The Future Exodus

As rising ocean levels threaten heavily populated coastal regions, as disappearing glaciers threaten over a billion people dependent on glacier-fed rivers, as soil degradation leads to desertification and peak oil results in peak food, likely within this century we must choose between 1) global famine, war, and massive migrations to struggling urban centers and 2) alternative agricultural practices that have the potential to turn the world’s deserts into food-bearing forest gardens. Since, converting deserts into gardens will take time, preparing in advance in crucial.

Being an optimist, I foresee massive migrations of people into deserts; Asians armed with green knowledge will pour into the Australian and Indian and other deserts. North American cities will depopulate as millions migrate to the warm, inland, Southwest, and the same pattern will be occur across the globe. The Middle-East will be united in its common struggle to become green. Unity is crucial, especially as some evidence shows that desert rainfall patterns improve as vegetation returns.

Published in: on June 16, 2009 at 2:11 pm Leave a Comment

Willie Smits

“Willie Smits: A 20 year tale of hope: How we re-grew a rainforest” will move many viewers to optimism about mankind’s ability to help revive nature — even from abuses made in the name of biofuel. Smits shows us how thousands of hectares once reduced to a wasteland — within a decade — can be restored, albeit not to their original state, but to a state more suitable to human life and good enough for orangutans.

Maybe I am an incurable pessimist, but I fear Willie Smits and the BOS project — while noble in their own right — are doomed to  failure. While the project is incredibly wel-planned and most carefully executed, the project lacks the “total” or “global” perspective. Agriculture, housing, our relationship to animals and culture (religion, the arts, etc.) must be conceived together, as a unity. One cannot introduce a tribal culture to post-tribal and even post-industrial agricultural practices and expect long-term success unless the tribal culture also receives a make-over. I am simply saying what is already a commonplace principle: we must think of the whole.

What this implies is that, like most people, the tribes of Borneo cannot expect to manage their affairs better than any other people on  earth simply because they now possess an ideal garden of plenty. Unless the promised land is accompanied with the promised culture, the land is doomed. This is, according to anthropologists, what happened to countless cultures, including those that once inhabited East Island, whose tribe is now extinct. The vast majority of the world’s people are uncultured and highly susceptible to the primitive forces exerted by charismatic men, greed, irrational fear and the longing for immortality. Eventually, people will not be content with mere peace and full stomachs, and all Hell breaks lose, and Eden lies destroyed again.

Ironically, Smits’ primary goal was to save “the thinkers of the jungle,” the orangutans. Before we can hope to succeed at that, we need a species that understands what thinking is and nourishes its thinking organ as carefully as it nourishes its stomachs.

For the video, visit –  http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/willie_smits_restores_a_rainforest.html

Published in: on May 13, 2009 at 3:24 am Leave a Comment
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Kafka’s Water Hour

Imagine you are on the Titanic, speeding towards a glittering squadron of icebergs, when suddenly a rumor spreads that these icebergs really exist and could well sink the ship. What do you do? Of course, you turn off the lights so that you can get a better view of the glittering bergs, I mean, you turn off the lights so that it will take longer for the captain to hit one.

Now, not everyone is amused. People on the upper deck have a clear view and are begging the captain to ease off the diesel. The captain tells them to get the Hell off the boat if they don’t like it, but they don’t know how, and besides, they actually enjoy much the ship has to offer. Why, they’ve never known anything else.

Meanwhile, whether the ship moves forward or stands still is meaningless, and even the icebergs are redundant. You see, the ship is so bloody popular that millions, even billions, are vying to get on deck and even below deck, so, eventually the ship will find a very short route to land.

Published in: on April 22, 2009 at 1:23 pm Leave a Comment

Beyond the Box, Organic Structures, and The Amazing Depression

Environmental solutions should never be framed as if they only represented means to survival; they are, just as importantly, means to improving the quality of life. The former works well in an atmosphere of fear; the latter is hardly understood by people who cannot imagine how happiness could grow in a world without money.

1. Finance
We live in financial boxes. Mortgages and the cult of private property keep people apart and perpetuate an unsustainable illusion of independence. If you can’t afford your mortgage, find friends or go scouting for potential mortgage-mates. In fact, since most of our houses can easily accommodate more than a single family of 1.3 children, now is the perfect time for learning to live together.

