It is no secret that America is addicted to oil, we are crack fiends
for oil. America uses one third of the worlds cars, and one quarter of
the worlds energy produced. America has gone to war over oil. After 9/11
the Bush administration declared war on Afghanistan and Iraq without
the permission of Congress. Bush claimed that they were going to find
Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD), but that turned out to be a
deliberate lie created by the Bush administration ands its bureaucrats.
They claimed that they would disarm Saddam Hussein and prevent him from
further killing people, but we learned that we were responsible for
arming him in the first place. Even after his capture and the fall of
Iraq, and the longest war in America’s history, our troops still remain
in the Middle East. The real agenda was later revealed, and if was
already well known, but the real agenda of the war was to gain control
of the oil. The Middle East, particularly in Saudi Arabia, has 25% of
the world’s oil fields.
After years of searching for
WMD, nothing even close was discovered. When the support of Bush’s plans
declined over the years, more and more people demanded that we bring
our troops home. But will that ever be accomplished. I hope so, but as
long as we are addicted to oil, I think that will not happen. Right now,
we have built three of the world’s largest military bases in Iraq and a
U.S. Embassy in the heart of Baghdad that is larger than Vatican City
–that’s not a temporary deal.
Sweden is nearly entirely
petroleum free, it plans to be in 2020 - that's mind-blowing. Germany,
England, Denmark, and many other countries are working tirelessly to
only use renewable energy and rely less and less on foreign oil.
We
continue to drill offshore, which is a large waste of money and
manpower. It also is very dangerous and risks a huge spill. As seen
several times since the 1970’s oil spills are frequent and response to
them is slow. These spills cause much damage to the environment. America
goes as far as trying to drill oil beneath the polar ice cap. This is a
problem since ice floats and moves. So you cannot expect to build a
station on Tuesday and expect it to be in the same place on Thursday,
that is why a lot of conservative think tanks and oil companies are
cheering the melting of the polar ice cap and spreading the lies and
misinformation that global warming is a hoax.
Even on
land, producing oil is dangerous. I can go on and on about cancer
allies, but lets take a look at incidents like Katrina. Millions of
crude oil spilled into the city, costing the tax-payer millions of
dollars too clean it up, but the company who produces the oil did not
pay a single dime in the clean up. This is why I strongly promote green
taxes, or ecotaxes, because these taxes drive companies to push to
produce less pollution.
America needs to find an
alternative to oil fast. We must provided greener jobs. The problem is
that oil plays a large role in everything. Oil is in our cars, paints,
tires, toothbrushes, etc.
Continuing of using cars
demands more oil. America can still make a change. We can drive less,
carpool, and use public transportation. The cut back on cars is very
beneficial, it helps the environment, economy, and it battles global
warming.
Can we use electric and hybrid cars?
Remembering that there are seven gallons of oil in every tire and oil in
the paint, these cars are not completely free of oil. However, cars can
be manufactured from recycled material and the oil can be replaced by
other forms of biofuel, such as algae, used cooking oil, and hemp. The
materials that make the car can bee made from oils like algae instead of
crude oil.
However, oil is in nearly everything so we
can do more than focus on saving fuel for our cars. What about plastic?
Petroleum is used to make plastic, and we make 200 million plastic bags
every day. Sadly, less than 1% of that is recycled. The rest is out
floating in the ocean or siting in a landfill not degrading. Several
food markets are no selling reusable bags, or charging customers per
plastic bag to encourage them to bring their own bags. Paper bags are
not a better option, bearing in mind that millions of acres of trees are
cut down every day to make such bags. So the only option is to use
reusable bags, or plastic bags not made with petroleum that are
biodegradable. Perf Go Green was developed in response to this.
Will
we ever run out of oil? Many scientists, geographers, lawyers,
economists, etc. think we might and soon, perhaps they are right. They
have proposed a theory based on science and mathematics called Peak-Oil.
That is, in a shape of a bell curve, when oil production has reached
its zenith, oil productivity will permanently begin to decline. Even
former CEO of Chevron, the largest oil company, even came out and said
that oil is becoming harder and harder to find. Lets say that oil does
run out, what will happen? Thankfully we have seen what happens when a
country that is dependent on oil loses it all. When communist Russia
collapsed, the two countries that were affected were North Korea and
Cuba. Each was dependent on Soviet oil. Korea suffered dearly, cars did
not run, planes didn’t fly, mail was not delivered, food was not
transported, etc. Cuba however did not suffer. The Cuban government told
all their citizens to plant and grows their own food. If anyone found a
patch of land that was unattended, the person would be responsible to
farm it. Cuba was growing food everywhere, in their backyards, on
streets, on their roofs, even in flower pots. Everything was organic and
local, and Cuba was eating healthier then they ever have. They were
free from industrial agriculture. Cuba thrived. That is what we will
most likely encounter when oil supply becomes low and prices sky rocket.
