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After this 60-year Feeding Frenzy, Earth Itself has Become Disposable
Consumerism has, as Huxley feared, changed all of us – we'd rather hop to a brave new world than rein in our spending
Who said this? "All the evidence shows that beyond the sort of standard of living which Britain has now achieved, extra growth does not automatically translate into human welfare and happiness." Was it a) the boss of Greenpeace, b) the director of the New Economics Foundation, or c) an anarchist planning the next climate camp? None of the above: d) the former head of the Confederation of British Industry, who currently runs the Financial Services Authority. In an interview broadcast last Friday, Lord Turner brought the consumer society's most subversive observation into the mainstream.
In our hearts most of us know it is true, but we live as if it were not. Progress is measured by the speed at which we destroy the conditions that sustain life. Governments are deemed to succeed or fail by how well they make money go round, regardless of whether it serves any useful purpose. They regard it as a sacred duty to encourage the country's most revolting spectacle: the annual feeding frenzy in which shoppers queue all night, then stampede into the shops, elbow, trample and sometimes fight to be the first to carry off some designer junk which will go into landfill before the sales next year. The madder the orgy, the greater the triumph of economic management.
As the Guardian revealed today, the British government is now split over product placement in television programmes: if it implements the policy proposed by Ben Bradshaw, the culture secretary, plots will revolve around chocolates and cheeseburgers, and advertisements will be impossible to filter, perhaps even to detect. Bradshaw must know that this indoctrination won't make us happier, wiser, greener or leaner; but it will make the television companies £140m a year.
Though we know they aren't the same, we can't help conflating growth and wellbeing. Last week, for instance, the Guardian carried the headline "UK standard of living drops below 2005 level". But the story had nothing to do with our standard of living. Instead it reported that per capita gross domestic product is lower than it was in 2005. GDP is a measure of economic activity, not standard of living. But the terms are confused so often that journalists now treat them as synonyms. The low retail sales of previous months were recently described by this paper as "bleak" and "gloomy". High sales are always "good news", low sales are always "bad news", even if the product on offer is farmyard porn. I believe it's time that the Guardian challenged this biased reporting.
Those who still wish to conflate welfare and GDP argue that high consumption by the wealthy improves the lot of the world's poor. Perhaps, but it's a very clumsy and inefficient instrument. After some 60 years of this feast, 800 million people remain permanently hungry. Full employment is a less likely prospect than it was before the frenzy began.
In a new paper published in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, Sir Partha Dasgupta makes the point that the problem with gross domestic product is the gross bit. There are no deductions involved: all economic activity is accounted as if it were of positive value. Social harm is added to, not subtracted from, social good. A train crash which generates £1bn worth of track repairs, medical bills and funeral costs is deemed by this measure to be as beneficial as an uninterrupted service which generates £1bn in ticket sales.
Most important, no deduction is made to account for the depreciation of natural capital: the overuse or degradation of soil, water, forests, fisheries and the atmosphere. Dasgupta shows that the total wealth of a nation can decline even as its GDP is growing. In Pakistan, for instance, his rough figures suggest that while GDP per capita grew by an average of 2.2% a year between 1970 and 2000, total wealth declined by 1.4%. Amazingly, there are still no official figures that seek to show trends in the actual wealth of nations.
You can say all this without fear of punishment or persecution. But in its practical effects, consumerism is a totalitarian system: it permeates every aspect of our lives. Even our dissent from the system is packaged up and sold to us in the form of anti-consumption consumption, like the "I'm not a plastic bag", which was supposed to replace disposable carriers but was mostly used once or twice before it fell out of fashion, or like the lucrative new books on how to live without money.
George Orwell and Aldous Huxley proposed different totalitarianisms: one sustained by fear, the other in part by greed. Huxley's nightmare has come closer to realisation. In the nurseries of the Brave New World, "the voices were adapting future demand to future industrial supply. 'I do love flying,' they whispered, 'I do love flying, I do love having new clothes ... old clothes are beastly ... We always throw away old clothes. Ending is better than mending, ending is better than mending'". Underconsumption was considered "positively a crime against society". But there was no need to punish it. At first the authorities machine-gunned the Simple Lifers who tried to opt out, but that didn't work. Instead they used "the slower but infinitely surer methods" of conditioning: immersing people in advertising slogans from childhood. A totalitarianism driven by greed eventually becomes self-enforced.
Let me give you an example of how far this self-enforcement has progressed. In a recent comment thread, a poster expressed an idea that I have now heard a few times. "We need to get off this tiny little world and out into the wider universe ... if it takes the resources of the planet to get us out there, so be it. However we use them, however we utilise the energy of the sun and the mineral wealth of this world and the others of our planetary system, either we do use them to expand and explore other worlds, and become something greater than a mud-grubbing semi-sentient animal, or we die as a species."
