Sunday, November 18, 2012
Survey Results Checkpoint 2
The first question I started with in my survey was "Are you a student at NCSU?". Later on in the survey, I ask if there was a free consultant available for nutritional services, would you visit? A majority said yes, and one hindsight regret is not including a textbox asking "why?". I hope to show that with students at NCSU knowing that there is a free nutritionist available, they will visit and make healthier choices in a group. For those not at NCSU, yet still wishing they had access to that free nutritionist, it just shows how students should take advantage of this and set healthy life goals for their food and physical activity while it is free, rather than pay by the hour for such consulting advice. Also, as expected, most students would be more likely to adhere to a set fitness and healthy eating plan if they had support from their friends, which supports my theory. This paper seems to be fitting together nicely, but as I continue to analyze my survey and actually write the essay, I'll think of a million other things I wish I would have asked, as well.
Monday, November 12, 2012
Survey/Essay 4 Checkpoint
So far I have interviewed five people with my survey, that surveymonkey was awesome in helping me set up! I feel my questions lead in a logical order and progression as well as help emphasize some points that may not come across with just one question. I'm also planning on meeting with the nutritionist once I get a moment during her hours to breathe and not freak out over the inundating amount of tests and what not this week. Yay school! But I definitely find the applicable research aspect of this essay enjoyable and actually fun to be a part of. I guess that's a sign I'm either getting old and boring, or just intellectual. Who knows?
Monday, October 29, 2012
Indigenous Resistance and Racist Schooling on the Borders of Empires: Coast Salish Cultural Survival
In Marker's essay "Indigenous Resistance and Racist Schooling on
the Borders of
Empires: Coast Salish Cultural Survival", he explains the tragic fate of the Salish Indians in the Northwest United States. Separated by the 49th parallel, the Salish Indians were divided into the United States and Canada and forbidden to cross over. However, both countries decided to destroy the Salish culture and matriculate the Salish Indians into their own lives. Both Canada and the United States took the children of the Indians and forced them into boarding schools. In Canada, the children went to school with other Canadian children to try and pick up their habits and the "Canadian" culture. If any of their old culture was seen, the children were severely reprimanded. This caused the Salish children to become ostracized by the other students and some ran away to the United States. In the United States, boarding schools were also used, but it was only Salish children. However, they were still severely punished if any of their old Salish habits were being shown or if they were not accepting this new "American" way of life quickly enough.
Both countries went beyond their reign to wipe out their culture, yet between the two methods, the United States' boarding school was much more effective than those in Canada due to the reduced racism. However, both were still wrong and should not have happened. In a country where individuality is celebrated, we should encourage pride in one's culture instead of abolishing any trace of it.
Both countries went beyond their reign to wipe out their culture, yet between the two methods, the United States' boarding school was much more effective than those in Canada due to the reduced racism. However, both were still wrong and should not have happened. In a country where individuality is celebrated, we should encourage pride in one's culture instead of abolishing any trace of it.
Thursday, October 11, 2012
Sustainability in Spain - not mainly on the plain
Felix Hernandez details the environmental sustainability efforts in Spain in his article "Environmental Sustainability and Global Warming in Spain", published in Energy Policy, Volume 32 Issue 3. He opens his argument by detailing the complex relationship between the human impact and the results on the environment. For example, fossil fuels are not the only contributing factor to the steady incline of global temperature on Earth. Hernandez breaks down this environmental trouble into what he defines as "three dimensions": Ecological sustainability, economic sustainability, and social sustainability. If all three can be achieved, then the global CO2 count can be drastically reduced with Spain as a global leader in environmental sustainability as a whole. Spanish efforts currently include RE deployments and initiatives at all levels of their government so that the general public is aware of the environment's distress and how they can do their part. Long-term goals for the Spanish include reducing fossil fuel dependency as well as deforestation. Hernandez concludes that should this work, the Spanish can be a global leader and role model for other countries in the same economic distress, and yet are still able to create an environmentally sustainable society.
"Environmental Sustainability and Global Warming in Spain"
"Environmental Sustainability and Global Warming in Spain"
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Environmental Ethics
In Ned Hettinger's article "Environmental Ethics", he creates a synthesis of several articles regarding their view points of environmental ethics. Some of the points he addresses are those that the environment is the responsibility of the whole world, and not just one country can be held accountable for the environmental degradation that has occurred. A second main point he concludes with is that the world needs to resort to a bioregionalist movement, similar to that of island civilization.
