Dear Readers,

I, perhaps like a cat, have had "nine lives."  I cannot be
pigeonholed.  I am the product of a mother who loved
people and loved to talk, and a father who came from
a line of fathers, who taught and practised areas from
moral philosophy to physics to technology.

So, whether my book on Technological Innovation or one
on Health, Safety and the Environment -- I have walked
"the mile" and then some.

I sometimes grow weary, but a close colleague, fifteen
years my elder, has shown that even at 75, if one lives
a healthy life style and otherwise take care of yourself,
retirement at age 65, is often optional.  (We witness Thurmond,
who held his seat to age 99, and only just passed.)

***

I say these things because I truly see convergence across
a number of social policy issues to which I've contributed,
from energy, to the environment, to community.

As most know, the current level of oil consumption simply
can't continue (and neither for coal or gas).

So, some suggest the war in Iraq was about oil, as they ask
why some various dozen regimes without oil, and having
been excessively cruel to their people, were not also
subject to the "might" of the U.S. of A.

I say.  "Good question."

One way or another we are destined to live what many call
the "sustainable economy."  If we think of a million
years of future generations, many are convinced that
the level of energy consumption seen today will appear
aberrant.

But to Bush, Jr. and Cheney -- both "oil men," they
will fight to drain every last drop of those fossil
remains from millions of years ago.

***

Any of you who have read _On the Beach_ by Nevil Shute,
or seen the movie based on the book, will recall that,
due to a nuclear holocaust, there are only very remote
countries that still have survivors.  And, having read
this book, now about forty years ago, I can vividly recall
the fellow who still had a car and just enough fuel for
"one last ride." (from which he does not survive)

So, I see our current trajectory as "one last ride" and
very possibly one we may not easily survive from.

An example?  When I was a boy I would marvel at seeing
a jet airplane streak across the sky!  I could see
the vapor trail of the combustion of fuel, and they looked
like peculiar clouds.

But, older and wiser, I now look at "air travel" as aberrant
behavior.  Why?  It simply consumes much more energy in a
day than what we can easily capture from the sun in a day.

So, now, 45 years later when I see the plane and the vapor
trail I wince.  No longer am I enthralled by this enormous
consumption of energy -- because -- it has little place in
a "sustainable economy."

Very soon, in terms of the history of this planet, the
thousands of jet planes that consume this enormous amount
of energy will soon be silenced.

Americans, in their belief that "our country" is the end-all
and be-all for every other country are simple unaware of
the shear arrogance that we transmit to both people in this
country who see the aberrant behavior, and every other country
that sees our aberrant behavior in everything from consumption
to media.

Jon Stewart asks (on the Daily Show/Comedy Central) "so why
do they hate us?"

Oh, my.  The answer is as clear "as the nose on your face."

We have overstepped our authority, we have overstepped our
right to consume, we have overstepped our right to create
pollutants and waste, and we have forgotten how to listen
to important values in others' cultures.

We are so focussed on "freedoms" that we have forgotten
the natural restraints of the planet.

So, with this introduction, I copy the following 2
articles, of a similiar concern:

=======================Electronic Edition======================== . .
. RACHEL'S ENVIRONMENT & HEALTH NEWS #767 . . --- April 17, 2003--- .
. (Published July 3, 2003) . . HEADLINES: . . WALKING NORTH ON A
SOUTHBOUND TRAIN, PT. 2 . . ========== . . Environmental Research
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766 -- Walking North on a Southbound Train, Part 1, April 03, 2003

Published June 25, 2003 

by David W. Orr** 

An old farmer once told me a story of a wily fox that he came to know
well, and its interactions with his unfortunate dog. One day, as he
tells it, the fox began to run in circles just outside the radius of
the dog's tether, followed by the frantically barking dog. After a few
laps the tether was wrapped around the post, at which point the fox
strutted in to devour the dog's food while the helpless mutt looked
on. Something like that has happened to all of us who believe that
nature and ecosystems are worth preserving and that this is a matter
of obligation, spirit, true economy, and common sense. Someone or
something has run us in circles, tied us up, and is eating our lunch.
It is time to ask who and why and how we might respond. Here is what
we know: 

(1) Despite occasional success, overall we are losing the epic
struggle to preserve the habitability of the earth. The overwhelming
fact is that virtually all important ecological indicators are in
decline. The human population increased three-fold in the twentieth
century and will likely grow further before leveling off at 8-11
billion. The loss of species continues and will likely increase in
coming decades. Human-driven climatic change is occurring more rapidly
than many scientists thought possible even a few years ago. There is
no political or economic movement presently underway sufficient to
stop the process short of a doubling or tripling of the background
rate of 280 ppm CO2. On the horizon are other threats in the form of
self-replicating technologies that may place humankind and natural
systems in even greater jeopardy. 

