Showing posts with label global warming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label global warming. Show all posts

Entitlement


An entitlement is a just claim or right, usually granted by some authority to an individual. Entitlement may also refer to a personal attitude. This usage is common in therapeutic circles.

The attitude of entitlement is seen as an unconscious, narcissistic sense of being owed a certain deference without any rational basis for that belief. It is often a defense against self-loathing, but it can be the result of poor socialization or poor parenting. Part of healthy human development is the achievement of an understanding of the basic worth and commonality of all human beings. Added to that understanding, a rational, socialized human being realizes that respect and consideration are earned by respectful behavior and responsible action. The entitled person, in the psychotherapeutic sense, enters human interactions and social situations with a demanding or emotionally needy attitude which has no real or socially accepted basis in objective reality.

In the current American political landscape, legal entitlements, such as social security and unemployment benefits, are decried by The Right as frivolous waste of public funds. Their adamant railing against these social benefits imply that the recipients are milking the public treasury unnecessarily and unjustly. Ironically, this reflects an attitudinal entitlement in the holders of these views, who are often fortunate to be wealthy enough, while holding these opinions, to not need the benefits themselves. They feel entitled to live in a safe and comfortable society without paying for the social infrastructure that creates the conditions they obviously take for granted.

The iPhone and Blackberry seem to enforce this sense of general impatience and entitlement. Mesmerized by the power of a portable, compliant slave, which offers up demanded information with the flick of a thumb or finger, people could tend to be less patient with human servers and coworkers, whose clocking times tend to be less immediate and require a certain amount of social prompting to get the best result. Having slaves of any kind, historically, has bred the worst form of entitlement in their masters.

The culture of "we are all special" has contributed to entitlement in many who are not special and who are perhaps are not even average. This is the entitlement of the bling-encrusted felon, now a rapper, whose knowledge or understanding of the human condition is minimal. However, this individual strides from talk show to talk show and dispenses the wisdom of the ignorant with great hubris. The echo effect of this media barrage breeds entitlement in similar listeners, who feel themselves ordained by their rough-shod role model.

The pathological attitude of entitlement, in my opinion, is a reflection of the inequality and lack of education in society. I believe the most basic human entitlement, in a legal or ethical sense, is the birthright to a safe, well-nourished, properly housed, maximally educated and justly employed life span from cradle to grave. Who would be responsible for granting this birthright or entitlement? The state? No. I believe it is the responsibility of every person who brings a child into this world to provide this basic birthright to each and every child.

"It takes a village to raise a child!" I hear the frequent refrain. Yes, I agree. Just as no one of us has the ability to build a television set, a car or an iPhone, no one person has all the tools to provide that basic birthright to a child from cradle to grave. However, this does not excuse propagating the mindless reproduction by those who have absolutely none of the tools to provide that basic human birthright. Nor does it justify Tea Party or Libertarian rantings about denying any social benefits paid for by tax money.

The best treatment for pathological entitlement is the provision of the basic legal entitlement of universal rights to a quality lifespan to each and every human being who is born. This cannot be attended to exclusively with legislation or religious doctrine. Experiments in enforcing these ideals from the top down have failed miserably. This must come from educated and properly socialized individuals who decide to procreate and participate in a just society. The way to that ideal is not every-man-for-himself, the populist battle cry in America, covertly funded by corporate dollars.

The current humanist movement for universal human rights worldwide is an important first step to providing the most basic human justice for all human beings on the planet. Until all human beings are entitled to a quality life from cradle to grave, the plagues of war, greed and injustice will flourish.

Rain


The rain is pelting down here in Boston today. Torrential rain. This is a new type of rain for New England. We are suddenly subject to downpours more typical of climates south of us. Flooding and emergent home repairs result.

Ignoring the deterioration of the atmosphere, due to fossil fuel usage by too many human beings in this enclosed ecosystem of Earth, this bubble of air, water and life in a dry, cold universe, is doing nothing to reverse this trend. The damage that is already done will plague the inhabitants of Earth of decades ahead, even if we begin drastic measures today to halt the environmental changes.

The apparent flaw in human evolution is the frontal lobe's ability to work against the best interests of the human organism. The destractibility and abstraction of the human brain diverts the focus of existence from the essential to the idealized, the imagined. So, the organ in the human body responsible for the advancement of human age and quality of life in the short term may undermine human prosperity in the long run.

