Hi Gail,

You commented:

"We don't seem to be able to develop any better way of 
distributing the means to survival than through processing the planet's 
resources, having organized ourselves more as a factory than as family, 
spurred by a vastly exaggerated notion of scarcity and praising our 
remunerated activity as "work." It seems all such a pity."


Well said! 

I find that discussing the future of work cannot be realistically approached 
without present consideration for how we are using, abusing or restoring what 
resources we have. Too much of the future of the planet and life thereon is 
determined by short-term, profit seeking concerns to whom governments and the 
courts have usually given favour. 

We can discuss what manufacturers are going to do, and how their decisions will 
affect workers and the market, but such focus on short-term problems which 
usually result in the corporate concerns taking precedent fails to address the 
root problems we face around our immediate survival and our need for a 
sustainable healthy planet. I believe that if we take a hard look at what we 
had but a hundred years ago, realize what we've got left today, and admit and 
commit to what we can and cannot do in future, survival and the future of work 
would become far more clear. Of course, that would begin with real leadership, 
and leadership's acknowledgment that credible -- as opposed to Pharma-funded -- 
science must be consulted and respected before policy decisions are made. 

What science means to some may not be what many would value. Science that 
discredits traditional, centuries old knowledge and common sense should be 
rigorously scrutinized. That's why government accountability is not only an 
important topic, it is an urgent one. Truth has been suppressed around 
countless issues that impact our immediate survival, and as long as the focus 
is still scarcity of affordable goods for primarily N. American consumption, we 
will not find our way out. Maintaining the current unsustainable system and its 
mythical competence depends on pillaging resources of our own and other 
nations. How much time does that leave us? 

There is no future in a world based upon false hope. Far too many job markets 
being discussed on this list address industries of a dying breed. Everyone 
unemployed can get a job in the manufacturing/service/sales sectors, but 
involving what kind of product and what kind of service? What means are 
employed, and what resources and poisons are consumed or distributed to perform 
their jobs? How many more of these 'bright' futures are doubly condemned by 
growing casual work lists and dirt wages they glean? 

What a different world the truth would usher in. A world properly dedicated to 
a sustainable future, where everyone's contribution had value.

Natalia Kuzmyn


HUMANS USE ONE QUARTER OF ALL NATURAL RESOURCES

NEW SCIENTIST - Almost a quarter of nature's resources are now being 
gobbled up by a single species – humans. People appropriate 24% of the 
Earth's production capacity that would otherwise have gone to nature, 
according to figures for the year 2000, the most recent available. The 
analysis was performed by Helmut Haberl, of Klagenfurt University in 
Vienna, Austria, and colleagues using UN Food and Agriculture 
Organisation data on agricultural land use in 161 countries, covering 
97.4% of the planet's land surface.

The result is a gradual depletion of species and habitats as we take 
more of their resources for ourselves. And things could get even worse, 
they say, if we grow more plants like palm oil and rapeseed for biofuels 
to ease our reliance on fossil fuels.

By comparing carbon consumption through human activity with the amount 
of carbon consumed overall, Haberl's team found that humans use 15.6 
trillion kilograms of carbon annually.

Half was soaked up by growing crops. Seven per cent went up in smoke as 
fires lit by humans, and the rest was used up in a variety of other ways 
related to industrialization, such as transport.

Haberl says that the Earth can just about cope if we meet future needs 
by producing food more efficiently. This could be done by intensifying 
production on the land used now. But we are asking for trouble, he says, 
if we expand production of biofuels, as the only fertile land available 
is tropical rainforests.

http://environment.newscientist.com/article/dn12176-humanity-gobbles-a-quarter-of-natures-resources.html
 



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