Category: consumerism

the biotic mandala, what it is
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the biotic mandala, what it is

Time to imagine what a biocitizen is again, if only b/c we learned a few days ago that the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has exceeded 400 parts per million (ppm) for the first time in 55 years of measurement—and probably more than 3 million years of Earth history. The last time the [...]

A Visit to Amherst’s Sustainability Festival
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A Visit to Amherst’s Sustainability Festival

Post written, and pics taken, by Evan Hutton, Biocitizen intern and UMass Class of 2013, Legal Studies The Sustainability Fest is one that has all of the elements you want a culture to embrace in order for their community to become green. Over the weekend, Amherst Commons was lined with stands around the border of [...]

new bees, (not the) same as the old bees
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new bees, (not the) same as the old bees

  There are times when the environmental news is so bad I wonder if there’s any way to stop the harm that is being done to our shared life—and I say shared life because that’s what our earth is: our body. Last Friday was one of those times. Last Friday I learned that Monsanto-salesman/President Obama signed [...]

Transgenic DNA from GMOs in Chinese Rivers—why is it suddenly there?
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Transgenic DNA from GMOs in Chinese Rivers—why is it suddenly there?

(NOTE: this revised version correctly attributes Sichuan University researchers, and not Dr. Ignacio Chapela, for the discovery discussed below.) UC Berkeley microbiologist Dr Ignacio Chapela has commented on a discovery, by a research team from Sichuan University, of “the escape and establishment of transgenic DNA from GMOs” in rivers in China. That’s not good news. The [...]

thinking like a superorganism—again!
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thinking like a superorganism—again!

I read a stimulating opinion piece by Tom Englehardt this morning about how American culture is adapting to suit the conditions of global warming: Climate Change as History’s Deal-Breaker. His observations about how our (devotion to our) economy prevents us from evolving are definitely worth considering. This one especially: “It’s difficult to organize for or even [...]

The Krugs with Our Place summercampers in front of the Judd black walnut
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Trans-generational Amnesia, conclusion

I’m trying to remember where I was. Until I do please let me entertain you with a tale of local color. When my family moved from to Westhampton about eight years ago, one of the first friends we made were our neighbors, Dan and Jessie Krug. We were very lucky to meet them because they [...]

Trans-generational Amnesia, part 4
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Trans-generational Amnesia, part 4

Biocitizen maxim: “You are more than you have ever been taught.” You are the product of 4 billion years of evolution by natural selection. In other words, you’re not 12 or 65 or 27 or 34 years old. You are the breaking crest of a wave of life, a tsunami of being, generated in deep [...]

Melbourne, Australia 1983
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Intentional ignorance, the NYTs, & the loss of our collective imagination

We fancy that industry supports us, forgetting what supports industry. Aldo Leopold Ignorance is not the same thing as stupidity or imbecility. You have to ignore something to be ignorant. You have to exclude from awareness something you have already noticed. Stupidity or imbecility connote an innate feature of character; ignorance, on the other hand, is [...]

NYT’s enviro-blogger Andrew Revkin is anti-science, mainly b/c he gets awarded for it
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NYT’s enviro-blogger Andrew Revkin is anti-science, mainly b/c he gets awarded for it

“With support from a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship,” Andrew Revkin authors the NYT’s blog Dot Earth, which reports on environmental issues. Revkin makes a good living, and is honored regularly by professors who invite him to speak as an expert at academic conferences. His position at the NYTs makes him a leading voice amongst environmentalists [...]

solstice/new year’s thoughts on the forces of life and of death
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solstice/new year’s thoughts on the forces of life and of death

  In Beyond the Pleasure Principle, Freud argues that humans struggle “between two opposing drives: Eros, which produces creativity, harmony, sexual connection, reproduction, and self-preservation; and Thanatos, which brings destruction, repetition, aggression, compulsion, and self-destruction.” So many of us wonder, as we try to understand the massacre in Newton CT, what drove the murderer to [...]

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