening the grease would glisten and drip.
"Daddy, who was The Great Bloviator?"
"Oh, (cough cough, hack, hack, gasping for breath), he was the Radio King who said climate change and global warming was a fiction (coughs again and spits out a mucus laden brown mass) promoted by a conspiracy of radical fringe elements that was taking over the country."
"Daddy, what happened to him?"
"Well, while he was delivering one of his apoplectic diatribes he choked on his cigar and his stomach exploded. They had to seal off the studio because there was nothing left but splatter."
"Daddy, is there a moral here?"
"Yes, son, there is. Don't eat your seed corn for then you will certainly starve."
-30-
"I'm speaking entirely of the advanced, industrial, affluent societies, not the developing world, which does need to grow."
Even this guy, portrayed as a radical, isn't nearly radical enough. He thinks the developing world needs economic growth. The result of this growth will be mass addiction to high-energy consumption and dependence on elites. Imagine all of the problems in the USA spreading to a population seven times the size. This is slated to happen in China/India.
"It gives you the sense that the problem is an individual one, and it's on you, and you can solve the problem. Whereas the problem is really deeply systemic-it's only through political action that we will solve the problem."
Baloney. The progressive approach reigns in all of the excess production/consumption and environmental destruction by taking the elites completely out of the loop, isolating them, making them irrelevant. This task is given to the people, accomplished by shifting our individual exchange/association away from the elite enterprises and toward our local communities. We saw over the past eight years how the elites, in the persona of the smirking chimp, defy populist political pressure. You march in the streets, they build you a corral. So we take the economy away from them, via localism.
"It gives you the sense that the problem is an individual one, and it's on you, and you can solve the problem. Whereas the problem is really deeply systemic-it's only through political action that we will solve the problem."
Baloney. The progressive approach reigns in all of the excess production/consumption and environmental destruction by taking the elites completely out of the loop, isolating them, making them irrelevant. This task is given to the people, accomplished by shifting our individual exchange/association away from the elite enterprises and toward our local communities. We saw over the past eight years how the elites, in the persona of the smirking chimp, defy populist political pressure. You march in the streets, they build you a corral. So we take the economy away from them, via localism.
Mr. Speth's ideas for change, "revolution in pricing", "grow very specific things", "wider variety of ownership patterns" are very progressive. The first one, to put full costs in prices, makes the task of aligning our economic activity with our civic responsibility far easier.
Speth isn't alone, and he isn't the first... ever of Jacque Fresco?
http://www.thevenusproject.com/
Speth might grasp the gigantic environmental problems ahead, but his suggested solutions are disappointingly puny.
Where moneypower is more or less equal to available resources:
Sustainability = moneypower/population
or:
S = m/p
S is a constant that applies to humans, determined by available resources per population numbers.
Sustainability for all species = Carrying Capacity
or:
S* = C
Carrying Capacity = available resources/population
or:
C = r/p
C is a constant that applies to every species, determined by available resources per population numbers.
snydly
Gus, I read your book, then bought ten copies to hand out.
My 2 cents worth---as the debt-based economy implodes, we re-organize on local and regional basis all utilities,etc., re-design the grid for solar/wind DC, shoot for collectors on every available surface, prepare for coastal refugees in the millions, export low tech alt energy devices and factory capability to coal and wood burning cultures, all mentioned in your book. But, also, to add constructing the bare framework of a new society to be in-filled as the old disintegrates.
It's odd, as I look around, I see no one car-pooling, turning out lights or even hanging clothes out to dry. What will it take to get people off the dime? I humbly submit a previous rant scenario---
Almost all have seen An Inconv Truth and noticed or remember the big ice core data chart and Al's fork lift. But that's not enough time to study it. So I got the book and studied the chart. It reveals a lot about our predicament.
The chart shows about 6 ice ages over the last 650ky (1000 years). Temp deviation from mean and CO2 rise and fall together. The last 3 cycles show well-defined spikes. We are at or very near the top of one now. Our CO2 level shoots well past historical levels.
Several questions and observations present themselves just from this chart alone:
--Did humans or some other overly-successful mammals cause or merely ride the previous cycles?
--What sort of weather phenomenon defeated and reversed these spikes in such a short time?
--When and where does the massive ice that constitutes an ice age form?
--How will the massive excess of CO2 we have added affect the way this cycle will play out?
--Obviously, the ice caps on neither Greenland nor Antarctica melted entirely off before the reversal occurred.
--We're getting a lot of melting now.
--The height of the temp reading is very close to what looks to have been the trigger point range for the other cycles.
