Tuesday 24 September 2013

Blog #1, Enviro 2000.


Section 38. Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed.
3. How do the choices of people (individually and as societies) affect whether a society collapses due to environmental damage? 
The human population has been accelerating at such a rapid rate that the impact of our daily anthropogenic actions are constantly compromising the earth’s finite resources through pollution, deforestation, overfishing, overhunting, and soil problems (including erosion, salinization, and soil fertility losses). Other serious environmental issues induced by humans include water management, effects of introduced species on native species, and increased per capita impact of people[1]. Within the animal kingdom successful communities are known to have mutualistic relationships with their ecological neighbors depending on the type of benefit, degree of dependency, specificity, and duration[2]. The majority of contemporary societies living within urban communities are failing to participate as mutualistic beings within their given ecosystems. This disconnection from Mother Nature has “upset the balance[3]” by destroying our precious resources and denying responsibility for our actions. Selfish leaders who fail to cooperate as mutualistic beings are exhibiting symptoms of intraspecific competition[4] where they take on the role of dominant individuals who claim and abuse the earths resources while denying protection rights emphasized by environmentalists. Humans have developed this superior mentality throughout the course of evolution by exploiting resources as a negligent excuse for economic growth. “The economy is not a force of nature or some kind of immutable, infallible entity. We created it[5]” and this arbitrary system has now become a reflection of our unsustainable resource acquisition habits. As the earth continues to suffer from human exploitation we watch as the severity of storms and extreme temperatures continue to increase ultimately affecting the well being of our Mother Earth as well as own human health because “everything in nature is interconnected.[6]” Politicians who reject science are not fit to lead[7] and perhaps we, as an ecological species are doomed to become either physically or spiritually extinct as a result of our insatiable hunger for economic growth at the expense of our devolution. As the Cree prophecy warns, “only after the last tree has been cut down, only after the last river has been poisoned, only after the last fish has been caught, only then will you find that money cannot be eaten.”



Section 35. Human Carrying Capacity
1. What is carrying capacity?
            Carrying capacity is the maximum population size that can be sustained in a given environment typically limited by the resources available during the most unfavorable period[8]. Populations do not increase indefinitely. As resources become limiting, birthrate decreases and/or mortality increases, slowing growth. At very low density, positive feedback associated with the Allee effect can drive a population to local extinction[9]. Humans are exclusively responsible for consuming excessive amounts of resources faster than the earth can replace them and this is a primary concern for the long-term sustainability of the earth’s resources. Within the last hundred years humans have become extremely dependent upon fossil fuels. Consequently this resource has reached its peak and is now declining. The decrease of our global oil supply has been reinforced by the general cost increase of oil within the last 50 years, exploiting the tar sands in Canada, as well as the American drilling boom that desperately sent companies such as Shell and BP looking for reserves offshore throughout the world[10]. The American dream is about to expire leaving our entire human civilization at a carrying capacity of 6 billion (and growing) with a serious addiction to cheap oil that in its absence could trigger an economic and cultural depression. International governments are now facing economic, agricultural, and industrial challenges that have lead to innovative alternative energy and resource management strategies. “Along with protecting clean water supplies and human health, addressing climate change will strengthen the economy. An analysis conducted in 2010 by the Western Climate Initiative showed that addressing climate change and fostering clean-energy solutions could lead to cost savings of about US100 billion by 2020 for the initiative’s member states and provinces[11].” This economic scenario must be taken into serious consideration if humans hope to sustain the overall wellbeing of our growing population and the planet to which we all belong. 

  



Section 7. The Tragedy of the Commons
2. List some examples of resources held in common by all the citizens of society that have suffered by overuse.
            The year is 2013 and our civilization has become extremely addicted to fossil fuels. As the world watches our global oil supply disappear due to extreme exploitation we will need to seriously consider sustainable alternatives for the long road ahead in a world without petroleum products. Urban communities casually pollute the atmosphere with cheap fuel while the clock continues to tick towards midnight. Monsanto quietly injects its genetically modified organisms with Agent Orange, BT toxin and Bovine Growth Hormones while consumers continue to be sedated by their chemicals. Monocrops and large-scale farms are preventing plants from reproducing by means of natural selection, which is how organisms develop resistant genetics that are linked to environmental variation. Our oceans have become dumping grounds for the garbage that humans fail to recycle and as a result leak harmful toxins into the food supply of fish that omnivores regularly ingest. Instead of considering sustainable fibers like hemp and bamboo as alternatives to industrial materials we pursue cotton and polyester, which require harsh chemical processes to purify the material.
            Clean air, clean water, forests and fertile soil are four of the most essential resources that our planet naturally provides for all living organisms. Each living individual requires specific minerals and nutrients to survive that often overlap the requirements of others. Contemporary civilizations should be consciously striving to maintain healthy relationships with their ecosystems in order to understand the vital connection we share with the earth. In reality humans have been exploiting the majority of our shared global resources, which has become a contemporary cultural norm. Our destructive behavior has led to pollution, over fishing, over hunting, clear cutting, mining, as well as oil and gas development. Habitat destruction is one of the major negative impacts of modern civilization’s progress. These ecological issues are at the heart of our environmental battle between ecocentrism and anthropocentrism. Unfortunately our social system rewards selfish intraspecific competition so that people will continue to disconnect from the earth both physically and spiritually with each new generation. On September 12th, 1975 Pink Floyd released the album with the self-titled track Wish You Were Here. Thirty eight years later that song still successfully conveys a strong premonition about the state of depression that humans have self-induced at the expense of our own devolution from the natural world into a dystopia of temporary satisfaction and serious environmental consequences:

So, so you think you can tell Heaven from Hell, blue skies from pain. Can you tell a green field from a cold steel rail? A smile from a veil? Do you think you can tell? Did they get you to trade your heroes for ghosts? Hot ashes for trees? Hot air for a cool breeze? Cold comfort for change? Did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage?”




Activity: Spend 1 hour in silence with nature.
On Saturday September 14th my friends and I took a day trip out to Winnipeg Beach to enjoy the last fleeting moments of summer. As we walked down the dirt road towards the boardwalk the wind chased us, rustling the leaves, stirring up the water and scenting the air with an autumn undertone. The strength of the wind was changing the oxygen concentration within the atmosphere because suddenly my head felt like it had submerged (despite my terrestrial position on the peer) as my lungs filled with hydrogen; I could feel the hydrogen molecules enter my trachea. The breath I inhaled at that moment in time was confirmation of my individual existence. Down the road we passed a marsh where the algae was so photosynthetically active that it seemed to be radiating a luminescent glow. This exquisitely vibrant pallet that nature bestows before us is a gift for those who wish to embrace magic. Approaching the sand and grass naturally lead me to remove my sandals which instantly activated all of my senses as I began to embrace all of the elements viscerally, cognitively and spiritually. The first step I took from the land into the water brought about so much joy as I felt the waves rock the sand beneath my toes and sweep away the tiny stones. This pattern of constant change and renewal is a mesmerizing metaphor for interconnectedness among all organisms and elements within the universe. As my footprints began to dissolve with the flowing tides my awareness of unity brought peace to my soul as I openly embraced the galaxy with every inhalation and exhalation. That day I realized that I am an extension those same cosmic elements and my body is simply a vessel for the journey. 



Blog Reflections
1) What promotes human connection to nature?
            I currently work at the Hempyrean, which is an eco friendly clothing shop at the forks that locally supports pesticide free, chemical free, fair trade, natural, organic, antibacterial, and hypoallergenic food/ clothing. Our mission is to raise awareness about the positive economic and social benefits of minimizing our carbon footprint by using eco-friendly fibers that are sustainable for the planet to produce. Focusing on a society that does not require poisonous chemicals to thrive allows us to imagine a utopian world where organic resources cultivation is the primary goal for our ecological survival. When more time is spent within nature we see individuals express a deeper sense of gratitude for the gifts that the earth provides. By welcoming the elements of nature into our daily lives we experience life as a reflection of the earth’s well being instead of our general income.
 



2) What promotes disconnection from nature?
            The mainstream media is by far the most powerful socioeconomic tool in the first world fueled by ruthless corporate giants such as Monsanto and Shell responsible for distributing information to millions of people. These selfish companies (among others) strategically manipulate people by distorting their perception of wellbeing to equate with their unnecessary and sometimes harmful corporate products. This extremely intelligent method of control is achieved through product symbolism, which is meant to reflect the social status of an individual. This complex web is designed to trap vulnerable individuals who have no knowledge about the current state of the world with little to no interest in pursuing questions about the how the system is designed to function. “According to relative depravation theory, people who are satisfied with their present condition are less likely to seek social change (Rose, 1982).[12]” Ignorance is comforting to those who prefer to be sedated by a temporary solution regardless of the long-term consequences of their decisions. This negligent behavior is a frightening social epidemic because it has removed the environment from the equation of wellbeing and replaced it with money to look something like this: Individual+ money = product. Individual + product = happiness.
·      William Kentridge: Felix in Exile 1994. Charcoal& pastels, stop motion animation.
 http://youtu.be/vF5cngcXqSs 

 

