EARTH MEANDERS
How Can the Earth Win If Global Citizens Do Not Seek 
Ecological Truth and Sufficient Action?

Sustaining biodiversity, climate, and the biosphere requires 
protest to achieve sufficient policies based upon ecological 
science; and all of us including the environment movement 
taking risks while committing to massive social change

Earth Meanders by Dr. Glen Barry, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://earthmeanders.blogspot.com/
March 30, 2008

As the fourth anniversary of my Earth Meanders personal 
ecological essays approaches, I thought it appropriate to 
meander on the past and future challenges of their writing. 
Given the demands of 80 hour weeks required by my day job 
running Ecological Internet (EI), the leading provider of 
environmental portals, I much desired an opportunity to more 
broadly express my ecological insight. Thus Earth Meanders was 
born with the mandate of "placing environmental sustainability 
within the context of other contemporary issues". 

After 20 years of focusing tightly upon studying and working 
to protect forests, and climate for the last ten years, 
writing these essays and expressing more widely a biocentric 
vision has helped me tremendously. I do this out of love for 
the Earth and to help myself deal with the personal pain of 
knowing the violence being done to her. However, I do realize 
there has been some confusion regarding my dual roles within 
EI and these writings. They are completely separate, and to 
make this clearer you will see that future Earth Meanders will 
be coming from [EMAIL PROTECTED] . 

Earth Meanders is my attempt to understand and communicate how 
ecology pervades every aspect of life. This ongoing dialogue 
regarding ecological sustainability and related issues is not 
meant to be strategic, or part of a campaign. The only 
criterion determining whether I like a piece and will send it 
out is if I believe it to be truthful, and it says what I 
meant to say. This essay is even more bloated and self-
indulgent than usual, but I find it necessary to respond at 
length to what I consider unfair criticisms and further 
explain what I do and why.

Far too little effort has been made to truthfully determine 
global ecological policy required to sustain humanity and the 
Earth. A strong disservice is done to the Earth's prospects by 
those who generally know the scope and seriousness of the 
global ecological crises but continue living and working as if 
token change is enough. My personal approach as an essayist, 
and professional methods as an activist -- both based upon 
biocentric ecological truth seeking and protest action -- are 
frequently criticized, even by my closest colleagues. 

Let me give a few examples, not to chastise, but to illustrate 
some important points. A dear advisor and financial supporter 
recently castigated me in regard to my cellulosic biofuels 
essay, letting me know "nothing that you write will have any 
significant impact", urging me to accept them as inevitable 
rather than tipping at windmills. A longtime colleague of EI 
recently suggested we should not protest Brazil's soy policy 
because it was undiplomatic and could cause outrage. As I went 
ahead, this individual reneged on pledged financial support. 

And there is the long-standing six-year effort to get former 
colleague Rainforest Action Network out of the business of 
supporting ancient forest logging. RAN refuses to answer the 
simple question "how does FSC certified logging of primary and 
old-growth forests protect endangered forests". These sincere, 
truthful efforts have been met with stonewalling and 
increasingly personal attacks suggesting I just seek 
attention, like causing problems, and dismissal of EI's 
campaign to end ancient forest logging as "flame bait". If all 
I wanted was attention I would go and hang off a building as 
RAN does!

In each case criticism from respected associates that I depend 
upon for my livelihood has strongly stung. I am deeply 
reflective, and this leads me to consider whether changing my 
approach would be a good idea. Ecological Internet continues 
to struggle financially. Is this because of these 
controversial personal writings and EI protests, and should I 
sell out and stop strongly identifying and advocating 
ecological truth in order to better fit in while paying my 
modest mortgage? 

Certainly if I stopped writing these essays and removed 
controversial content from EI's portals, while toning down our 
campaigns, it would result in more mainstream, broad-based 
support including more funding. But would the Earth's 
interests and truth in general be best served? Though modest 
in resources (though perhaps not in personality) I have built 
one of the world's only ecological truth-telling truly global 
networks committed to sufficient policies to achieve global 
ecological sustainability. Should this be traded away for 
social acceptability, some coins, and a return personally to 
IT/ecological consulting to make a living?