This makes me appreciate the tidal nature of existence. There is balance in a closed system. One positive balanced by one negative. Yin and yang. Light and dark. Every gain brings its corresponding loss.

Climate


the great lie pelted my roof
ruptured clouds of dark soot
banging to get my attention

i cringe beneath the attack
sweating from the humidity
knowing the planet's dying

innocent humans weeping
petro-moguls still grinning
polluting coal stacks smoking

no burly angry god coming
to right the wrongs of money
to sweep the climate clean

doom comes in flood water
the end is pain and misery
millions die, more sadly born

we bowed to the oil barons
we let them stop paying taxes
we made our own bad ending

Money


Greed is the social motivator in current human societies. This is simply a reaction to the obvious deterioration of the planet's resources and human overpopulation. Animal, mindless responses, translated into complicated derivatives and securities.

There is little rational basis for hoping that this trend will let up, since the destruction of the planet's health is well under way at the hands of those who hold financial and political power. The only possible hope lies in the heart of each individual who sees the value of human life beyond consumer comforts and the accumulation of things. If this hope is allowed to grow and spread to others, there may be some hope for humankind.

The salvation of the human species does not lie behind a teller's window or on the trading floor of a stock exchange. The salvation of the human species lies within your single individual heart and mind. By adopting a mindful, compassionate and loving daily practice, which turns its focus from getting things to doing good, you may well be turning the tide of greed and destruction.

Heat


As the temperature hovers in the high 90's Fahrenheit (30's Celsius), the unsustainability of the modern urban environment becomes glaringly obvious. A culture which relies on oil and coal to power air conditioners, cars and water purification plants is not prone to support a radical change to sustainable energy sources in any big hurry.

Black pavement, dark roofs and an absence of shade trees make the modern urban environment a solar heat collector. This requires greater artificial cooling to maintain human health in buildings poorly designed for hot weather. Not using air conditioning is a choice to sacrifice personal health for no measurable social or environment effect. Frankly, it is masochistic, since the price of an air conditioning unit is equivalent to what most families pay for one month's cable TV bill.

The problem is a big one and beyond the power of single individuals to solve. Industry obviously has no interest in solving it. Government, if constrained by corruption, will not fix it. This is not a hopeful scenario, but it is an accurate assessment of the status quo.

As global warming radically changes the environment with exponential effects of petrochemical addiction, great human suffering is predictable. This suffering will cut across socioeconomic lines. When the technological breaking point comes, there will be no refuge from heat or drought or famine. Only then will those who live in denial of science and history be forced to face the truth. Meanwhile, those us us who see the coming catastrophe must turn to some form of daily practice to maintain our sanity and personal optimism.

Apathy


There is an active volcano of polluting oil spreading over a huge area of the Gulf of Mexico. No, it hasn't been fix yet, despite the cooling media interest. Political mayhem is also spreading in the states on the Gulf Coast. Politicians with considerable lumps of oil cash in their bulging pockets are looking at their shoes and mouthing the scripted litanies of "Don't panic." These are written for them by their masters, quite obviously. Less bribed politicians are calling the alert in hopes of mobilizing voter lethargy on the issue. The lethargic voters are more concerned about gas prices for their SUVs than drowning in polluted, globally warmed oceans.

Afghanistan, Iraq, oil spill, Icelandic volcano, Haitian earthquake. It is all becoming a series of paper cut-outs or digitized screen images to the overwhelmed, overinformed and undermotivated American public, who are treading their personal financial waters in a recession, which everyone in Government says is over. Other than the various fringe groups, there is no united, visible protest against the status quo.

Is it the corn syrup in the Dunkin Donuts coffee and practically everything else? Is it the overprescribed tons of anti-depressants, thrown at anyone with a blue day? Is it that life is still too easy for the middle class, despite all these problems? Is real protest being igored or actively hidden by media? Whatever it is, I can't shake the feeling that something truly wicked this way comes.

Wind


The conflict between the better mind of human beings and the weight of human possessiveness and greed is quite apparent in the Cape Wind conflict, which moves closer to resolution today at the Massachusetts State House.

