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Environment

How Food Riots, Pricey Gas and Home Foreclosures Point to a Better Future

By Marjorie Kelly and Paul Raskin, AlterNet. Posted May 10, 2008.


We are beset today by a systemic global crisis that could open the way to hopeful transformation. It is up to us.
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Can anybody make sense of what the heck is going on today? A lead story in the news covers the rioting in Haiti and a half-dozen other nations as food prices soar. Another front-page column reports that the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis is seizing up credit markets worldwide and contributing to housing woes -- possibly even economic destabilization -- in Ireland, Spain, Britain and elsewhere. Other news reports the discovery of a huge fracture in Antarctica’s vast Wilkins ice shelf, drawing attention to the slow-motion crisis of climate change. And there are ongoing reports about water shortages in Africa and Asia, droughts in Australia, sky-rocketing oil costs, the razing of the Amazon and images of war and terror.

Is the conjunction of these various crises simply a coincidence? The answer is no. From a historical perspective it is possible to see an overall pattern that connects the dots. What is unfolding today is a systemic crisis, heralding the beginning of a large-scale shift at the deepest levels of cultural organization. We are in transition -- for the first time in history -- to a tightly interconnected global system. We have entered the planetary phase of civilization, in a passage that may prove as significant as the advent of agriculture or the Industrial Revolution.

When keeping our thermostats high melts ice sheets at the bottom of the world, when our housing crisis erodes the world economy, when filling our cars with biofuel from corn contributes to hunger a world away, we’re not in Kansas anymore. We need a new map of the world. The old one -- with its geopolitics based on the competition of self-interested nation-states and its economy growing exponentially atop a natural world of unlimited resources -- is vanishing, along with cheap gasoline.

The new map conceptualizes the world as a single global system with interacting, nested subsystems. In this view, lines of connection reach beyond national borders to embrace all of humanity -- linking the poor in Haiti to homeowners in Spain to investors in the United States -- and reaching beyond society to the larger earth community, encompassing even the very air itself. All are entwined in a common fate. All compose a single system and must find their place on a new map, as we rechart the world for a new era.

Transitions announce themselves in the language of crisis. We are in a time of turbulence as old patterns give way and new ones form. The multiple crises today signal a system transformation operating at the scale of the planet. Transformation is distinct from adaptation, which is the normal process of incremental adjustment to new conditions. Transformations are rare moments in history when dominant societal structures cannot cope with emerging developments and change in fundamental ways. With the converging lines of crises we face today, we may be entering a perfect storm of destabilizing stress.

We cannot predict the future. It may be good, bad or ugly, depending on how events unfold and how we respond. But scenarios can help us envision alternate futures, and our organization has -- with the aid of an international group -- crafted four scenarios of possible futures. In a "market forces" scenario, the United States continues with business as usual, other nations converge toward American lifestyles, economic growth remains the sine qua non of development, and environmental strain and cultural polarization intensify. In "policy reform," government seeks ambitious policies to protect the environment and reduce inequity; but with the ethos of consumerism unchecked, the reformist path could be overwhelmed by unsustainable trends. In "fortress world," reform fails and problems cascade into self-amplifying crises as the affluent retreat into protected enclaves amid oceans of misery.

In a "great transition" scenario, mounting crises lead not to breakdown but to breakthrough into a sustainable culture, where we shrink our environmental footprint, not only because we must live lightly and equitably on this small planet, but because quality of life matters more than quantity of stuff. It is a world where global interdependence -- as both a fact of history and a moral imperative -- replaces the heedless pursuit of self-interest as a guiding ethos. Such a resilient, just and livable world order is possible, though not inevitable. We do not offer facile hope. Large-scale social transformation does not come from small-scale woes: A time of troubles lies ahead.

Nevertheless, there is a case for hope. In the turbulence of transition, small actions can have big effects. We stand at a moment of unparalleled creative opportunity that calls for bold leaders and engaged citizens to articulate new visions of a 21st century social order and to mobilize a global movement to bring these visions to reality. Our world today generates more despair and resignation than vision and action. But it would not be the first time that an effervescence of popular political energy arrived unexpectedly to shift the direction of history.

We are beset today not by random bad luck, but by a systemic crisis that could -- on the other side of calamity -- open the way to hopeful transformation. It is up to us.

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See more stories tagged with: crisis, great transition

Marjorie Kelly and Paul Raskin are with the Boston-based Tellus Institute, which for over three decades has blended science and vision in the search for a sustainable future.

