Dave Pollard's environmental philosophy, creative works, business papers and essays. In search of a better way to live and make a living, and a better understanding of how the world really works.
A Short History of the End of Civilization: Mike Davis is a brilliant and provocative writer. Just go read his brief and incisive summary of what has led our civilization to the brink of collapse. Mike, you need a blog! Teasers:
The
UNDP...warns that it will require "a 50 percent cut in greenhouse gas
emissions worldwide by 2050 against 1990 levels" to keep humanity
outside the red zone of runaway warming... Yet the International Energy
Agency predicts that, in all likelihood, such emissions will actually
increase in this period by nearly 100 percent -- enough greenhouse gas to propel us past several critical tipping points...
Let's
just ask: What if the buying and selling of carbon credits and
pollution offsets fails to turn down the thermostat? What exactly will
motivate governments and global industries then to join hands in a
crusade to reduce emissions through regulation and taxation?...
And
what if growing environmental and social turbulence, instead of
galvanizing heroic innovation and international cooperation, simply
drive elite publics into even more frenzied attempts to wall themselves
off from the rest of humanity?... We're talking here of the prospect of
creating green and gated oases of permanent affluence on an otherwise
stricken planet...
National Academy of Science...found that the
richest countries, by their activities, have generated 42 percent of
environmental degradation across the world, while shouldering only 3
percent of the resulting costs.
Humans Have 23 Years to Go: IFTF is creating a game set 10 years from now that gives the players 23 'years' to deal with five cascading social, ecological and economic crises that threaten to end civilization.
Sounds like fun, if they'll let us play (full access to members only,
and the link above was down at time of writing). Problem is, they're
calling the game Superstruct (literally: build over top). Seems to me that the only viable solutions to this problem will be bottom-up, not top-down. Shouldn't the game be called Substruct? Thanks to Jerry Michalski for the link.
Discover Undiscovered Musicians: Some great hand-made music from unknown artists you can browse and play to your heart's content -- IACmusic.com. Here's my own 'station' collection of what I've been listening to there.
See What Global Warming Has Wrought So Far: A couple of years ago I pointed out the NOAA viewer that lets you see a movie of glaciation, coastal flooding and vegetation change over the past 21000 years
(since the last ice age). If you haven't seen it, take a look. What
would be interesting would be to project it forward, assuming a
hundred-fold or thousand-fold acceleration of rate of change.
The Only Diet for a Peacemaker Is a Vegetarian Diet: "Conscience dictates that the grain should stay where it is grown,
from South America to Africa. And it should be fed to the local
malnourished poor, not to the chickens destined for our KFC buckets."
Even the orthodox churches are starting to get it.
Who Are You Trying to Impress?: Justin Kownacki analyzes the politics of conversations, and how disruptive they can be to making the conversation meaningful, valuable, and informative.
Google Offers Animated Avatars for Google Chat: The poor man's Second Life app "Lively", has just been released. Limited avatar options. Agonizingly slow. Much work needed.
Doug Rushkoff on Open Space Democracy:Democracy is a collective choice and emerges through collective action,
he says. If we only care about what it means to us individually, and
what we do individually, democracy is lost. Branding, advertising, the
mainstream media, corpocracy, hierarchy -- these are all directed at us
as individuals. We have to get past self-interest, past individuation of everything. Don't ask What can I do?, discuss What can we do? Thanks to William Tozier for the link.
Unintended Consequences: George Monbiot's latest article about the Death of the Oceans
raises some more interesting thoughts about unintended consequences in
complex systems. Of course high oil prices will reduce (somewhat)
demand for gasoline and hence reduce CO2 emissions. But that reduced
demand in affluent nations will also allow Asia to continue to pick up
whatever oil is not contracted for, pushing emissions right back up
again. And while high prices will drive some people to switch to more
efficient vehicles, will those more efficient vehicles then be driven
further than the gas guzzlers? Monbiot explains that high oil prices
are keeping ocean-devastating fishing trawlers in port, but it's also
got fishermen striking for subsidies, pushing politicians who want
re-election to divert money from worthy causes to subsidizing
uneconomic activities. And environmental laws designed to prevent
permafrost and glacial melt and ocean disasters are being abandoned in
the desperate search for a little more cheap oil, accelerating global
warming that will ultimately require huge taxes on oil to curtail. This
is precisely why the "market mechanism" that so many conservatives
trust to solve global warming and everything else simply does not work.
Complex systems are inertial -- they tend to adapt to stay in
equilibrium until forced to a new equilibrium by either decisive
intervention, or catastrophe.
Canada's Conservatives "The Republican Farm Team": George Bush's (last?) lapdog, arch-conservative Canadian PM Harper, is refusing to allow conscientious objectors to the Bush war to come to Canada,
ending a two-century-old tradition of providing sanctuary for Americans
of conscience. Bush now beckons Harper obediently to his side by
barking "Yo Harper!" Meanwhile,
as they shrugged off their responsibility for the global food crisis,
Bush and Yo Harper and the rest of the G8 gang of thieves chowed down
on an extravagant 18-course meal of high-energy, high-cruelty imported foods.(Thanks to Meg Fowler for the links).
Alberta Hypes Bitumen Sludge Mining to Obama & McCain:
Despite growing realization that the Alberta Bitumen Sludge Mining
operation (what the industry prefers to call 'oil sands', depicted
above) is the most ecologically destructive project on Earth, the government of Alberta, whose economy is utterly dependent on this horror, is busy lobbying both US presidential candidates to endorse buying its dirty oil. They will almost certainly succeed: It's not in their backyard.
Find of the Day, above, found on top of a baby change table in a women's washroom in BC. Thanks to Darren Barefoot for the link.
Thought for the Week: Being A Part: I've been chatting recently with Andrew Campbell and Beth Patterson about connection with the land and all-life-on-Earth. Andrew has pointed to the work of Gregory Bateson (whose first wife BTW was Margaret Mead) and his discussion of immanence
-- the quality of remaining within as a part (of the environment, Gaia,
the complexity of all-life-on-Earth), while our minds furiously attempt
to analyze, to dissect, to set ourselves apart. Beth has collected a
remarkable set of stories from readers that answer the question "Where is Home?"
I replied to Beth that I thought the most evocative writing I had read
about this was that of Sam Mills of the now largely-lost blogs feral and thistle & hemlock (she now writes the blog bitterbrush); here's an example of how she tells us what it means to be a part.
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