I theorize that a combination of changing angular moment of the mass of the planet due to the migration of watermass to the equatorial bulge will activate tectonic plate movement, which in turn would start under sea volcanism, more or less flash heating the oceans past the temp trigger. I know that's a lot to swallow, but it's non-linear forcing of the forcings that might happen. It's so much like Nature to do that.
But keep in mind that humans have survived this before, in loin cloths and huts, yes, but survived. So be ready. It's going to be hard to charge a cell phone and lord knows how many vertical reception bars one can count on...
It looks like our challenge is to cut our anthropogenic CO2 and heat additions back to within historical norms so we at least have a snowball's chance of someone making it. It is a worthy goal.
and---
1. Do you think we have the time to survive this climate crisis while still making a profit? While still playing this dumb-assed game of war and wealth? The super-rich know it’s crunch time. Unfortunately for everyone, they’ve pinned their (and, by extension, our) survival hopes on holding all the marbles, rather than the cooperative power of billions (of healthy, educated, able and organised people). Perhaps survival of civilization would be best insured by a re-evaluation of that approach. (There are so very few of them and so very many of us—but how can we get their attention??…hmmm…)
As much as we like to think otherwise, Nature rules.
Apparently, none of the human cultures (the remnants of which we are, and have been actively destroying) that survived the previous temperature/CO2 spike reversal (110kya) were very big into profit or psychopathic corporatism. Maybe we should learn what they can teach us before we kill them off for the resources they happen to be living in/over.
Words from Long ago:
Those who would take over the earth
And shape it to their will
Never, I notice, succeed.
The earth is like a vessel so sacred
That at the mere approach of the profane
It is marred
And when they reach out their fingers it is gone.
For a time in the world some force themselves ahead
And some are left behind,
For a time in the world some make a great noise
And some are held silent,
For a time in the world some are puffed fat
And some are kept hungry,
For a time in the world some push aboard
And some are tipped out:
At no time in the world will a man who is sane
Over-reach himself,
Over-spend himself,
Over-rate himself.
—LaoTzu 600BC+/-
and---
1. We are entering the period of the “forcing of the forcings” in that global warming has become non-linear and beyond intuitive. The only economic system that has a prayer of moderating the effects will start to do what can be done only after it pussy-foots around trying to make a profit out of the effort.
Typical example: Chevron touts its move to alternatives with a development of geo-thermal power generation when an evaluation of the CO2/temp chart from the ice cores tells us that the climate event that defeats and reverses the spikes has a temperature trigger, not a CO2 trigger, although they go hand in hand. Geo-thermal moves heat from the magma to the atmosphere.
For instance, with the resources pissed away in the middle-east we could have covered every roof in the world with solar PV cells, both reducing structural cooling load and producing electricity, and shuttered half the coal power plants.
Loss of a third of the Greenland ice cap is a given. Fast or slow, it will go. My guess: is three years. This S hemisphere summer will be a wakeup call.
Look at that friggin chart-it will tell you a lot.
Then look at USGS earthquake data, magnetic striping in the Atlantic ridge for magnetic pole-swap, methane release from the ocean floor theories, and it’s easy to see that not only will we get more of this party, but it’ll come sooner, too.
and--- here's a freeby bumper sticker: WHAT WOULD NOAH DO?
Cheers and happy crusading...snydly.
I logged in partly to say I'm relieved to find that most of the comments here recognize how nonsensical Speth's so-called radical ideas are. 1. NOT 2. As Brian Bradenmeyer says, the guy may know the danger we're in, but his ideas reflect someone who doesn't recognize the time we do NOT have. True, "change everything now" is what we need, but his idea, for example, of "a certain kind of capitalism" is crap. Capitalism is capitalism.
[ And Frank1569... Sorry, but yeah, the venus project is on my radar as fire from the enemy of TRUE sustainability. That project is what's behind the nonsense of the "Zeitgeist" internet film phenomenon. It's nothing more than just another tech-junkie looking to start yet another industrial revolution, but CALL it green call it anything but capitalism, of course, even though it simply amounts to more destruction for the sake of ultimately saving the rich.]
You (Speth) want sustainability? You want radical? Look at cultures of humans who've lived on the planet for FORTY-THOUSAND YEARS, such as those in Papua New Guinea. You can call that stone age, you can call that "backwards", and I will call you (Speth and Co.) just plain not looking at the real world...
"Art for art’s sake is the attempt to instill ideal life in one who has no real life." (Gaither Stewart)
A capitalism based on sustainability instead of continuous growth? Nice thought, but it wouldn't be Capitalism. Capitalism requires continuous growth. It's part of its nature.
That is why all reforms of Capitalism (like the New Deal, even though it was a big improvement for working people, it couldn't last) ultimately will fail. Marx describes this in Das Kapital. You don't have to be a Marxist to understand to validity of his analysis.
