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- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!uniwa!DIALix!tillage!gil
- From: gil@tillage.DIALix.oz.au (Gil Hardwick)
- Newsgroups: sci.environment
- Subject: Off Thoughts. Sheep!?
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <726576558snx@tillage.DIALix.oz.au>
- References: <1993Jan8.160932.8591@nstn.ns.ca>
- Date: Sat, 09 Jan 93 10:49:18 GMT
- Organization: STAFF STRATEGIES - Anthropologists & Training Agents
- Lines: 129
-
-
- In article <1993Jan8.160932.8591@nstn.ns.ca> dc_ags@ac.nsac.ns.ca writes:
-
- > I didn't really expect them to... what I was getting at was the _wisdom_ (or
- > more importantly, the _lack_ of it) of expending resources to the manufacture
- > of things like the pink flamingos that people put on the front lawn, or items
- > like the `dipping bird'... you know the one... it works on the principle of
- > evaporative cooling... it dips down to a glass of water (gets wet, cools off)
- > and eventually repeats the process... I forget the name of the product, but I'd
- > be surprised if you don't remember it.
-
- Oh Don. Some sense of humour required, yes?
-
- All those funny little gizmos really do stimulate the economy in a
- very *big* way, especially being targetted as they are to the impulse
- buying end of the market.
-
- Here during the 1950s we got little junk plastic toys from Japan, and
- we thought of the country as the very epitomy of shoddiness. But then
- in the early 1960s we started to get Japanese motorcycles and cars;
- the first of the latter I think being a Datsun built from the old
- British Austin A40 blueprints. The rest is history.
-
- Then it was Taiwan's turn, and now China's . . .
-
- > It's not that I object to their manufacture, or that I have anything against
- > free enterprise, but I just don't think it makes sense to be using resources
- > and creating pollution to indulge this type of demand.... regardless of profit.
-
- They allow people to practice their manufacturing skills in a harmless
- and good-humoured way, before graduating through the ranks to the more
- complex technology. Would you have them start making nuclear weapons
- at those levels of skill?
-
- > Although I am not naive enough to expect to see it evolve in my lifetime (I am
- > 41), I would predict that such a system would prioritize such human endeavours
- > as food production, shelter and medical care up to the level where they belong,
- > and additionally (in relation to the case in point) that it would set
- > guidelines as to what is appropriate to manufacture and what is not.
-
- Let the poor village make do-dads for sale, so they can get some money
- in to start paying for their children's education in medicine, building
- construction, and so on. We are quite as happy to buy them as anything
- else; there is really nothing more tragic than seeing the villager
- having to pedal his bicycle all the way home again having sold nothing
- all day. With his wife waiting for money to pay the rent, or buy nice
- clothes for the children, all that sort of thing . . .
-
- > Furthermore, I would predict that nations would enter into this type of system
- > voluntarily, not by force... and that they would adopt the basic tenets of
- > sustainability willingly. After all, the alternative will be to live in a world
- > which becomes more polluted and congested every day... a world ravaged by war,
- > famine and disease... a world where people starve to death in the midst of
- > plenty.
-
- Provided they are allowed to step through it in their own way, yes?
- They are the ones who need to learn and develop better skills, not you
- or me. I am doing quite OK, thanks, but I can't possibly live other
- people's lives for them and they would resent my trying to.
-
- Help us, it really isn't so bad as all that. It is just that *some*
- people are still being caught up in events far beyond their control,
- without the resource base allowing them to cope in the meantime.
-
- > If you wanted some better examples of products that fall into the category of
- > `unneeded or unwanted', look into the grocery bags the next time you come from
- > the supermarket... how much is actually food, and how much is packaging and/or
- > other debris that could actually fall into the above category?
-
- This is a matter of consumer education, and making more appropriate
- choices available to people who are rushed to get their shopping done
- anyway. The packaging and unnecessary debris issue is far better
- tackled at the disposal end, increasingly as we simply run out of
- landfill space to dump it all.
-
- > Or better yet, go down to your local landfill and look at all the `widgets'
- > there... virtually _everything_ in the landfill was purchased by someone... and
- > _someone_ must have made a profit, or all these items wouldn't have been
- > manufactured in the first place!
-
- Indeed, but the positive approach is to sell more appropriate types of
- packaging on a win-win basis for everyone, where the manufacturer can
- make more profit turning over a product people find cheaper to buy,
- and who pay less in rates for its disposal. Else, add the substantial
- cost of the packaging and its disposal into the retail price, and
- still let people make their choice at the supermarket shelf where it
- all really does happen.
-
- > Admittedly, many items you'll see in a landfill are worn out, broken, or have
- > otherwise served their usefulness, but there is a substantial amount of
- > material which cannot be classified in this way... and it is this material to
- > which I was referring.
-
- Be creative! See it as a resource for building a career for yourself
- to do something really good and constructive about it. That is what I
- am doing here with my consultancy, precisely.
-
- Dr Vandeman and a few others will be taking that career path soon too,
- I expect, as we put the finishing touches to their education.
-
- > When the difference between right and wrong is measured in dollars and cents, I
- > think it's time to rethink our strategy... that people have become so
- > complacent that they actually _accept_ that rationale is a sad state of
- > affairs, IMHO.
-
- I don't like so much emphasis on the almighty dollars myself, but
- whether we like it or not, money *is* an excellent good lubricant. I
- have already discussed here other options including infrastructure,
- social credits and quality of life issues which can be negotiated to
- serve the very same purpose.
-
- There is happiness there too, Don, as well as a nice place to live
- with trees and birds to make your life sweet, and a few quid in your
- pocket. It is up to you which you want to choose.
-
- > If we moved somehow towards a system where our elected representatives'
- > decisions were `divorced' from the affairs of the marketplace, I think we'd see
- > improvements in two directions: first, the market itself could move closer
- > towards the ideal of `pure and perfect competition'.. and secondly, it would
- > have the effect of allowing our government to make more clear-headed decisions
- > with respect to the overall health of our society and the environment.
-
- Already doing . . .
-
- [the rest gets a little morbid . . . ]
-
-
- Gil
-
-