Everything will be local and communities will work together. However,
lets say Peak-Oil was inaccurate, does it make a difference? Just
because oil may never run out does not mean it should remain the source
of our energy.
Do I think Peak-Oil is true? Science
magazine, documentaries, and top oil companies are saying it is true.
Even oil banker Matthew Simmons agrees with peak oil and has testified
before Congress. Saudi Arabia is home to the largest oil reserve in the
world. It provides 25% of the world's oil. However, why are they moving
and investing into off-shore drilling? Off-shore drilling demands
massive amounts of labor and money, you would rather go to the moon. If
the Saudis are moving to off-shore drilling, doesn't that seem as if
they are aware that their oil is running out? Of curse, the Saudis don't
dare announce they are past their peak-oil, otherwise there would be a
revolution, and if a revolution takes place in the country that provides
the world with 25% of it's oil, then we are screwed. And given the
recent events, the revolution in Tunisia, Egypt, and Libya, it seems
very likely revolution will hit Saudi Arabia. Once America cannot get
it's oil, we will ave no choice but to find an alternative energy
source.
Do alternatives to petroleum oil exist?
Absolutely! They do exist, and they have for a long time. We are
expanding their efficiency and technology, we continue to search for
multiple new alternatives. Many alternative sources of energy for cars
have been presented (water, hydrogen, ethanol, etc.) but I think the
three that stands out the most is algae, coking oil and hempoil.
Algae
is exactly that which became the oil we suck out of the planet. But we
do not plan to wait 15 million years for algae to turn into oil, since
we can turn it into sustainable and effective oil in about 3-10 days!
What they do is grow and collect energy and convert it into oil. A petri
dish of algae cells can turn into liters of oil in a matter of days.
These cells have double and reproduce overtime to create a full tank of
fuel in about 10 days. The oil from algae can be used for biofuel,
plastics, ammonia, and virtually everything we use petroleum for. Where
and how do you grow and collect algae. Algae can grow in all types of
water: fresh, salt, ocean, dirty, etc. Building algae farms adjacent to
factories is a great start, since carbon-dioxide is algae food and
natural gas and carbon factories provide plenty of that (in fact, they
account for about 50% of the green house gases). We can build algae
farms adjacent to the factories and we do not have to modify them in
anyway. Collecting algae from 1700 power plant algae farms can produce
enough oil equal to 25% of the nations fuel demand. Biofeul must come
from waste. A company known as PetroSun is currently working to build
ponds next to waste facilities. The waste put in these ponds is food for
algae, where it can be collected and turned into oil. Do you know how
much money the city pays just to get rid of that stuff? Norway already
has a system that converts its waste into energy, why don't we? It has
been estimated that 10 years of fuel from waste to algae farms can equal
all of Alaska's oil.
Algae oil has many other
benefits, including nutrition, fertilizer, and can even be a very useful
anti-pollution tool. How much land is required too harvest enough algae
oil to sustain us? It has been estimated that 10 million acres of land
would need to be used for biodiesel cultivation in the US in order to
produce biodiesel to replace all the petrodiesel used currently in that
country. This is just 1% of the total land used today for farming and
grazing together in the US (about 1 billion acres). This site
shows the math that can be done with just investing in algae oil in a
250 acre area. To get America off foreign oil, Michael Briggs concluded
that 140,800,000,000 (140.8 billion) gallons of biodiesel could replace
100% of the petroleum transportation fuels consumed in the United States
annually, without requiring a big change in driving behavior or
automotive technology. The math divides that by 10 million acres to 250.
Each 250 acre area must produce at least 15,000 gallons every year,
which is not that much since this CNN report
of Glen Kertz, president and CEO of Valcent Products, " Kertz said he
can produce about 100,000 gallons of algae oil a year per acre, compared
to about 30 gallons per acre from corn; 50 gallons from soybeans." So
producing enough algae oil to meet all ends for foreign and domestic oil
does not take a lot of room or effort, but it does require a lot of
support and political and financial backing. Not only does it take less
land to make sustainable fuel, it requires a lot less water. how much?