The best scientific minds have guided the public to an awareness of the effects of depending heavily on fossil fuels to maintain the easy lifestyle of machine-dependent nations. Fossil fuel usage poisons the atmosphere and disrupts the balance of gases in the planet's atmosphere, causing devastating sea level rise. None but those on the fringe dispute global warming.

Wind power, currently being exploited with urgency from Europe to Saudi Arabia to China, is a low-carbon, renewable (perhaps endless) supply of electrical power. Now, if I can imagine myself on an alien space ship looking at the situation, I think I'd be saying, "Wow, those humans finally realized the power source they used to grind grain to feed themselves centuries ago can easily produce electricity and maybe save their planet."

This hasn't been the opinion on Old Cape Cod. The wealthy on Cape Cod and the islands have caught the NIMBY bug with considerable financial booster shots from the fossil fuel industry, who have contributed to at least one opposition group loudly protesting the construction of a wind farm in Nantucket Sound on the grounds that it will spoil their views, scare the tourists and knock some misguided birds senseless. The NIMBY-ites have also pulled in the American Indian community who claim that the wind farm obscures views of the sun, essential to their rituals. Apparently they plan to position the casinos they would like to develop away from holy horizons.

So far, Cape Wind has generated more hot air than energy. Nearly ten years of contention have brought us to the announcement today from the Secretary of the Interior, which will either bless or nix the project from the Federal government's perspective. This will not be the end. Further court battles will most likely ensue.

The better judgment of the human mind would vote to restore the planet's viability for human life, no matter what it takes. No planet to live on means no views, no Indian rituals, no worrying about concussed birds, no law suits at all. But, as amply illustrated by the opponents to Cape Wind, clinging to what we already have can be the enemy of getting what we need.

Flooding



Here in New England, we have had quite a bit of rain lately. Many of us are bailing out basements and mopping up cellar floors. After hearing a considerable number of these stories, I spent some time thinking about the whole process in relation to the cycles of life and death. I summarized my thoughts in the following poem:


iFlood
by Paul Creeden

veneered with flood water
mottled gray basement floor
not deep but seeping up
from under earth beneath.

cannot push it down, away.
must suck it up and spit it out
down the back walk asphalt
to the gutter storm drains.

dead things, decomposed, stay.
the soup of deep water dried
shows brine and bacteria skin
around the rough cellar edges.

scent of drying decay reminds
how we are just bits together
until we die and soak and rot
to parts of low ground water

someday after some heavy rain
somewhere not too far from here
my bits may visit you invisibly
rising with the damp under foot.

don't hesitate to flush me out.
travel will be my way of life.
from pump to drain to sea mist
and back to flood water again.
.

War


Preemptive war is a policy of fear, not strength. "We're fighting them over there, so we don't have to fight them here." This is lunatic and childish thinking. They are already here, as evidenced by American Somalis going back to Africa to fight with extremists, as evidenced by the several recent bombing plots uncovered by the FBI, as evidenced by the rapid development of mosques being built in the U.S. to accommodate Muslim immigrants.

The poverty and ignorance that has led to jihad throughout the Muslim world is the fault of the same regimes we have supported politically. Now we pressurize a victimized and deprived civilian population by killing them with our military might in their homelands, while still supporting their oppressive and corrupt leadership.

If we withdrew our armies, the citizens of Iraq and Afghanistan would have to make their own choices and allegiances. Frankly, they would be too busy sorting themselves out to worry about attacking the U.S.. That is simple common sense. Viet Nam was a prime example of this.

The current government war policy in Iraq and Afghanistan has its roots in the same evil which brought us the catastrophic lessons of Viet Nam. That evil is the attempt and success of the military-industrial complex to run U.S. foreign policy, against the founding precepts of the U.S., as designed by leaders like George Washington, who insisted that the military be subject to civilian rule.

I am sorry to see the Obama administration bow to the military-industrial complex in Afghanistan. It speaks of a weakness in that administration. It speaks of an abandonment of the politics of peace and reconciliation by that administration. My only hope comes with an understanding that a new anti-war movement will rise from these events, as the American people feel the cost in lives and in their wallets for many years to come.

Reproduction


At the core of all the problems facing the human species is its inability to examine and effectively deal with human reproduction. Reproduction is considered a human right, but dealing rationally with reproduction has not been treated effectively by most societies as a human responsibility.

The result is the ever-growing problem of overpopulation, which lies at the root of all the planetary problems of our age. Do you doubt this? If so, I would suggest that you are either ill informed or naive.

