A human construct is what stands in the way of moving toward
mitigating human-induced climate change.
Humans, bit by bit, piece by piece have built an economy
that now straddles the globe and while it was to be our servant, it is has
become our master.
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| The options - climate change or the economy. |
The economy has been elevated to God-like status and to
suggest anything likely to unseat it, borders on blasphemy and bring with it
accusations of ignorance, naivety and even stupidity brought on by a gross
misunderstanding of what it is that gives the world society sustenance.
Such allegations arise from an addiction to the paradigm in
which the world economy is embedded and with most governments in the world,
whether they be liberal democracies, communistic, despotic regimes,
religion-based facades of democracy or something of any other flavour, bowing
before the might of money, to suggest something different is not only decried,
but considered grossly irresponsible.
Humanity, or at least some of it, has been fortunate to
escape from the daily trepidations of the hunter and gatherer life, something that
has been achieved in building an economy which has, in many ways served us well,
but at the same time has ignored the subtle beauties of life that cannot be
measured in the simplistic brutal reality that is money.
Growth, a code word for exploitation, has seen man excavate
the world’s ancient sunlight, and in the past two or three centuries use the
fossil fuels we discovered with a rude rush of exuberance that saw all the
available environmental sinks on the earth filled to over-capacity, disrupting the
earth’s atmosphere to create a disarray with the world’s climate to subsequently
bring-on weather patterns with which humans are unfamiliar.
That unfamiliarity is of such a dimension that the future of
humanity, along with most other species with which it shares the planet, is
questionable.
The time is already a few decades past and certain weather
related difficulties cannot be avoided, but it is time to bury our concerns
about the world economy and change our rhetoric to align it with ideals that
are about equality, philanthropy, altruism, sharing, kindness and an
understanding of the other to ensure that life on earth can endure.
The economy has served a few on earth well, disadvantaged more
and if we are unable to rein it in and return it to again being a servant, as
opposed to a master, then climate change will continue its march to a rather
gloomy conclusion.
- Robert McLean
- Robert McLean

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