Sunday, September 30, 2012
"Fracking Fury"
In Janna Palliser's article "Fracking Fury" published in the journal "Green Science", Palliser weighs the pros and cons of hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking", as a mechanism used to obtain natural gas from deep within the earth.
Some pros were that fracking created hundreds of domestic jobs for Americans, as well as the fact that using natural gas versus fossil fuels is a lot cleaner; less CO2 is produced as a byproduct.
However, the cons heavily outweighed the pros, categorized with water pollution, human health, animal health, and then the cause of earthquakes. Water pollution is caused by fracking because once the fluids used to displace the natural gas are released into the ground, they seep through the earth until they reach reservoirs of ground water and all of the chemicals in the fracking fluid are then combined with the ground water. This then affects human health because any contact with this polluted water causes irritation, and even serious infections. Humans are not the only species affected by this pollution; cows, goats, and chickens have been found dead as a result of fracking in a close radius. Most severely, earthquaked are a severe byproduct of hydraulic fracturing. In Youngstown, Ohio, as soon as the fracking fluids were placed into the ground, several earthquakes erupted over the time span of one year within five kilometers of the fracking site, and the epicenter of these earthquakes was at the same depth as the fracking, three kilometers below the earth's surface.
Palliser makes it clearly evident that the cons of fracking severely outweigh the pros, and then discusses the EPA study that the class read about in the week prior. The link between fracking and pollution is irrefutable, and government regulatory action needs to happen before the earthquakes or health effects become more severe.
"Fracking Fury" by Janna Palliser, published in "Green Science"
http://ehis.ebscohost.com/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?sid=aca0bfc0-005d-4df8-8d84-dd1ad8bb6eb6%40sessionmgr110&vid=2&hid=102
Some pros were that fracking created hundreds of domestic jobs for Americans, as well as the fact that using natural gas versus fossil fuels is a lot cleaner; less CO2 is produced as a byproduct.
However, the cons heavily outweighed the pros, categorized with water pollution, human health, animal health, and then the cause of earthquakes. Water pollution is caused by fracking because once the fluids used to displace the natural gas are released into the ground, they seep through the earth until they reach reservoirs of ground water and all of the chemicals in the fracking fluid are then combined with the ground water. This then affects human health because any contact with this polluted water causes irritation, and even serious infections. Humans are not the only species affected by this pollution; cows, goats, and chickens have been found dead as a result of fracking in a close radius. Most severely, earthquaked are a severe byproduct of hydraulic fracturing. In Youngstown, Ohio, as soon as the fracking fluids were placed into the ground, several earthquakes erupted over the time span of one year within five kilometers of the fracking site, and the epicenter of these earthquakes was at the same depth as the fracking, three kilometers below the earth's surface.
Palliser makes it clearly evident that the cons of fracking severely outweigh the pros, and then discusses the EPA study that the class read about in the week prior. The link between fracking and pollution is irrefutable, and government regulatory action needs to happen before the earthquakes or health effects become more severe.
"Fracking Fury" by Janna Palliser, published in "Green Science"
http://ehis.ebscohost.com/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?sid=aca0bfc0-005d-4df8-8d84-dd1ad8bb6eb6%40sessionmgr110&vid=2&hid=102
Thursday, September 27, 2012
EPA Fracking Water Pollution
Fracking is a process of extracting
natural gas from the ground by means of inserting liquids into the ground that
displace the gas and allow it to be collected and used for energy. This process has been used for several
decades and there have been regulations as to where and how deep the fracking
occurs, but ever what chemicals are placed within the water that displaces the
gas. Recently, the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) conducted a study in Pavillion, Wyoming, which is home
to several fracking locations, and has also experienced water contamination.
In
order to accurately monitor these sights, the EPA first did their research of
the area. Before the fracking first occurred
in the 1950’s, a preliminary water quality study was conducted and several
contaminants were found without any fracking fluids in the area. Several decades later, the EPA returned after
several residents complained that their well water turned brown and there were
other peculiar qualities. The EPA then
monitored several wells and collected data as deep as 1000 feet below the
surface. The data was irrefutable:
several of the fluids found were identical to those contained in fracking
fluids – many of these even carcinogens, meaning they cause cancer. EPA quickly advised the residents to not
drink their well water and also recommended that they ventilate their houses
while showering, since the high concentrations of methane in the water might
ignite an explosion.