2. Education
Our children live in day care and educational boxes. Every class is boxed according to date of birth; they rarely mix or help each other, and children in upper boxes often look down on children in lower boxes. These boxes also keep children apart from parents. If you can’t afford day care or private schooling now, consider it a blessing. Take advantage of the chance to try home schooling, and do your best to raise human beings that grow beyond the “Look at me!” and “It’s mine!” stage.

3. Food
Stop buying prepared, boxed and preserved food. In fact, prepare for the inevitable food crisis by getting your family off the food grid. Study permaculture and urban gardening and fight for your independence. With friends, buy a run-down family farm and revive and revolutionize both the family and the farm.

4. Shelter
Get out of your industrial, frame and cardboard, chemically treated box-house and look into alternative, cheap to maintain, heating- and cooling-wise materials like cob and adobe. If maintaining a house was expensive before, imagine when things get worse, much worse. The health and safety advantages of earth-based building materials are reason enough to switch.

5. Entertainment
Get rid of your idiot box and other dispensers of mass-produced junk culture that keep people from thinking and families and friends from living. Encourage your children to use their imagination, to understand the world in a practical way (not the public schooling way), and develop your sense of humor beyond anything you ever dreamed imaginable and learn to make everyone happy, yourself included.

6. Utilities
Most of the above steps will help reduce energy consumption and free a household from the water/power grid. Even if the economy recovers, it’s in your own interest to control your own destiny to the greatest extent possible. Actually, it’s amazing that a country so proud of individualism is the same country in which everyone is dependent on others for even the most basic necessities. Of course, being unemployed will go a long way to providing people with the energy needed for these activities.

Concluding Political Thoughts: The Organic Political Structure

The word organic is now such a powerful marketing tool for the organic food industry that I hesitate to apply the word social and aesthetic structures. The organic food industry has shaped the word “organic” to mean the absence of artificial chemicals, whereas it could denote all the richness of life, the presence of living, pliant cell structures that exchange information, serve no “higher” cells and cooperate for mutual benefit in a radically de-centralized organism. Of course, along with this independence from centralizing structures of inequality (i.e. capitalistic economies and totalitarian politics) is the corresponding principle of freedom from economic welfare systems (as in modern socialism) and simplistic notions of equality (as in modern democracies). Cells that do not work properly are typically removed from the organism, and cells do not vote, they understand, and wherever there is significant disagreement there is disease.

If cells are the universal building blocks of life, why not found civilization on cellular principles of life?

By emulating cellular principles, am I not suggesting that humans aspire to become even more like mindless, microscopic particles? Instead of answering this amusing question, simply consider that we have many assumptions and prejudices about the human mind. We are far more than minds, or, if you will, far less.

Published in: on April 19, 2009 at 1:49 am Leave a Comment

Dear Mr Gore,

What’s so inconvenient about the need to stop a lifestyle most people don’t enjoy much? Statistics don’t lie. Job satisfaction rates, public school satisfaction rates (ask the kids if they would quit if they could; I dare you) divorce rates, cancer rates, mental complication rates: all are either climbing or are already at frightening heights. So, a call for change is anything but inconvenient.

You fail to offer a vision that goes beyond environmental sustainability and ecological hygiene. You do not address the need for a complete cultural revolution; your emphasis on inconvenience and catastrophe fails to address the convenience and the eu-strophe.

Everything, from the clothes we wear to the way we speak, is wasteful and in need of a very convenient change.

We must go beyond a discourse based on renewable energy fantasies to a discourse infused with cerebral energy. Forgive my mischievous cryptogram—: I beg you, stop wasting time installing solar panels on the Titanic; the sooner we stop having such fantasies the sooner we can learn to imagine the way down to the land beneath our feet.

The Silent Revolutionary

Published in: on April 18, 2009 at 7:17 pm Leave a Comment

The Mad Scientist

Anyone who experiments is a scientist, but the destiny of science is to experiment with human culture, for as yet no culture exists which has been properly designed, tested and evaluated, and so it’s no surprise that cultures continue to fail their people, or at least perform sub-optimally.

