RANGER AGAINST WAR: Paying it Forward <

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Paying it Forward

Vaclav Havel, former president of the Czech Republic, has a wonderful essay on confronting climate change in today's New York Times (Our Moral Footprint).

He is not alarmist in terms of the earth's destruction, as the earth will continue to exist, be it hotter or colder. But our place on it may be jeopardized. It is an argument for "a consciousness of the commonality of all living beings and an emphasis on shared responsibility," lest we lose freedom by virtue of profligacy and inaction, versus reasoned choices.


Havel appeals to the corporate mindset and fiduciary responsibility (something our current leadership has forgone):


"Maybe we should start considering our sojourn on earth as a loan. There can be no doubt that for the past hundred years at least, Europe and the United States have been running up a debt, and now other parts of the world are following their example. Nature is issuing warnings that we must not only stop the debt from growing but start to pay it back. There is little point in asking whether we have borrowed too much or what would happen if we postponed the repayments. Anyone with a mortgage or a bank loan can easily imagine the answer."

Today the figure of $800 billion was floated as the cost estimate for the Iraqi and Afghanistan wars thus far. Our leaders are spending resources while wreaking havoc on lives and the environment like there is no tomorrow. Perhaps they know something we don't.


--Lisa


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2 Comments:

Blogger Mike said...

If just one of these guys would mention - even in passing - that maybe (just maybe!) there are too many of us on this mudball, I'd start paying attention to 'em.

Until then, he's just another hand wringer. Perhaps better educated than most, but a hand-wringer none the less.

Friday, September 28, 2007 at 10:50:00 AM EST  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

mr. oblivious,

You are too candid, and I am with you.

The people to whom they minister are so enrapt in medievalist thinking (religion) that they dare not estrange themselves from their audience.

I would love to hear one leader worth his salt address the topic of population control. Statistics show birthrates down in most industrial countries, but burgeoning amongst the underdeveloped populations. If we use the concept of the asymmetrical warfare theorists, those populations will end up triumphant simply by virtue of their numbers.

At the risk of sounding too New Age, the earth's undoing will be that the creatures who inhabit it share no vision of connectivity. It is still, as ever, one village against another. Because we are, as ever, greedy and selfish.

Friday, September 28, 2007 at 12:22:00 PM EST  

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