350 gallons of water per gallon of oil -- or a quarter of what the
country currently uses for irrigated agriculture -- would be needed to
produce that much algal biofuel (further explained here). So algae seems to hold a lot of potential, so I would highly recommend investing in algae oil.
In
a future blog, I will discuss America's food problem. But just briefly,
fast food restaurants can be found in every city in every state.
Restaurants use cooking oil to make food, but what do with it
afterwards? They toss it. Several projects are being initiated in
several cities, like New York, to have trucks go around town collected
these wastes and turning it into biofuel. To make biofuel, all you need
is the 90% of cooking oil (grease), 9.9% alcohol, and 0.1% lyre and
presto you have biofuel. Can you imagine if every restaurant in every
town was mandated to rather just tossing their used oil to donate it to a
company that would convert it into biofuel? Massive massive amounts of
extra fuel for transportation, prices go down, and we have saved lots of
waste into something beneficial.
What about hemp? Hemp
is a very very useful resource of man. You can use it to make food,
clothing, houses, and biofuel. But why is hemp illegal? It should never
have been illegal in the first place. The main reason why people do not
see hemp in a bright light is due to the false presumption that the hemp
plant is the same as marijuana. Since the war on drugs, marijuana had
been criminalized, which I will address later on, but alongside
marijuana people feared hemp as well. The top paper and oil industries
ran smear campaigns against industrial hemp, and they won but they did
not do so fairly.
What we are currently doing is
collecting biofuels from timber, which leads to deforestation. In
response, we have developed these trees called megafloras, which are
trees that can mature in three years, be cut down and a new tree can
grow from the stump. Clever way to grow trees and prevent deforestation,
while absorbing carbon dioxide and producing biofuels. Megafloras also
absorb the heavy metals from the land, like selenium and borone, put in
there by man. Due to modern agriculture, spraying fertilizers and other
chemicals into the land, we have turned the soil into a junkie, so
megafloras can be very beneficial. The leading company of this project
in Emerald Energy. Megafloras can clean the land, and it has been
calculated that 10 years of fuel from California's megaflora trees can
equal all drilling of oil in Alaska. However, when considering the
growth rate of hemp, which is a few weeks compared to megaflora's three
years, hemp is a clear winner. Growing hemp can also prevent
deforestation. Hemp does not require pesticides.
Hemp
can be used for food. After the oil is collected from the seeds, the
seeds can still be used to make food, so hemp can produce biofuels and
combat global hunger. Hemp can also be used for cloths and fabrics.
The
bottom line is America needs to end its addiction to oil and renewable
energy is the solution. Biofuels is not the whole solution, and I will
discus multiple possible solutions in future blogs. Renewable energy
collected by solar and wind is a must. Wind is cheap (3 cents per kWh),
which is much cheaper than coal, natural gas and nuclear (all over 5
cents per kWh). Solar power is a no-brainer. If every house had a solar
panel, then every house will be an entrepreneur and American will become
richer and produce their own power. Solar panels put the power from big
corporations into the hands of the common man. Isn't that part of the
American dream?
Americans need to change their habits.
It starts off with the individual. Change your light bulbs to
florescent, get replace your old appliances with new ones that use less
energy, get a green car, carpool, or even don't use a car and use public
transportation or bike. Call your legislator, senators, and mayors.
Change your politicians, especially with those who have a green vision
and ambition for America and who are not bought buy big oil
corporations.
Monday, April 30, 2012
Big Issues Regarding Health and Food
I would like to see America become
healthy. I know I said I would address things that matter, but I am not
some bloke who thinks all Americans need to get fit and thin. There is
more to it. The second leading cause of death in this country, right
behind tobacco smoking, is poor diet/health. Americans have an obesity
problem, even in children. More people have diabetes, which is more and
more effecting kids. In fact, 1 out of 3 children in minorities will
have a great chance of getting diabetes. Even I come from a family with
a history of diabetes. People need to make a change in their lives and
watch the way we eat.
America is
driven by the deep desire to buy everything cheap. This has driven
companies to produce massive amounts of food, much larger in less time.
They no longer see cattle and animals as they are, so they pump them
full o enzymes to make them grow, shelter them in terrible conditions,
feed them crap, etc. As long as the American people continue to eat the
way they current do, things will not improve one bit. In 2005, a study
showed that in order to preserve our forests, we spent a total of $8
billion, while in the same year we spent $22 billion on sack food and
potato chips. See a problem here?
