Folks --

It seems like every day, week, or month I see in the mainstream press 
another matter-of-factly presented alert that a species, an ecosystem, a 
critical planetary cycle is out of whack, with likely devastating 
consequences, often sooner rather than later.

Polar bears, sage grouse, the North Banks fishery, the western Pacific, 
major river systems, major aquifers, rain forests, ocean levels rising, 
desertification, carbon dioxide/global warming, glaciers melting; and the 
list grows and grows over time with the pace of new alarms itself increasing 
alarmingly.

And the consuming public is told by their government that the solution to 
"terrorism" is to go shopping.  More ways to shop are devised through 
electronic and cyber-media and advertising.
The Shopping Channel  on television is supplanted by EBay and Craigslist.  
People tune out the drone of warnings of ecological catastrophe, but focus 
intently on businesses handing out free products and services to bring in 
yet more paying customers.

We are a world of catastrophic consumption, with the lines totally blurred 
between wants and needs.  Human survival is increasingly being put at risk 
by destructive consumption.  Resource wars are killing many, many thousands, 
with planning being laid by governments for yet more such wars.  Terrorism 
is a buzz word for those who resist colonization and imperialism through 
armed force, with the underlying impetus for these conflicts being 
competition for increasingly scarce resources with petroleum far and away at 
the top of the list of valued resources.  Petroleum greases the pathway to 
consumption, and consumption of petroleum itself is the underlying factor 
for wars past, present and future.

During World War II, Americans were asked to consume less of many consumer 
goods in order to allow for resources to be devoted to the war effort.  Now, 
Americans are asked to shop during wartime.  The American economy drives 
armaments production of high technology implements of war that are capable 
of killing countless citizens of other countries whose national needs are in 
competiton with those of American citizens.  So we shop and kill and kill 
and shop and it is all one endless destructive cycle, as interlinked as any 
ecological system's components.

We are used to killing our competitors.  Ranchers kill ground squirrels and 
prairie dogs that compete for grass.  We kill coyotes and wolves that 
compete for our livestock.  We kill termites that compete for our finished 
lumber.  In a world of increasing competition for resources, with a 
still-growing human population and retaining the idiotic priority of yet 
more economic growth, the killing will only continue and increase.

Will we ever learn?  I think we may be asking the wrong question.

Can we ever learn as a species that an appropriate level of consumption is 
the key to survival, but catastrophic consumption kills?  And our 
society/culture is as addicted to catastrophic consumption as a junkie is to 
heroin.  The junkie often harms only himself, but we are harming 
biodiversity, ecosystems, planetary cycles and processes, and our unborn 
children.


Stan Moore    San Geronimo, CA     [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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