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Who could
overlook that title? I must say this
did make me think of all Keith’s posts about salt and trade routes and status
goods. It also repeats another (in)famous
theme: ignoring the lessons of history. - KWC Salt of the Earth Since we're stuck in Iraq indefinitely, we may as well try
to learn something. But I suspect that our current leaders won't be receptive
to the most important lesson of the land where cities and writing were
invented: that manmade environmental damage can destroy a civilization. When archaeologists excavated the cities of ancient
Mesopotamia, they were amazed not just by what they found but by where they
found it: in the middle of an unpopulated desert. In "Ur of the
Chaldees," Leonard Woolley asked: "Why, if Ur was an empire's
capital, if Sumer was once a vast granary, has the population dwindled to
nothing, the very soil lost its virtue?" The answer — the reason "the very soil lost its
virtue" — is that heavy irrigation in a hot, dry climate leads to a
gradual accumulation of salt in the soil. Rising salinity first forced the
Sumerians to switch from wheat to barley, which can tolerate more salt; by
about 1800 B.C. even barley could no longer be grown in southern Iraq, and
Sumerian civilization collapsed. Later "salinity crises" took place
further north. In the 19th century, when Europeans began to visit Iraq, it
probably had a population less than a tenth the size of the one in the age of
Gilgamesh. Modern civilization's
impact on the environment is, of course, far greater than anything the ancients
could manage. We can do more damage in a decade than our ancestors could
inflict in centuries. Salinization remains a big problem in today's world, but
it is overshadowed by even more serious environmental threats. Moreover, in the
past environmental crises were local: agriculture might collapse in Sumer, but
in Egypt, where the annual flooding of the Nile replenished the soil,
civilization went on. Today, problems like the thinning of the ozone layer and
the accumulation of greenhouse gases affect the planet as a whole. On the other hand,
today we have the ability to understand environmental threats, and act to
contain them. The Montreal Protocol, signed in 1989, shows how science and
policy can work hand in hand. Research showed that certain chemicals were
destroying the ozone layer, which protects us from ultraviolet radiation, so
governments agreed to ban the use of those chemicals, and the ban appears to be
succeeding. But would the people
now running America have agreed to that protocol? Probably not. In fact, the
Bush administration is trying to reinterpret the agreement to avoid phasing out
the pesticide methyl bromide. And on other environmental issues — above all,
global warming — America's ruling party is pursuing a strategy of denial and deception. Before last year's
elections Frank Luntz, the Republican pollster, wrote a remarkable memo about
how to neutralize
public perceptions
that the party was anti-environmental. Here's what it said about global
warming: "The scientific debate is closing [against us] but is not yet
closed. There is still an opportunity to challenge the science." And it
advised Republicans to play up the appearance of scientific uncertainty. But as a recent article in Salon
reminds us, this
appearance of uncertainty is "manufactured." Very few independent experts now dispute
that manmade global warming is happening, and represents a serious threat. Almost all the skeptics are directly or
indirectly on the payroll of the oil, coal and auto industries. And before you accuse me of a
conspiracy theory, listen to what the other side says. Here's Senator James
Inhofe of Oklahoma: "Could it be that manmade global warming is the
greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American people? It sure sounds like
it." The point is that when
it comes to evidence of danger from emissions — as opposed to, say, Iraqi nukes
— the people now running our country won't take yes for an answer. Meanwhile, news
reports say, President Bush will spend much of this month buffing his
environmental image. No doubt he'll repeatedly be photographed amid scenes of
great natural beauty, uttering stirring words about his commitment to
conservation. His handlers hope that the images will protect him from awkward
questions about his actual polluter-friendly
policies
and, most important, his refusal
to face up
to politically
inconvenient environmental dangers. So here's the
question: will we avoid the fate of past civilizations that destroyed their
environments, and hence themselves? And the answer is: not if Mr. Bush can help
it. |
- Re: [Futurework] Strategy of Denial and Deception Karen Watters Cole
- Re: [Futurework] Strategy of Denial and Decepti... Brad McCormick, Ed.D.