When
presented with the findings of their research, the fracking companies denied
any correlation between the fracking and the pollution, saying that there were
other reasons and fracking should not be pin-pointed as the sole contributor. The EPA then did an extensive historic study
of Pavillion, Wyoming and found that there were thirty-three abandoned oil and
gas wells dotted across the city, and that those are also possible contributors
of the pollution. However, they could
not have contributed to pollution 1000 feet deep; the technology to extract
that deep was only used with the fracking companies.
Although
no conclusive data has yet to be presented to the fracking companies or
government regulating the laws, the EPA’s findings is scheduled to be peer
reviewed and released the following spring.
Richard Kahn: Toward Ecopedagogy
Richard Kahn's "Toward Ecopedagogy" is a very heavy article addressing his concerns toward environmental education and how society has developed around pressing environmental issues. One example he provides regarding the human population and wealth distribution is "So, as approximately 1.2 billion people live on less than $1 per day and nearly 3 billion live on less than $2 per day, the roaring heights of global technocapitalism have been unfortunate indeed for nearly half of the human population."
This quote provides the staggering statistic that half of the people living on this planet live on, at best, only $2 per day. Although some might deem this unfortunate or that the people living in poor conditions can and should be helped by donating to certain foundations or raising awareness, due to the discussion in Tuesday's class, it could also be argued that there is a system set up so that the poor exist in copious amounts for a reason. In order to make unequal living conditions in other countries, such as the United States, look better, the Devil's Advocate of the situation would say that the "system" or the government, or whichever "Big Brother" figure is present, is having that significant poor class exist so that those living with less than the higher class in their society can think "well, at least I'm not as poor as those populations having to live off of $1 a day."
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
In this advertisement, the Carnegie Melon Design Students are urging students to ride bikes not just for beneficial health, but also for environmental sustainability. This reduces "one pound of CO2 for every mile you don't drive", according to the poster. Visual rhetoric is the use of graphic design to appeal to cultural beliefs, but also as an act of persuasion to an audience. Graphic design is useful because it helps manipulate an image to make it more striking to the audience, and that causes it to be more memorable so the message is more effective.
Monday, September 17, 2012
Snyder Turtle Island Take 3
For this third assignment, I read "Night Herons" (pg 59 in my pocket edition), Affluence (87), and Two Fawns That Didn't See the Light This Spring (102). All three poems had a strong sense of bioregionalism tied in and also called for action from the humans responsible for destruction of the natural order that the bioregion used to posses.
In "Night Herons", San Francisco Bay is described as noisy and rampant with air pollution, sewers, and water treatment plants. The speaker states how while walking through the city at night, he longs for the night herons to return, but the noise and pollution drove them away. This shows how the humans presence has caused the removal of key species to the natural food web that the bioregion possessed, and without that string in the web, the whole natural order of life might be thrown off. At the conclusion of the poem, the speaker describes the sunrise, leaving the audience with a sense of hope and a new beginning; that the natural order might soon be restored.
Snyder's "Affluence" describes a forested area rather than a city, but it still focuses on how humans have destroyed the natural world. The forested area has been harvested for logging by a slash and burn method, which leaves only the tree stump behind. This removes shelter and food for the natural life and animals residing in that forest, causing them to have to leave. The final line in the final stanza says the forest is "paying the price someone didn't pay", meaning that because humans have evolved so they cannot survive without the uses of logging and destroying trees and natural areas, it is nature that must pay.
Lastly, in "Two Fawns ... Spring", Snyder tells two stories: one of a hunter, the other of a driver. The first story about the hunter describes how he shot what he thought was a buck to harvest, but it turned out to be a doe - and not just a doe, but a pregnant doe. In the story with the driver, a deer slowly walked out in front of the car, which effortlessly ran the deer over, instantly murdering both her and the fawn she was carrying. The deaths of both unborn fawns are the two fawns that the title refers to.
All three poems weave together to form a story about how humans are destroying the natural bioregion. First, we slash and burn all natural areas to construct our own polluted society, and this causes all animals to have to flee. Once the animals leave the area, they have no home to go to since they are surrounded by urban civilization, so when they go to seek food or shelter, they encounter either a misinformed hunter, or a car speeding around a curvy road. Either way, humans are responsible for the destruction of both the land and species: the bioregion. All humans can wait for now is the "dawn" referred to in "Night Herons" that will bring a new beginning of environmental sustainability.