Industrialization, based in petroleum, has developed as a means to support population, as well as a means for the most aggressive and wily of our species to ensure their own progeny's survival and dominance . This petroleum based industrialization is the cause of global warming. It is the basis of corporate agriculture, which is stamping out biodiversity and producing food which can maintain an overpopulated planet at a huge cost in nutritional and cultural value. The processing of human waste in industrialized, urban population centers produces a sludge, which is used as fertilizer on millions of acres of land. The heavy metals in that sludge have already rendered thousands upon thousands of acres permanently useless for food production, due to the heavy metals from pipes and pollutants in it.

Educated people in industrialized countries look to the underdeveloped world and shake their heads at the lack of family planning there. Well motivated couples adopt children from those countries, as opposed to having children of their own. These people are perhaps the most rational and courageous planetary stewards in our times. However, corporate capitalism preaches the values of overpopulation, which is considered 'growth'. More cookie-cutter developments, more widgets for more factories to produce more useless junk to fill more landfills. Insanity.

An examination of the Chinese experience with The One-Child Policy illustrates the inability of human beings to address, understand and control their own reproduction for the common good of the species. And, even in a China which is now reaping the benefits of that policy, it is spoken of with condemnation by 'human rights' advocates in China and abroad. How about the human right to have enough space to grow food and enough clean air to breathe?

I hold the opinion that being a truly mindful and compassionate Humanist entails a commitment to fostering and practicing socially responsible reproduction of the human species. It is key. Wars, disease and famine have been the only modifiers of human population to date. With advances in medicine, a growing abhorrence of war, and a growing movement to feed the poor of the world, overpopulation will become a more and more obvious issue. Whether human beings will be able to chose quality of human existence for all people over their selfish choices, based on sexual and instinctual urges, may well determine the survival and continued evolution of our species.

CEO-Plutocracy


I have used the term 'corporatocracy' to describe the current world government. Yes, world government. The world is being governed (badly) by corporations.

The Business Roundtable, for example, represents 160 US corporations through their CEOs, who as a group lobby and push around the US government at all levels. There are similar organizations and institutes in every industrialized nation. This amounts to a plutocratic group who govern through veiled bribery and campaign contributions.

The US sees its most blatant putsch by the CEO-Plutocracy to date in the $700 billion demand placed before Congress. Amazingly, Congress has said a temporary 'No', but this is temporary. This minimal show of resistance is spurred now by genuine fear that there will be a popular uprising in the voting booths this November, when a general election takes place.

The reality is this: Those in corporate power know that the planet is polluted, overpopulated and under-resourced. They will do whatever it takes to see that they and their offspring survive in the opulence to which they are accustomed and feel entitled. End of story. It's that simple, ladies and gentlemen.

Practice will become more essential for those who are not part of the CEO-Plutocracy. That is, for 90+% of the human species. To survive in a world controlled from the top is difficult. Look to stories from Victorian England for a primer. To evolve will become more and more challenging. To refrain from self-defensive or forced military violence will become nearly impossible. War will be used to keep the poor occupied, distracted and limited in numbers, as much as possible without alerting them to the real reasons for their systematic enslavement and destruction.

Practice living without aspirations to be part of the CEO-Plutocracy. It is a closed system and it is a corrupt, evil system. Live to be compassionate. Live to be whole in mind, body and spirit. Live without material obsessions or addictions. This practice will put your truth and your essence out of the reach of those who would dominate you or destroy your essential being.

Sports



The top photograph to the right was recently taken in front of the Science Museum in Boston. The museum is hosting a corporately funded exhibit on Olympic sports history. The photo below it replicates a Nazi propaganda poster which was used at the time of the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, which were presided over by Adolph Hitler and are considered the beginning of the current commercial Olympic movement. This represents the same genre of propaganda used to equate teamwork with family with social responsibility.

The sad truth which history conveys is that genetic-family-centered, sports-centered societies are less socially responsive to social needs. In fact, these societies, like ancient Rome and ancient Sparta, were war-centered and brutal to those in their societies who did not measure up to the warrior classes. These societies, like the current American society, were fractionalized by gangs, political factions and family feuds.

