Donald Worster is an
environmental historian at
the University of Kansas. He
is the author of Dust Bowl:
the Southern Plains in the
1930s, Nature's Economy, and
Rivers of Empire: Water,
Aridity and the American
West. It is sometimes
claimed that he is one of
the most brilliant people of
our time.
Worster just published an
article that argues a pet
theme of mine, that as bad
as terrorism is, the "war"
against terrorism and the
unfathomable cost associated
with it is terribly
misguided. It can only bring
about a more insecure world
and massive suffering -
imagine the almost one and a
half million Iraqis who have
died under two presidents
named Bush. I'm not even
going to get into the
counter-argument of what
would their lives have been
like otherwise, that is not
my point. In a culture of
our alleged intelligence and
compassion, war and killing
are never justifiable.
More importantly, if just
a fraction of that effort
were directed towards
peace... ah, what an
interesting thought. And if
just a fraction of that
effort were directed towards
stopping the pollution that
is poisoning our atmosphere,
rivers, land and seas, and
that is directly putting
humanity and half of all the
animals on this planet on a
road to hell, if not
extinction, because of the
global warming
consequence... We learned a
long time ago that every
action has an equal an
opposite reaction. But even
before that knowledge of
enlightenment, we knew the
story of the Pied Piper:
it's the same thing. We
can't live as we do with
impunity. We can't take with
one hand without giving back
with the other - the problem
is that what we are taking
can only be given back in
kind, and it's a kind that
is not very kind to
biological life. Well, at
least not to the 99.999%
(plus or minus a few decimal
places) of biological life
that supports the remaining
part. I'm not trying to be
academically or
scientifically accurate
here: any hyperbole is used
only to support a point.
Until we can accept, as many
shamanic and indigenous
cultures have for millennia,
that every single part of
the known universe exists
for a reason, and that we
must respect all the
component parts, we will
continue down this road to
hell. What is increasingly
clear is that the Earth does
not need humans -?we need
the Earth. The approaching 7
billion humans don't need
the tiny percentage who
control all of the power and
money - the elite need the
rest. Without a "rest",
there is no elite - but
without an elite there can
still be a "rest".
There is still time to
change the infinite number
of possible futures that
humanity faces, and to
narrow these futures down to
one of a few that represent
hope. And having said that,
my heart goes out to those
who have died in the name of
terrorism - and every other
cause that can be blamed on
humans...
Peace,
White Feather
---------
Here's the article by
Worster.
Counterpunch Weekend
Edition
June 30 / July 1, 2007
Which City is Worse Off
Today: New York or New
Orleans?
Fiddling While America
Sizzles
By DONALD WORSTER
The United States is the
richest, most powerful
nation in history -- this
you have heard many times
before. What you have not
heard so often is that
America has also been, for
nearly 200 years, the
safest, most secure nation
ever. Far from being aware
of that fact and enjoying
it,
we have become a nation
filled with fear and
anxiety. But we fear the
wrong invader.
Not since the British
burned our capital in 1814
has a foreign army succeeded
in invading our continental
domain. Pearl Harbor lay
thousands of miles from our
mainland homes. And the
World Trade Center bombing
was no real invasion or
victory of a foreign power,
but one act by a handful of
fanatics, all killed. Their
brothers are hiding in caves
along the
Pakistan-Afghanistan border,
no more able to invade
America, if we keep our eyes
open, than camels could take
over our national parks.
Yet a far more serious
threat has appeared that our
leaders are ignoring. It is
global climate change. And
it has the potential to
bring the United States down
economically, socially and
agriculturally, making us a
much poorer and weaker
nation.
In February the
Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change released its
latest major report of
scientific data. Based on
the greenhouse gases already
affecting the atmosphere,
and on expected increases in
those gases under various
economic scenarios, the IPCC
projects -- too
cautiously, many say -- that
the Earth's overall surface
temperature will rise 3 to 7
degrees by the end of this
century, and the sea may
rise almost 2 feet.
In an April IPCC report,
world policy-makers were
told to expect long-term
flooding of coastal areas,
more intense tropical
storms, increased drought in
drought-prone areas, and a
decline in crop productivity
with increased risk of
hunger.
Here is where the danger
comes to the United States:
Not only may we be forced to
protect people on the
coasts, or move them inland,
we will also be in great
danger of losing our
agricultural heartland --
the Corn Belt and the Wheat
Belt. Today, half of our
wheat crop goes overseas. In
a few decades we may not
have enough food to support
our own population,
let alone share with others.
And our Western cities
may be paying a lot more for
water, if they can find any,
than for the last drops of
oil.
We are most threatened
today, not by terrorists,
but by impersonal physical
forces. And as the century
goes on, that invasion will
gather speed and effect with
biological threats like
invasive plants and malaria.
Such talk, we are told,
is scare mongering. We also
are told that defensive
measures would cost too
much.
Yet which place is worse
off today? New York, which
lost two major buildings and
thousands of lives to
terrorists? Or New Orleans,
which lost many lives as
well and may never recover
much of its displaced
population or destroyed
territory after being hit by
a hurricane that drew its
energy from warming gulf
waters?
And how can we not afford
to invest in conservation
and alternative energy
sources to defend our own
land against the ravages of
global climate change, but
afford to fight wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan, which cost
$120 billion a year? And pay
four to five times that,
depending on
the calculation, for the
military as a whole? And
spend more than $40 billion
more on the Homeland
Security Department?
All that money to defend
a country that is the most
secure and safe in the world
from outside human invasion!
Our homeland is facing a
change of unprecedented
danger, one that we have
helped create by wasteful
consumption. This is likely
to be the greatest threat to
security and prosperity in
our history.
When will our leaders
stop beating the drums about
"a war on terrorism" and
start facing the real
dangers we face? When will
they wake up and take action
-- today, this year? Will
they wait until Washington
is under water and the Great
Plains are a burning desert?
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