This is the consumer society taken to its logical extreme: the Earth itself becomes disposable. This idea appears to be more acceptable in some circles than any restraint on pointless spending. That we might hop, like the aliens in the film Independence Day, from one planet to another, consuming their resources then moving on, is considered by these people a more realistic and desirable prospect than changing the way in which we measure wealth.
So how do we break this system? How do we pursue happiness and wellbeing rather than growth? I came back from the Copenhagen climate talks depressed for several reasons, but above all because, listening to the discussions at the citizens' summit, it struck me that we no longer have movements; we have thousands of people each clamouring to have their own visions adopted. We might come together for occasional rallies and marches, but as soon as we start discussing alternatives, solidarity is shattered by possessive individualism. Consumerism has changed all of us. Our challenge is now to fight a system we have internalised.
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49 Comments so far
Show AllIn american suburbs perfectly fine houses are bulldozed down and thrown away to make larger houses. Sometimes two next to each other are tossed to make giant homes. Even houses are disposable in this insane system.
WE are now nothing but consumers in this nation according to corporate capitalism. Black Friday is a leading indicator. GDP is seen as equaling quality of life.
How we have corrupted the dismal science. Adam Smith, who understood that the Market is not the same as capitalism, is spinning in his grave.
Gary
I have read this critique almost verbatim in the early seventies. Consumerism, hedonist narcissism is a lot worse now.It seems time has reinforced the behavior. I don't hold out much hope for things to change. Humanity is approaching the cliff at light speed. Mother Nature is getting ready to collect.
Although I have my doubts about the science of "Global Warming", we certainly need to stop the wasteful march of capitalism.
Perhaps one of the biggest symbols of waste in the UK is the 2012 Olympic Games, that requires £9 Billion (or more?) to be spent on infrastructure which will mostly become redundant after just 2 weeks!
If CO2 needs to be reduced - and even if it doesn't - we need to cut back on the food we waste in the UK (and elsewhere), make equipment more repairable by insisting that it be created from interchangeable parts, and stopping (maybe by law) the very notion of flying abroad for one or two nights only.
However, before we can really break this cycle, I suspect there needs to be a job for everyone - government supplied if necessary. At present, most of the really damaging developments are justified because they "create jobs". People who need a job are not going to think about the environmental harm they are doing.
The New Decade Desiderata empirePie January 1st, 2010
We are one people on this universe,
so step lightly.
Make your path a footpath to a garden,
in our garden home.
Go purposefully for peace requires more than silence.
The noise, confusion, and despair are our making.
Remember that peace, tranquillity, and enjoyment
don’t depend on achievement, status, or desire.
We are all one people of the universe
to cherish our many cultures and stories.
Let them enrich us to unfold in harmony
as the petals of our changing groups in time.
Avoid vexatious visionaries selling exclusionary truths
for their is no monopoly on truth.
Our choices have an impact on the universe.
We may have time to heal our spaceship home.
Choice need not be capricious.
We may choose a path of peace.
You may make your footprint on Gaia light.
We are one people on this universe
step lightly and enjoy the dance of life.
We are one people on this universe
We can make peace the choice.
The Canadian Press is touting $30 billion new investment in the tar sands as a good thing for our GDP. Creating a Germany-sized moonscape and destroying a vast ancient river system to put massive amounts of carbon in the air and enrich a few people for a little while is a good thing.
If economics is a science then clown rodeo is a science.
There's an old line that I think came from Malcolm X but I'm not certain. It runs like this, "The strongest chains and the hardest to break are the chains in your mind."
As Frederick Pohl pointed out so long ago in his Gateway series; Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, and Nitrogen are the four most common elements in our Universe and they are the building blocks for everything in our Universe. Most of that is in "Space", the final frontier. Why wouldn't we do all mfg 'off-planet'?
That doesn't mean suck the planet dry and leave a burnt out husk. It means provide the resources to make fusion into a resource and we have the means to go anywhere and do most anything we wish without leaving a wasteland behind us.
Of course to do that, we will have to trash this testosterone civilization and our authoritarian patriarchy, and our male supremacy, gender slavery, constant war, and feral blood drinking oligarchy - and we'd rather be dead as a species rather than get rid of any of them.
The White Majority in the US is far closer in our social organization to the Pashtuns than we will ever admit.
there are substances, natural substances, growing wild here that help with breaking the chains in your mind in a very real way...
when the problem is psychological, we must deal with it that way...
these subtances, and a serious look at the way we have subjugated sexual urges in our society, are key to relieving our current, suicidal psychosis...
the other, physical instrument keeping us bound is the ownership of property...
"After this 60-year Feeding Frenzy, Earth Itself has Become Disposable."
Guided by rapacious greed, humans have made themselves the disposable commodities.
The trashman cometh.
Thank You, George for this thought provoking analysis.