As a taller-than-average boy with a father who was compulsively driven to conform to conservative heterosexual values, I was cajoled and then bullied into participating in basketball games. I had no aptitude or interest. The result was a widened permanent rift between my father, my older sports-minded brother and myself. I was verbally demeaned and humiliated within my family and in public for the remaining years of my childhood and adolescence in my working-class environment. While ineptitude at sports was the overt reason for ridicule, the subtext was my suspected homosexual nature.

This was valuable training for my personal evolution. I saw through the mindless popular myths about sports and masculinity and aptitude. I was able to work out that the men who were most driven to conform and comply with these myths are the same men who support war, child abuse, the abuse of women and the suppression of their own homosexual feelings. I can only assume, from my experience, that the women who are similarly driven are similarly motivated by rage and fear.

I firmly believe that organized sports as they exist are part of the problem, not part of the solution. I believe they are impressed on youth to produce compliant citizens who will join armies and fight real or virtual wars for the corporate powers. The merging of nationalism or global capitalism with organized team sports is glaringly obvious everywhere. I am sure my simple assertion of this opinion could throw indoctrinated team sports fans in to blind rage. This would simply prove my point, in my opinion.

The men responsible for creating democracy in modern times, men like Adams and Jefferson, did not play team sports. They did not learn the politics and philosophy of liberation on a football field or basketball court. Far from it. They read books, studied history and promoted cooperation of the many against the gangsterism of the few.

A world at peace would indeed have plenty of teamwork to do to correct the negligence and environmental corruption caused by corporate power. The time, money and energy spent on corporately sponsored team sports may eventually be put to better use. This would indeed be an evolutionary step for mankind.

Baseball


Hitting a ball with a stick. This will not stop global warming. It will not deal with overpopulation. It will not lead to human evolution. Charging large sums of money for overweight fools to watch men hitting balls with sticks is a game older than the Roman Coliseum. Wake up. The time of a single life is short. There is so much to do.

Cold

I saw this cardinal in a bare tree yesterday on my walk. It was well below freezing. Yet this small bird was active and minimally curious about me. Last evening, after I had seen this cardinal, I watched a PBS (http://www.pbs.org/) 'Nature' program about rhinoceros. The great lumbering animals were wonderfully photographed. Then my mind drifted back to a recent radio show on NPR (http://www.npr.org/) which was focused on the implications of global warming and the problems involved with our oil dependency. This morning it was about 10 degrees Fahrenheit when I ventured out. This all pulled together in my mind as a question: When the power runs out and it's cold, what will happen to our human habitat? I had visions of people hooking up wood stoves to their chimneys where their oil or gas furnaces once vented. I imagined people chopping up furniture, fences, hedges. How little time it would take for the suburban landscape to become denuded. Would there be mass migration to warmer climates? Would men with guns line the highways to the south to prevent refugees from digressing off the beaten path. Where would the refugees find a safe haven? What would they do to provide for themselves? Would it be the end of society and civilization as we know it? Well, I'm sure of one thing. The cardinal and the rhino would probably go on doing what they do without devoting much interest to the plight of the once-dominant species, gone awry. I find it helpful to think about my life in the context of the lives of other species around me. Anthropocentric thinking can lead to the kind of imbalance that is now destroying the planet's atmosphere.


Winter

There is a human tradition, among the wealthy, to escape Winter by traveling to warmer climates for vacations or seasonal living. Many elderly people in Northern Hemisphere move from colder climates to warmer climates at retirement. They often leave community and family behind to do this. What does this say about the actual/real human commitment to environment, community and family? Is there any real reason to wonder at the state of the planet's environment and the state of the human environment? If the planet is not enjoyed and appreciated for its basic seasonal nature by those with money, influence and power, is it any wonder that the planet is abused and deteriorated by human habitation? What can change this? A human revolution can change this: A revolution in human consciousness, human ethics and human commitment to living mindfully and ethically in respect to the planet and to each other.

August

The temperature here is nearing 100 degrees Fahrenheit. Animals are seeking water wherever it may be found. The squirrels look anorectic. The birds are quiet. The insects are slow. The cicadas are droning a complaint for all of us. The planet is getting our attention. We do not control it. It does not control itself. There is no control. The Universe is chaos. Happiness comes with knowledge (study), acceptance and determination to creatively live within this chaos. Personal evolution comes with sharing happiness and fostering compassion for all beings in our own lives.