In "Night Herons", San Francisco Bay is described as noisy and rampant with air pollution, sewers, and water treatment plants. The speaker states how while walking through the city at night, he longs for the night herons to return, but the noise and pollution drove them away. This shows how the humans presence has caused the removal of key species to the natural food web that the bioregion possessed, and without that string in the web, the whole natural order of life might be thrown off. At the conclusion of the poem, the speaker describes the sunrise, leaving the audience with a sense of hope and a new beginning; that the natural order might soon be restored.
Snyder's "Affluence" describes a forested area rather than a city, but it still focuses on how humans have destroyed the natural world. The forested area has been harvested for logging by a slash and burn method, which leaves only the tree stump behind. This removes shelter and food for the natural life and animals residing in that forest, causing them to have to leave. The final line in the final stanza says the forest is "paying the price someone didn't pay", meaning that because humans have evolved so they cannot survive without the uses of logging and destroying trees and natural areas, it is nature that must pay.
Lastly, in "Two Fawns ... Spring", Snyder tells two stories: one of a hunter, the other of a driver. The first story about the hunter describes how he shot what he thought was a buck to harvest, but it turned out to be a doe - and not just a doe, but a pregnant doe. In the story with the driver, a deer slowly walked out in front of the car, which effortlessly ran the deer over, instantly murdering both her and the fawn she was carrying. The deaths of both unborn fawns are the two fawns that the title refers to.
All three poems weave together to form a story about how humans are destroying the natural bioregion. First, we slash and burn all natural areas to construct our own polluted society, and this causes all animals to have to flee. Once the animals leave the area, they have no home to go to since they are surrounded by urban civilization, so when they go to seek food or shelter, they encounter either a misinformed hunter, or a car speeding around a curvy road. Either way, humans are responsible for the destruction of both the land and species: the bioregion. All humans can wait for now is the "dawn" referred to in "Night Herons" that will bring a new beginning of environmental sustainability.
Monday, September 10, 2012
Turtle Island Themes Part 2
This time around, I read "It Pleases", "Pine Tree Tops", and "The Uses of Light" from Gary Snyder's "Turtle Island" and compared the three poems. From my last post, a common theme in Snyder's poetry is how humans are destroying nature and the world around them. However, with this second set of three poems, a more common theme is that humans have no connection with nature.
In "It Pleases", for example, Snyder argues that the earth is the center of all power in the world and drives all actions. As much as humans may try to control nature, the earth is the supreme ruler and humans attempts are solely in vain. Another example would be from the poem "Pine Tree Tops". Snyder describes a night scene where the narrator views the tree tops fading into the night time sky. In an appeal to the audience's senses, he compares the creak of boots to the animal tracks. The boots creaking represents how unnatural the human presence is compared to the animal tracks that are naturally embedded onto the ground. Snyder closes the poem with the question "what do we know?", which challenges the reader to contemplate their knowledge of the world compared to how naturally all other life coexists.
The most powerful example of how humans have no connection with nature came to me in Snyder's poem "The Uses of Light". This poem has the narrator listening to the stones, trees, moths, and deer in nature as they teach him the lessons their way of life and how they survive in accordance with nature. In the final stanza, nature calls the narrator to climb the towering building that humans built on the ground, but instead of going about the daily business routines, to just gaze out the windows, and with each floor, he can see a thousand miles more. By calling the human to ignore his daily routine as to just take time to look out and appreciate nature, the animals say that he can see "a thousand miles more". With one floor's elevation, one thousand miles cannot be viewed, but the thousand miles could be in relation to not only sight, but also general knowledge and appreciation for nature and the way the world works without human influence.
In all three poems, Snyder makes it evident that humans have no connection with nature or the way that the world works. By combining this theme with the theme found in the last three poems, a more general theme or statement summarizing Snyder's message can be found: humans are drastically reducing their understanding of how to live with nature, and with less of a connection, nature is slowly being destroyed.
Thursday, September 6, 2012
Gary Snyder Themes
For this assignment, I read "The Dead by the Side of the Road", "Front Lines", and "By Frazier Creek Falls". All three shared a very strong environmental sustainability theme, as is common with Snyder's poetry found in "Turtle Island".
