Friday, January 25, 2008

Our Educational System, Tampons, and Satirical Videos...

Sorry I haven't been writing too much original stuff. And I'm not going to right now either..

I've been really mixed up lately, trying to decide what I want to do in the future, and what's worth doing, and what I have time for.

anyways, here's a great article - worth the long read.

This is about prescription drugs for children/students and behavior, etc.
http://www.theecologist.org/archive_detail.asp?content_id=621

This one, I haven't read myself, but I've read similar writings, is about tampons. Beware!

http://www.theecologist.org/archive_detail.asp?content_id=1137

And here's the videos. Enjoy.



Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Esperanza delayed/ New Article.

Esperanza is being delayed indefinitely because of outside forces. I'll keep it updated though.

I don't feel like writing. Here' s a pleasant article...

Economic Collapse And Global Ecology

By Dr. Glen Barry

14 January, 2008
Earth Meanders

Given widespread failure to pursue policies sufficient to reverse deterioration of the biosphere and avoid ecological collapse, the best we can hope for may be that the growth-based economic system crashes sooner rather than later

Humanity and the Earth are faced with an enormous conundrum -- sufficient climate policies enjoy political support only in times of rapid economic growth. Yet this growth is the primary factor driving greenhouse gas emissions and other environmental ills. The growth machine has pushed the planet well beyond its ecological carrying capacity, and unless constrained, can only lead to human extinction and an end to complex life.

With every economic downturn, like the one now looming in the United States, it becomes more difficult and less likely that policy sufficient to ensure global ecological sustainability will be embraced. This essay explores the possibility that from a biocentric viewpoint of needs for long-term global ecological, economic and social sustainability; it would be better for the economic collapse to come now rather than later.

Economic growth is a deadly disease upon the Earth, with capitalism as its most virulent strain. Throw-away consumption and explosive population growth are made possible by using up fossil fuels and destroying ecosystems. Holiday shopping numbers are covered by media in the same breath as Arctic ice melt, ignoring their deep connection. Exponential economic growth destroys ecosystems and pushes the biosphere closer to failure.

Humanity has proven itself unwilling and unable to address climate change and other environmental threats with necessary haste and ambition. Action on coal, forests, population, renewable energy and emission reductions could be taken now at net benefit to the economy. Yet, the losers -- primarily fossil fuel industries and their bought oligarchy -- successfully resist futures not dependent upon their deadly products.

Perpetual economic growth, and necessary climate and other ecological policies, are fundamentally incompatible. Global ecological sustainability depends critically upon establishing a steady state economy, whereby production is right-sized to not diminish natural capital. Whole industries like coal and natural forest logging will be eliminated even as new opportunities emerge in solar energy and environmental restoration.

This critical transition to both economic and ecological sustainability is simply not happening on any scale. The challenge is how to carry out necessary environmental policies even as economic growth ends and consumption plunges. The natural response is going to be liquidation of even more life-giving ecosystems, and jettisoning of climate policies, to vainly try to maintain high growth and personal consumption.

We know that humanity must reduce greenhouse gas emissions by at least 80% over coming decades. How will this and other necessary climate mitigation strategies be maintained during years of economic downturns, resource wars, reasonable demands for equitable consumption, and frankly, the weather being more pleasant in some places? If efforts to reduce emissions and move to a steady state economy fail; the collapse of ecological, economic and social systems is assured.

Bright greens take the continued existence of a habitable Earth with viable, sustainable populations of all species including humans as the ultimate truth and the meaning of life. Whether this is possible in a time of economic collapse is crucially dependent upon whether enough ecosystems and resources remain post collapse to allow humanity to recover and reconstitute sustainable, relocalized societies.

It may be better for the Earth and humanity's future that economic collapse comes sooner rather than later, while more ecosystems and opportunities to return to nature's fold exist. Economic collapse will be deeply wrenching -- part Great Depression, part African famine. There will be starvation and civil strife, and a long period of suffering and turmoil.

Many will be killed as balance returns to the Earth. Most people have forgotten how to grow food and that their identity is more than what they own. Yet there is some justice, in that those who have lived most lightly upon the land will have an easier time of it, even as those super-consumers living in massive cities finally learn where their food comes from and that ecology is the meaning of life. Economic collapse now means humanity and the Earth ultimately survive to prosper again.

Human suffering -- already the norm for many, but hitting the currently materially affluent -- is inevitable given the degree to which the planet's carrying capacity has been exceeded. We are a couple decades at most away from societal strife of a much greater magnitude as the Earth's biosphere fails. Humanity can take the bitter medicine now, and recover while emerging better for it; or our total collapse can be a final, fatal death swoon.

A successful revolutionary response to imminent global ecosystem collapse would focus upon bringing down the Earth's industrial economy now. As society continues to fail miserably to implement necessary changes to allow creation to continue, maybe the best strategy to achieve global ecological sustainability is economic sabotage to hasten the day. It is more fragile than it looks.

Humanity is a marvelous creation. Yet her current dilemma is unprecedented. It is not yet known whether she is able to adapt, at some expense to her comfort and short-term well-being, to ensure survival. If she can, all futures of economic, social and ecological collapse can be avoided. If not it is better from a long-term biocentric viewpoint that the economic growth machine collapse now, bringing forth the necessary change, and offering hope for a planetary and human revival.

