by Divemistress of the Dark on 08 Dec 2009 17:08
FWIW (and I say this in a friendly way, respectful of the fact that we all have the right to our opinions), the Amazon rain forest is a huge sort of carbon filter for CO2. If it's gone, the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere - already dangerously high - skyrockets. I'll agree countries have the right to do what they want, but there are some things that do affect us all.
Having been lucky enough to have visited the Amazon, I think most people in North America have absolutely zero idea how poor a lot of the people are who live there. I'm talking about living in huts, no indoor plumbing. This is true of ginormous tracts of the world - just about everywhere that isn't the U.S. or Europe. It's a really intractable problem and we're not going to solve it by scolding the likes of India and China, who are just trying to bring their own literally billions of poverty-level residents to some quality of life approaching that which we enjoy in the West. Of course people are doing what they need to, to survive - a huge percentage of deforestation is taking place b/c people are cutting down trees, burning them, and selling them for charcoal. I'm told the officials in charge of policing this turn up dead with regular frequency. (Frankly, I saw the longline fishing boats in Galapagos for myself - another horrible story, oceanic degradation.)
Personally, I think the solution is giving money to outfits like the Overpopulation Institute - we have too many damned people on this planet. (Unfortunately it's hard to discuss birth control or other hard facts with people without them getting all righteous on you. Sometimes I feel like we're gonna wind up with the planet we deserve, with so many people irrationally resistant to doing what we need to.)
The U.S. sets a horrible example, also. Not only through everybody driving these guzzling vehicles and living in McMansions, but the fact that there's this mindset that folks have to have the newest and greatest (fill in the blank) every year. What an insane amount of waste. It's really the downside of the individualist mentality that people here have - sure, it's great to live here in many ways, but IMO we fall down - way down - when thinking about the needs of others and trying to live in some kind of community. Do we really have the right to lecture others when we can't even get our crap together on health care for our own people, our birth mortality rate is the worst in the industrial world, we have the highest percentage of our residents in prison, etc.
I have a horrible carbon footprint too - I do what I can, driving a hybrid, paying for recycling pickup, buying used stuff, composting, using Freecycle - but in some ways our officials have let us down by, among other things, not planning for and building the kind of transportation infrastructure common in other parts of the world. If I wanted to take a train somewhere, I couldn't do it - the nearest passenger rail line is 200 miles away.
Unfortunately I guess I'm also of the 'live it up' mindset, some of the time. It just seems like we're not going to be able to fix this problem, with all of our elected representatives bought and sold by huge corporations and ignoring the needs of people and communities.
I thought Sting did pretty well and that this interviewer was of the 'attack journalism' mindset that tends to boost ratings and isn't a sincere attempt to discuss an issue. The Brits have the same problem with Fox News-type distortion and misinformation that's rampant over here, unfortunately.
I haven't had a chance to discuss this in the other climate change thread posted recently, but there's a huge PR blitz being put out by these same giant corporations to deceive people so they can keep up their wastrel ways. Got a few things to do this month but I'll try to post a few factoids I've read on the situation later.
I love you all - let's try to keep things in hand - xo Dive
On Google - site:stewartcopeland.net "your keyword here" - thanks DM!!