I agree with everything you said and my reaction to the post you cited was exactly the same, perhaps best described with two famous quotations:
- one from Albert Einstein:
“You cannot solve a problem with the same way of thinking that created it in the first place.”
(This should be engraved in the walls of parliaments ...)
- and one from Goethe:
“There is nothing more frightful than an active ignorance” (or in other words “aggressive stupidity”)
Back in 1979, Erich Fromm asked in his masterpiece “To Have or To Be” (a book I would recommend for spiritual and ethical guidance instead of a bible...) the big question:
How is it possible, that the most important instinct, that of self-preservation, fails to guide humanity in a time when a huge paradigm change is necessary to avoid a global disaster?
Scientists who study biological cybernetics (how open (living) systems regulate themselves) could perhaps give an important clue:
“Information flow is of paramount importance, therefore, to the health of any living system--or enterprise. Feedback from its component parts, and from the larger systems in which it operates, is essential to its long-term survival. When feedback is blocked or discounted, the system cannot meet its own changing needs or respond to a changing environment.
Feedback from the biosphere--climatic disruptions, loss of biodiversity, etc. is revealing that our present economy is unsustainable.
Self-governance requires the free circulation of information necessary to public decision-making. In the present hypertrophied stage of the Industrial Growth Society, however, even governments that call themselves democracies suppress information unwelcome to corporate interests [politicians cling to outdated economic theories, although they never worked in practice ... see also Karl Polanyi: The Great Transformation]
... We have become accustomed to misinformation and deception about an enormous array of dangers, such as the relationship of cancer and other diseases to radioactivity, food additives, or household products. This institutionalized secrecy is understandable in terms of protecting vested interests, but it comes at a high price. For any system that consistently suppresses feedback--closing its perceptions to the results of its behavior--is suicidal.
Doom & gloom scenarios can arouse feelings of fear, anger, grief, and a sense of helplessness. These emotions are actually healthy: they inform us that something is amiss and changes are needed. Denial of anomalous information and uncomfortable feelings blocks our ability to think clearly and responsibly. Instead of responding to issues and dangers in a timely fashion, we seek reassurance that everything is really okay and we can continue with business as usual. We fall into apathy." [apathy means literally avoidance of pain ...)
http://www.joannamacy.net/html/living.html
The problem is that a huge industry, armed with enormous amounts of money from their corporate clients and their political servants, has now more influence on what we think and do, than any honest and responsible scientist or political activist can reasonably hope to achieve.
They know that intellectual information is important for decision making but to influence and even control human behaviour, you have to appeal to emotions and manipulate them for your own purposes.
Chris Hedges wrote a piece recently which also dealt with the subject (“The Truth Alone Will Not Make You Free” available here on commondreams). Here are two excerpts:
“The emergence of corporate and government public relations, which drew on the studies of mass psychology by Sigmund Freud and others after World War I, found its bible in Walter Lippmann's book "Public Opinion," a manual for the power elite's shaping of popular sentiments. Lippmann argued that the key to leadership in the modern age would depend on the ability to manipulate "symbols which assemble emotions after they have been detached from their ideas." The public mind could be mastered, he wrote, through an "intensification of feeling and a degradation of significance."
[...] “The public is bombarded with carefully crafted images meant to confuse propaganda with ideology and knowledge with how we feel. Human rights and labor groups, investigative journalists, consumer watchdog organizations and advocacy agencies have, in the face of this manipulation, inundated the public sphere with reports and facts. But facts alone, Ewen says, make little difference. And as we search for alternative ways to communicate in a time of crisis we must also communicate in new forms. We must appeal to emotion as well as to reason.”
I think Hedges has raised an important point here.”Managing perceptions” and consequently a kind of thought control has become a frightfully powerful influence in practically all areas of political life, whether it is a phony “health care reform”, an even phonier debate about the benefits of genetic engineering (no debate at all about applied nanotechnology, the next Pandora’s box), absurd political theater like the “peace process” in the Middle East and the “moral” wars fought by NATO on behalf of the “greatest force for good”, etc. (see also Pinter’s Nobel speech about the “vast tapestry of lies” ...)
http://www.historyisaweapon.com/defcon1/bernprop.html#SECTION1
“Information dominance” combined with psychological and emotional manipulation is the perfect strategy to control behaviour. We must stop being gullible “consumers” (of disinformation and deceptive products) and become self-thinking citizens again.
We are now being ruled by a cartel of giant banks and their corporate allies, while politicians act as the faithful servants of an insane ideology of “growth and competition” (read: we don’t know where we are going, but we’ll be the first to get there ...)
It’s time for civil disobedience (a revolution really, talks and protests are not effective) Boycott the banks (see Democracy Now!), we must take back the right to decide / change economic policies (based on systemic thinking and with consideration of the social & environmental impact) and with them the organizing principles of society...