RE: Population
Per capita, in the US we use about 49 times the energy that is used per capita in Bangladesh, one of the world’s poorest countries. Multiplying Bangladesh’s population (150 million) by 49 gives us the population that Bangladesh would have if their population reflected our energy use. Bangladesh’s population would be 7.35 billion! Population is a problem but consumption is a far bigger problem.
Incidentally, Capitalism requires an excess labor force to keep wages low. Over population maintains that excess pool of labor. It is part of the Capitalist project.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_energy_consumption_per_capita
Snydly---
Brilliant post. Seems likely you are some sort of engineer. I am not (oh well, I spent a few years repairing failed Macs).
OTOH, your post seems to neglect two major potential "tipping points" on Global Climate Change that have come to some concern in the most recent decade: first is the unequal distribution of a combination of salt and temperature in the oceans. One result of this so-called inequality is that there is, for example, a massive ocean current around the British Isles that keeps them "temperant." Northern freshwater ice melts reportedly could reverse the current and would drastically cool England and other parts of northern Europe even as the equatorial zones were heating up.
Second is the more recent concern with what are now being called "methane burps" at the arctic line, where the ocean is now spewing massive quantities of methane from the ocean floor, previously trapped in organic sediments, into the atmosphere due to rising water temperatures there. Directly related: arctic circle tundra melting, releasing otherwise trapped methane as rising oceans threaten indigenous populations that live at near-tribal conditions in the midst of Capitalist Consumerism. It is said that as a greenhouse gas, methane is some 20 times more destructive than CO2. Also, when was the last time anyone reported on the "ozone hole"? The latter opens up the atmosphere to more Angstrom units of destructive radiation from the sun, essentially broadening the spectrum of energy allowed to strike the Earth. (I have yet to see a study of the relationships between methane and the ozone hole...)
Then there is the word nobody wants to go to: ENTROPY, the loss of energy relationsips that allow for a truly simple (or perhaps simplistic, depending on who is doing the thinking...) physics concept known as WORK, something Karl Marx knew a hell of a lot about, as did most of the Marxist-Leninists (and the 4th International of Leon Trotsky). Have I overwhelmed the Propaganda yet? Lao Tze was a Physicist. Thousands of years ago. The Tibetans are Physicists.
Our dependence on all extractive resources is ultimately FINITE, and thus ENTROPIC. (Sorry for the capitalization but I am writing from a computerized typewriter or worse: my old Remington would enable underlining while this gmail site does not...)
If we base our theories of energy availability on ENTROPIC versus ANTIENTROPIC systems, we have some hope of saving both our planet and our species. We need to cool down Giaiaia and the DNA chain because heated up it tends to mutate into cancers and the alleals truncate faster and we really do not need that right now.
We need to cool down this Mother Earth ASAP. She is all we have. Now let's talk, desertification! Have I got your attention, Guv. Schwarzawhat? Without stealing northwwestern water you cannot grow grapes in a decade. Kiss the wine industry goodbye. Within two decades the entire United States will have evolved some sort of legal system for draining the Great Lakes to the Lower 48. You will want to move to Canada, but they will not let you in. Meanwhile, Costa Rico is burning so you do not want to go there. God Damn. Gotta stay here and fight. Now see how quickly Wal*Mart which just a few short years ago was selling big shotguns all over the country is barely selling .22 longs. Today they like CO2 high powered pellet guns. Still lead. Next you know they will be selling "depleted" uranium, maybe already are in the U.S.
The real issue is ENTROPY. It goes to all Politics and all Physics. Henry and Brooks Adams: "The Degradation of The Democratic Dogma." a real book in national Depositories. See if you can release it... If so, READ IT. Then compel yourself into the Future and then imagine a future beyond yourself. Now we are gettingh somewhere.
Now imagine SiouxRose and her Planetary and Universal hypotheses at a sea-change requiring that she consider ENTROPY as the guiding Principle of the Musical Seasons. Or Musical Chairs. The Prevailing View of the Physicists and modern alchemists says the world and its surroundings are some 13.7 billion years old. Allan Sandage said before the Hubble Telescope Data came in that it was some 17 billion. The distinction is important. Like the Einstein Detractors now more than a century ago, I challange any Detractor of the Big Bang Theory, including Sarah Palin, presumptive President a heartbeat away from McCain.
The MSM do not comprehend the depth of our global crises. They think this can all be "adjusted." It cannot and will not.
Think ENTROPY. Think SYNERGY. Think LIFE. Think FECUND.
-30-
Step one.
Ban the Corporation.
We need to get back to the principle of personal and moral responsibilty to the enviroment and our fellow citizens. The Corporation as an entity allows the person, or a group of people to absolve themselves of personal responsibilty for the behaviour of said corporation.