You
can make a difference. It does not take that much of an effort to make
an alternative diet. A simple and easy step is to eat less meat. I'm not
at talking about eating no meat at all, just reduce the amount you
have. There are thousands of there meals to have with less meat, such as
pasta. Many people don’t realize that a single person can make a
difference.
Schools should feed their
students the right food. Schools are the center of education for the
next generations and the future. Today, what kids know as far as food in
school is what they serve in the cafeteria, buy from vending machines,
and/or go to a local store, restaurant, or fast food store.
A
change in diet has not just a positive effect on our health, but also
the environment and economy. For example, shark fin soup costs the lives
of thousands of sharks, just for their fins. There exists alternative
to shark fin, even vegetarian.
If
you compare countries like America who loves eating meat to those who
eat less meat such as South Asia, the countries who eat less meat have
much less heart attacks.
Much of our
cattle are settled in CAFOs. These are mainly located in desert like
areas. These animals eat grass, but grass does not grow there. How do
you feed these animals? Nowadays we are training the cows to eat corn,
something that these animals are not built to eat and often make them
very sick. These corns are genetically modified to grow fast. How much
corn do we give these animals? 12 pounds of corn can produce 57 bowls of
cornflakes, or 20 loafs of bread. How much meat does 12 pounds of corn
produce? Just 1 lb. of meat (which is just one patty of meat). If you
were stuck on an island and all you had was 12 ponds of corn, which
option would you use? Grow your food or give it to a cow? I think the
answer is obvious. What we must understand is that the earth does not
have an infinite amount of resources. This is the problem of the entire
world’s economic systems, is that they are built on the belief that
resources are infinite. What happens when a society runs out of
resources, look at what happened at Easter Island.
Can
we grow grass in the area to feed the cows? Well you need water for
that. Most cattle used for beef are raised in the western America, an
area that is mostly dry. The crops they are fed are grown in the west
where rainfall is scare and water is a precious resource. How do you get
water into the desert, well you transport it there. This takes energy
and vast amounts of water to irrigate the crops. Most people are not
aware how much water is used to irrigate cattle feed. Los Angeles is
known to use up a lot of water -12 million people surrounded by lawns
and swimming pools in a semi desert. But irrigating pastier crops in
Alfalfa uses more water than all the people in Los Angeles combined, in
fact, more than all the cities in California combined. It has been
estimated for ever 1,000 lbs. of meat coming from the slaughterhouse has
consumed enough fresh water to float a US Naval Destroyer. To grow a
pound of apples in California requires 49 gallons of water. To grow a
pound of potatoes requires 24 gallons of water. But to grow one pound of
beef in California requires 5000 gallons of water.
Where
does this water come from? What many people do not know is there is a
vast amount of pure fresh water in the heart of America. It is as big as
the Louisiana Purchase beneath America, a gift from the ice age, and
contains as much water as the Great Lakes. The high plain states depend
on this water. The bad news is that we are pumping it all up so rapidly
that environmentalists say that it may be bone dry in about 30 years.
The vast majority of this water is being sent to irrigate crops to feed
cattle. Since the drought of 1988 it is clear how precious water is to
us. Our rivers and aquifers are at a very low rate, and the top activity
we do as a society that drains water from our rivers and aquifers goes
to cattle. Water is the life and blood of not just the west but this
whole country. The only way we can save this water for ourselves is to
eat less meat and put that water to grow crops that we are going to eat
ourselves.
Think about the extra
stages of production that are required to get dead chickens, pigs, or
other animals from the farm to the table:
1.
Grow more than 10 times as much corn, grain, and soy as would be
required if we ate the plants directly. How do you get those plants?
First you drive an oil-powered machine to plow the land. Then you have
another oil-powered machine that drives along and it plants the seeds.
Then you have to irrigate the plants, but how do you irrigate them? You
pump the water through pipelines, and that pump is powered by
electricity well where does that electricity come from? In the U.S. It
comes from either coal or natural gas. The next thing you have to do it
fertilize it -ALL commercial fertilizer is made from ammonia, and the
feedstock for ammonia is natural gas. So you have these ammonia
fertilizer sprayed on the plants, driven by another oil-powered vehicle,
and then the crop dusters come along that are powered by oil. The
pesticides are all made from petroleum. When it's time to harvest, you
drive another oil-powered machine and finally you harvest it.
