Tuesday, August 28, 2012

The Nieve Person


The podcast interview with Bill McKibben highlights the need of American society to become self-sufficient. Too often today, people rely on factories, grocery stores, energy plants and other corporations to mass-produce the essentials of life. Society focuses too much on the issue of the economy. Without a stable economy, people will be unable to afford the needs for living. As McKibben states in the podcast - the economy is not the problem. Instead of focusing our attention on the economy, our attention must be turned to focusing on becoming self-sufficient and becoming the provider of these resources. 

McKibben explains in great deal how important renewable energy is. McKibben talks about the solar panels powering McKibben's home. The idea of renewable energy runs hand and hand with becoming self-sufficient. Instead of buying products from large corporations that ship goods from other places, society needs to buy locally (i.e. a farmers market). Only 1% of the nation farms! This number needs to be increase dramatically if our society ever hopes on decreasing the large carbon footprint that is produced today. McKibben closes with explaining how growth has been society's focus for so long, now society needs to focus on durability. 

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

One Issue Today!


            One of the largest benefits that “island civilization” could have on our environment would be the preservation of land. If we could limit ourselves into a much smaller portion of land by decreasing the population, issues like deforestation would fade away. In terms of the United States, our population requires a vast amount of urbanized cities, roads, and transportation. This urbanized lifestyle is taking away from the “wild” land that once was so plentiful. Deforestation is an issue that has been growing along side our population count. The more people that occupy our country and world, the more homes, cities, and accommodations we will need to sustain the growth factor. We have seen a trend that deforestation increases at the rate of population. We have no other choices but to clear out forests in order to make room for these greater amounts of people.
            Deforestation has been linked to causing several other problems in addition to destroying our forests. In Oregon, the logging of the Douglas fir has led to a significant decrease in biodiversity of plants and animals in the state of Oregon. The major deforestation of the Douglas fir trees left the few groups of tress that remained highly vulnerable to disease and predatory insects. A tree that was once so plentiful could be at serious risk of disappearing because of this severe issue.
            Accommodating the influx of population may seem like the most important issue we need to resolve now, however once all of our land and resources are used up we will be faced with a much larger issue that will affect us in the long run.  Cutting down population sizes is truly important. Nash represents “island civilization” as one approach to a problem that is drawing closer and closer.


Learn more about the issue of deforestation from this documentary by the University of Michigan:

Source for the Deforestation in Oregon:
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~mblowers/def.html







Sunday, August 19, 2012

Island Civilizations


            Island Civilizations by historian Roderick Fraizer Nash is an article explaining how the human population is corrupting the “wild” environment that was given to us untamed. Breaking it down in to millenniums, Nash explains how modernization has drawn back the wilderness population to as little as two percent – the same percentage of land covered by pavement. At the end of the second millennium, the idea of conservation began and people started viewing the importance of preserving the wilderness. As people began to better understand the wilderness, the study of ecology was brought forth which taught people that “nature was a community to which mankind belonged, not a commodity it possessed” Nash states.  The third millennium marked concern over the land’s water, soil, forest, and food issues. The tables turn as people began to realize that excess urbanization was not in our environment’s best interest. Nash concludes the article with four possible scenarios for the fate of Earth, the fourth being his own solution to the problem that balances human occupancy in a more economical preserving manner.
            Nash states that the world began as complete wilderness. The word “wild” meaning that it carries on without human intervention. As humans began to take over this freestanding territory, civilization began to form at the expense of the current ecosystems. Nash refers to the Indians as savages who destroyed most of the wilderness with their barbaric behavior.  In some respect to Nash’s remark, the Indians never concentrated on preserving their environment. The Indians were known for utilizing the environment with little worry about what damage it could be causing.  This issue seemed to be raised much later as we reached the near end of the second millennium. Nash states, “maybe what really needs to be conquered is not wilderness but rather our capitalist-driven culture with its cancer-like tendency to self-destruct”. Currently, our society has many preservation methods to save our environment, but in our carefree past, we focused way too much on modernizing our society and too little on the effect.
             The idea of conserving our environment began in part as people started to enjoy the environment and view the wilderness as a symbolic church and representation of history, art and literature. The Wilderness Act of 1964 was a step in the right direction, however as Nash states, was to benefit the people. The society still viewed the wilderness and environment as something that was theirs. By preserving it, it was seen as giving them a type of recreational activity. It was not until Asian cultures began their study of ecology that society began to understand the concept of an ecosystem. The wilderness was never theirs to control; humans are only a link in what is known as a food chain.
            The third millennium stressed the issues at stake if preservation methods are not taken. Nash states that water, soil, and food issues made headlines daily and people began to view the need for a change. Society is facing a point where the decisions that will be faced are irreversible and we must do what is best for our environment. Our present-day society is at this point currently. Neighboring nations to the United States are beginning new ecofriendly projects to protect our environment, while the United States contributes the most pollution to our world.  It is time to make a change so we can benefit the outcome of our environment.
            Nash includes four possible scenarios to the fate of our environment. The wasteland scenario anticipates a “trashed, poisoned, and used-up planted that can support only a pathetic remnant of its once-miraculous biodiversity and civilization”. The garden scenario allows “human control of nature to be total, but this time it’s beneficent”.  Humans would control every aspect of the way of life, nothing left to be “wild”. The third scenario, the future primitive, “involves writing off technological civilization as a ten-thousand year bad experiment”. This dramatic scenario is highly unlikely given today’s technology-driven society. Finally, Nash’s solution known as the Island Civilization calls for boundaries to be “drawn around the human presence, not around the wilderness”.  The Island Civilization limits human intervention and restores large parts of the world to be “wild” again.
As humans, we take so much and feel so entitled. Nash’s main purpose of this article is to present a method for just enjoying a small portion and not using more than we need. We do not need to civilize the entire wilderness and adapt it for human needs. More over, we must designate certain areas for our existence and let others be free to carry on by itself. There is little wilderness left in our world today and if our actions are not altered, we can expect nothing more than Nash’s first scenario where our planet and home go to complete waste.