(2) The forces of denial in the United States are more militant and
brazen than ever. Every day millions in this country alone hear that
those concerned about the environment are "extremists," "wackos," or
worse. A former Wyoming senator charges that the environmental
movement is "a front for these terrorists," and no significant
Washington politician utters any objection.[1] And people holding such
opinions have been appointed to strategic positions throughout the
federal government. 

(3) The movement to preserve a habitable planet is caught in the
crossfire between fundamentalists of the corporate-dominated global
economy and those of atavistic religious movements. It is far easier
to see the latter than the former, but in a longer perspective the
forces of perpetual economic expansion will be perceived to be at
least as dangerous as those of a purely religious sort. That danger is
now magnified by a new rightwing doctrine gaining the status of
national policy that permits the United States to strike preemptively
at any country deemed to be an enemy without resort to international
law, morality, common sense, or public debate. In the words of one
analyst, this is "a strategy to use American military force to permit
the continued offloading onto the rest of the world of the ecological
costs of the existing U.S. economy -- without any short-term
sacrifices on the part of U.S. capitalism, the U.S. political elite or
U.S. voters".[2] 

(4) Fundamentalists either economic or religious require dependably
loathsome enemies. For Osama bin Laden, the United States and George
W. Bush admirably serve that purpose. It is no less true that the
foundering presidency of Mr. Bush was revitalized by the activities of
Mr. Bin Laden and subsequently by the less agreeable attributes of
Saddam Hussein. Each is fulfilled and defined by an utterly vile
enemy. 

(5) There has been a steep erosion of democracy and civil liberties in
the United States, driven by what former president Jimmy Carter
describes as "a core group of conservatives who are trying to realize
long-pent-up ambitions under the cover of the proclaimed war against
terrorism."[3] There is a strong antidemocratic movement on the right
wing of American politics that would limit voting rights, reduce
access to information, prevent full disclosure of the conduct of
public business, and reduce public control of military affairs. 

(6) In the 1990s, massive amounts of wealth were transferred from the
poor and middle classes to the richest. By one estimate "the financial
wealth of the top 1% exceeds the combined household financial wealth
of the bottom 95%."[4] Much of this transfer of wealth was simply
theft. In the California energy "crisis" alone, an estimated $30
billion was diverted by those utilities that effectively defrauded the
state and its citizens. 

(7) For nearly a quarter century, government at all levels has been
under constant attack by the extreme right wing, with the clear
intention of eroding our capacity to forge collective solutions. The
assumption is now common that markets are "moral" but that publicly
created political solutions are not. The result is a continuation of
what a Republican president, Teddy Roosevelt, once described as "a
riot of individualistic materialism, under which complete freedom for
the individual... turned out in practice to mean perfect freedom for
the strong to wrong the weak" (quoted by C. Meine, unpublished
manuscript). 

(8) The U.S. government's strategy, once revealed by Ronald Reagan's
director of the Office of the Budget, David Stockman, has been to cut
taxes for corporations and the wealthy and increase military spending,
there by creating a severe fiscal crisis that requires cutting
expenditures for health, education, mass transit, the environment, and
cities. 

(9) Our problems are systemic in nature and will have to be solved at
the system level. 

(10) There are yet good possibilities for averting the worst of what
may lie ahead. 

In short, the movement to preserve the habitability of the earth is
failing, and we ought to ask why. The reasons can be found neither in
the lack of effort or good intention by thousands of scientists,
activists, and concerned citizens nor in a lack of information, data,
logic, and scientific evidence. On these counts the movement has grown
impressively, as has the quality and quantity of scientific evidence
and rational discourse on which it rests. But we must look more deeply
at how this movement is manifest in the larger arena in which public
attitudes are formed and the way in which it influences the conduct of
the public business. 