*Note
the chemicals (nitrates from fertilizer and manure) from agriculture
find their way into our lakes, rivers, and water system, killing
thousands of animals and threaten human life. If a pregnant woman drinks
this water, researches say that her fetus has a large chance of having
birth defects. Corn is the major crops that uses the largest amount of
insecticides, herbicides, and fertilizer in the nation.
2. Transport -- in gas-guzzling, pollution-spewing 18-wheelers -- all that grain and soy to feed manufacturers.
3. Operate the feed mill (again, using massive amounts of resources).
4. Truck the feed to the factory farms, again by gas-guzzling, pollution-spewing 18-wheelers.
5. Operate the factory farms.
6. Truck the animals many miles to slaughterhouses using (you guessed it) pollution-spewing trucks that run on oil.
7. Operate the slaughterhouses - which have a LOT of problems that will be discussed in another article.
8. Truck the meat to processing plants, again with oil-powered trucks.
9. Operate the meat processing plants.
10. Truck the meat to grocery stores (in refrigerated trucks, but still run on oil).
11. Keep the meat in refrigerators or freezers at the stores.
12.
Customers have to drive their oil-powered cars to whatever distance,
pick up the meat, and then drive it back home. Usually, they carry their
groceries in plastic bags, which is made from oil.
No
matter where meat comes from, raising animals for food will require
that exponentially more calories be fed to animals than they can produce
in their flesh, and it will require all those extra stages of
CO2-intensive production as well. Only grass-fed cows eat food from land
that could not otherwise be used to grow food for human beings, and
even grass-fed cows require much more water and create much more
pollution than vegan foods do.
If we
eat less meat, less land will be needed to house cattle or keep clear
for crops. Those croplands could be reforested to the tens of thousands
of acres which could help from lumber for houses, more oxygen and less
carbon dioxide (effective against global warming), stabilizes the top
soil, purifies the water, provides a home for the wild life, attracts
tourists, and more. Land with a forest is more valuable than a clear
land with a cow on it. It would also mean we would have less chemicals
being poured into the environment. We would have less heart attacks,
less strokes, less cancer and less fear of cancer, less diabetes, we
would be fitter, healthier, and more happy people.
Did you know that according to the FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations), as much as 70% of the food produced worldwide is lost through spoilage, inefficient processing and preparation, and plate waste. Nationwide, U.S. households throw away food worth as much as $43 BILLION a year - almost twice the $24 billion a year needed to eliminate global hunger and malnutrition. Seriously, we can all live a better, healthier, easier life if all we do is care!
1. The earth will only allow a certain number of top carnivores.
2.
We can’t escape the Second Law of Thermodynamics and ecological
efficiency no matter what other rationalizations you pit against it. As
one student wrote in the TD: "It doesn't really matter how different the statistics are… even the best case scenario is horrific”.
3. Comparing resource use of grass-fed versus grain-fed: Although there’s a case for grass-fed being a better option is some
ways, there’s still one extra trophic level - they’re both wasteful
practices according to the second Law. Anyway, there’s not enough
grazing land to support ALL the cattle being raised at this moment, and
grazing cattle cause a tremendous amount of loss of biodiversity in the
ecosystems in which they are grazing (and degrading).
4. Animal agriculture is swallowing up the world’s NPP.
5.
The rules have changed since we were a just several million people on
the planet! We can’t use the excuse that “mankind has always done …this
or that”. There are simply not enough resources to support our present
logarithmic population growth, certainly not in the way we’re currently
managing things. Once we overshoot our own carrying capacity, natural
processes will limit the number of unsustainable practices we engage in,
whether we’re prepared to do so or not.
6. Some of us are using more than our fair share of resources; others must do with less or go without.
7.
Presently, only the privileged have the luxury of eating meat at the
rate they do. (In an affluent society, a person may not be considered
“rich”, but may nevertheless be privileged.) The affluent require an
extremely high amount of energy, resources and land to maintain their
diet, and contribute to more waste and pollution.
8.
Poor countries export grain to make money, while their own people are
starving from not having enough to eat. Land which could feed them is
instead used to grow cattle feed which is shipped to affluent countries.
9. Nutrient cycles are overtaxed
and disrupted due to excess nitrogen waste (especially from concentrated
feedlot manure), increased phosphorous waste, and increased carbon
dioxide production inherent in the way agribusiness grows crops for
animal feed.
10. Cattle produce the greenhouse gas, methane, contributing to the enhanced greenhouse effect (climate change).
11.