But how can we overcome the apathy, the feeling of helplessness, of disgust, of being isolated individuals, not a united front against the powerful interests that control our society?
'but how can we overcome the apathy, the feeling of helplessness, of disgust, of being isolated individualy, not a united front against the powerful interests that control society?'................
annihilate televisions............the big propaganda machines.
this is so important, yet such a subliminally pervasive element of our lives that people are frequently unable to appreciate the fundamental influence this device exerts...
it is not passive, it is not in your interests...it is actively engaged in providing you false information, greased with just enough 'choice' and 'value' to appear benign...
this 'choice' and 'value', of course, exist within a very limited framework, a framework exclusively granted and tightly controlled...
TV...just the letters alone sound so cute and harmless...the reality, however, is so insidious as to have become necessary to many...so necessary that we will destroy entire mountains to generate the electricity to keep the thing on...
has it become cliche to recommend disconnecting tv? it hasn't become any less vital that we do so...only more so...
agree wholeheartedly dubet, but to disconnect some people from their tv's would be tantamount to disconnecting them from their 'raison d'etre'.........
People have formed self-help groups to overcome shared afflictions such as alcohol addiction that strengthen community and empower individuals to overcome their affliction. Even small rural areas have these groups that can provide an answer to a person experiencing the anomie you describe. I would suggest Dharma centers, but even a church group that has a political outlook you identify with is better than nothing. Lions Clubs, Women's Clubs, Reading Circles, the local coffee shop--not Starbucks--that promotes group interactions (as most do), Film Clubs, etc. I live in a rural county with well under 100,000 inhabitants, yet we have over 200 such clubs and organizations. I've yet to mention the local chapter of your political party. If there isn't one, start one as I bet others are asking your question too.
Most of what I've suggested was already said by William Greider in his "Who Will Tell The People? : The Betrayal Of American Democracy," which was published in 1993.
Sioux Rose
TOQUEVILLE: Great post! Thank you for posting it.
>>“Information dominance” combined with psychological and emotional manipulation is the perfect strategy to control behaviour. We must stop being gullible “consumers” (of disinformation and deceptive products) and become self-thinking citizens again.<<
Yet except in scale and efficiency is this really new (think of how partisan newspapers and broadsheets once manipulated public opinion, as did great orators) and were we EVER "self-thinking citizens" or hostages to ignorance, religion, ideology, and human flaws?
Otherwise a great post.
Gary
"But in its practical effects, consumerism is a totalitarian system: it permeates every aspect of our lives."
And what of the political systems charged with enforcing consumerism?
As for alternative economic indicators that include the negatives Monbiot notes, there is the Genuine Progress Indicator http://www.rprogress.org/sustainability_indicators/genuine_progress_indicator.htm
whose graphic displays the great disparity between GDP and standard of living.
Slaying consumerism begs the question: Waht are all of these millions of people now without jobs supposed to do? It seems obvious to say, overconsumption is fueled by overpopulation, with the process containing a feedback loop that increases its negative effects as more societies are MADE to belive they need all the stuff related to consumerism.
What makes consumerism possible is the human desire for comfort and ease. IMO, this fundamental trait dooms humanity.
Consumerism is the dynamo which drives our economies because we have been told, and given no means to contest, the concept that "growth" (related of course to "progress") is essential for liberal democracies if they are to thrive. So the upcoming cull of public services and destruction of the whole concept of a welfare state is justified as the means of securing "growth", only possible, apparently, by making our economies bankable and suitable for triple A credit ratings again. How can we fight this? Iceland is fighting it by refusing to give up money destined to ensure the welfare of its citizens, despite the threat of being excluded from the banking system and denied "growth". In the UK, we can fight it by refusing to vote for any party which proposes to destroy public services. In the US, go all out for public health, cripple and destroy the insurance companies, refuse to play along with the mantra of "growth". Get back to real welfare - people helping one another, giving as they are able to those in need. And forget about growth - it's what is eating up the world, and treating people like cockroaches.
"Consumerism is the dynamo which drives our economies because we have been told, and given no means to contest, the concept that "growth" (related of course to "progress") is essential for liberal democracies if they are to thrive."
This "economic growth" propaganda never made any sense to me. It's obvious to anyone that a business can maintain a steady amount of trade that in turn maintains a steady living for the people involved, without growth. It's obvious to anyone who observes nature that the earth maintains a constant volume of biomass constantly renewing itself. No growth there.
Our economy can and should mirror nature. Yes, indeed, many of our questions are left unanswered by the elites and their propaganda, so we must answer them ourselves, and it's easy. Never trust an elite. Go in the opposite direction the elite tells you to go. We don't need economic growth. Tell the elite he's crazy. And avoid feeding his monsters. Shift all of your individual exchange/association away from the power centers and toward your local economy, which is stable and sustainable.