At the same time, while absolved of responsibility they can profit tremendously off activities that are harmful, both to the enviroment and to others.
This is like getting something for nothing which leads to an imbalance.
A million person march will be the only way that voters supporting Obama will see him promoting their interests if he becomes president.
The Obama campaign is seriously in hock to the Wall Street pirates and they are not about to give up their NYC penthouses, estates in the Hamptons, Aspen, Hawaii, etc. or their fleets of jets and yachts. Obama will not take action that benefits the masses any more than FDR did until DC was flooded with protesters.
The human race has produced some great violin and basketball players, some clever inventors and some clear thinkers. It would be a shame to see it go, and even more of a shame to take so much of the biosphere along as it exits. When your numbers reach the current toxic levels, you'd be a menace to the environment even if you were a tribe of seraphim.
I think it might be generally agreed that if we could cut our population to about a tenth or a twentieth of the current size, and keep it there permanently, we would be a fairly innocuous species. We could enjoy a better standard of living, quarrel less among ourselves and harmlessly contribute our reflective musings, our clever food processors and our dayglo sneakers to the outrageous variety of the rest of the creation. What to do?
This may sound a bit extreme, but voluntary measures are not a good bet for creatures as selfish as we are. What we need in the short term is to develop a really virulent strain of heterosexual AIDS and put it out there vigorously, like flu shots. Within a short time there would be plenty of jobs to go around. Shortages would vanish. World wide, the rain forests would return, the orangutans would multiply, and acres of condos would begin to compost into charming bird habitat. Celibate people could enjoy long, happy, childless lives. Travelers would occasionally come upon human settlements, small places uninfected by the compulsion to growth and progress, with lots of free parking and no stockbrokers.
Our consumerism is not on a future collision course with the biosphere, it collided the day consumerism was defined and implemented as the economic standard and unit of measure for success. The theory and practice itself is based off a system that is so obviously unsustainable that a grade school student has enough knowledge to label it foolish and ignorant.
We have collided as a species with our only home and are in the process of following through. Sustainability will become our new measuring tool but only in the sense that it dances in relation to consumption. We need to look at our planet and life a different way. Everything we need to survive and flourish is abundantly available to us as long as we work within the confines of common sense.
Life, by definition, struggles to fill every void of our natural world, there is enough to go around. Irrational consumption, waste, and complete lack of respect for life, or respect of life with conditions, are the demons that form the foundation of our troubled world. We must let go of the assumption that Wal-Mart and Visa are providing us a true glimpse of things to come. They are not.
www.oneplanetonelife.com
>Gus Speth: Well, I think a lot of people believe that. I actually have a law, Speth's Law, and it is that the richer you are, the more you think that population is the world's problem. But the scale of the impact is really derived from the phenomenal amount of economic growth in rich countries, not from the phenomenal population growth. <
It's basically the Consumption vs. Population debate. While it's true that over-industrialized regions are having the greatest impact now, especially on global climate change, the rest of humanity is busily destroying ecosystems as well. They aspire to an increased consumption level, and one to two billion actually need an increase.
Speth's Law may be referring to those who point to population growth in other regions and discount our own impact because we are supposedly only at replacement level fertility. Rather than discounting population growth, this emphasizes the huge impact which procreation by the wealthy causes. Each new US resident we create converts another 24 acres of biologically productive land to human uses. Humanity's average individual footprint is 5.5 acres, and Earth provides 4.4 acres per person.
He seems to be saying it's not people who damage the environment, it's what we do. Well, we wouldn't do what we do if we didn't exist, and we seem quite intent on doing what we do as long as we're able. We'd all do better if there were fewer of us.
We don't need a massive die off, as someone suggested, though that's a distinct possibility as we continue to degrade our life support systems. Humanity needs universal reproductive freedom. When couples have access to adequate contraceptive services, birth rates improve dramatically. In high-consumption regions, we also need an awareness of the adverse impact our redundant breeding has on the world.
The change necessary in the human family to realize the Eden again on
Earth is happening; in fact it is inevitable. Whether it happens soon
enough to avoid an apocolypse is questionable.
The essential element is the relationship between the intellect and the
intuitive. The intellect has become too strong in the cultural stories
of the people of the earth. When humanity learns how to leave the
intellect in its place in the presence of the intuitive; then we will
have peace. That is happening; rapidly enough, I hope.
Hunamity is learning, slowly, to accord all sentient beings, even the
rocks, the freedom enjoyed, in partial measure, by mankind as given the
Declaration of Independence of the US. That freedom in the
Declaration is being extended to everything, slowly. The Eden will
arrive when we humans view the universe with mindfulness (just paying
attention) and respect (acknowledging the existence).