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Earth To Humankind: Back Off

Say good-bye to your car, computer, everything. We are

burning up the planet too fast to hang on

 

By Mark Morford, SF Gate Columnist

 

Source >

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/gate/archive/2005/04/13/notes041305.DTL\

& nl=fix

 

Wednesday, April 13, 2005

 

 

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Mark Morford

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The Earth is going down. Way, way down. To the mat,

hard and painful and with a sad moaning broken-boned

crunch.

 

We are chewing her up, spitting her out, stomping and

gobbling and burning and gouging and drilling and

sucking her dry and we are carelessly replicating

ourselves so goddamn fast we can't even stop much less

even try to slow the hell down, and all we want is

more and faster and with less consequence and pretty

soon the Earth is gonna go, well, there you are, I'm

finished, sorry, and boom zing groan, done.

 

Don't take my world for it. Just read the headlines,

the latest major, soul-stabbing report.

 

It's one of those stories that sort of punches you in

the karmic gut, about how they just completed this

unprecedented, four-year, $24 million, U.N.-backed

study involving 1,360 scientists from 95 nations who

all pored over thousands of satellite images and

countless scientific reports and reams of stats, and

they all distilled their findings down to one deadly,

heartbreaking summary.

 

And here it is: We, humankind, people, sentient

carbon-based biped creatures, only us and no one else

but us because it sure as hell ain't the goddamn lions

or caribou or meerkats or rhododendrons, we humans

have, in our shockingly short time on this wobbly

sphere, used up a staggering 60 percent of the world's

grasslands, forests, farmland, rivers and lakes.

 

That's right, 60 percent. Gone. Burned up. Used up.

Much of it irreversibly. These are the basic ecosystem

services that, simply put, sustain life on Earth. The

glass ain't even half full, people. It's about

three-fifths empty and draining fast and we are doing

our damnedest to expedite the process because, well,

this is just who we are.

 

We reproduce. We consume. We use it up and dry it all

up and move on to find more and it reminds me of that

line from Agent Smith in the first " Matrix " movie

where he stares menacingly at Morpheus and speaks

about how every mammal on Earth instinctively develops

a natural equilibrium with the surrounding

environment, " but you humans do not. You move to an

area, and you multiply, and multiply, until every

natural resource is consumed. The only way you can

survive is to spread to another area. There is another

organism on this planet that follows the same pattern.

A virus. Human beings are a disease, a cancer of this

planet. You are a plague, " and then Morpheus gets all

huffy and righteous and goes on to inspire Neo to

prove how we are also full of beauty and fire and life

and he makes it all better by saving humankind so we

can go buy the mediocre soundtrack.

 

But it doesn't stop there. The study also reveals that

our fair and gluttonous species has altered the planet

more violently and rapidly in the past 50 years than

in any comparable time in human history. Yay

accelerated technology. Yay multinational

conglomerates. Yay lack of corporate ethics and rabid

unchecked capitalist consumer gluttony. Whee.

 

And you read this horrific story about how we are

mauling the planet at an unprecedented rate and you

ask yourself the obvious question: Our government is

doing what about this again? Oh right: nothing. Not

one thing. They are, in fact, making it all far, far

worse. Worse environmental president in American

history, you remind yourself. Whee.

 

And this heartbreaking study, it comes hot on the

heels of one of the most distressing and sobering

pieces of journalism I've read in ages, an excerpt

from a book by James Howard Kunstler called " The Long

Emergency, " all about the imminent and staggering

oil/natural gas crisis now looming large over the U.S.

and the world, a crisis of such dire proportions that

it will very soon reshape American life like nothing

since the Industrial Revolution. Except in reverse.

 

It's about peak oil. It's coming within a year or two.

