The Big Melt --No ! No an Arbys Sandwich-lol

temperance

Electoral Member
Sep 27, 2006
622
16
18
The Big Melt --No ! Not an Arbys Sandwich-lol

[FONT=Tahoma,Arial,Sans Serif][SIZE=+2]Charging towards the Big Melt[/SIZE][/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma,Arial,Sans Serif][SIZE=+1]Consumption has climate change consequences.[/SIZE][/FONT]​

[SIZE=-1][SIZE=-1][FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]Dateline: Tuesday, January 23, 2007[/FONT][/SIZE]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]by Stephen Leahy [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]BROOKLIN, Canada (IPS) — Record retail store sales during the holiday season in North America is one reason 2007 is predicted to be the hottest year on record. And it's well past time that people began to connect the dots between what they buy and the resulting environmental impacts such as global warming, experts say. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]In other words, consumption has consequences: big, nasty environmental consequences that inflict suffering mainly on the world's poor. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]That North Americans, and to a lesser extent Europeans, are profligate consumers is well known. If everyone consumed like North Americans we'd need five planets to support us — only three planets are necessary if we all lived like Europeans, according to the World Wildlife Fund's Living Planet Report. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]The world collectively overshot the Earth's capacity to support us in 1984, the report notes. In the 22 years since reaching that crucial tipping point, rates of consumption of resources have accelerated. Not just in North America and Europe but China and India, not to mention other parts of Asia and Latin America. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]While this ever-accelerating consumption of resources the sign of a healthy global economy according to economists, it has also resulted in climate change, amongst many other environmental and social ills. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]"People don't appreciate that their purchases have real environmental impacts," said Monique Tilford, acting executive director of the Centre for a New American Dream (CNAD), a Maryland group promoting environmentally and socially responsible consumption. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]"They also don't think their individual actions make much of a difference," Tilford told IPS. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]A Chinese-made computer desk that can be bought for 40 or 50 dollars at a US or European retail store is likely to be the product of illegal clear-cutting in Indonesian rainforests. Such clear-cutting not only fuels crime syndicates, it results in the loss of biodiversity, releases huge amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and drives indigenous people off their lands. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]"We need to shift people to become environmentally and socially conscious consumers," said Tilford. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]
The world collectively overshot Earth's capacity to support us in 1984.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]That means buying less stuff and also being willing to spend more on products that are better for the environment or societies in other countries. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]"And for those willing to be more conscious, they often don't have the knowledge or information to know what's better and that's the role of NGOs like ours," she said. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]CNAD started a Responsible Purchasing Network for state and local governments in 2000, which has been successful in creating a large market for environmentally friendly products, Tilford said. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]"It is very complicated for public to know what's from where or how products in the stores are made," noted Lester Brown of the Earth Policy Institute, a US group focused on environmentally sustainable economy. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]China makes about one-third of the world's furniture, quite surprising in a country that strictly protects its few remaining forests. Imports of foreign timber have skyrocketed and are well over 40 million cubic metres per year. Reports show that re-exports of forest products from China to the United States and Europe have increased by about 900 percent since 1998. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]"Scarcity quickly crosses national boundaries," Brown said in an interview. "If the Chinese furniture makers can't get trees in China, they get trees from Siberia, Myanmar, Papua New Guinea and Indonesia." [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]Greenpeace, Global Witness and other NGOs have documented extensive illegal logging operations in these countries, with China the main recipient of the illegal timber. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]Over the past decade, China has become the world's leading manufacturer of low-cost products. More than 80 percent of all toys, including electronic goods, sold in the US are made in China. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]"If we weren't consuming all the stuff China manufactures, they wouldn't be growing so fast," Brown pointed out. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]That over-consumption has reached such an absurd level that the average US citizen, living in the world's richest nation, spends more than they earn every year. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]Tilford admits that at the individual consumer level, people are often so busy they don't want to know or ignore the evidence that their behaviour is resulting in environmental impacts like global warming. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]"It is sometimes stunning that people will not make the most minimal effort to change," she said. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]The huge societal shift needed to find ways to live in a sustainable fashion will likely not happen without some kind of disaster that will generate enough suffering that people will make the shift, she says. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]Both Tilford and Brown believe that the US public needs to elect people who will put policies in place to ensure products sold on US shelves are sustainable no matter what country they come from. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial,Sans Serif]"People in other countries are putting their lives on the line so we can buy gourmet products, " Tilford says. But unless there is enough popular support, there will be no action. [/FONT]
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MikeyDB

House Member
Jun 9, 2006
4,612
63
48
No one is going to be able to reverse the results of behavior conditioning that's been aimed at the world by western industrialists through advertising that's taken place for the past sixty years. America has entrenched the concept of consumption = freedom. Industries in North America have elevated the dynamic of conspicuous consumption complete with planned obsolecence and objectification of people and values into an art form. Soup can labels became "art", sex and violence sell everything from chocolate bars to million dollar homes. The wealthy have killed this planet in the name of greed.
 

temperance

Electoral Member
Sep 27, 2006
622
16
18
yes whether or not

I don't much go for " Global warming "all caused by us humans theory's ,but I do wish we would not waste so much ,its awful ,we take, take, take and don't give back ,well we give back but what we give back is not recyclable enough ,and we ve lost basic principles ,the fuel to send all this wood product to China and then back again ,and we don't support our own countries because of cost ,
I would much rather buy a old desk (real wood from sally ann or second hand than go to Canadian tire and buy a piece of junk that was made out of ? shipped back n forth .Plus the thing will probably end up in the garbage in a few years --