The world is losing fertile land – forests and grasslands are being
destroyed for growing animal feed and for grazing; deserts are degraded
by overgrazing. Anywhere cattle are grazed, we see severe reduction in
biodiversity of both plants and animals. Marine and freshwater habitats
are being degraded by stockyard runoff. Species in competition with
livestock are destroyed as well, including keystone species such as
wolves and prairie dogs.
12. Using our
land sustainably means reducing our resource use, waste, and pollution.
That unequivocally means reducing and replacing the harmful practices
of animal agriculture with more sustainable ones, repairing our soils,
growing crops sustainably to feed humans, and removing greed and profit
from the food distribution equation. This will result in a decrease in
the inequality in standard of living for a global population. These
things will not happen unless the demand for high throughput meat goes
down.
13. One of the reasons for this discussion was to help you recognize high-throughput when you see it, and avoid it.
14.
Human health – Studies have shown that diets high in red meat lead to a
higher mortality rate. Diets high in meat can cause diseases attributed
to overnutrition, such as obesity and heart disease.
15. Processing and Transportation costs - pollution
plus use of oil, plus all the energy and land it takes to grow animals,
cut them up, dispose of their carcasses, perhaps cook and otherwise
process, package and ship, store (refrigeration), and finally, more
waste – as is the case in the US, much (lowest estimate is over 40%) is
not eaten and must be trashed!
16.
Carrying capacity, Hunger and Poverty - Meat consumption creates
significant increase in one’s ecological footprint. You can feed more
people if we all ate lower on the trophic levels. If we reduce meat demand, we enable more people to live well on this planet.
Some people don’t do their part to reduce their “food footprint” based
on the excuse that there’s plenty of food and the problems lie with
distribution and politics. Does this argument distract you from doing
your part? Does that mean we ignore the
waste/inefficiency/degradation/pollution issue just because charities
can’t keep up with the hunger problem, or because governments aren’t
properly regulating corporate practices? If we reduce demand, we reduce
the numbers of acres dedicated to wasteful animal agriculture, we reduce
the amount of pollution we create, we increase the amount of available,
fertile farmland, we increase the amount of water, food and energy
available to other creatures on this planet, and we shame politicians
into following suit.
17. We reduce our dependence on oil, a nonrenewable resource.
18. Other factors - business, government, special interests, greed, profits, affluenza, selfishness, status quo mentality
19.
Reducing our own personal meat consumption is a simple, inexpensive
action that requires no new laws, and has the most immediate realization
of benefits: to humans (health), plants, animals, grasslands,
deserts, rainforests, wetlands, oceans and fresh water, air, and soil,
with less pollution, less waste of water, petroleum, and energy, less
soil erosion, less greenhouse gases, less habitat loss, and (of course)
increased ecological efficiency for the whole planet.
AND THAT’S JUST ONE
THING YOU RESEARCHED, ONE THING YOU CAN DO, WHICH CAN MAKE A HUGE
IMPACT. WE’VE BEEN UNSUSTAINABLE IN OUR AGRICULTURAL METHODS, AND WE
NEED TO TURN IT AROUND.
HOW?
DON’T SUPPORT HARMFUL PRACTICES.
SUPPORT ONLY SUSTAINABLE PRACTICES AND PRODUCTS!
Once
we discover the evidence, what can “little” citizens do against “big”
profit-centered corporations and do-nothing government agencies? How can
we help empower the masses to throw off their veil of misinformation
and break out of the deep rut of status quo?
We do have power because businesses need us to make their profits.
Quit encouraging profits for those who are damaging our planet, our
health, and our prosperity: Vote with your pocketbook! Refuse to buy
unsustainable products and services, and changes WILL miraculously
occur!
Intro
As Gandhi once said, "When the people lead, the leaders will follow."
Thanks to the internet, it has given the common man a turn at the big microphone. Since this being my first blog where I just write along as I go, I do no not expect it to be a masterpiece, nor do I really expect to get any readers and if I do get readers I do not expect much. So what exactly am I doing here? Ever since I started this blog, I wanted nothing more than to write down what I constantly had on my mind; just let it all out and write it down, and share with as many people as I can. I do not expect much attention, and I am fully aware other great people out there are promoting exactly what I plan to write about, but I feel as if the messages are not being heard enough. All I hear today is concerns about little things like getting a new phone, sports, celebrities, new video games on the market, etc. If the message is being heard, then I must stress he importance and hope that people will take action. Why don't I hear people going around talking about things that really matter, like trying to find an alternative fuel instead of oil or doing everything in their power to end poverty.