The main theme presented in "The Dead by the Side of the Road" is shown through several examples and parallel structure of the stanzas within the poem. Each stanza tells the story of a different type of road kill found at the side of a highway that was built. It is made clear through the accusatory tone of the poem that the roads are anthropogenic and each death resulting from cars is on the shoulders of the humans. Although Snyder introduces that humans use the bodies as food or tools, this is contradicted with a stanza dedicated to how humans then beg these animals for forgiveness and for them to "bless us" for causing their deaths. It is in this hypocritical plea for forgiveness that Snyder makes evident his theme of humans causing more death than they can make use of.
In the poem "Front Lines", Snyder exposes human expansion as a "cancer[ous]" expansion into nature. He even goes to a further extent to compare the expansion to rape. The reality company in the poem tells the forest to "spread your legs" making the comparison to rape severely evident. Snyder's theme of environmental sustainability is carried into "Front Lines" by showing how many people do not see the negative effects of destroying forests for expansion. He personifies the forest as a human and portraying the expansion as rape so that humans can connect more with that comparison rather than just a forest being torn down for some condos. Snyder ends his poem with a challenge for the audience: where should the line be drawn for how much nature can be destroyed. This leaves the reader thinking more about the repercussions of their actions on nature and creates a very effective message.
Lastly, "By Frazier Creek Falls" brings a more peaceful look to environmental sustainability by describing the breathtaking beauty of nature to a viewer. Like in "Front Lines", Snyder calls his reader to "listen" and establishes a connection with the audience, causing the reader to feel closer to the author and take away a stronger message from the poem. Snyder then states how humans are a part of nature themselves and should take the responsibility that comes in hand with that. He also states that "we can live without clothing or tools", suggesting that he believes a viable solution to environmental sustainability would be to live as a part of nature with no modern technology, even as simple as clothing or tools.
In each of these three poems, Snyder keeps his universal message of environmental sustainability. Whether is it how humans are causing nature's death, causing irreparable damage to nature, or introducing a solution to how humans can live with nature, Snyder challenges his audience with each poem. A connection between the reader and the author is established through a question or a radical solution which causes the reader to debate how they feel about the suggested solution or answer and take a stance on environmental sustainability, themselves.
The main theme presented in "The Dead by the Side of the Road" is shown through several examples and parallel structure of the stanzas within the poem. Each stanza tells the story of a different type of road kill found at the side of a highway that was built. It is made clear through the accusatory tone of the poem that the roads are anthropogenic and each death resulting from cars is on the shoulders of the humans. Although Snyder introduces that humans use the bodies as food or tools, this is contradicted with a stanza dedicated to how humans then beg these animals for forgiveness and for them to "bless us" for causing their deaths. It is in this hypocritical plea for forgiveness that Snyder makes evident his theme of humans causing more death than they can make use of.
In the poem "Front Lines", Snyder exposes human expansion as a "cancer[ous]" expansion into nature. He even goes to a further extent to compare the expansion to rape. The reality company in the poem tells the forest to "spread your legs" making the comparison to rape severely evident. Snyder's theme of environmental sustainability is carried into "Front Lines" by showing how many people do not see the negative effects of destroying forests for expansion. He personifies the forest as a human and portraying the expansion as rape so that humans can connect more with that comparison rather than just a forest being torn down for some condos. Snyder ends his poem with a challenge for the audience: where should the line be drawn for how much nature can be destroyed. This leaves the reader thinking more about the repercussions of their actions on nature and creates a very effective message.
Lastly, "By Frazier Creek Falls" brings a more peaceful look to environmental sustainability by describing the breathtaking beauty of nature to a viewer. Like in "Front Lines", Snyder calls his reader to "listen" and establishes a connection with the audience, causing the reader to feel closer to the author and take away a stronger message from the poem. Snyder then states how humans are a part of nature themselves and should take the responsibility that comes in hand with that. He also states that "we can live without clothing or tools", suggesting that he believes a viable solution to environmental sustainability would be to live as a part of nature with no modern technology, even as simple as clothing or tools.
In each of these three poems, Snyder keeps his universal message of environmental sustainability. Whether is it how humans are causing nature's death, causing irreparable damage to nature, or introducing a solution to how humans can live with nature, Snyder challenges his audience with each poem. A connection between the reader and the author is established through a question or a radical solution which causes the reader to debate how they feel about the suggested solution or answer and take a stance on environmental sustainability, themselves.
