Contradiction is balance. [entries|archive|friends|userinfo]
Axver

[ website | U2gigs.com: for all your U2 setlist needs! (Got a question, suggestion, or addition? Feel free to leave me a comment! I co-maintain the site.) ]
[ userinfo | livejournal userinfo ]
[ archive | journal archive ]

[14 December 2007|11:36 pm]
[Tags|, , , ]
[Current Music |'Headphone Dust' by Incredible Expanding Mindfuck]

I would like to address climate change, as I do not think I have ever touched on it in this blog. Honestly, I perceive that as a terrible failing, but it's not due to a lack of effort; I have tried to write more than once on the topic but scrapped the entries due to being excessively vitriolic and inflammatory. Accordingly, I will not actually make any effort to argue the case for the reality of climate change. I feel it is not necessary. The debate has been settled; it is like the evolution vs creationism debate, which has been settled emphatically and undeniably in favour of evolution but some wilfully ignorant individuals choose to continue to argue for creationism and don't wish to be bothered by the facts. The climate change skeptics are the creationists, refusing to let the facts get in the way of either 1. their desire to subjugate the planet and do with it as they please and/or 2. their vested interest in maintaining the status quo and resultant unwillingness to alter their behaviour. The facts are there for all to see (not to mention worrying, such as this article), and if you wish to deny the reality of climate change and that human activity has impacted upon the process, then you are either grossly misinformed (this is not helped by the media giving equal airtime to skeptics despite the fact that over 99% of the scientific community accepts the basic facts) or are wilfully ignorant and anti-intellectual. If you are the latter, frankly, I have no time for weak-minded cretins such as yourself.

What I most want to say with this entry is that I don't understand the need for much of the debate that is currently being had. Essentially, whether or not climate change is a reality and whether or not it is going to this or that extreme, shouldn't we still be urgently pursuing the most environmentally friendly policies and taking a long term perspective? So often, I see environmentally friendly actions condemned and obstructed by people advocating short term economic interests and immediate maximisation of financial wealth. These perspectives suffer from an absolute blindness or a refusal to acknowledge that environmental damage, while perhaps convenient in the short term for a company's bottom line, is hugely detrimental in the long term. Even localised pollution will ultimately come back to haunt an employer through declining employee health, negative impact on other industries that sustain the local population and provide a source of workers, and of course a tarnished reputation. Ultimately, what is best short term must be considered in light of its long term consequences. If it is detrimental in the long term, then the short term economic growth disappears into irrelevancy as it cannot be maintained and will in the end cause more decline than growth.

Whether or not you accept the reality of climate change, it simply makes good sense on every level to act in the best interests of the environment. It provides economic security and sustainability in the long term. It provides the social benefits that come with a healthy ecosystem; just compare the sickness, squalour, and poor quality of life in Industrial Revolution England or some of the rapidly industrialising cities of the third world with the health, sanitation, and high quality of life in communities where environmental degradation and pollution are low. It provides cultural benefits, especially in regions with large groups of ethnic communities that possess strong ties to a pure and undefiled land. It provides political benefits nowadays too, as climate change increasingly becomes a significant election issue. And from my own special interest, it's good for the development of public transport and especially railways and tramways, as rail is the most environmentally friendly form of transport.

Essentially, I am presenting an "even if" case. Back when I debated in high school, it was one strategy we routinely employed - "even if this point and that point presented by the opposition are true, here is why their core contention is false". Even if climate change skeptics are justified in their skepticism, we still gain more from pursuing environmentally friendly action. We achieve long term economic and social stability, while unregulated or minimally regulated action that focuses on the potential for short term growth and gain is ultimately disastrous. Just look at Nauru, which I wrote about yesterday. The failure to sustainably manage its phosphate resources provided it with brief wealth - it was once the wealthiest Pacific island state. However, it is now on the verge of insolvency and faces the possibility of a very bleak future. Climate change or no climate change, I don't think any of us want to see that happen elsewhere. Climate change or no climate change, I think all city dwellers want to live in a city where the air is safe to breathe and stars can be seen in the city. Climate change or no climate change, I think all those whose living is dependent on the land do not want to be destroyed by issues such as erosion, soil degradation, desertification, and drought. Why squander the beautiful planet we have?
LinkLeave a comment

Discourses on profit. [21 August 2006|11:05 pm]
[Tags|, , , , , , , ]
[Current Mood | tired]
[Current Music |'Mellotron Scratch' by Porcupine Tree]

Today's Politics of Development tutorial was quite interesting, and not just because of the possibly-not-a fire drill (the announcement over the PA was so hopelessly garbled that I'm unsure if the word preceding 'a drill' was 'not'). I was just reflecting on one of the matters that came up in our discussion; it is an issue that I have been tossing around in my mind for a little while and have been meaning to write about here but hadn't yet gotten around to it. I figure now is as good a time as any (actually, it probably isn't as I should be reading, but this shouldn't take me long to type).

It troubles me that today's society is so incredibly monetarily driven and focused upon economic profit. Projects, development, construction, investments, and almost any action are judged on whether they will turn a profit; this is the defining issue that over-rules all others. The discourse of our society seems to neglect to mention that other forms of profit exist; in fact, we understand the unqualified statement of 'a profit' to refer to money without hesitation. I suppose this reality has been rammed home by my interest in trains; it seems the New Zealand system isn't doing so well, especially not when it comes to carrying passengers, and those professing to be 'realistic' argue vehemently that the service simply cannot continue because it is not profitable. My simple reply is: profitable in what sense? Monetary profit for the operators appears to completely nullify whatever environmental, convenience, or social profits exist, or even for that matter, nullify related economic profits such as providing employment, a source of traffic for associated businesses, and the like. Only the direct profit of the service matters; any other profits might as well not exist.

What especially bothers me is that this discourse has narrowed the bounds of discussion so significantly that any mention of alternate forms of profit just does not get a look-in, let alone any serious consideration. This can be simply illustrated by the reaction to the suggestion that something monetarily unprofitable should go ahead because it offers other profits: "how on earth is it meant to survive if it does not make money?" I simply don't know, because I have been raised to understand profit based on the dominant discourse that the supreme profit is monetary and all other profits are subordinate to it. But what I do know is that societies can survive and flourish without this discourse and its attitude, and not just non-monetary societies either. Monied societies in the past have not been dominated by this discourse. Why must we be dominated by it? I fear where it may lead. It is a discourse of accumulation, greed, materialism, and consumption. People aim for significant surpluses - and for what great purpose, or will this surplus just remain unused while others starve? And that raises the most significant issue: what is the cost of this discourse? If the supreme profit is monetary and all others are essentially ignored, what happens when all those other factors fail to turn a profit and make a loss instead? Great monetary wealth won't do much good when the social losses have caused the disintegration of order and the environmental losses have caused harm beyond repair.
Link28 comments|Leave a comment

navigation
[ viewing | most recent entries ]