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View:
A message for Pollyanna
Posted by: Sojourner on May 10, 2008 12:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here

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otto
Posted by: otto on May 10, 2008 4:56 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have heard that the Chinese word-symbol for crisis puts together the words "danger-opportunity'. This article brings out that view well, and I like it. And if I can be forgiven for sounding a bit Evangelistic (in the best sense, I hope!), I see it as part of God's plan for seeing ourselves as His-Her big human family, with a call to actively love one another as God loves us.

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» RE: John Mont = Troll Posted by: kazz
» Goodf post, Beck! Posted by: Cathyc
» Good post, Beck! Posted by: Cathyc
» Brain scan info, please? Posted by: SayBlade
Most of the oil under this country...
Posted by: Cooltruth on May 10, 2008 5:21 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
hasn't been drilled for yet. The majority of food needs to be grown closer to where it gets eaten instead of transporting it everywhere. Buy food from local farmers whenever possible or raise a garden. If you want corn, planting it in your garden beats complaining about some corn being made into ethanol. After ethanol is produced the byproduct can be fed to livestock which people can eat. Hungry people might be able to make meals off the corn byproducts of ethanol production. Even in cities you may be able to find a place for a garden. I wouldn't want to be stuck in a city where I couldn't plant anything to eat with the rising costs of food & getting the food to the stores. It will get worse. A poster on another site mentioned that the price of a bushel of wheat should be equal to the price of a barrel of oil. An idea that could work to bring down the cost of oil if it didn't cause starvation in the process. Maybe farm equipment in addition to cars needs to be tweaked to run on alternative energy. We are clearly 'over a barrel' when everything is dependent on imported oil from incresingly hostile places. The sooner we get away from it (dependence on imports) the better the economy could get for everybody that isn't bleeding us dry from that 'importing of things we need' business.

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Forward thinking....
Posted by: kazz on May 10, 2008 5:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Creating transitional communities in cities, towns, villages and islands across Europe and the world.
TransitinsTowns.org

This is a great site just in the early stages of development. I've had cause to contact the people behind Transition Towns, and found them most accommodating and open.
As far as I'm aware there are no transition communities in the States at the moment (though certainly there are plenty of people working toward that end) but the project/community is international, so there's no reason why there can't be soon.

Signed: A Brit

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Empty-headed blather devoid of information.
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on May 10, 2008 5:56 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Alternet is blowing chunks - no coverage of the Iraq war, a bunch of nonsensical articles, feel-good nonsense, Don Hazen writing articles on "socially responsible investing?"

Who finances this site? Do you guys keep your records open to the public, or is it all hush-hush, like the other non-profit corporate 501c sites?

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Systemic Thinking
Posted by: jlan on May 10, 2008 6:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you for this post. The use of the word "systemic" alone is so important for us to start seeing and thinking about and using in our everyday language. It needs to seep into our collective conscience and embed itself in our view of reality. Amazing things begin to happen when we begin to think systemically.

I've only recently begun to think about this concept and I have Fritjof Capra to thank. A world-renowned physicist, author, and founder of the Center for Ecoliteracy in CA, Capra has devoted himself to the study and application of systems thinking. What he has to say is very important. Please take the time to read "The Hidden Connections: A Science for Sustainable Living," and "The Tao of Physics". And, if you can find it on VHS (for some reason not on DVD), watch "Mindwalk", a film loosely based on Tao of Physics. It's all dialogue, not exactly your typical Friday night movie, but it may just change the way you think about everything.

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» RE: Systemic Thinking Posted by: john mont
What real news (without analysis or explanation, though) looks like:
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on May 10, 2008 7:13 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1) "Oil Climbs Above $126 to Record as Dollar Weakens Against Euro By Mark Shenk
May 9 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil rose above $126 a barrel in New York to a record as the dollar weakened against the euro, prompting investors to buy commodities as a hedge against the currency's decline."

"For a fifth day oil climbed to all-time highs as the euro strengthened on signs the European Central Bank will keep rates at a six-year high to cut inflation. Nigerian output fell to the lowest this decade in April because of a strike and attacks on oil installations."

"Oil is a safe haven because of the weak dollar and how badly the financial sector has been doing,'' said Michael Lynch, president of Strategic Energy & Economic Research in Winchester, Massachusetts. ``There are also geopolitical concerns about places like Nigeria and Venezuela that are propping prices up.''

. . .The contract surged to $126.27 today, the highest since futures began trading in 1983. Prices are up 8.3 percent this week, the biggest weekly gain in more than a year. Futures have more than doubled in the past year.

. . .Oil at $200 is "possible if we have a continuing devaluation of the dollar with respect to other currencies," OPEC President Chakib Khelil said yesterday at a press conference in Washington."

