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GliderGuider Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Sep-03-08 01:04 PM
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Political Will, Political Won't
It's time for another bit of shameless blogwhoring. These are excerpts from an article I've just posted. It's discusses what the converging crisis tells us about our civilization, how we got into this predicament, and why those who are looking to politicians for leadership are by and large asking the fox to guard the henhouse.

Political Will, Political Won't

The accepted wisdom of today's environmental reform movement is founded on two core assumptions. The first is that most of the technical solutions we need to address the world's various crises are available, or at least could be swiftly developed by sufficiently intelligent, hard-working people. The second assumption is that all that's lacking for a successful outcome is the political will to put these technical solutions into effect.
(...)
Unfortunately, until now we have seen precious little evidence of such a collective response. For example, we have repeatedly seen climate change conferences break down or issue watered-down statements that fail to address the scale of the accelerating crisis. While individuals, citizens' groups and even some governments are obviously aware of the urgency, collective action repeatedly fails to gain the required global traction.
(...)
So here we have a species that was exquisitely adapted to its environment, living an affluent yet sustainable life, treading lightly on the earth, never outgrowing or overrunning its habitat, at least in terms of the species as a whole. We lived in this harmony with our world for two and a half million years, or 99.6% of the time we have been on the planet. Then suddenly, in the last ten thousand years – a mere 0.4% eye blink of time – our population increased over 1000 times, we decimated the earth's stocks of non-renewable resources, we cut down over 90% of the planet's forests, we fished her oceans to the edge of extinction, and we live in a near-constant state of conflict with each other. In this grievously short time we have brought about all the wicked problems listed above. Pardon my French, but what the hell happened?

In a word, it was agriculture.
(...)
Centralizing the production of food and managing its distribution reinforced the development of hierarchies. Since some of the food was needed by people who had no direct hand in producing it (such as weavers, shamans and granary guards), some means had to be found of giving them equitable access to it. This meant coming up with a way of defining relative values for different kinds of work, and establishing a medium of exchange. In one stroke the concepts of money and wages appeared, resulting in a further transfer of power to those who established the value of work and controlled the money supply (and indirectly the access to food).
(...)
As always happens with hierarchies, power flows uphill. Along with it go the perquisites of power, the most important being the right to higher levels of material abundance than those lower in the pecking order. In order to ensure that this comfortable situation is maintained, part of the accumulated social power is used to protect the situation. This is done by strongly defending the two fundamental preconditions: the idea that both material growth and the need for hierarchy are natural, essential and unquestionable. Indeed, the status quo is best served if the rest of the community sees this situation as simply part of the matrix of the universe, the only possible way life could work, and that any suggestions to the contrary are the result of either some nefarious agenda or outright insanity.
(...)
Over the centuries an interlocking system of guardian institutions has grown up to protect and defend the two key ideas of growth and hierarchy.
(...)
In light of this, is there any hope for a return to a sustainable, egalitarian, interconnected, considerate and just civilization? I strongly believe that there is, but getting there will be neither sure nor easy.

More at the link...
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lutherj Donating Member (788 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Sep-03-08 01:56 PM
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1. Skimmed through your article - looks excellent. I will read it thoroughly
later when I have a little more time. I totally agree with you that it's way past too late for top down solutions - if there ever was such a possibility; that government won't save us, Corporate America won't save us. The profit motive won't save us. Capitalism is the froth on cheap oil. Our only hope is a bottom-up, grassroots movement. Even then, real change will only happen once the present paradigm starts disintegrating.

On the positive side, I have the feeling that society is reaching a tipping point. I have the feeling that many, many people, who pay little attention to issues of energy resources or even politics, feel that something is deeply wrong with the world situation, that the present arrangement cannot last. It could be that once the change in mindset starts happening it will snowball, and we could see a very rapid transformation in society. (Or maybe I'm just dreaming.)

If you haven't already read it, I might recommend The Great Turning by David Korten, and also the documentary film called The Power of Community.
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