We are failing, first, because for 20 years or longer we have tried to
be reasonable on the terms of the opposition, in the belief that we
could persuade the powerful if we only offered enough reason, data,
evidence, and logic. We have quantified the decline of species,
ecosystems, and now planetary systems in exhaustive detail. We bent
over backward to accommodate the style and intellectual predilections
of self-described "conservatives" and those for whom the economy is
far more important than the environment, in the belief that politeness
and good evidence stated in their terms would win the day.
Accordingly, we put the case for the earth and coming generations in
the language of economics, science, and law. With remarkably few
exceptions we have been reasonable, erudite, clever, cautiously
informative, and -- relative to the magnitude of the challenges before
us -- ineffective. In short, we do science, write books, publish
articles, develop professional societies, attend conferences, and
converse learnedly. But they do politics, take over the courts,[5]
control the media, and manipulate the fears and resentments endemic to
a rapidly changing society. 

The movement to preserve a habitable Earth is failing, too, because it
is fractured into different factions, groups, and arcane philosophies.
In this respect it has come to resemble the nineteenth century
European socialist movement, which became bitterly divided into
warring factions, each more eager to be right than right and
effective. When the world was finally ready for better ideas about how
to decently organize industrial society, that movement delivered
Bolshevism, and the rest, as they say, is history. The left
historically has exhausted itself in bloody internecine quarrels, the
strategy, as David Brower once described it, of drawing the wagons
into a circle and shooting inward. The right generally suffers no such
fracturing, in large part because their agenda is formed around less
complicated aims having to do with pecuniary advantage. 

Further, I think Jack Turner is right in saying that we are failing
because all too often we are complacent and lack passion. "We are," in
his words, "a nation of environmental cowards... willing to accept
substitutes, imitations, semblances, and fakes -- a diminished wild.
We accept abstract information in place of personal experience and
communication."[6] Effective protest, he continues, "is grounded in
anger and we are not (consciously) angry. Anger nourishes hope and
fuels rebellion, it presumes a judgment, presumes how things ought to
be and aren't, presumes a caring. Emotion remains the best evidence of
belief and value. Unfortunately, there is little connection between
our emotions and the wild" (pgs. 21-22). We are endlessly busy trading
email, doing research, writing papers, and attending conferences in
exotic places, but we go into the wild less and less often. We are cut
off from the source. 

Finally, we are losing because we have failed to appreciate the depth
of human needs for transcendence and belonging. We have allowed those
intending to pillage the last of nature to do so behind the cover of
religion, national pride, community, and family. As a result, the
majority of U.S. citizens -- even those who regard themselves as
"environmentalists" -- see little problem with the goals of human
domination of nature and the perpetual expansion of the human estate
on Earth. As Buddhists would have it, whatever we thought we were
doing, we have built a system based on illusion, greed, and ill will
disguised by patriotism, religious doctrine, and individualism. 

[Continued next issue: What is to be done?] 

========== 

* Reprinted from Conservation Biology Volume 17, No. 2, April 2003,
pgs. 348-351. The title comes from Peter Montague, Rachel's
Environment and Health News #570 (October 30, 1997) available at
www.rachel.org. 

** David W. Orr is chairperson of the Environmental Studies Program at
Oberlin College, Oberlin, OH 44074, U.S.A.; E-mail:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

[1] Walkom, T. 2002. Return of the old, Cold War. The Toronto Star, 28
September: F-1, F-4. 

[2] Lieven, A. 2002. The push for war. London Review of Books 4(19). 

[3] Carter, J. 2002. The troubling new face of America. Washington
Post, 5 September. 

[4] Gates, J. 2002. Globalization's challenge. Reflections 3(4). 

[5] Buccino, S. et al. 2001. Hostile environment: how activist judges
threaten our air, water, and land. Natural Resources Defense Council,
Washington, D.C. 

[6] Turner, J. 1996. The abstract wild. University of Arizona Press,
Tucson. 

["fair use," "teachable moment," "archival," Section 107(a), 1976
Copyright Act and 1998 Digital Millennium Act]

Subject: Rachel #767: Walking North on a Southbound Train, Pt. 2 Date:
Thu, 3 Jul 2003 16:50:21 -0400 From: Rachel News
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***

WALKING NORTH ON A SOUTHBOUND TRAIN, PT. 2*

by David W. Orr**

[Continued from Rachel's #766.]