2) India Bans Rubber, Soybean Oil Futures to Cool Prices (Update4)
By Thomas Kutty Abraham


"May 8 (Bloomberg) -- India, the world's second-largest buyer of vegetable oils, banned futures trading in soybean oil, rubber, chickpeas and potatoes as the government seeks to rein in the fastest inflation since 2005."

"The Forward Markets Commission halted trading for at least four months from today, Anupam Mishra, a director at the market regulator, said last night in a phone interview. Trades will be settled at yesterday's closing price."

So, if you want to control skyrocketing food prices you ban what is called food futures trading.

Indeed, Alternet's choice of bogus articles on this topic rivals anything seen in any of the mainstream corporate press - Stan Cox claiming food prices are due to ethanol, some idiot saying that people will burn more gas if they buy hybrids, Amy Goodman's bogus article on the food crisis that mentions ethanol about a hundred times and futures hoarding not at all.

Vile & Slimy - and the left wing 501(c) nonprofits are just as bad as the right wing 501(c) nonprofits. All across the net, left-wing and right-wing U.S. press outlets are rallying behind the interests of the biggest energy interests on the planet, instead of behind the needs and interests of ordinary people.

And so, the secret war for the control of the world's diminishing energy resources continues...

The real question may be this: will Bush and Cheney, as a last gift to Wall Street, attempt an assault on Iran as a means to boost the value of the dollar, at least short-term?

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» Banning futures contracts? Posted by: ReallyBearish
» You still don't get it, Yellow Posted by: ReallyBearish
» RE: Banning futures contracts? Posted by: edgeofnowhere
» Tilting at windmills Posted by: frantaylor
As regards to looking at...
Posted by: bobtr900 on May 10, 2008 8:45 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...the entire world. There is one huge problem with that which is the Repub party has control of the U.S. alongwith their religion of profits at any cost. They, in turn, are supported by their right wing religions/voters. The world economy means nothing to them, only profits and they will kill and maim for those.

As Thom Hartman of Air America Radio says in his latest book they are the party of 'me'. Not the party of 'we' as the Dems are. The party of 'me', the Rethugs, are extremely narrow minded possessing very restricted vision. They cannot see beyond just three issues, namely, profits and political power, gay bashing and abortion. They have built their entire political future a and a good deal of their past on these three items/goals. They care about nothing else. WQith such a narrow vision how can anyone ever think they will even begin to look at the needs of the entire USA and all of our citizens much less the entire world.

Were it not for the thuggery and schoolyard bullying of the Rethugs we might all be able to climb out of the gutters of their mind and look at the bigger picture. IMHO, the Rethugs are a combination of scared people because the USA and the world are changing. Also they are totally self absorbed and totally greedy. Religion should always be able to look at a bigger picture. BUT, the Repub right wing religions are totally focused on getting and keeping the Rethugs in power, forever, and that includes my own religion but most assuredly does not include me.

The Repub/Bush stygian viewpoint of everything is a total drag on those of us who regard ourselves as more progressive and cosmopolitan thinkers; exemplified by the fact that we look at our own thinking but also take into account the thinking of the rest of the world. And they just hate that we do that, engage in outward looking. In other words, the rest of us are dragged down, hindered and very limited by the lowest common denominator thinking of the 'bubba's' who control the U.S. which in turn has a very debilitating effect upon the rest of the world, the entire family of man.

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Can anybody make sense of what the heck is going on today?
Posted by: toddcory on May 10, 2008 9:54 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Actually I can... we live on finite planet with finite resources. We now have over 6.6 billion people here. The more people on the earth, the smaller the resource pie becomes, especially when non- renewable resources are starting to decline.

This is not rocket science folks. Next year, this will look like the good old days. If higher prices do not curb consumption rationing and shortages are next. The thin veil of civility will evaporate once that happens. It is going to get very ugly, very soon.

Do what you can to mitigate these impacts on your live. Get out of debt, become super efficient, and conserve as much as possible. Investing in active renewables and growing a garden and planting an orchard might be wise as well.

What an interesting time to be alive.

Todd

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Unfortunately It's Not Up to Us
Posted by: perkywa on May 10, 2008 11:49 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The article is correct in pointing out that these crises are not accidental but rather systemic. However WE don not run the "system". A cabal of Banking elites do...they purchased all the governments long ago (anywhere there is a private Central Bank...Like the "Federal" Reserve INC created in 1913) and have over the last 100 plus years steered events to setup their World Bank, IMF, World Court of Settlements etc. to form the core of a World Government. The dream of world collectivism has been on the Elites minds for a long long time...the emerging "world" government is going to be run by all of the former European "empires"...meet the new boss same as the old boss....the empires strike back.

