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.
In September 2005 I summarized biologist David Ehrenfeld's prescient 1993 book Beginning Again,
in which he lovingly tells the story of the giant green turtles of
Costa Rica, who have lived there unchanged for 300 million years,
skewers bureaucracy and hierarchy as twin evils of the modern era,
laments the loss of the critical skills of craftsmanship and
maintenance, insists that there is no adapting to catastrophes in
complex systems (so we must learn to prevent them), champions
generalists over narrow specialists, calls for restrictions on increase
of human numbers, urges adoption of sustainable polyculture and
permaculture to replace catastrophic agriculture, and warns (in 1993!)
of the looming crisis created by the "bottomless pit of debt" in the
US.
He likens our modern economy to "a massive flywheel, spinning too fast for its size and
construction, coming apart in chunks as it spins". This, he warns, is what happens when you try to replace an effective complex natural system, with great resilience and redundancy evolved over hundreds of millennia, with an efficient
complicated, man-made system, fragile, over-extended, unforgiving of
any failure in any of its moving parts. The big losers when it comes
apart, he warns, will be the poor and the young. The rich and old, who
have hoarded what they need to pull them through, will increasingly
closet themselves away from the masses as the cascading crises wreak
havoc on everyone else.
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People
who have inspired or informed me frequently over the past few months.
For my full blogroll/online reference library, see
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people I connect with in real time, f2f, via IM, Skype or SL chat.]
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