>>Shift all of your individual exchange/association away from the power centers and toward your local economy, which is stable and sustainable.<<
It is? Or does it need outside sources for what it CANNOT produce for itself? And small communities certainly have their own "elites" as anyone living in a small town or rural community or county can testify to. Big guys are everywhere it seems.
Gary
"It seems obvious to say, overconsumption is fueled by overpopulation, with the process containing a feedback loop that increases its negative effects as more societies are MADE to belive they need all the stuff related to consumerism." (karlof)
I find it hard to follow your logic:
Overconsumption is the result of overproduction, an inherent problem of capitalism (as Marx understood) not overpopulation (just look at the US: 5 % of the world's population consume 25 % of its energy and materials and produce an incredible amount of waste, to say nothing of military spending ...)
The ancient greeks distinguished between production for use - "economy" (from the Greek word "oikos" for household)
and ("chrematistic") production for profit, which Aristotle considered a form of insanity ...("unnatural").. [as in "investment banking"]
A society driven by the aim of maximising "profit" is self-destructive ..
A world ruled by capital interests has no future ..
How Americans (and later most of the world) were turned into a herd of consumers can be watched here:
http://video.google.at/videoplay?docid=8953172273825999151&ei=cJ1DS5i6CdjB-Ab9xYGLDQ&q=edward+bernays#
The Kopenhagen debate showed clearly that overpopulation is a red herring because countries like India and China only became a global problem when they adopted capitalist industrial production in its worst form and stage: the globalized, transnational "free-market" system where the "right" to profit supercedes all human rights and ignores ecologic imperatives..
Why the economy has to "grow", what drives this insanity in a financial / monetary context is explored here:
http://video.google.de/videoplay?docid=-2550156453790090544&ei=PqRDS8iLPJWz-Aajob3ZDw&q=Money+as+Debt#
(see also part 2)
People do not need "jobs", (which they can no longer really choose and many people do not like) they need a meaningful activity, as part of a functioning community. We must go back to the principles of solidarity and remember being a part of a bigger, wiser system (nature) to organize alternative production and consumption patterns.
We could create more "jobs" in social services, which are badly needed these days, we could support local and regional organic food production, not global "trade" between faceless producers and consumers ... We MUST take back the control over monetary policy, perhaps even issue local currencies ...
http://www.webofdebt.com/articles/
http://www.smallisbeautiful.org/local_currencies.html
Politics ought to be decentralized: small, manageable economic units striving for (energy) independence, self-sufficiency and co-operation, which leads to more freedom and prevents economic conflicts.
But capitalism strives for monopolies, oligarchies, even global hegemony (see the US: Full Spectrum Dominance) not decentralisation (one reason why the transition to renewable energy is so unpopular among energy giants) and and the concentration of economic and military power is now so great that most nations have no chance to shape their own future ...
Monbiot is right: we live under (more or less disguised) economic tyranny, market-rule is a totalitarian concept, and its wrecking havoc with our lives ...
The central problem is one of perception: they have normalized the abnormal, the insane "growth & competition" mantra but all sustainable systems must have a self-limiting principle ... so industrial production must be heavily regulated according to ecological principles ...as Monbiot has pointe out earlier, we must be careful not to replace "consumerism" with "green consumerism" ...
Some suggestions for changes in economic policy (deglobalisation):
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2009/09/04-4
As population grows, the need of jobs for those new members of society also grows, otherwise social unrest that threatens the Elite manifests itself, which is why consumerism was devised in the first place, along with its partner technological obsolescence and a very old partner technological outsourcing. When looking at European countries with zero or negative population growth, there is no incentive to engage in consumerism and only industrial overcapacity needs to be solved, as it seems the Gerrmans almost have.
For example, in the US, net population growth is about 1.1% Y/Y, which is to say a little over 3 million people want to enter the labor force yearly; thus, to avoid social unrest that threatens the elite's hold on power, at least 3 million NEW jobs must be manufactured. The current US labor force in reality amounts to over 210 Million. Several million of those will never work fulltime despite their desires because of their disabilities. (I tutored blind and disabled college students who greatly desired fulltime employment.) Other millions will never work fulltime because of institutionalized racism. En toto, I come up with a result similar to Shadowstats showing 22% of the 210 Million laborforce--over 46 Million people--desiring fulltime employment--that's over 15 years of annulaized job creation. Just think about how much consumption must increase to create that number of jobs. And this is just the US. Countries like Mexico, Brazil, and Kenya have a similar problem.
Perhaps now you can understand the linkage between overpopulation and overconsumption. Current global population growth is about the same as the US--1.17% Global population is about 6.8 Billion, which means an annual increase of just under 80 Million, and all will consume, albeit at different levels. The planet is finite with only one ininite resource--sunlight. The current conflict in Yemen is fundamentally over resources being strained by overpopulation, not overproduction, and the same is the central cause of current conflicts not being induced by Imperialism.
