This from "Truthout" it was written by Chris Hedges, "Truthout" reprinted it, and I'm taking it from them.
EVERYONE should read this. We must stop the insanity -- NOW!!
Please.
(follow link to original)
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http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/11331-chris-hedges-life-is-sacred
I retreat in the summer to the mountains and coasts of Maine and New
Hampshire to sever myself from the intrusion of the industrial world. It
is in the woods and along the rugged Atlantic coastline, the surf
thundering into the jagged rocks, that I am reminded of our
insignificance before the universe and the brevity of human life. The
stars, thousands visible in the night canopy above me, mock human
pretensions of grandeur. They whisper the biblical reminder that we are
dust and to dust we shall return. Love now, they tell us urgently,
protect what is sacred, while there is still time. But now I go there
also to mourn. I mourn for our future, for the fading majesty of the
natural world, for the folly of the human species. The planet is dying.
And we will die with it.
The giddy, money-drenched, choreographed carnival in Tampa and the
one coming up in Charlotte divert us from the real world—the one
steadily collapsing around us. The glitz and propaganda, the ridiculous
obsessions imparted by our electronic hallucinations, and the spectacles
that pass for political participation mask the deadly ecological
assault by the corporate state. The worse it gets, the more we retreat
into self-delusion. We convince ourselves that global warming does not
exist. Or we concede that it exists but insist that we can adapt. Both
responses satisfy our mania for eternal optimism and our reckless
pursuit of personal comfort. In America, when reality is distasteful we
ignore it. But reality will soon descend like the Furies to shatter our
complacency and finally our lives. We, as a species, may be doomed. And
this is a bitter, bitter fact for a father to digest.
My family and I hike along the desolate coastline of an island in
Maine that is accessible only by boat. We stop in the afternoons on
remote inlets and look out across the Atlantic Ocean or toward the
shoreline and the faint outline of the Camden hills. My youngest son
throws pebbles into the surf. My daughter toddles over the rounded beach
stones holding her mother’s hand. The gray and white seagulls chatter
loudly overhead. The scent of salt is carried by the wind. Life, the
life of my family, the life around me, is exposed at once as fragile and
sacred. And it is worth fighting to save.
When I was a boy and came to this coast on duck hunting trips with my
uncle, fishing communities were vibrant. The fleets caught haddock,
cod, herring, hake, halibut, swordfish, pollock and flounder. All these
fish have vanished from the area, victims of commercial fishing that saw
huge trawlers rip up the seafloor and kill the corals, bryozoans,
tubeworms and other species that nurtured new schools of fish. The
trawlers left behind barren underwater wastelands of mud and debris. It
is like this across the planet. Forests are cut down. Water is
contaminated. Air is saturated with carbon emissions. Soil is depleted.
Acidity levels in the oceans skyrocket. Atmospheric temperatures soar.
And someone, somewhere, makes obscene sums of money from it.
Corporations, indifferent to what is sacred, see the death of the planet
as another investment opportunity. They are scurrying to mine the
exposed polar waters for the last vestiges of oil, gas, minerals and
fish. And since the corporations dictate our relationship to the
ecosystem on which we depend for life, the chances of our survival look
bleaker and bleaker. The final phase of 5,000 years of settled human
activity ends with collective insanity.
“All my means are sane,” Captain Ahab says of his suicidal pursuit of Moby-Dick, “my motive and my object mad.”
The ocean floor off the coast of Maine, which this summer has seen a
staggering five-degree rise in water temperature, is now covered in
crustaceans—lobsters and crabs—that no longer have any predators. The
fish stocks have been killed for profit. This crustacean monoculture
carries with it the fragility of all monocultures, a fragility that corn
farmers in the Midwest also have experienced. Lobsters provide 80
percent of Maine’s seafood income. But how much longer will they last?
When a diverse and intricately balanced biosystem is wiped out, what
future is there? After you dismantle nature and throw away the parts,
what happens when you desperately need to put them back together? And
even if you can nurture back to life the fish stocks decimated by the
commercial fleets, as valiant organizations such as the Penobscot East Resource Center
are attempting to do, what happens when sea temperatures and acidity
levels continue to rise amid global warming, dooming most life in the
oceans?
The warmer water this year caused lobsters to shed six weeks earlier
than usual. What happened to the sea further south is now happening off
New England. Long Island Sound, two decades ago, had an abundance of
lobsters. Then as the water heated up they disappeared. They fell prey
to parasite infestations and shell disease, and the survivors migrated
to colder water.
All natural resources are being exploited until exhaustion. They will
diminish and soon vanish. Droughts are affecting forests in the
Northeast as well as the Northwest. The wintertime die-off of pine
beetles and other pests—a reduction vital for the health of the
forests—is no longer happening as the planet steadily warms. The
traditional hardwoods of the northern forests and the great conifer
trees are dying. They are being replaced by oak-hickory forests, dooming
the biodiversity, eradicating the habitat of a variety of songbirds and
other wildlife and ending the maple syrup industry. Maple syrup was
produced a few decades ago in Connecticut and Massachusetts. As a child I
would hike in snowshoes to the farmers’ sheds deep in the woods
containing vats of boiling syrup. We would pour syrup on the blanket of
snow outside to make brittle winter candy. But production in the
southern New England states has been largely extinguished and shifted to
northern Maine and Canada. These are the small natural indicators that
something is terribly wrong.
The daily loss of Arctic sea ice this summer is the most severe on
record. The amount of sea ice has fallen by 40 percent since satellite
tracking began in the late 1970s. The complete disappearance of summer
Arctic sea ice may be no more than a decade or two away. And with the
disappearance of the summer ice, our planet’s weather patterns will
become dominated by freakishly powerful and sudden storms and other
violent natural disturbances. Droughts will devastate some parts of the
Earth, and in others there will be unrelenting rainfall. It will be a
world of extremes. Hurricanes. Tornadoes. Floods. Dust bowls. Fire and
water.
Our political leaders, Democrat and Republican, are complicit in our
demise. Our political system, like that in the declining days of ancient
Rome, is one of legalized bribery. Politicians, including Mitt Romney
and Barack Obama, serve the demented ends of corporations that will,
until the final flicker of life, attempt to profit from our death
spiral. Civil disobedience, including the recent decision by Greenpeace
activists to chain themselves
to a Gazprom supply vessel and obstruct a Russian oil rig, is the only
meaningful form of resistance. Voting is useless. But while I support
these heroic acts of resistance, I increasingly fear they may have
little effect. This does not mean we should not resist. Resistance is a
moral imperative. We cannot use the word “hope” if we do not fight back.
But the corporations will employ deadly force to protect their drive to
extract the last bit of profit from life. We can expect only mounting
hostility from the corporate state. Its internal and external security
apparatus, as the heedless exploitation and its fatal consequences
become more apparent, will seek to silence and crush all dissidents.
Corporations care nothing for democracy, the rule of law, human rights
or the sanctity of life. They are determined to be the last predator
standing. And then they too will be snuffed out. Unrestrained hubris
always leads to self-immolation.
Part 2: Current State of the Housing Market; Overview for mid-November 2024
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Today, in the Calculated Risk Real Estate Newsletter: Part 2: Current State
of the Housing Market; Overview for mid-November 2024
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