What is to be done? To that question there can be no simple or
definitive answer, but I do think there are some obvious places to
begin. The first step requires that we take back public words such as
conservative and patriot, which have been coopted and put to no good
or accurate use. How is it, for example, that the word conservative
came to describe those willing to run irreversible risks with the
Earth? Intending to conserve nothing, they are not conservatives but
vandals now working at a global scale. How have those driving their
sport utility vehicles to the mall, sporting two American flags and a
"God bless America" bumper sticker come to regard themselves as
patriots? They are not moved by authentic patriotism at all, but by
self indulgence. For that matter how has the great and noble word
liberal been demeaned and slandered as the height of political and
intellectual folly? Unable to defend the integrity of words, we cannot
defend the earth or anything else.

The integrity of our common language, however, depends a great deal on
the cultivation of discerning intelligence among the public, and that
requires better education than we now offer. But education has been
whittled down to smaller purposes of passing tests and ensuring large
"lifetime earnings" in some part of the global economy. What passes
for education has become highly technical and specialized, little of
which is aimed to draw out the full human stature of young people.
We've become a nation of specialists and technicians, not broadly
educated and discerning people. Scholars have been too intent on
developing "professional knowledge," arcane theories, and complicated
methodologies, instead of broad knowledge useful to the wider public.
Consequently, fewer and fewer people know history, how the world works
as a physical system, or the rudiments of the constitution, and fewer
have a respectable political philosophy. We are a people ripe for the
plucking.

This leads to a third point. We do not have an environmental crisis so
much as a political crisis. A great majority of people still wish a
decent and habitable world for their descendants, but those desires
are thwarted by the machinery that ought to connect the popular will
to public decisions but no longer does so. We will have to repair and
perhaps reinvent the institutions of democratic governance for a
global world, and that means dealing with issues that the founders of
this republic did not and could not have anticipated. The process of
political engagement at all levels has become increasingly Byzantine,
confusing, and inaccessible. And in the mass-consumption society we
have all become better consumers than citizens, which is to say
willing participants in our own undoing. The solution, however
difficult, is to reconnect people with the political process and
government at all levels.

Fourth, it is necessary to expose the mythology that surrounds what
Marjorie Kelly calls "the divine rights of capital" and place
democratic controls on corporations and the movement of capital.[1]

We once fought a revolutionary war to establish political democracy in
western societies, but have yet to democratize the workplace and the
ownership of capital. These are still governed by the same illogic of
unquestioned divine right by which monarchies once ruled. The
assumption that corporations are legal persons and thereby beyond
effective public scrutiny, control, or law is foolishness and worse.
The latest corporate scandals are only that, the latest in a recurring
pattern of illegality, self dealing, and political corruption
surpassing even that of the robber baron era. The solution is to
enforce corporate charters as public license to do business on behalf
of the public that are revocable if and when the terms of the charter
are violated. If private ownership is a good thing, it should be
widely extended, not restricted to the superwealthy. By the same
logic, we must remove the corrupting influence of money from politics,
beginning with corporate campaign contributions and the hundreds of
billions of dollars of public subsidies for cars, highways, fossil
fuels, and nuclear power that corrupt the democratic process and
public policy.

Fifth, political reform requires an active, engaged, and sometimes
enraged citizenry. An example is the Illinois farmer-citizens who
stood for hours to hear Lincoln and Douglas debate issues of slavery
and sectionalism in 1858. Those debates were full of careful argument,
eloquence, and wit. Those citizens applauded, laughed, and jeered,
which is to say that they followed the flow of argument and heard what
was being said. Later, some died for and because of those same
arguments. They were citizens and were willing to sacrifice a great
deal for that privilege. In our time, while the issues have grown to
global scale with consequences that extend as far into the future as
the mind dares to imagine, political argument is whittled down to
sound bites fitted in between advertisements. The means whereby
citizens are informed have been increasingly monopolized and
manipulated. Only half or fewer of citizens bother to vote. Some
believe public apathy and political incompetence to be good or at
least tolerable. I do not. Unless we reverse course, apathy and
incompetence will prove to be the undoing of democratic government and
all that depends on a healthy democracy. The nature of what will
replace it is already evident: an unconstrained and well-armed
managerial plutocracy intent on global plunder.