I am dreaming of the age of cultural science and cultural research and development. I am dreaming of the day when people stand up and say, “Okay, I can be honest. My culture, religion, political party, tradition–whatever, isn’t perfect. So, this year I’m going to try something different, and if the new culture does not satisfy all our reasonable expectations of a culture (i.e. is it sustainable environmentally and politically, and does it foster the highest possible mental and physical health?) I will try something else again, until I discover or formulate the best possible culture.”

While this envisions a responsible and necessary application of the scientific method, let’s be serious: no one has ever lived this way, and I doubt anyone can.

Besides, cultural scientists cannot be part of their own experiments and expect to be objective evaluators. We cannot extricate ourselves from one culture and enter or experiment with another as if we were uncontaminated subjects. Moreover,  any persons attempting to adapt to a superior culture will experience difficulties, even if they desire to adapt to it. For while superior cultures can produce greater health and happiness, they can only do so by first destroying the spirit or personality created by the inferior culture, and such destruction can easily produce negative, subjective evaluations, withdrawal symptoms and decisions to abort.

Fortunately, or unfortunately, a less formal and usually less conscious approach to cultural experimentation is normal. Cultures are constantly evolving, however blindly, and people too, however little. Experimentation occurs wherever anyone tries to do something different. I am not excluding such apparently trivial experiments as a person’s first attempt to wear red instead of black. While such behavioral changes may be upsetting and even traumatic (don’t laugh), they remain very minor experiments. More serious experiments would include religious conversions and immigration.

The true and necessary scientific spirit is lacking wherever people do not consciously experiment with their cultural identity, and simply slide along the blind and bloody historical slope of cultural evolution. Too often people expect Heaven when they have only taken a baby step forwards, not even upwards, and often enough downwards.

Now the question arises: who on Earth has time enough to experiment with all the possible manifestations and permutations of human culture in order to discover the best possible version? A thousand life times might not be long enough. Fortunately humans can recognize patterns, which helps us eliminate entire ranges of cultural expression on the basis of a few examples. To illustrate: if a few capitalist cultures share the habit of creating economic injustice, we can assume that such injustice is a necessary expression of capitalist cultures, and then all possible expressions of capitalism can be eliminated.

The law of patterns also applies to individual parts of a culture. Thus, although some cultures are somewhat heterogeneous, they are generally homogeneous, and therefore if one part is corrupt all the parts will be corrupt. For example: modern cultures practice monoculture in the area agriculture, monogamy in the area of reproduction, monotheism in the area of morality, and in the area of education they are mono-pros and one-trick specialists. As we erase entire forests to plant soya, so we erase the fertile world of the child and hand it over to an education system that requires increasing specialization, until the students focuses entirely on one subject and becomes a specialist. Students will need the chemical fertilizers, I mean pharmaceuticals, as the soil becomes increasingly depleted of nutrients, and we call this their Attention Deficit Disorder.

The positive result of our specialization is that this mania has allowed experimental specialists seeking revolutionary developments to develop improved cultural expressions in their respective fields. And then, whenever one specialist succeeds in improving one aspect of culture, the rule of one-part-like-another can be used to extrapolate desirable principles from that part, and the principles can then be used to generate improvements to other parts of culture (I refer the reader to my Little Country Handbook). For example, if we discover a highly sustainable form of agriculture, its core principles should be applied to architecture/rural planning,  education, aesthetics and social planning.  This technique may sound strange, as one would think agriculture has nothing in common with other parts of culture, but as I’ve just shown, the opposite is true.

Now this monomaniacal culture is crumbling, and as our leaders speak of bricks and banks, I ask them, where are our cultural leaders?–our cultural scientists and engineers? Political and economic structures can repress experimentation, growth and evolution, but they inevitably end in disaster, as does any attempt to keep a child from growing up. The more I examine the historical evidence the more I see that all past and present cultures are non-sustainable evolutionary stages on the road to a sustainable culture. In fact, despite the overwhelming signs of sickness, I dare say sickness is good insofar as it heralds and demands the end of an evolutionary stage. Besides,  pockets of progress exist, even progress beyond modernity, progress fueled by strong characters living apart from the masses, in private laboratories.