For any attempt at a steady-state economy to be viable, overpopulation must cease and gradual depopulation encouraged. Either humans do this voluntarilly, or Nature will do it for us in an uglier fashion.
>>A society driven by the aim of maximising "profit" is self-destructive ..
A world ruled by capital interests has no future ..<<
Yet is truly the Market inherently as evil as you claim? Or is it that it has been distorted by the bandits of the super rich and corporations? A tradesman earning profits off his labor is no real threat to the world. Profit is not the evil some would make it to be. (Aristotle also thought females were deformed males. The opposite is true.) Profit is an encouragement as is a sense of craftsmanship, to innovate and improve one's goods. Overproduction in a fair market CUTS profits.
Small may be beautiful but some things work better made in large factories -- like gas efficient autos. Appropriate scale is the solution not just decentralization and tiny organizations, Nor is bottom-up always better than top down.
Gary
THIS our global CONSUMER society -- is breeding GHOULS..generation after generation.
whether we are knowingly and approvingly part of it or not - the great majority of humans are GHOULISH in what we think is "happines and achievement".
we have so little respect , if any left, for our Mother Earth. it makes one cry from the GUILT alone as well as the knowledge that it is like a giant trap.
today -- i had a very special experience...
I was just standing in the cold outside in a corner between some buildings abutting a small park...
and perhaps there was the the mixt of the wind with both its cold and warm air - but there was this flock of sea birds...they looked like seagulls although much smaller, but much bigger than pigeons...white, with dark tips at the wings - and they were flying so low - flapping their wings a few times but mostly just "gliding" and "sliding" on the wind dozens of them...piping and making calls to each other occasionally...they were maybe sweeping down in some wind tunnels maybe down to even 15 feet above me....and one actually briefly landed on the ground a few feet from me after I threw a piece of bread from a sandwich, gobbled it..then looked intently at me ..before flying up again....and they just kept it up for about a half hour of that...as if they were playing...and suddenly they were all gone.
i was literally seeing their legs so clearly either stretched straight out behind them or dangling relaxedly as they flew or "floated" or glided...it was so incredible and so amazing to be so privileged to have that moment....
and yet suddenly they were gone, just like that.
it reminded me of the beauty and wildness of our earth and its bounty -- which suddenly someday could be gone...but the winds of "change" are those WE have imposed on it.
Sioux Rose
TEDDY: I think the Great Designer delivers these gifts when our hearts are heavy. By allowing us to be touched by the living poetry of existence, there are better odds that we will act as champions of that which sustains life in Her myriad expressions.
A friend recently emailed me a forward that had photos of tiny baby animals. These beings are so precious, that one can barely grasp how such beauty and innocence in so many countless forms has come to bless this planet. Then the mind lurches to the darkest truth of all, that so much of the material bounty delivered to us for the purpose that vast species can share this abundant sphere, has instead been converted into a sickening array of agents that deliver death. This is what has been done with The Gift... and it dazzles the imagination that many who identify with these practices dare to say they are religious, worse still, that they claim to identify with "the right to life." Folly has always been an aspect of the human equation, but I believe its numbers are about as high as the uncountable derivatives that have come to replace the very notion of wealth with a diseased and equally distorted fascimile.
it was so beautiful - just watching them..to be able to see them so close down..sometimes almost grazing each others' wings as they did their common dance in all sorts of patterns i could not even grasp..seeing them as ONE flock - and yet each one was an individual the more I watched or tried to follow particular individuals...I dared not even move an inch where i was standing, trying to be as still as a tree or be part of the wall.. for fear that it would end..even right now - i can't get it out of my mind..
i understood or was reminded once more what
AWE means.
AWE at what the mother Earth shows us in its glorious richness that we have no right, never had the right to ever think was "OURS" to "rule" over.
I think that what a truly civilized culture would have done is to try to "guide" what resources the earth gives us for our needs and even wants - but only with as little disruption to what it already has given us. it is WE that should be adapting to what nature gives rather than MAKE nature bend to our will.
even high science can be achieved , and with it high technology and culture , by respecting what the Earth SHOWS..rather than learn about the Earth ONLY to
TORMENT the Mother Earth to "give up your goods" until she can give no more.
when we work the earth we should have been PAINSTAKING as we would be if we were to hold a baby or put it down to sleep..but instead we just
blow the Earth apart to "get" at something so we can turn it into ......MONEY.....
what kind of creatures are we?.
>>and yet suddenly they were gone, just like that.<<
That is what is happened to species after species as we CONSUME this beautiful planet. Nature will win out (she usually does) I believe but without so many wonderful creations and probably us as well in another Great Extinction.