What the article doesn't tell you is that to "reduce our environmental footprint" 80% of you suckers gotta go with strict breeding regulation of the remainder. Or that under the new "world" government the wealth, ALL of it, WILL be distributed to the same few elites who own it now. The other 98% will be their serfs in their new paradise.

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» Thanks, Perkywa Posted by: zeofredo
Systemic Crisis and Global Opportunity
Posted by: Mad Hun on May 10, 2008 5:12 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a well-argued essay. Thank you, Majory Kelly and Paul Raskin. What I enjoy, as a philosopher, is that rational design of an ecological future is not an idle indulgence anymore, but has now become basic survival gear. It's great that the American public is catching on to the Green Revolution sweeping around the planet. This is the path to Enlightenment.

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Что Делать?
Posted by: mclemens on May 10, 2008 6:45 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One of the chief detriments of the so-called “information revolution” is the nature of information delivery: we get “factoids” -- dismembered fragments of data delivered in such great numbers at so great a speed that developing the context and critical thinking necessary for real comprehension is, in most peoples’ cases, obviated. This easily places media like television and the internet almost by default at the service of prevailing establishment power. All that needs be done is to keep bombarding the populace with byte-sized disconnected chunks of emotionally resonant information which, given this dislocation from any corresponding or conflicting data and from any grounded theory of historic process, debases the very essential question of how are we to live (or, in Lenin’s borrowed phrase, Что Делать?, What is to be Done?) to the point that such a question is little more than hollow entertainment. Fewer and fewer of us, struggling to keep body and soul together, have the time, energy, or inclination to develop the patience and epistemological grounding requisite to taking a well-reasoned, humane and ethical orientation to the constantly streaming flood of factoids which create in our minds “the world.”

The authors claim that historic perspective allows one to recognize that the ever-widening shockwaves of 500 years of Eurocentric imperialism are really ” heralding the beginning of a large-scale shift at the deepest levels of cultural organization.” Really? Sounds as exciting and easy to grasp as The Celestine Prophecy. Cloudy attempts to “envision alternate futures” while avoiding taking a particular historic and conceptual stance only reinforce the status quo, which I feel sure is not the authors’ intent. Our present ecohumanitarian crisis is a direct consequence of an already extant scenario developed by politico-economic forces which have prevailed in the US roughly since 1948.

Articles like this are just pipedreams if not grasped in the context, for example, of the planned underwriting of increased reliance on the automobile with how the National Interstate and Defense Highways Act of 1956 was imlemented, and the corresponding deterioration of community following the post WWII FHA boom in “suburbanization.” All of this was part of “urban” design as envisaged from the perspective of power and wealth and designed to serve those interests. This has been discussed widely for many years, for example in Bertram Gross’ Friendly Fascism: The New Face of Power in America (1980) and in The City in History (1961) and The Myth of the Machine (1967-1970), both by Lewis Mumford.

The crisis addressed here is neither unintended nor unforeseen, nor will there be any viable and meaningful recovery unless policy which has today the status of revealed truth becomes recognized for the totalitarian system it is and overthrown from the bottom up. Frankly, there doesn’t appear to be a lot of reason for optimism. Feel-good affirmations may be just fine between you and your bathroom mirror, but have no place in any serious discourse about social change when the terms of the debate are as confused and the situation as dire as where we find ourselves today.

It is essential that any well-intentioned vision of alternative futures not replace or sap a persistent effort to perceive, oppose and deconstruct the immoral, inhumane establishment structure of power and ideology. Until we are agreed on a clear and well-detailed picture of what we hope to change, to “envision alternate futures” is all too often just time and energy stolen from the liberation and transformation we pay lip service to and, through that distraction, perpetuation of the cruelties and injustices we all hope to remedy.

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» Excellent comment. Posted by: Coleman
» Thanks for your response (1) Posted by: mclemens
» Thanks for your response (2) Posted by: mclemens
» RE: Что Делать? Posted by: jmaddox25
HOW ABOUT ANOTHER SCENARIO: FREEDOM!
Posted by: alicelillie on May 11, 2008 7:23 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In all the discourses on how to solve the world's problems, and there are many serious ones, one thing never seems to come up: freedom.

I won't write a great big letter, but rather refer you to my brand new blog essay, where I try to demonstrate that a respect for individual rights will go a long ways toward solutions.

