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MOTHER NATURE DOWN FOR
THE COUNT: PART 2—GLOBAL DASHBOARD GLOWING RED WITH DANGER
By
Frosty Wooldridge
A reader Shadow Dancer commented
on the first part of this book review on “Wecskaop: What Every Citizen
Should Know About Our Planet”: “So you’re starting to grasp exponential
mathematics! I posted at Native Sites where people talk about the destruction
of the earth with great sorrow in their hearts.
”All I can tell them is the truth that this is the money men's world,
and the money men aren't going to stop anytime soon. The human race is
not going to stop its destruction of the earth. Meaning the entire human
race is destroying itself slowly just through its pollution alone.
”As you begin to grasp mathematics you then should be able to grasp the
mathematics of complete zero. The Kogi People of South America still live
pretty much the old way upon the earth, the way of the Tribe, and at complete
zero, or in the least destructive way to the earth. Once you understand
complete zero...and that complete zero was broken long ago...then you
have the world now...that is the result of Cause & Effect. Then from that
you know all things will get worse upon the Earth...but how much worse
is still an unknown. As well as how soon...as other variables come into
play.
”Indians way back when did not want to learn what they called the white
man's knowledge because they believed such knowledge was forbidden...they
may have been right...more right than they know…we may already be far
too late to save the earth from destruction as well as the human race
or most of the human race.”
I nod my head as to Shadow Dancer’s wisdom. Odd that ‘money men’ control
the growth-capitalism-waste paradigm over common sense-stasis-sustainability
paradigm espoused in this book. If allowed to continue, we shall all become
victims of the ‘money men’s’ paradigm.
Anson said, “Why should we suppose the earth’s environmental machinery
is invulnerable? How many organisms can an ecosystem or planet support
over a long period of time without suffering severe or irreparable damage?”
Garrett Hardin likens earth’s carrying capacity to an “engineer’s estimate
of the carrying capacity of a bridge.” Notice the collapse of the mega-bridge
over the Mississippi River last week in Minnesota! It didn’t collapse
until that single last car drove onto it to exceed its carrying capacity.
In the living world, biologists use the term “threshold” as to the limits
of a system before it collapses. All ecological processes carry thresholds.
Last week, a highly educated woman friend of mine bumped into me at an
art show in Winter Park, Colorado. She said, “I don’t agree with your
population stance…we’ve got plenty of space.” I said, “If it was about
space, why are there only 20 million Australians and not 300 million on
a continent the same size our 48 contiguous states?”
“I don’t know,” Paula asked. “Why?”
“It’s not about space,” I said. “It’s about carrying capacity and Australia
is nine-tenths desert. They don’t possess water or farmland.”
“Oh, I didn’t think about that,” Paula said.
LIMITED CAPACITY TO ACCEPT WASTE
Anson did and more! He said, “Carrying capacity can also be limited by
the ability of an environment to accept and process the wastes of a given
population.”
Anson stated, “You might be able to overload the bus with too many people,
but when you overload the toilet at the back of the bus, well, you’ve
got a problem…food and other resource shortages may be out there on the
horizon as looming problems, but earth’s ability to accept, dissipate,
cleanse and recycle our societal and industrial wastes appears to be stressed
already.”
Anyone can read the papers weekly to see our “global dashboard” light
up with warning lights. “Examples include acid rain, ozone depletion,
deforestation in the tropics at 136,000 acres lost per day (www.RedJellyFish.com),
vanishing wilderness, collapsing fisheries, 100 million sharks killed
annually, reefs worldwide dying, accelerating emissions of greenhouse
gases, vanishing bee colonies, accelerating desertification, melting permafrost,
disappearing polar ice and mass extinctions that may become the greatest
biological disaster since the dinosaurs vanished.”
Even more frightening, China’s 1.3 billion people want into the game of
a “car for every garage and chicken in every pot.”
THIN FILM OF AIR AND WATER
“Mathematically speaking, 99.94 percent of the earth consists of crust,
rocky mantle and molten interior,” Anson said. “The thin layer of water
that we refer to as an ocean exists only as an inexpressibly thin and
precarious surface film that is only six one-hundredths of one percent
as thick as the earth itself.”
As mentioned in earlier writings, humans create 27,000 square mile toxic
dead zones in the North Sea, 6,000 square miles at the mouth of the Mississippi
River, Lima, Peru; Rio de Janeiro; Shanghi, China, and many more places
on the earth where humans pump sewage 24/7 into the oceans.
Why so dangerous? “If we were to wipe a wet paper towel across the surface
of a twenty-inch world globe, the film it leaves behind would be proportionally
too deep to properly represent the depth of our planet’s oceans,” Anson
said.
In other words, if we keep using our oceans as the final toilet flush,
at some point, they will upchuck on us with severe consequences as to
food, flooding and climate change brought about by undersea current changes
and melting ice caps.
INSULT TO INJURY TO MOTHER NATURE
“An immense storehouse of methane exists in the form of deposits representing
10,000 billion metric tons of carbon…if present warming continues and
the ocean’s mud begins to warm, a self-fueling release of ever more gigatons
of carbon could result,” Anson said.
“While red-tides and algal blooms are localized phenomenon, human impacts
are a planet-wide phenomenon, so that today’s human impacts already appear
to be having global repercussions,” Anson said.
Yet, demographic predictions show the human race growing from 6.6 billion
to 9.2 billion by 2050 and some estimates show 10.2 billion. Anyone with
a three digit IQ can tell that we’re in trouble! But not one world leaders
speaks to this global dilemma!
“Wecskaop: What Every Citizens Should Know About Our Planet” can be found
at www.amazon.com ; www.barnesandnoble.com
or by calling Arman Publishing at Ph. 386 673 5576. ISBN 0-933078-18-8.
In part three of this series, we’ll wrap up with “The Big Question” as
to how many people can the earth hold and what we can do to change course
like Captain Smith of the Titanic should have!
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