Gary
consume less. small is beautiful
Monbiot writes:
"We might come together for occasional rallies and marches, but as soon as we start discussing alternatives, solidarity is shattered by possessive individualism. Consumerism has changed all of us. Our challenge is now to fight a system we have internalised."
I agree with the first sentence, but not the explanation.
People vigorously advocate for their personal vision of alternatives BECAUSE THE INTELLECTUAL ELITES, WHO SHOULD HAVE BEEN PROCESSING AND REFINING THESE IDEAS AND STARTING TO CREATE A CONSENSUS ON THEM VIA THE MASS MEDIA, OR AT LEAST THE INTELLECTUAL MEDIA, HAVE BEEN IGNORED/SILENCED. That is, each of us has to be our own PR advocate, because we've been almost entirely ignored by serious media. (Monbiot is a notable exception).
>>THE INTELLECTUAL MEDIA, HAVE BEEN IGNORED/SILENCED.<<
Or co-opted into becoming lackeys of those that rule us. Think tanks spring to mind.
Gary
I voluntarily slammed the breaks on my ambition well before I crashed into my first $Billion.
When I saw something on tv lately about new water-bearing planets (or something like that) being discovered ONLY 2 (it might have been 10) light-years away, I did a quick calculation; if it takes us 2 years to get a probe to Mars, then just by dividing the distance from Earth to Mars into 2 light years and multiplying by 2 (or something like that) I came up with 70 MILLION YEARS - that's how long it would take us to get there. Of course that's not very scientific - could be as low as 50 million years. Can we do cryogenic freezing that would last that long, or is that just in SF movies? Only joking. And remember ' War of the Worlds'; even if we find a 'suitable world', and send our deep-frozen ambassadors, armed with some supertools and all the world's knowledge on computer disks, then we'll have to deal with all those alien bacteria and viruses - how long to develop sufficient immunity to survive? Not to mention, of course, that if intelligent hasn't evolved there already, or in the intervening 70 million years, then there'd have to be something far wrong with the place.
How long have we got before we've 'used up' this planet on our current course? 100 years? Anyone care to bet on whether we're likely to develop the technology for near light-speed travel on a scale big enough to move billions of people in that time? That nonsense like this can be spoken in public shows that the propagandists are starting to believe their own propaganda. Get real - we're not going anywhere fast?
"...we have thousands of people each clamouring to have their own visions adopted."
And therein lies the core problem: we know Consumerism is killing us, but there is no clear 'ism' out there for us to switch to, and without that, our only choice is to keep this Titanic afloat as long as possible - and deal with surviving the icy waters after she goes under...
Changing our 'way of life' is about as major as it gets - without a solid, concise game plan, ain't no one jumping ship...
It is not actually possible for any individual group, such as a nation to go it alone either. The country that becomes ecologically sustainable has also become militarily weak. The American Indians and the Australian Aborigines lived in an ecologically sustainable fashion, which made conquest just too easy.
"The country that becomes ecologically sustainable has also become militarily weak."
The examples you provide don't prove your hypothesis. In the Americas, microbes did the job of conquest. Downunder, the peoples had no knowledge of metals or husbandry, lived on the very edge of existence, and cannot in any sense be called a country. I would submit that the Mongols certainly had an ecologically sustainable economy and came very close to conquering all of Eurasia, and maintained their hegemony in many regions for centuries. They were unaffected by the microbes. The same would be true of Dynastic China, India and Japan. It's arguable Rome was ecologically sustainable, or the Greeks and Persians before them.
So, it doesn't hold that ecologically sustainable countries make "conquest just too easy."
Maybe the problem is that everybody is looking for an "ism" when what we should do is keep clear of any and all "isms" - I'm all for cooperatives. See, no "ism" in that...at least, until someone decides to turn them into "cooperativism"
'In a recent comment thread, a poster expressed an idea that I have now heard a few times. "We need to get off this tiny little world and out into the wider universe ... if it takes the resources of the planet to get us out there, so be it. However we use them, however we utilise the energy of the sun and the mineral wealth of this world and the others of our planetary system, either we do use them to expand and explore other worlds, and become something greater than a mud-grubbing semi-sentient animal, or we die as a species."'
I'd hope that by breaking free of this planet, we'd actually reduce the strain on it, and be better able to protect its environment ...
A plausible idea, but numbers strip away the plausibility. If you do the numbers on what sort of resources are required per person in order to send them to another solar system, then what you have left is just a beautiful fantasy. To give you some idea, take a look at the calculations just to Mars:-
http://members.cox.net/jhaldenwang/mars.htm
I am not saying that SOME humans cannot go to other solar systems. All I am saying is that general migration is impossible and only a very very small percentage of us could go.
To summarize, we are stuck here on planet earth. We cannot escape to another planet and politics, economics and greed makes it impossible even to make the best of what we have.
