You mean like this?
http://www.mintpressnews.com/nestle-...fornia/211565/
You mean like this?
http://www.mintpressnews.com/nestle-...fornia/211565/
"Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it--every, every minute?" Emily Webb, Our Town
www.silententry.wordpress.com
I don't think there's a true either/or regarding bae's example and Ultralight's. The reality is that some resources are quite renewable and there's no reason we shouldn't be taking advantage of them. However, there are plenty of situations where non-renewable, or slowly renewable, resources get used solely for profit or because people can afford to waste them. For example, how many single driver SUV's are cruising up and down the freeways in this country at any given time. Dinosaurs aren't growing as fast as the trees in the pacific northwest.
Another example, farmers in the central valley of California with the financial ability to do so are switching from lower profit, lower water usage crops to the higher profit, higher water usage crop of nut trees, and in order to have sufficient water for this new, more profitable endeavor, they are hiring oil well diggers (because the water well diggers don't have equipment to dig far enough) to dig massively deep wells to suck up what's left of the water table.
Using resources isn't the problem. Using resources faster than they can rejuvenate is.
I like the Natural Step folks' approach to laying out system conditions for long-term sustainability:
1. Substances from the Earth’s crust can not systematically increase in the biosphere.
2. Substances produced by society can not systematically increase in the biosphere.
3. The physical basis for the productivity and diversity of nature must not be systematically deteriorated.
I think this is a smart explanation.
I try to see comprehensive systems. So sunlight is pretty darned renewable, but the stuff we use to build solar panels might not be. Also, if we have missile factories powered by solar energy we're missing the point. These things connect. How do we harvest a "renewable" energy? What do we do with the energy after we harness it?
Yes, but you are a member of the society in which you live--a small community that seems to be interdependent with a vested interest in maintaining the quality of life there. Good stewardship of your property is what motivates you.
That's different than someone coming in and deciding that your trees will make them lots of money if they log them all and take them to the mainland and sell the logs to Lumber Liquidator for the benefit of strangers and stockholders with big profits as the only raison d'ętre.
"Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it--every, every minute?" Emily Webb, Our Town
www.silententry.wordpress.com
We take steps here to make sure that doesn't happen.
http://sjclandbank.org/protected-lands/
Wouldn't you prefer it to a gas station without solar panels on the roof?
I'm not arguing against environmental sustainability, however you care to define it. I'm arguing against a sort of lifeboat ethic based on a zero sum view of the world where Peter must starve to feed Paul. I believe that "sustainability" is more likely to be achieved through technical means than some sort of mass enlightenment.
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