In response to each expression of concern, I have replied that 
truth matters, that a central truth is that ecosystems are 
required for life and are failing, and that discussion of 
uncomfortable yet sufficient alternative ecological views is a 
good thing. These three instances are but tiny examples of the 
timidity and cautiousness of the environmental movement. 

I am constantly amazed at the lack of fight. If any other 
issue threatened to kill billions, and even perhaps end human 
civilization, there would be outrage and urgent mobilization 
to action. Alas, it is easier to raise armies than achieve 
necessary widespread personal and societal sacrifice. When 
asked to give up material comforts to save their species and 
habitat, even the greenest would rather seek reform than 
revolt.

If the Earth is to have a future, it is critical that little 
in regards to human consumption patterns remains sacrosanct. 
If we cannot fuel personal automobiles, power our electronics 
and use large timbers in construction without destroying 
global ecosystems; then autos, coal and ancient forest logging 
have to go. The status quo is irredeemable and will change 
either through lack of effort, continued destruction and 
eventual collapse; or through personal and societal 
revolutionary change based upon ecological truth.

Humans are animals. Fundamentally our habitat requirements are 
met by the variety of life and their cumulative outputs and 
interactions; that is, biodiversity creates ecosystems we need 
to live. There is virtually no chance that humanity can 
engineer these ecological processes and patterns. All aspects 
of human endeavors – economic, cultural, social, artistic and 
political – are subsets of the global ecological system. No 
ecology, no economy.

Economic, justice, security and other political concerns are 
very important. Yet none rise to the level of biodiversity 
loss, ecosystem failure, global heating and the biosphere's 
pending collapse. If the global ecological system fails, being 
ends, and all these other matters mean nothing. There are many 
fancy and increasingly complex policies proposed to protect 
the Earth's climate and biodiversity. These range from carbon 
markets, to biofuels, to payments for avoided deforestation -- 
all meant to extend growth of the human enterprise.

Yet in reality, limits to such growth have already been 
exceeded, and the solutions are simple -- ending the burning 
of fossil fuels, and any diminishment of rainforest and other 
natural habitats. And we must be willing to pay the price of 
forgone development including meeting needs of those 
economically dependent upon these antiquated activities. 

If humanity really decides saving the Earth’s diversity of 
life and relatively stable climatic patterns is worthwhile, we 
would swing into action with a sense of urgency to support 
this environmental sufficiency agenda at all costs. 
Ecologically enlightened global citizens will protest across 
borders judging rightly that their survival depends upon 
success. Europeans and Americans will protest Amazonian 
rainforest loss; even as Bolivian victims of climate change 
induced floods protest their wasteful use of energy. 

Saving the Earth and all her species including humans depends 
critically upon creating a movement of global citizens 
interested in truthfully identifying what is required to 
maintain the Earth, and then taking sufficient action 
(whatever the odds) to achieve that which must be done. This 
effort must not be bound by social convention, political 
boundaries, or the interests of environmental funders and 
gatekeepers of permissible thought. 

I believe strongly it is less risky for the Earth and the 
survival of all her creatures to perhaps fall short of what is 
truly necessary to achieve ecological sustainability, while 
just maybe wholly succeeding; than to achieve in their 
entirety policies that are inadequate and can only inevitably 
lead to ecocide. For as long as we can possibly hold out, you 
can count upon Ecological Internet to help facilitate required 
global protests, and for me to write freely and truthfully 
here about sufficient measures to achieve global, just and 
equitable ecological sustainability. It is what I do.

********************
Dr. Barry is founder and President of Ecological Internet; 
provider of the largest, most used environmental portals on 
the Internet including the Climate Ark at 
http://www.climateark.org/ and http://www.EcoEarth.Info/ . 
Earth Meanders is a series of ecological essays that are 
written entirely in his personal capacity. This essay may be 
reprinted granted it is properly credited to Dr. Barry and 
with a link to Earth Meanders. Emailed responses are public 
record and will be posted on the web site unless otherwise 
requested.

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