Friday, September 09, 2005

Goodbye green and pleasant land

In response to a report from the Campaign to Protect Rural England that claims most real countryside in England may be lost within a generation:

Many of the problems we see are the result of the countryside attracting hundreds of thousands of people moving there because of the attractive environment and high quality of life which it offers. They cannot all be wrong.

- A spokesman at the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs

I can't grasp how far beyond sanity this statement falls. It just rockets right past it, does a loop-the-loop, and crashes into the spokesman's own house. His assuring smile doesn't so much as flinch as a gargantuan fireball erupts.

Despite, or because of, my long-standing antipathy to my farming background, I'm now acutely aware of the situation we're in. A large-scale expansion of locally-distributed organic food production is the only way forward. Anyone who's seriously looked at the fossil fuel situation knows this.

No, this doesn't mean that we're regressing back to "shit-kicking peasant" medievalism - although that might happen if we don't transition consciously. Technology will play a large part, but not necessarily in the sense of the gleaming biotech that's currently being fostered by multinationals. To me, we're either moving forward creatively and intelligently into a future that's a little like the distant past, and a lot like nothing we've seen before, or we'll be forced, brutally, by circumstances, to collapse toward something between the Middle Ages and Mad Max.

The fact that our government's response to this alarming report amounts to nothing - no argument, no evidence, no sense - is indicative of our situation. We're in collective denial, and we elect those who will help us to keep the lid on.

Tuesday, September 06, 2005

The Debate's Over

That's Katrina's most important lesson: the time to debate whether or not to act is over. That debate's history, like the Berlin Wall. Katrina flattened it. In the aftermath of Katrina, we can no longer scruple self-interest masked as caution, short-sightedness masked as responsibility, and lies masked as patriotism. To see the pictures and hear the stories coming out of New Orleans is to know one thing: whatever moral credibility professional environmental "skeptics" once claimed is as shredded as the Superdome roof.

Do check out this overview of Hurricane Katrina's implications, not just for action on climate change, but its interrelatedness with global poverty and security issues.