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- Newsgroups: talk.environment
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!eff!world!rjk
- From: rjk@world.std.com (robert j kolker)
- Subject: Re: The Real Challenge
- Message-ID: <C1Bvx1.JJ9@world.std.com>
- Organization: The World Public Access UNIX, Brookline, MA
- References: <88290205@hpindda.cup.hp.com>
- Date: Sat, 23 Jan 1993 22:31:49 GMT
- Lines: 53
-
- ......McGovern says......
- >That future is worth infinitely more than any "substitutes" for it. The
- >technologies and technologists we need are those that will help us to
- >reach that future, not those that will help to make it forever unreachable:
- >technologies that serve life -- *all* life -- not destroy it. Ecologically
- >sane technology, not technological substitution gone insane and become
- >technological supremecism.
-
- >The time of morally empty technology, driven by greed, limited only by
- >derided threats of "doom", is over. The real challenge for technologists
- >is whether they can overcome the counsels of greed and fear and find within
- >themselves the moral purpose and strength to be able to just say "no" to
- >technological changes that take us ever farther from where we should be, and
- >to seek out with all their intelligence the changes that will bring us, day
- >by day, year by year, sensibly closer to our heart's desire: our true home
- >on earth, among our innumerable living kin, the tapestry of life rewoven.
-
- >But can such technologists exist? Will they appear in the years ahead?
-
- >Just watch!
-
- >------------
- >Alan McGowen
-
- >"Force the Spring." -- Bill Clinton
- I am watching. What I see are people unconfortable with industrialism
- ready to impose an Oath of Poverty on the rest of us. Very frankly I do
- not wish to live in a world whose economy is based on Granola and
- Chickenshit. Very organic, very natural, and very hard on people who want
- other than that and better than that.
-
- Having said this, I must confess a sympathy for those who wish to
- preserver a measure of untouched (natural if you will) beauty. I like to
- walk in the woods, and hear a symphony with no components from the local
- freeway. Occasionally it is nice not to hear the roar of the jet plane.
-
- But I reject catagorically the necessity for making and exclusive choice
- between a technology based economy and an echophreaks paradise. We can
- have natural enclaves in the world for those who wish them as places of
- spiritually refreshment. For example, we have a system of national parks
- where wood and leaf is carefuly guared and preserved. I am willing to pay
- for such facilities. What I don't want is a bunch of neo-Puritans telling
- me my taste for manufactured goods and high technology is an expression of
- sin. I want it both ways, as do most other rational folks. And it is
- comming.
-
- Just watch.
-
- Conan the Libertarian
-
- --
- "If you can't love the Constitution, then at least hate the Government"
-
-