Published in: on February 18, 2009 at 7:02 pm Leave a Comment

I Challenge my Childhood Hero, David Suzuki

Being an environmentalist, I was struck by David Suzuki’s life-defining metaphor of all environmentalists being stuck yelling in the trunk of a car headed for a brick wall. Now David is producing some cute tv ads from his trunk, trying to persuade us to buy better lights and to seal our windows. And, curiously, Obama is striking the same note. I ask you, should we have more efficient automobiles as we hurtle headlong towards resource wars, mass migrations and climate horror? Hmmm. Why not leap out of the trunk and found an intentional/utopian/environmental community? The world already has a few and takes little interest in them. What it needs is a public figure like Suzuki to do something heroic by doing what may seem like abandoning the so-called green movement. We have enough movements. What we need is something stationary. A foundation. No, not an abstract “foundation” like the Suzuki Foundation; an actual, living, self-sustaining and physical community. Utopia? Well, just something that operates according to green principles, without donations from sponsors and businesses.

David, if you can hear me out there, could you lead us out of Egypt, ban yourself from cars and airplanes, put your foot down and begin to create the promised land?

Become a myth.

Published in: on February 12, 2009 at 8:00 pm Leave a Comment

Barack, A Tragic Hero

The irony: America is a country that has long striven to abide by the principle that all races are equal, and now, just when it most desperately needs a president who is radically different from past presidents, it gets a black president, that is, someone who is radically different in the most superficial way. Merely electing him feels like a victory, but it will likely prove an empty victory, as not even Obama can stop the Titanic.

Obama is the first black U.S. president – the question is, can he drag America out of the red sea?

To fix the economy, Barack would have to 1) force people to stop overspending, 2) force people to stop buying crap made by foreign underpaid workers, 3) force businessmen to stop raping the people, 4) force businessmen to stop paying workers slave wages (Chinese wage slaves, all third world wage slaves and the minimum wage U.S. employee who must work 40hrs a week for the most barren necessities + television), and 5) lower taxes. The fact that these solutions are not even part of the present Save Us package simply emphasizes the already evident fact that a culture defined by pollution, obesity, the self-esteem/narcisism/gingoism complex and gross financial inequality and professional wrestling is a culture not even worth saving.

What else can one say? I recently heard that Barack is a fan of Spiderman, a comic book hero; I would have preferred a president who admitted being a fan of Charlie Brown or The Muppets.

Ultimately, this change of colours is only a tiny step for America: it still needs the pink, rainbow and green president (aren’t they all green?). Actually, every artist knows that black and white are not true colours, and every philosopher knows that every president is a black and white president: a president without much subtlety of thought and trapped in the dollarizing, bi-polarizing, buy-political arena.

Published in: on January 16, 2009 at 6:54 pm Leave a Comment

Sick of Hollywood Heroism

So Batman is at it again, saving Gotham city for the nth time. Ugh. How tiresome. Have you seen that dreary dreadful city that is oh so stuck in the forties? I think sunshine and plant life are illegal in Gotham. But it’s the same story everywhere: Spiderman, Superman and the whole lot, one and all defenders of cities. Do you know, no great author, painter or musician has ever praised cities more than nature. So, the question is, why can’t superheroes defend an agricultural region or, say, the Amazon? Oh, right, Steven Seagal did that.

By constantly associating heroism with violence, with supernatural biceps, glutes, pecs, and a few other physical and technological powers that are the envy of every army, Hollywood prevents its viewers from ever considering other kinds of heroism.

This brings me to Batman’s enemy, the Joker. Why did Hollywood have to make a joker, a person normally associated with laughter and good health, the ultimate expression of criminal insanity? Whatever the reason may be, the fact that it did goes to show that Hollywood’s vision of the world is both perverse and completely backwards. Compared to the information industry, the joking industry, if one could even call it that, is relatively worthless. But to turn joking into an evil. . . that goes too far and I won’t stand for it! Indeed, the poor actor Hollywood persuaded to slander the art of joking by equating it with the psychotic, even he has testified against himself with his recent fatal drug overdose.

Joking ought to be portrayed as the opposite of evil. In fact, Hollywood would have been more truthful if it chose some millionaire playboy (Batman), or some millionaire businessman (Ironman), or some cheap journalist (Spiderman), or even a blockheaded extraterrestrial (Superman) for its ultimate villain!