by
Robert McLean
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| Devastation on the east coast of the U.S, following the recent superstorm - such scenes will become all to familiar as climate really kicks in. |
The idea that the Goulburn Valley, and so Shepparton, becomes
sustainable introduces a paradigm of a complexity that most don’t yet
comprehend or understand.
“Sustainability” is an idea poorly defined and littered with confusions
and as most of us are tainted by the wastefulness of our modern lives
(including myself), we are trapped within a blizzard of consumption and so being
unable to see, we must imagine the future; a future without the fineries that
presently provide contentment.
Blinded by the brilliance of what exists, and what is promised, and with
imaginations hammered into shapes desired by powerful neo-liberal corporate
consumerist forces, we struggle to comprehend a different way of living.
Climate change is an implacable
force, witness how nature has closed down the “city that never sleeps” and New
Yorkers scurried for cover as a collision of natural events stalked America’s
east coast, the nation’s most populous area.
Sustainability is not about
simplistically replacing a few light globes and adding a few newspapers to the
recycling bin, for although those actions are driven by the appropriate intent,
they are absolutely inadequate.
Climate change – complex and awe-inspiring
Climate change is the most complex
and awe-inspiring event humanity has ever confronted and so it will only be a
response equal in complexity and of awe-inspiring dimensions that will give
humanity any chance of easing the injury to our climate.
Sustainability is about embracing
those complex and awe-inspiring undertakings.
As devastatingly dangerous as
climate change is, its complexities are worsened by the social inequity that
world-wide research conclusive illustrates the correlation between increasing
inequality and worsening mental health.
Considering that, I think of the
late American astronomer, cosmologist, astrophysicist, science popularizer,
author and communicator in astronomy and natural sciences, Carl Sagan, who,
while writing in one of his books, “The Demon Haunted World” said: “I have a foreboding of an America in my
children’s or grandchildren’s time when the United States is a service or information
economy; when nearly all the key manufacturing industries have slipped away to other
countries; when awesome technological powers are in the hands of very few, and
when no one representing the public interests can even grasp the issues; when
the people have lost their ability to set their own agendas or knowledgeably question
those in authority; when, clutching our crystals and nervously consulting our
horoscopes, our critical faculties in decline, unable to distinguish between
what feels good and what’s true, we slide, almost without noticing, back into
superstition and darkness.”
Heinberg tells us that ‘The Party’s Over’
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| Richard Heinberg spells out exactly how the 'party' will end. |
To quote at title of a book from
author, Richard Heinberg, “The Party’s Over” and no longer can civilization
treat the world with disrespect, or treat ourselves, ourselves with disrespect and,
to enlist a colloquialism, we have to “step up to the plate” and relearn how we
live in concert with nature.
Achieving sustainability is about
many things, but among those matters most needing attention is the welcoming of
all people, regardless of personal habits, fancies or perceived failings, back
into the human family.
So the task is massive, daunting
and demands a response that may well be beyond our intellectual capacities for
any response to the tremors that facing humanity need us to instantly re-set
our present trajectory and shift from our present individualistic, ego driven
way of life to one that is collaborative, community orientated and about
building strong, resilient and resourceful communities that are the antithesis
of the present direction of the “business as usual” boosters.
Climate change deniers search for
short-term profit, while those who entreat their fellows to reach for, and work
for, sustainability understand that we are simply guardians of our planet and
grasp the fact that our behaviour will either leave the world in reasonable
condition for those who follow or, rather, in decided disarray.
The modern life, as comforting as
it might be, is funnelling civilization into a col de sac, a blind canyon, a
dead end street and a way of living from which the only way out is to slow
those things that worsen human life on earth.
Those things driving civilization toward
damnable difficulties and possible catastrophic troubles are the exponential
growth of human numbers; our voracious consumption of earth’s finite resources;
our fondness for distractions; and our inability to understand, and accept,
that the science that has made all the modern wonders of the world possible is
the same science is at the root of all civilization’s difficulties.
Interestingly, that same science
explains how, why and when the changes will unfold and, if we listen carefully,
how we can avoid, or at least ease, those evolving differences.
Discussion about sustainability frequently
brings a hail of protests from many who argue they don’t want to go back to
horse and cart days (and neither do I), but without the arrival within the next
few years of some breakthrough, idea, technology or concept, then the horse and
cart will be something of a luxury.
Most everything humans presently do
is about the opposite of a sustainable lifestyle ranging from our industrial,
consumptive way of living through to the distractions and entertainments that
absorb our time.
Writing in “Dead End Path” David L
Brown said our species has acted with far more cleverness than wisdom.
Our need is to cultivate common sense
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| Brown's book that helps us understand the crushing difficulties of industrialized agriculture. |
He wrote: “The challenge for our
descendants will be to cultivate common sense solutions while making peace with
nature.
“In short, our challenge is to
invent new and better ways of ‘being human’. In the long stretch of future
possibilities, true and beneficial stewardship of the earth must become the
primary of any successful human society. If we fail to achieve that, like the
dodo or the passenger pigeon our species will simply cease to exist.”
Further discussing civilization’s unfolding
problems, Brown says: “Signals such as these are many and ominous, and yet most
people in the advanced parts of the world choose to pretend that everything is
just fine. It’s business as usual. Even though we passengers on Planet Earth
are metaphorically riding the Titanic, many fail to recognize the dangers and
refuse to accept that over-population caused by industrial agricultural lies at
the heart of the problem.”
Sustainability begins with surrendering
our individuality, as it applies to our ego-driven consumerism, embracing fellows
with an altruism that will help build resilient and supportive communities.
I look forward to our next
gathering Beneath the Wisteria at which we will discuss sustainability
and a society appropriate for that desired sustainability.
We gather again Beneath the Wisteria on Saturday,
November 24, at 11:30am.



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