It means we've essentially siphoned off all the easily

attainable oil on the planet (about 50 percent of the

grand total) and getting to the remaining 50 percent

-- the lower-quality stuff that's buried deep in rock

or in impossibly difficult locations or that lies

underneath countries where the people absolutely hate

us -- will be so fraught and expensive and

hypercompetitive that it will mean not only, in the

immediate future, much more war and strife and pain

but also, in the next decade or two, a radical -- and

I do mean radical -- reshaping of life as we know it.

 

Petroleum and gas will become incredibly scarce and

everything we know about consumer culture, travel,

products, Wal-Mart, easy access to all daily goods and

services, will essentially vanish, and we will return

to a intensely local, viciously competitive

agricultural model of raw survival. Read this article

now, and be amazed.

 

This is the incredible thing about humans. We are

capable of such amazing extremes, such breathtaking

beauty and such violent ugliness, astounding awareness

to utter blindness, transcendental light to staggering

dark. Some periods in our history, it feels like we're

actually progressing, calming down, evolving, reaching

new heights and new levels of psychospiritual

awareness, as opposed to merely rearranging the puzzle

pieces in a drunken haze of frustrating anxiety.

 

And at other times, like now, like the new and violent

and fractured Dark Age so savagely exemplified by

BushCo, it feels as though we are working toward the

other extreme, working our last raw nerve, seeing how

far we can go before we implode, how much of the

planet we can abuse and pollute and rape before

something pops so violently and unexpectedly we can

only sit back and go, oh holy hell.

 

Maybe the nutball evangelical born-agains have it

right: Maybe it's best to just burn up this whole

godforsaken lump of Earth as fast as possible and then

watch in giddy flesh-rended glee as Armageddon rains

down and only those who've given tens of thousands of

dollars to secretly gay televangelists will rise up

and be saved and the rest of us will merely drive our

Priuses off a collective cliff into the fiery pits of

gay-marriage-friendly hell.

 

Ah, but we have bad news there, too, because,

according to the cute Rapture Index, that adorable

little Web site o' righteousness that charts the

various global " signs " leading up to the impending

Second Coming, the Rapture should be happening, like,

right now. Or maybe last week.

 

In fact, the index now stands at 152, well above the

" Oh sweet Jesus take me now " threshold. Which means,

of course, that the Second Coming might have already

come and gone, and Jesus may have swooped down and

taken one look at what we've done to the place and

said, you've got to be freakin' kidding me, and said,

sorry but no one here deserves much of anything

illuminative or enlightened right now. Can't you just

hear all those gay-hatin' born-again Christians

saying, what the hell?

 

Of course, no one said this was gonna be easy. Not

Christ, not Buddha, not Allah and not Lao Tse and not

Rumi and not Krishna and not the light beings right

now swirling around your head and trying to get the

message across that this earthly plane is one of the

harshest and more difficult and bloody messy ugly

lessons in the universe, which is also why it's so

valuable and mandatory and why so many souls want to

come here, to learn. Trial by fire, is what it is.

This is what they say.

 

But if these scientific studies and stories are to be

believed -- and there's little reason to think

otherwise -- that fire is about to get one hell of a

lot hotter. Stock up on duct tape. And water. And

hope.

# Thoughts for the author? E-mail him.

# Subscribe to this column here

# Mark's column archives are here

# The RSS feed for Mark's column is here

 

Mark Morford's Notes & Errata column appears every

Wednesday and Friday on SF Gate, unless it appears on

Tuesdays and Thursdays, which it never does. Subscribe

to this column at sfgate.com/newsletters.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Guest guest

, Rick Stevens <ecology1st2004>

wrote:

>

> Earth To Humankind: Back Off

> Say good-bye to your car, computer, everything. We are

> burning up the planet too fast to hang on

>

> By Mark Morford, SF Gate Columnist

>

> Source >

>

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/gate/archive/2005/04/13/notes041305.DTL\

& nl=fix

>

 

 

Perhaps Space Living is the only Future Solution ?

 

http://www.nasa.gov/vision/space/livinginspace/eclss1.html

 

Vijay

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