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Eaarth and McKibben
Earth as a planet has undergone significant change within the past several decades. With the technological revolution causing exponential growth of both the amount of computers in use as well as human population, the world that was once known decades ago has forever gone. McKibben explores the new world in a book titled "Eaarth" with two a's to signify how the world has changed so significantly, that humans reside on an entirely different planet than many were born into.
In this whole new world, McKibben argues that humans have run the Earth dry and that there is minimal, if any, capacity left for growth. In order to remedy this predicament, immediate and drastic action must be taken to avoid a worst case scenario of habitat deconstruction. However, due to the fact that environmental sustainability has not yet been reached, a new way of life, regardless of how sustainable it may be, will not come without consequences.
Ideas introduced in "Eaarth" include cutting down on "too big to fail" companies, saying that "too big to fail is too big to exist". With any company that can be automatically forgiven for any debt introduced because it has too much of a monopoly on the way Americans or any mass group of people live their lives should not be given that power to withhold. Another concept McKibben is very passionate about is localized farming. Mass production and farming of primarily soy and corn has only evolved because of the demand and monetary rewards. McKibben urges the audience that good soil is needed across the globe and that farming should be reverted back to the methods as the abundance as farming was in the 1950's.
As a concluding plea, McKibben states that what this new planet of Eaarth needs is a plan with durability and not simply a quick-fix that relies on many assumptions or many variables to be in perfect condition. Either the world is willing to pay a substantial amount of money and invest in a brighter and more sustainable future now, or pay an even greater amount of money as well as be stuck with an unstable environment.
In order for such reform to work, humans as a whole have a personal responsibility to become more knowledgeable about the environment surrounding the community. A simple assessment, such as the BioRegional quiz, can easily inform one whether or not the information necessary to even have a chance of independent survival is possible. Questions that are meant to inform the taker of their oblivious nature cause the taker to step back and realize that perhaps there is more to the world than the latest YouTube sensation or what is happening on Facebook.
In this whole new world, McKibben argues that humans have run the Earth dry and that there is minimal, if any, capacity left for growth. In order to remedy this predicament, immediate and drastic action must be taken to avoid a worst case scenario of habitat deconstruction. However, due to the fact that environmental sustainability has not yet been reached, a new way of life, regardless of how sustainable it may be, will not come without consequences.
Ideas introduced in "Eaarth" include cutting down on "too big to fail" companies, saying that "too big to fail is too big to exist". With any company that can be automatically forgiven for any debt introduced because it has too much of a monopoly on the way Americans or any mass group of people live their lives should not be given that power to withhold. Another concept McKibben is very passionate about is localized farming. Mass production and farming of primarily soy and corn has only evolved because of the demand and monetary rewards. McKibben urges the audience that good soil is needed across the globe and that farming should be reverted back to the methods as the abundance as farming was in the 1950's.
As a concluding plea, McKibben states that what this new planet of Eaarth needs is a plan with durability and not simply a quick-fix that relies on many assumptions or many variables to be in perfect condition. Either the world is willing to pay a substantial amount of money and invest in a brighter and more sustainable future now, or pay an even greater amount of money as well as be stuck with an unstable environment.
In order for such reform to work, humans as a whole have a personal responsibility to become more knowledgeable about the environment surrounding the community. A simple assessment, such as the BioRegional quiz, can easily inform one whether or not the information necessary to even have a chance of independent survival is possible. Questions that are meant to inform the taker of their oblivious nature cause the taker to step back and realize that perhaps there is more to the world than the latest YouTube sensation or what is happening on Facebook.
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
Environmental Issue - Global Warming
In today’s changing environment with
increasing human impact, one of the main consequences that come to mind is
global warming. By definition, global
warming is the trend of increasing temperatures in the environment due to the
increase of ozone (O3) in the troposphere.
Ozone works as an absorber of ultra-violet (UV) radiation, and in the
stratosphere, where ozone is naturally found, it works as a shield to protect
the earth from UV radiation. Having too
much ozone in the lower atmosphere and not enough in the stratosphere in
relation to global warming is one of the leaded reasons society would be forced
to resort to living in island civilizations.
The impacts of global warming are
felt all over the world, and the repercussions of our actions as humans now
regarding the environment affect the severity and longevity of global warming’s
affects. The affects specifically in
North Carolina would be a receding coastline due to rising sea levels,
increased storm surge from severe hurricanes, and also an increase in drought
periods between heavy storms – to name a few.