Sixth, we need a positive strategy that fires the public imagination.
The public, I believe, knows what we are against but not what we are
for. And there are many things that should be stopped, but what should
be started? The answer to that question lies in a more coherent agenda
formed around what is being called ecological design as it applies to
land use, buildings, energy systems, transportation, materials, water,
agriculture, forestry, and urban planning. For three decades and
longer we have been developing the ideas, science, and technological
wherewithal to build a sustainable society. The public knows of these
things only in fragments, but not as a coherent and practical agenda
-- indeed the only practical course available. That is the fault of
those in the field of conservation, and we should start now to put a
positive agenda before the public that includes the human and economic
advantages of better technology, integrated planning, coherent
purposes, and foresight.

Finally, we should expect far more of our leaders than we presently
do. Never has the need for genuine leadership been greater, and seldom
has it been less evident. We cannot be ruled by ignorant, malicious,
greedy, incompetent, and shortsighted people and expect things to turn
out well. If we are to navigate the challenges of the decades ahead,
what E. O. Wilson calls "the bottleneck," we will need leaders of
great stature, clarity of mind, spiritual depth, courage, and vision.
We need leaders who see patterns that connect us across the divisions
of culture, religion, geography, and time. We need leadership that
draws us together to resolve conflicts, move quickly from fossil fuels
to solar power, reverse global environmental deterioration, and
empower us to provide shelter, food, medical care, decent livelihood,
and education for everyone. We need leadership that is capable of
energizing genuine commitment to old and venerable traditions as well
as new visions for a global civilization that preserves and honors
local cultures, economies, and knowledge.

Imagine a world in which those who purport to lead us must first make
a pilgrimage to ground zero at Hiroshima and publicly pledge "never
again." Imagine a world in which those who purport to lead us must go
to Auschwitz and the Killing Fields and pledge publicly "never again."
Imagine a world in which leaders must go to Bhopal and say to the
victims "We are truly sorry. This will never happen again, anywhere."
Imagine, too, those pilgrim leaders going to hundreds of places where
love, kindness, forgiveness, sacrifice, compassion, wisdom, ecological
ingenuity, and foresight have been evident.

Imagine a world in which those who purport to lead us must help
identify places around the world degraded by human actions and help
initiate their restoration. Some areas might take as long as 1000
years to restore, such as the Aral Sea, the Harrapan region in India,
the forests of Lebanon, soil fertility in the Middle East, Chesapeake
Bay, and the North Atlantic cod fishery. Imagine a world in which
those who intend to lead help lift our sights above the daily crisis
to the far horizon of what could be.

Imagine, too, leaders with the kind of humility demonstrated by Czech
President, Vaclav Havel[2]: "In time I have become a good deal less
sure of myself, a good deal more humble... every day I suffer more and
more from stage fright; every day I am more afraid that I won't be up
to the job... more and more often, I am afraid that I will fall
woefully short of expectations, that I will somehow reveal my own lack
of qualifications for the job, that despite my good faith I will make
even greater mistakes, that I will cease to be trustworthy and
therefore lose the right to do what I do."

Self-described realists will dismiss the idea of better leadership as
muddle-headed. Some will see in it some global conspiracy or another.
Prospective leaders will profess sympathy but say they do not have the
time to improve themselves further. And those least qualified to lead
will pay no attention at all. But it is not up to any of them to
prescribe for us. We are now citizens of the earth joined in a common
enterprise with many variations. We have every right to insist that
those who purport to lead us be worthy of the task. Imagine such a
time! Imagine a time, not far off, when we might all be on board a
train heading north!

============

* Reprinted from Conservation Biology Volume 17, No. 2, April 2003,
pgs. 348-351. The title comes from Peter Montague, Rachel's
Environment and Health News #570 (October 30, 1997) available at
www.rachel.org.

** David W. Orr is chairperson of the Environmental Studies Program at
Oberlin College, Oberlin, OH 44074, U.S.A.; E-mail:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

[1] Kelly, M. 2001. The divine right of capital. Barrett-Koehler, San
Francisco.

[2] Havel, V. 2002. A farewell to politics. The New York Review of
Books 24 October, pg. 4.

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