I know there are other great resources out there then my blog on these issues, however if my blogs reach one person unaware or unconcerned of these problems, then that is all I need.
Why do I have the urge to even bother writing this stuff? I feel that my own purpose is to help my world. I have little interest in myself, just a average cozy place to live and a very simple lifestyle. I demand little for myself. I never ever get hyped over little things everybody makes a big deal out of (like shoes. My non-fancy simple shoes have small holes in them, but I wear them for years without care or desire to run to the market to buy a new pair. Anyone who buys shoes over $300, I think they need a swift visit from Chuck Norris's boot up their ass). So why do I care about others? Every humans and animal on earth shares a connection. We are genetically linked and share the same home. Whenever I know that someone else is suffering, I feel that my family is suffering. It is a heavy burden to rest the world on your shoulders, but I know I cannot help everyone. It is an impossible task. But as history has shown is that one man can make a difference, no matter how significant. But one person cannot fulfill all their goals. If we are to survive, we must work together. If one person takes action, a small circle of friends and like minded people will soon follow, then the circle grows then their friends and co-workers join, and so on and so on until revolutions start.
Let me share two of my favorite quotes. The first one is from one of my favorite films of all time: “There are two kinds of people in this world when you boil it all down; you have your talkers and you have your doers. Most people are just talk, all they have is talk. But when all is said and done, it’s the doers who change this world. And when they do that, they change us. And that is why we never forget them. So which you are you? Do you just talk about it, or do you stand up and do something about? Because, believe you me, all the rest of it is just coffee-house bullshit.”
That is what I dream of becoming, that is what I work for, which leads me to my next quote: “If you do not do anything, then you're worth nothing.” So besides from typing on the internet, I contribute portions of my day to do what I can to help. My new job, the California League of Conservation Voters, allows me to deal with some of the big issues, from political and environmental. I join certain clubs at my university to work on fund raising. Other times, I go out in public and protest when other people on a variety of things I feel are important.
My blogs will cover a wide variety of topics, some will be linked or intertwine. Of course, I cannot fit all that needs to be said into one blog, so many will have follow-ups.
Some of the Topics I will discuss
Oil, The War in the Middle East, Peak-oil
The War on Drugs, Prohibition
Global Warming, climate change
Environmental Causes, both political and cultural
Religion in general and the Secular Movement, Church and State Separation
Equal Rights
Food, health and environmental consequences
Education and a higher acceptance of science over pseudoscience and quack medicine
And several other things. I must point out, just because I did not list several huge problems (like global hunger, poverty, terrorism, racism, and AIDs) does not mean I will not mention them in my blogs or that I do not think they are worthy of our attention. No, all these things are VERY important. Very important, and we must deal with them as soon as we can. While at the same time, we must not lose focus on many other huge issues.
I care a lot about the planet and my fellow mammals. Really, I would love nothing more that to minimize the suffering of my fellow man and the animals we share this planet with. Let me ask you a question, and please pick the response that best fits you.
“How do I react or respond to discovering that I’m contributing to negative impacts on the planet?”
1. Believe whatever I want to believe, regardless of the data.
2. Don’t know what to believe. Shrug. Do nothing.
3. Become hopeless and depressed. Do nothing.
4. Make excuses: Too expensive, too inconvenient, doesn’t matter.
5. Don’t care. Keep wasting and polluting.
6. Become defensive, rationalize actions.
7. Become enraged with others. Become an eco-terrorist.
8. Make a little sacrifice to ease the guilt.
OR:
“I’ll do my best to educate myself so I can make the best choices with the information I have. Acting selflessly as much as possible, simplifying my life, acting not only to satisfy my desires, but for the welfare of the whole, I’ll offer whatever form of charity (money, resources, and/or services) I am able. And I’m making changes right away.”
I hope your answer was the same as the last one, like mine. If not, then I'm not sure if you will find much interest in further reading my blogs, although I recommend you stay and become educated. You are still welcome to read and comment.