Global warming is a monster that the entire world must unite to try and
conquer, and its affects will be felt all over the world, not just specifically
in one place. Every individual’s way of
life will change because of the sudden and dramatic changes that may accompany
any worst-case scenario regarding climate change as a result of global warming. Attached is a link to the Environmental
Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) article regarding global warming and its effects on
the Southeastern region of the United States.
Monday, August 20, 2012
Island Civilization Response/Summary
Time and time again, it has been
argued that since the Industrial Revolution, human impact upon the environment
has been so detrimental that is has now become a leading cause of environmental
decay. With as large an impact that has been made, environmentalists have been
scoping out possible future conditions of the environment and society should
the current rate of environmental impact continue. Roderick Frazier Nash’s
“Island Civilization” explores several future scenarios that have been argued
and put forth, and then refutes those by suggesting his own original futuristic
utopia in the form of island civilizations. Although the name “island
civilizations” has not been used to describe a futuristic scenario before, it
is not as original or successful of an idea as Nash leads the audience to
believe.
Upon introducing his “revolutionary”
concept of “Island Civilizations”, Nash first argues how his idea is better
than other outlooks by refuting their credibility and probability. The first is
a wasteland scenario, in which Earth is entirely used up as a nonrenewable
source and humans have fled the barren planet in search of another capable to
support their parasitic existence. Sound familiar? The first thing to pop in to
my head was Pixar’s “Wall-E”. The second scenario is called “garden scenario”
and has humans in what appears to be an entirely utopic society, yet it is all
synthetically produced from the flora to the fauna. Once again, Pixar pops into
my mind (it might just be my two younger sisters dragging me to all of their
movie premieres). This time around, it
is the more recent “The Lorax” which beholds an entirely plastic society and
follows one boy’s quest to restore natural “truffula trees” to his town. At
this point, I read each new scenario as if it were a game, trying to match each
with its movie-counterpart. Next on Nash’s docket of disapproval is one called
“future primitive”. This scenario has humans choosing to revert back to their
pre-Mesopotamian existence and surviving solely as part of the environment and
not at the top of the food chain. This one presented a challenge, yet I managed
to stretch it far enough so it could work: “Planet of the Apes” – sans apes.
Nash then introduces his proposal
for “island civilizations” across the globe. He defines these civilizations as
500 habitats for three million humans a piece located across Earth. Each of
these civilizations would be entirely sustainable on its own, growing its own
food and producing its own water, tools, and supplies. Also, because of technology’s
advancements, humans would be able to occupy the most barren of all wastelands,
leaving prosperous temperate zones for nature. However, some humans may choose
to remain outside of these societies and remain “primitive”.
While this is certainly a valid
outlook to take upon the imminent future, it is very presumptuous that humans
will accept the parameters required to make this work. Examples of these
parameters would be the deprivation of rights and require each human to live
inside a contained area and only leave for travel at certain times (“Hunger
Games”, anyone?). Also, anyone with proficient math skills can see 500
groupings of three million people would require the human population to become
¼ of its current standings. With such specific requirements, this can only be
imagined to succeed synthetically. A synthetic society living in isolated
groupings with limited contact and humans outcast from their civilization
sounds nearly identical to the dystopia introduced in Aldous Huxley’s “Brave New
World”. The dehumanization of Huxley’s version of an “island civilization” is
juxtaposed against the free “wilder” humans that live outside of the structured
and controlled civilizations. If Nash’s islands were created, there would need
to be a factor that would separate his idea from the dystopic novel.
Although the idea of an island
civilization is sustainable, one must weigh the pros and the cons; while it is
important to maintain natural resources, basic human rights and choices should
be maintained, as well. Nash was correct in stating how the industrialization
of Earth has become “cancer-like” and will inevitably cause it to “self
destruct”(373), however, survival requires each individual to make choices and
also have the population as a whole benefit. Nash couldn’t have phrased it
better when he said “humans stopped adapting and started creating”, but like
all things in the natural world he is trying to preserve, there needs to be a
balance.
Friday, August 17, 2012
Just for practice
Figuring out Blogger... super fun.
Go state!
Different font.
Go state!
Different font.
- bullet point
- another one
- oh look, it's numbered.
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