See http://www.alicelillieandher.blogspot.com

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» This really doesn't work. Posted by: ReallyBearish
Bull
Posted by: uncleeddie on May 11, 2008 8:25 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We do not contribute to global warming as CO2 as poison is a lie. When the world wakes up to the people manipulating the current crisis only then is there hope. This author unfortunately is among the manipulators of public deception. The food crisis like the sub prime, the oil, and on and on are all carefully contrived events. Who Al Gore really represents is the key to the puzzle because to say he stands for the planet is a pathetic injury to all intelligence and self respect.

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» What!? Posted by: ReallyBearish
It reads like feel-good indoctrination
Posted by: zhine on May 11, 2008 4:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And I'm getting tired of it.


Can someone point to a site that deals in news and takes into account the bigger picture?

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Peak oil does not bode a better future
Posted by: gourdman on May 11, 2008 10:31 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Food and gas prices are directly linked to one thing: the peak of world oil production, for which we are woefully unprepared. Our opportunity to create a better future was a point we flashed by in 25 years ago in our gas guzzling SUVs; what we did instead was to drive the global population beyond 6.5 billion, create ever more unsustainable cities and food supply chains, and turn up the volume on resource consumption worldwide.

There is no energy source that approaches petroleum for power and portability. What we are facing is perhaps the die-off of two thirds of the the planet's population, and I'm not sure how ANYONE can view that sober fact through rose-colored glasses.

More information on peak oil: Dieoff.org

View a graph of crude oil prices since 1947, adjusted in 2007 dollars: WTRG Economics

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"...back to 'normal'..."
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on May 12, 2008 8:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
you know what I hear?

a *lot* of Americans demanding that they be returned to their previous levels of blind resource squandering & ignorant pillaging of non-American human rights.

How dare Americans have to realize what has been going on outside the United States or their gated communities?

How dare non-Americans show them how we've seen them since the turn of the LAST century?

...all they want is to return to PREVIOUS levels of disengagement from their corporatized "democracy".

They just want to be able to strut about again shrieking "We're Number ONE!" & ignoring the Rest of the World rolling its eyes in disgust.


THERE WAS NO 'NORMAL' that could be applied to the pre-Bush years. What was 'normal' for privileged Americans (you know, the un-disenfranchised citizens who were treated as non-Americans like the Rest of US).

What was 'normal' for them? wasn't 'normal' for the other few billions of us.

just a thought, but sustainable progress won't look anything like what was seen in the US gated communities before Bush...

just a thought, but its time to realize the way the REST of us have been living.

Amazing how many Americans have never even left the country or hold a passport...

isn't it ODD that the US has made it almost impossible to *casually* cross the Border to see how Mexicans have been oppressed?

...almost like its better for Power to blindfold the masses to prevent them from seeing they're being led...

****moooooooo****





~~~
Spread Love...

BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian com
~~~
"We, two, form a Multitude" ~ Ovid.
~~~
"Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced"
"do no harm"

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when it was Iraq... *boom*
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on May 12, 2008 8:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
gee, I wonder why they've pressured to attack Iran??

hummmmmm

what could it BE... gee, I wonder?

thoughts on "Crude jolt for US as Iran scraps OIL trade in dollar" - The Economic Times

oops.

~~~
Spread Love...

BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian com
~~~
"We, two, form a Multitude" ~ Ovid.
~~~
"Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced"
"do no harm"

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Optimism is a dangerous delusion
Posted by: leland61 on May 13, 2008 3:25 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Such a resilient, just and livable world order is possible, though not inevitable. We do not offer facile hope. Large-scale social transformation does not come from small-scale woes: A time of troubles lies ahead."

As along as we have a world economic system based on:

1. Belief in unlimited economic growth through the use of and destruction of Earth's resources;

2. Belief that some people deserve more and better lives than others;

3. Belief that the resources of the planet belong to whoever can take them rather than to all, and I mean all, of Earth's inhabitants;

4. Belief in economic and social Darwinism - the fundamental basis of so-called Free Market Capitalism;

The world will be slowly transformed into a land of misery for the masses and precarious bounty for the very few or a global revolution of the poor where the rich are destroyed in a world-wide blood bath that will make the Russian Revolution look like a Baptist Sunday School Picnic brawl.

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More on the Great Transition
Posted by: jmaddox25 on May 15, 2008 1:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you have an interest in exploring further the nature and gravity of what lies ahead, as well as the historic opportunity we have to shape an equitable world of peace, freedom and sustainability, I recommend that you read Paul Raskin's Great Transition, The Promise and Lure of the Times Ahead. You can learn more about the initiative and network at www.gtinitiative.org.

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