I wish no harm to anyone, and want desperately to avoid these prophesies foretold by ecological science. I speak for the Earth, for despite being the giver of life, her natural voice remains largely unheard over the tumult of the end of being.

Monday, January 21, 2008

Viva la Esperanza!

http://esperanzasc.org/index.php?page_name=home

Heading to this intentional community, working it's way to living off the grid entirely on the fringes of a self-destruction civilization at it's weakest point! I'll be gone for a good portion of the weekdays and I'm bringing my bud Brandon along with, who is actually looking into living there.

It should be a ton of fun.

Oh, I've officially graduated high school. Yes.

Adios,
Clayne

Monday, January 14, 2008

Ken Wilber - Integrative or permanent "regression"

I've been reading this blog titled the Edge of Grace by someone who spent a year at Teaching Drum. He wrote some segments on the "Evolution of Consciousness" in which he questions the primitivist thought that says we aren't developing in any way.

Does he have a point? I don't know. I'm thinking a lot about this.

Does it matter? Won't one of the two, if not extinction, just happen? There isn't really a right or a wrong - there is just what WILL happen and what WON'T happen...

One thing I want to point out is the main premise of this and similar writings...that there HAS been a shift in consciousness. It seems to be assumed that there was, but I'm less sure. At the same time, though, where is that line of shift? Is it from tribal living the civilized living? I would doubt that. While I agree there was a sense of oneness with the earth during tribal living, I don't think there's any permanent mental shift from that to our disconnected civilized state we experience today. So where is this shift? Maybe earlier on the scale of evolution - when we weren't considered 'human' - maybe at that point we lived more subconsciously. If that's the case, then this is where this following debate comes from.

Is the civilized mess we see today a tough transition of a subconscious state of living to a fully conscious state of living? Only to be on it's way to some trans-conscious state of living that integrates the two? If that's the case, then civilization isn't the mistake a lot of primitivists would like to believe it is. Most believe that we took a wrong turn and much reconnect/rewild. Or we can say what the following quote is saying...that we must "regress" to fix what our "mistake", as in regress to hunter-gatherer, but instead of stay there, we will then integrate our subconscious and conscious, now fixed, into a new state of being.

I don't know which it could be. A large part of me, still, thinks it doesn't matter - that in the meantime, we still need to reconnect ourselves, no matter which answer it is. We need to stop fucking things up. I think that's all that matters to the generations that live now. Anyways, here it is:

"Whenever evolution produces a new differentiation, and that differentiation is not integrated, a pathology results, and there are two fundamental ways to approach that pathology.

One is exemplified by the Freudian notion … of “regression in service of ego.” That is, the higher structure relaxes its grip on consciousness, regresses to a previous level where the failed integration first occurred, repairs the damage on that level by reliving it in a benign and healing context, and then integrates that level — embraces that level, embraces the former “shadow” — in the new and higher holon of the ego (or total self-system). For the ego’s problem was that during its formative growth, where it should have transcended and included its lower-level drives (such as sex and aggression), it transcended and repressed them, split them off, alienated them — one of the prerogatives of a higher-level structure with its greater relative autonomy, but a prerogative, we have seen, that is bought only and always at the price of pathology. Thus the cure: regression in service of a higher reintegration — a regression that allows evolution to move forward more harmoniously by healing and wholing a previously alienated holon.

The other general approach is the retro-Romantic, which often recommends regression, period. This approach, in my opinion, simply confuses differentiation and dissociation, confuses transcendence and repression. Thus, whenever evolution produces a new differentiation, and that differentiation happens to go into pathological dissociation, then this approach seeks to permanently turn back the pages of emergent history to a time prior to the differentiation. Not prior to the dissociation — we all agree on that! — but prior to the differentiation itself!

That will indeed get rid of the new pathology, at the cost of getting rid of the new depth, the new creativity, the new consciousness. By that retro-Romantic logic, the only way to really get rid of pathology is to get rid of differentiation altogether, which means everything after the Big Bang was a Big Mistake."

Enjoy,
Clayne

Sunday, January 6, 2008

A small update.

I just started reading Walden and Other Writings by Thoreau.

I've been quite distracted, but not regrettably, because I've met a wonderful person that I love to be with and talk to. She's amazing.

Anyways, two weeks of school left.

Two. Weeks.

That hasn't really sunk in. I can't even imagine a life without school. I'm also going to have to get a job soon, for in the meantime.

I just found out that the yearbook staff has included a section for environmental things. They've quoted me talking about veganism and this destructive culture. Unfortunately, they've seemed to downplay my message. The first thing they said we can do is, "use bottles that have less plastic". I didn't read that list thoroughly, although I think it was all pretty trivial *sigh*.

Anyways, they asked for a photo of myself, so I had one taken of me with my bike at the lake. I hope that'll suffice.

***

I've been pushing everything to the side. Reading. Finishing applications. Activism (what can I do in this town?? This city?! I don't know of anything in Dallas).

That's it for now.

Take down some infrastructure for me.

: /

Love and Rage,
Clayne