3) Is there a danger to growing a disconnection from nature?
The most overwhelming feeling in a time of danger is one of helplessness, which consumes my entire being as I continue to unearth the truth about our current environmental crisis. The most valuable tool of our technological genertion is the Internet because it allows information to circulate internationally without corporate interference or bias. The information I have gathered throughout university has lead me on a quest to accurately identify and expose selfish corporations that are heavily responsible for recklessly destroying the earth’s precious resources. Instead of respecting the earth as an abundant source of life the Western mentality entertains the notion of entitlement and righteousness for ones own selfishness and greed. Blindly supporting organizations that exploit Mother Earth’s has become socially acceptable behavior with zero criminal consequences despite the serious damage our global ecosystems. Sadly, humans have come to embrace this cold-hearted voice as the lexicon of the machine and have gone great lengths to fuel the fire of this prodigious beast. As we continue to dance and feast our lives away while the waves quietly rise[13], and like moths to a flame, humans are advancing into a dangerous territory of resource wars where our political and corporate leaders will delegate the course of action for the entire world to endure.
·      Black Sabbath, War Pigs. 1970, Paranoid.  
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OGPD0ZBiMs0 



 

4) Where do your environmental ethics lie? Anthropocentric/ Biocentric/ Ecocentric?
            I strongly support an Ecocentric ideology when discussing environmental ethics because it fully encompasses the wellbeing of our entire ecosystem including abiotic environmental factors as well as the biotic organisms that exist within a wide range of exquisite habitats across the globe. I have become increasingly aware of my carbon foot print within these last 7 years and I have made respectable efforts to live sustainably by pursuing a vegetarian diet, riding my bike to work, supporting fair-trade, local/ organic markets and consuming less petroleum products. I currently work at an eco-friendly clothing store called the Hempyrean where we sell fair- trade, organic, herbicide/ pesticide free, hypoallergenic, antibacterial clothing, cosmetics and health food. I have sincerely adopted the role of an Eco Warrior through my lifestyle choices as well as fashion statements within the last 7 years because just like the Lorax, I too speak for the trees. As a visual artist I have made it my mission to depict the delusional state of the world through performance and installation art. I have also studied psychology, sociology, biology, ecology, art history, mathematics and botany to further enhance my understanding about the evolution life on earth through the journey of awareness that is human consciousness. I consider myself to be an urban shaman conveying a Toxic Prophecy about our socioeconomic addiction to oil. The traditional practice of Shamanism is a sacred Aboriginal ceremony where chosen individuals enter the spirit world through chanting, singing, dancing and fasting with intensions of collecting information from the creator at a higher level of consciousness. This ritual of transformation is one of the most amazing methods of transcendence that humans will ever experience in terms of understanding the origins of life and universal interconnectedness. As a student of art, science and evolution I have made many attempts to enter trace-like states in order to attain universal consciousness to spiritually connect with plants, animals and the elements to better understand life, death and decomposition with deep underlying respect for Mother Earth. These experiences are exactly why I consider Ecocentrism to be the most accurate method of assessment when addressing environmental issues because everything on earth and within the universe is connected.    

Sarah Paradis: Toxic Prophecy, Trail Blazer Video Still, 2012.




[1] Thomas A. Easton: Classic Edition Sources: Environmental Studies, Fourth Edition. Section 38. Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed by Jared Diamond p.185.
[2] Smith, Smith& Waters: Elements of Ecology: Canadian Edition. Chapter 15. Mutualism Categories: There are Many Types of Mutualisms p.316.
[3] David Suzuki& Ian Hanington: Everything Under the Sun, Toward a Brighter Future on a Small Blue Planet. Chapter 6. It’s Getting Hot Down Here p. 138.
[4] Smith, Smith& Waters: Elements of Ecology: Canadian Edition. Chapter 11. Intraspecific Population Regulation: Intraspecific Competition p.237.
[5] David Suzuki& Ian Hanington: Everything Under the Sun, Toward a Brighter Future on a Small Blue Planet. Chapter 5. Is the Economy… Stupid? p. 105.
[6] David Suzuki& Ian Hanington: Everything Under the Sun, Toward a Brighter Future on a Small Blue Planet. Chapter 6. It’s Getting Hot Down Here p. 139.
[7] David Suzuki& Ian Hanington: Everything Under the Sun, Toward a Brighter Future on a Small Blue Planet. Chapter 4. Science Holds a Mirror to Existence p. 95.
[8] Smith, Smith& Waters: Elements of Ecology: Canadian Edition. Glossary. G-4.
[9] Smith, Smith& Waters: Elements of Ecology: Canadian Edition. Chapter 11. Intraspecific Population Regulation: Density Dependence p.237.
[10] Gelpke& McCormack: A Crude awakening: The Oil Crash. Docuramafilms. 2006- 2007.
[11] David Suzuki& Ian Hanington: Everything Under the Sun, Toward a Brighter Future on a Small Blue Planet. Chapter 8. Healthy People, Healthy Planet p. 215.
[12] Kendall, Murray& Linden: Sociology in our Times, Fourth Edition. Chapter 20. Collective Behavior: Relative Deprivation Theory p.644.
[13] Alive: Our Environment, A Duty to be Green. Canada’s Health and Wellness Magazine. July 2007 Ann-Marie Metten: Ticking Time Bomb. P48.