EARTH MEANDERS 2.0 
Only Cure for a Dying Earth May Be a Stewardship Revolution

May 17, 2009
By Dr. Glen Barry, Ecological Internet
Earth Meanders come from Earth's Newsdesk, http://www.ecoearth.info/newsdesk/
http://www.ecoearth.info/earthmeanders/

If Gaia, the Earth System, is alive, then it stands to reason she can die. And 
the fact Gaia has not yet succumbed in past mass extinctions is no indication, 
and certainly no guarantee, that when hit simultaneously, in a geological flash 
of time -- with climate change, deforestation, toxics, soil loss, scarce 
freshwater, dead oceans and more; caused primarily by over-population and 
inequitable consumption -- that Gaia will not pass from being. 

The degree to which humanity has changed Gaia's balance ecologically is clearly 
known by global change and ecological science, yet it is not well appreciated 
by most of the masses and ruling elite. Until it is, humanity and our sister 
species are careening towards global ecosystem collapse, where one day soon we 
will wake up on a toxic, largely lifeless planet and it will be too late.

If all entreaties to power to pursue necessary policies to avoid global 
ecosystem collapse continue to be rebuffed, there is a long tradition of 
protest culminating in revolution to draw upon as inspiration for a Stewardship 
Revolution. We need to steel ourselves to the possibility that environmentalism 
in the face of continued neglect by the ruling elite has become a battle for 
shared survival of our and all being.


Can the Earth System Collapse into a Lifeless and Uninhabitable Biosphere?

It is now generally accepted that the Earth System -- the sum total of natural 
life-giving ecosystems into the one biosphere, sometimes referred to as Gaia -- 
can in some important aspects be viewed as alive. This includes the ability as 
a super-organism to self-regulate its internal environment.  Thus nutrients and 
energy flow between seas and forests, from water to oceans, and back again, in 
the (until now) seemingly endless rhythms of natural life. This habitat is our 
and all life's home.

When you study, research and observe these issues for decades, as I have, it 
becomes apparent that like any biological system, the Earth can die, and is 
already needlessly and prematurely dying now. I will not review the voluminous 
ecological science that indicates that uniformly global ecosystems are in 
decline and have already started to collapse. Google searches on "ocean dead 
zones", "water scarcity", "ecosystem collapse" to say nothing of "deforestation 
extinction" and "abrupt climate change", make this abundantly clear.  I have 
spent a lifetime building environmental search and news tracking portals 
including http://www.ecoearth.info/ that catalogue and make accessible what is 
known about Gaia's looming demise.

Or you can walk outside and note how many native plants you see, what 
percentage of your landscape is intact ecosystem, what is required to make your 
water drinkable, and note changing seasonality. And if you are truly interested 
in your and your children's survival you may even read! Start with "Limits to 
Growth", move towards the "Millennium Ecosystem Assessment", and continue by 
getting a degree in ecology and/or global change. Most of what is necessary to 
diagnose Gaia's condition and propose sufficient, transformative ecological 
policies is already known. 

I am frequently derided for saying the Earth is dying, as doing so will only 
cause despair. My response is that ecological truth exists, and it will be 
impossible to solve merging global eco-crises without an accurate assessment of 
the severity of the matter. Those that resist this ecological knowledge do so 
out of dogmatic ideologies, of which they may not even be aware. They are cut 
off from the web of life and unaware of the essentially ecological nature of 
being.

It is particularly troubling that so many people find comfort in the far from 
certain notion that "Earth will survive" no matter what after humanity's own 
demise.  Given evolution is not guided by purpose, there is no such guarantee. 
Any one of the past five mass extinctions could have ended with a loss of 
complex or even all life.  Because life has survived mass extinction to evolve 
again into ever greater diversity and complexity does not mean it necessarily 
will do so.

