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Progressive News & Views (since 1982)
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  L I F E and my brother, the Homo (sapien) (2)

"Once apparently the chief concern and masterpiece of the gods, the human
race now begins to bear the aspect of an accidental by-product of their
vast, inscrutable and probably nonsensical operations." (H.L. Mencken -
1922)

"How can we speed our understanding of ways to organzie a more just and
sustainable society in order to catch up with our escalating technological
capacity to harm one another and our life-supporting environment?
Psychologist Daniel Kahneman succinctly satated the basic problem of
quarter center ago: "The increase in man's power over his environmetn has
not been accompanied by a concomitant improvement of his ability to make
rational use of that power." (Paul R. Ehrlich, Human Natures, 2000)

If we are going to do anything at all, we  better  do  something  soon.
There  has  been  a  tripling of the population  of  the  planet in less
than a hundred years and that is a staggering number of people with which
we have to share this third rock from the Sun.

The human predicament is problematic for every living organism.

Humans are animals like other primates which have a capacity to think
about these things. We have the ability to understand the damage we do.
To ignore it is not only making our own Freudian "death wish" real, it is
sharing the consequences with over a million other species who share the
planet with us and that is the real tragedy of human existence.

"human activities are now undermining society's life-support systems--the
systems, for instance, that maintain the quality of the atmosphere and, by
controlling the cycling of critical gases and nutrients, make it possible
for people to grow crops. The human predicament is causing extreme concern
among scientists, and an appreciation of its evolutionary roots can only
increase our chances of creating a sustainable society. An understanding
of the evolution of our perceptual systems makes clear one part of our
difficulty in coming to grips with environmental issues--we simply didn't
evolve senses capable of detecting some of the most serious problems
unaided. Knowledge of that, in turn, suggests directions in which
solutions might be found." (ibid)

There is also a  hunger  for  prosperity as much as there is a hunger
for food. Because we have a brain we can't help but think about these
things. Perhaps that is what makes us "human?"

    The  more  educated  minds  we have in the world, especially the Third
    World  which  are  rich  with  resources  but  impoverished because of
    unemployment and underemployment and countries that grow lots of food,
    but  the  local  people  can't afford to buy it because the food isn't
    grown  for  local  consumption  and international corporations own the
    means  of  production and exploit the local labor for their insatiable
    hunger for more and more profit.

    Hunger  of  desire  is  beginning  to match hunger of the body as more
    people  become  aware  of  the  great  disparities  that exist between
    impoverished  people  in the Third World and rich developed countries.
    Every  so  often  this  kind  of  dissatisfaction  causes an eruption.
    Rioting  in France which has now spread to Germany and Belgium is also
    a  manifestation of the great economic disparities which exist between
    rich and poor in those countries.

Hank Roth

To Be Continued

  

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