Wednesday, November 29, 2006

You know something is rotten....

...when your federal environment minister says something like this:
Ian Campbell

"What we need to do as a world is keep mining coal."

- Ian Campbell - Australian Federal Minister for the Environment

John Howard should give Ian Campbell a new portfolio. Perhaps Minister for Fossil Fuels would be a better title than Minister for the Environment.

Campbell was responding to a recent court decision that ruled that new coal mines would be required to include information in their environmental impact statement about the amount of CO2 released by the coal that they mine, as usual he came out with all guns firing to support big business.

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

This is me

I evade my personal responsibility for the things I choose to do. I blame the government, the oil companies, George Bush, the economy, the wealthy and anybody else I can think of for the destruction that my lifestyle causes.

I put my comfort, my convenience and my conformity ahead of the lives and livelihoods of thousands of future generations, and I try not to think too much about my daily contribution to the destruction of the world that was left to me by thousands of past generations. I put myself far, far ahead of my ancestors and decendents and take from them for the most trivial of reasons.

I ignore the real human pain, suffering and death that my behaviour causes. I turn the page, switch the channel, and change the topic of conversation. I pretend that the science isn't definitive yet, or that there's no point in changing before others do, and I convince myself that 'scientists' will come up with a technological solution that will make my lifestyle and me OK.

I avoid, I deny, I justify and rationalise, I pretend, I project, I squirm and squeeze and do whatever I can to maintain my concept of myself as a good person while still doing what I do. I evade my moral responsibility a day at a time in the hope that reality will somehow be different tomorrow morning.

I steal from those who live far away from me, and who I do not know because I see their pain as cartoon pain, and not fully real. I casually destroy what future generations will depend upon to live because they have yet to be born and it is only me, and my time and my normalcy that is important.

I am like those who, sixty years ago, did their jobs and lived their normal lives and didn't ask questions about where their Jewish neighbours had gone. I am like those who participated in slavery and other atrocities, except that the effects of my crimes will outlast all those others.

And it is OK, because today I am normal, and busy, and have other things on my mind and, if what I do is really so bad so many people wouldn't be doing the same, would they?

But when, in the hours before I die, I think back upon my life and what it has meant, I must do one thing. I must hope and hope and pray and pray that there is nothing beyond life and beyond time and beyond myself, that there is no balance, no karma, no morality and no justice.

Because if there is, and I do what I do, knowing what I know....

Well, lets not think about that.
A comment by Rashers101 in George Monbiot's column on The Guardian's website

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

The best things in life aren't things

Stuff you don't need


Do we have enough stuff yet? Maybe we need more supermarkets? Maybe we need more roads?