This is particularly so when, as now, not only are species becoming extinct, 
but the biogeochemical nature of Earth's environment is fundamentally shifting 
and may move outside the bounds of what is habitable. Gaia is now being 
bombarded by major biological and ecological change, in a never before seen 
barrage in all manners of ecological decline, and at an unheard of rate of 
change.  

Both lands and seas have been, and continue to be, scoured of their unique 
life. The current atmospheric composition is historically unprecedented, 
threatening long-established climatic patterns. Gaia's lifeblood, water, is 
treated as a bottomless sewer. Ancient soils are eroding, countless species 
passing, remaining ecosystems are accumulating dangerous nitrogen; and all this 
is occurring within a toxic soup of untested chemicals that may have unknown 
deadly synergies.

Most of these profound biogeochemical changes have occurred in a mere 300 
years. Today's Earth system is struggling under the pressure of 7 billion 
super-predators and their billions of livestock, which have and continue to 
grow at a super exponential rate. Under the dominant growth paradigm, each of 
these unique individuals want and expect ever more consumption, procreation and 
money/power; which can only come at the expense of more ecosystem loss. At some 
point, like a shirt having pieces cut from it, this will prove to be too much, 
and the fabric of being will fall apart.

Something has to break under such a scenario, and unfortunately it is global 
ecosystems which are required to make Earth habitable. Systems theory shows 
definitively that exponentially growing systems in positive feedback eventually 
tear themselves apart and collapse. Technology extends but does not eliminate 
limits to growth. Given widespread dismantling of the ecosystems that have made 
Earth livable for eons, who is to say that Earth dying is not a distinct 
possibility?
As a Conservation Biologist, I could spend my life writing scientific papers to 
illustrate these points, typing as Earth burns, knowledge that already exists, 
and will not be much read. Alternatively, I could join with other scientists in 
a controlled experiment on our one shared biosphere -- essentially what is 
proposed by geo-engineering solutions to climate change -- and see if 
dismantling ecosystems one by one and haphazardly eventually leads to 
destruction of the biosphere. 

Or as a Political Ecologist, I can trust a lifetime of ecological learning and 
intuition, and the findings of thousands of eminently more qualified 
scientists, and work together with others that have been similarly ecologically 
enlightened to promote the sufficient social change and personal transformation 
necessary to reverse ecological decline. I have chosen the latter. Please join 
us.


Can We Discuss Escalating Earth Protest and If Necessary a Stewardship 
Revolution?

I strongly believe we need to steel ourselves to the possibility that Earth has 
been so buffeted by humans that it is dying. And if this is the case, then we 
are in a fight for our lives and need to act with the requisite courage and 
resolve to ensure Earth and all creatures' existence continue. Once having 
realized a state of ecological awareness, together we can will a just, 
equitable and sustainable Earth and society into being.  

My scientific prediction that Earth is dying could be wrong.  Regardless, 
clearly there is going to be mass starvation, chronic water shortages and major 
flooded cities as a result of climate change and attendant ecological crises. 
This is established fact that is indeed already happening. The death of 
hundreds of millions if not billions in the coming century is bad enough and 
should warrant some serious policy changes. Whether Gaia and humanity actually 
die, or just wish they had; clearly profound changes in birth rates, equitable 
consumption and use of natural resources -- a Stewardship Revolution -- is 
required if Gaia is to be stabilized and restored, and descent into an 
apocalyptic dystopia avoided.

Americans, the French and much of the world have a long and illustrious history 
of revolutionary thought and action that is celebrated to this day. 
Revolutionary wars were fought to establish liberty and freedom, that however 
incomplete, nonetheless largely banished monarchial tyranny (excepting the last 
U.S. President). There are periods in history where questions of survival and 
justice required conflict for what was just and true, and sometimes just what 
was necessary to survive.

Both Gandhi and King brought a powerful new tactic of non-violent struggle to 
social movements. And indeed we should use these tactics, but not necessarily 
exclusively as these are different times with different imperatives and 
constraints. The extent of the necessary social change, intransigence of ruling 
elite, and severe time constraints whereby past certain tipping points it is 
too late, are unprecedented.