I trust in one of Clarke's Laws: "When an eminent scientist says something is possible, he or she is very likely right. When he or she says it's impossible, he or she is probably wrong." Even at this rudimentary stage, ideas are emerging that would enable mass migrations away, and mass importation of resources, ideas such as the space elevator. And on average it's only going to get easier as we go along, not harder. It'll happen ...
For concepts and numbers, you might want to look at many postings at
http://www.newmars.com/forums/
A good general paper on the whole topic is Freeman J. Dyson's "Human Consequences of the Exploration of Space." Carlson Memorial Lecture, April 1968. Bull. Atomic Scientists, 25, Sept. 1969, pp. 8--13, Reprinted in ``Man on the Moon,'' Ed. E. Rabinowitch and R. S. Lewis. Basic Books Inc., New York, 1969. This article also appeared in the New Yorker Magazine around that time period.
If we do settle space within the foreseeable future, it will be within our solar system. Interstellar distances are too huge to be crossed in a reasonable time without incredible amounts of energy. The most plausible sites for human settlement are Mars or on habitats in open space constructed from materials mined from low gravity bodies like the moon and asteroids. Despite Monbiot's fears to the contrary (and the hopes of some free market enthusiasts), space settlement will not be a way to indefinitely continue a wasteful and environmentally destructive society. To live outside the Earth, in an environment without a native ecosystem, space settlers will need to create and maintain their own closed cycle ecosystems from scratch using plant and animal species exported from Earth. One of the few real attempts to study how to do this was the ill-fated Biosphere II project in Arizona. If artificial biospheres are indeed possible, it is quite likely that they will be less stable and forgiving of environmentally irresponsible behavior than is our large and ecologically diverse Earth. Their inhabitants would face the consequences of their actions on a much shorter timescale than the slow, generations-long deterioration of our comparatively huge home planet. Although only a tiny fraction of humanity could go, a space settlement project could be precisely the sort of teaching tool that humanity needs to learn to live sustainably in a technological society here on spaceship Earth.
It should lead to improved knowledge and ability to protect the environment of this planet, yes.
I suspect larger scale movements and even interstellar travel will appear sooner than currently expected despite challenges, but I agree, the Sun's neighborhood is first, and we will need to master closed ecosystems ...
I browsed your site, and it was quite fun. It made a great change from thinking about the morose state of world politics. It explored loads of dreams and ideas that I had not thought possible, that might eventually become possible:-
* Rocket fuels 10 times more efficient than those currently being used.
* Means of lifting things into space approx 100 times more efficient than rocket propulsion, e.g. your space elevator.
Of course, none of this could give any excuse for trashing the mother planet earth.
To protect the environment here with space travel, why not gather all the plastic floating in the ocean and ship it to the moon? It could be put on the dark side, and nobody would even know it's there.
Until we clean up our own environment we have no business spreading like a disease to other worlds.
It's all fantasy anyway. When the Big Fart happens all the people will be right here, not colonizing other planets. There's not enough time.
Protect this environment by f%^%$#ing up another? Is that your idea of a solution? The real solution here won't come until humans become the next dinosaurs and extint themselves. Only at that point, will there be hope for the Earth and everything good it contains.
"Progress is measured by the speed at which we destroy the conditions that sustain life."
It's the 'corporation', folks.
CORP IS BORG.
STRANGE...HOW THEY MAKE US BUY OUR OWN AUDIO-VISUAL PROPAGANDA DELIVERY BOXES. Shouldn't they be free?
when it was clearly over
everyone gave away their possessions at once
clambered naked through streets
clotted with gift-wrapped appliances
turning orange
When your thoughts mutate into a strange verse should you still post them?
Is consciousness finally rising?
(1) Monbiot's best insight comes only in his final paragraph where he laments, "...we no longer have movements . . ."; i.e., we have lost the capacity for self-organized resistance to the lunatic fringe that runs the status quo. (Psychologists call this "learned helplessness.") Symptomatic is the nearly universal incapacity to conduct an honest, good-faith adult conversation on topics of civic interest. Instead there is a mindless recycling of cliches and stereotypes, resembling nothing so much as a splatter of talking bumper stickers. This makes for a lonely world, relieved only slightly by fine websites such as Common Dreams, which offer an opportunity to remember the art of conversation, if only as an extinct species is remembered in amber, and seen in a museum. (2) Psychologists have long since pegged the consumerism belabored by Monbiot as an economic edition of "identifying with the aggressor"--which reaches its apex in the American Dream that we can all be just like the rich folks. (3) The most telling omission in Monbiot's article: The word "capitalism" does not appear. (Would any sane person choose an oncologist who never used the word "cancer"?}
60 years of feeding frenzy, eh? Ain't that funny how the beginning of the end coincides with the establishment of the state of Israel? That god of the Christians does have a good sense of humor after all.