Thanks to the internet, it has given the common man a turn at the big microphone. Since this being my first blog where I just write along as I go, I do no not expect it to be a masterpiece, nor do I really expect to get any readers and if I do get readers I do not expect much. So what exactly am I doing here? Ever since I started this blog, I wanted nothing more than to write down what I constantly had on my mind; just let it all out and write it down, and share with as many people as I can. I do not expect much attention, and I am fully aware other great people out there are promoting exactly what I plan to write about, but I feel as if the messages are not being heard enough. All I hear today is concerns about little things like getting a new phone, sports, celebrities, new video games on the market, etc. If the message is being heard, then I must stress he importance and hope that people will take action. Why don't I hear people going around talking about things that really matter, like trying to find an alternative fuel instead of oil or doing everything in their power to end poverty.
I know there are other great resources out there then my blog on these issues, however if my blogs reach one person unaware or unconcerned of these problems, then that is all I need.
Why do I have the urge to even bother writing this stuff? I feel that my own purpose is to help my world. I have little interest in myself, just a average cozy place to live and a very simple lifestyle. I demand little for myself. I never ever get hyped over little things everybody makes a big deal out of (like shoes. My non-fancy simple shoes have small holes in them, but I wear them for years without care or desire to run to the market to buy a new pair. Anyone who buys shoes over $300, I think they need a swift visit from Chuck Norris's boot up their ass). So why do I care about others? Every humans and animal on earth shares a connection. We are genetically linked and share the same home. Whenever I know that someone else is suffering, I feel that my family is suffering. It is a heavy burden to rest the world on your shoulders, but I know I cannot help everyone. It is an impossible task. But as history has shown is that one man can make a difference, no matter how significant. But one person cannot fulfill all their goals. If we are to survive, we must work together. If one person takes action, a small circle of friends and like minded people will soon follow, then the circle grows then their friends and co-workers join, and so on and so on until revolutions start.
Let me share two of my favorite quotes. The first one is from one of my favorite films of all time: “There are two kinds of people in this world when you boil it all down; you have your talkers and you have your doers. Most people are just talk, all they have is talk. But when all is said and done, it’s the doers who change this world. And when they do that, they change us. And that is why we never forget them. So which you are you? Do you just talk about it, or do you stand up and do something about? Because, believe you me, all the rest of it is just coffee-house bullshit.”
That is what I dream of becoming, that is what I work for, which leads me to my next quote: “If you do not do anything, then you're worth nothing.” So besides from typing on the internet, I contribute portions of my day to do what I can to help. My new job, the California League of Conservation Voters, allows me to deal with some of the big issues, from political and environmental. I join certain clubs at my university to work on fund raising. Other times, I go out in public and protest when other people on a variety of things I feel are important.
My blogs will cover a wide variety of topics, some will be linked or intertwine. Of course, I cannot fit all that needs to be said into one blog, so many will have follow-ups.
Some of the Topics I will discuss
Oil, The War in the Middle East, Peak-oil
The War on Drugs, Prohibition
Global Warming, climate change
Environmental Causes, both political and cultural
Religion in general and the Secular Movement, Church and State Separation
Equal Rights
Food, health and environmental consequences
Education and a higher acceptance of science over pseudoscience and quack medicine
And several other things. I must point out, just because I did not list several huge problems (like global hunger, poverty, terrorism, racism, and AIDs) does not mean I will not mention them in my blogs or that I do not think they are worthy of our attention. No, all these things are VERY important. Very important, and we must deal with them as soon as we can. While at the same time, we must not lose focus on many other huge issues.
I care a lot about the planet and my fellow mammals. Really, I would love nothing more that to minimize the suffering of my fellow man and the animals we share this planet with. Let me ask you a question, and please pick the response that best fits you.
“How do I react or respond to discovering that I’m contributing to negative impacts on the planet?”
1. Believe whatever I want to believe, regardless of the data.
2. Don’t know what to believe. Shrug. Do nothing.
3. Become hopeless and depressed. Do nothing.
4. Make excuses: Too expensive, too inconvenient, doesn’t matter.
5. Don’t care. Keep wasting and polluting.
6. Become defensive, rationalize actions.
7. Become enraged with others. Become an eco-terrorist.
8. Make a little sacrifice to ease the guilt.
OR:
“I’ll do my best to educate myself so I can make the best choices with the information I have. Acting selflessly as much as possible, simplifying my life, acting not only to satisfy my desires, but for the welfare of the whole, I’ll offer whatever form of charity (money, resources, and/or services) I am able. And I’m making changes right away.”
I hope your answer was the same as the last one, like mine. If not, then I'm not sure if you will find much interest in further reading my blogs, although I recommend you stay and become educated. You are still welcome to read and comment.
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