What I am proposing is a serious dialogue to consider whether escalating 
protest actions may be required to transform and, if necessary, overthrow the 
global political and economic systems that are liquidating life-giving 
ecosystems for a throw-away consumer society for some. It is possible to 
envision a radicalized ecological sustainability movement that would move 
through an escalating series of protest actions -- from civil disobedience, 
through sabotage, and if need be violent acts of revolution -- until necessary 
changes for our shared survival like ending coal, tar sands and old forest 
logging occur.

The seeds for such a movement are already there as increasingly creative, and 
at times militant, protest is occurring globally, for example against coal and 
whaling. This would need to be grown as a movement as rapidly as possible, 
helping distraught and soulless consumers to reconnect with Earth. This is 
where the non-violent mass sit-ins, occupation of buildings, obstruction of 
loggers, whalers and miners would occur.  We all hope mass mobilization of 
global citizens solves the problems.

Yet, global ecological crises are so acute, and so immediate, that it could be 
made known that if initial peaceful protest fails to immediately achieve 
ecologically sufficient action, that some in the protest movement would 
escalate to sabotaging equipment and property used to dismantle ecosystems. It 
would seem evident that surgical strikes against property of known people and 
organizations profiting from and causing a dying Earth would be far preferable 
to any sort of indiscriminate terrorism, which should be avoided.

Clearly global ecological sustainability rises to the level of inalienable 
rights and duties that must be defended at all costs. No ecology, and there is 
no economy, art, sport or anything else. An Earth insurgency with the globe as 
its battlefield may become necessary, and should be planned for along with 
other tactics. Industrial society is far more fragile than it appears. The 
history of past and ongoing insurgencies shows that a couple tens of thousands 
of dedicated Earth insurgents -- after due warning that continued governmental 
failure would be met with resistance -- could certainly find a plethora of soft 
targets in the industrial growth machine.  

A leaderless movement of autonomous cells committed to defending their 
bioregion would be virtually impossible to stop, could significantly raise the 
price of ecocide, and just may pull the Earth eating growth machine down. What 
a life to be had: by day agrarian, relocalized democracy; and at night 
ruthlessly destroying the destroyers. This could not be merely tokenism; it 
would be about ending the disease of tar sands, coal, old forest logging and 
elite rule and inequity based upon plundering of natural ecosystems.  

As a last ditch effort to save Gaia and ourselves, a Stewardship Revolution 
would need to be swift, lethal, relentless and uncompromising to succeed. As 
with any insurgency, people could choose to partake to the level with which 
they feel comfortable. If conditions continue to worsen ecologically and the 
Earth slaying elite remain intransigent, some may choose to carry out targeted, 
well-conceived violent actions. Others may limit themselves to providing 
support and comfort for those carrying out the fight, as well as helping those 
displaced from industrial society to reconnect to the land.

I do not condone nor do I mean to imminently incite such actions, but the point 
is the Earth is dying, and there is no sufficient plan to stop the ecocide.  
The idea of a Stewardship Revolution deserves at least to be considered. The 
time may be now to issue a warning to governments that failure to aggressively 
and ambitiously act on climate change at Copenhagen at the end of 2009 will 
mean radicalization of resistance to the status quo Earth destroying economic 
and political systems. 

Earth and humanity, both of which I love very much, are dying; and all free 
thinking men and women of good faith should be willing to consider all 
alternatives necessary to save our and posterity's being.  And thank Gaia for 
previous revolutions, which in my country give me the freedom to academically 
think and write these thoughts. Discussing requirements for actions to achieve 
global ecological sustainability is not a thought crime. It may be the only way 
home to global ecological sustainability.


Gaia willing, Dr. Barry will be further elaborating on these ideas in the 
forthcoming book "New Earth Rising" coming soon. Discuss this essay at: 
http://bit.ly/dying_earth

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