Showing posts with label environmental damage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environmental damage. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

American Waste






Disposable Packaging
It’s amazing to think that in todays’ society, with instant communication and with instant digital imaging, we still fail to see the big picture.  Thanks to America’s insatiable appetite for consumption of all thing wrapped in plastic, we are now one of the world’s top producers of garbage.  

Latest reports indicate that America now creates 254 million tons of waste each year.  Less than a third of this amount is recycled.  Thanks to the financial meltdown of 2008, the recycling industry has become virtually nonexistent, so the numbers become even more skewed.  Connecting dots is not a game to be taken lightly, as it will lead the participant into troubled waters, far from anything resembling a comfort zone.  This national appetite for waste creation has obviously turned into a global environmental catastrophe, floating upon the high seas, far from home, eventually landing on distant shores, among other places.


Waste News
In the Pacific Ocean, northeast of Hawaii, lies the Central Pacific Gyre.  Natural currents and weak winds combine to help create something quite unnatural.  This is the place where yet one more irresponsible act of mankind gives an all-star performance on the center stage of environmental damage.  Plastic waste congregates within the gyre, covering an area, by most estimates, twice the size of Texas, with new immigrants arriving by the day, so to speak.  Within this area, plastic fragment pollution, as it’s known, outweighs naturally occurring plankton by a ration of 6:1.    

Plastic disposable containers, foam containers and disposable garbage beyond comprehension floats on the ocean’s surface, waiting for the sun’s rays to break it down into smaller and smaller pieces.  Eventually, these pieces become an attraction for marine wildlife, where entry into the food chain begins.  

With studies being  conducted to determine the effect of hormonal interruptions at these lower stages of the food chain, along with the ultimate effect on humanity, disturbing news is beginning to come forth.   Tests continue to show that most major health issues in the U.S. over the last 30 years have a relationship of sorts with plastics residing in the food chain.  

Higher Education Business
Somewhere along the way, man’s quest for higher eduction has taken a wrong turn.  It’s becoming increasingly clear that this wrong turn has placed us on a path of no return.  

Friday, September 11, 2009

Environmental Damage From The Hot Air Station

An environmental economy is no longer seen - if it were even considered - as viable.  Our right to a harmonious existence with nature is now overshadowed by the daily air quality report.  When corporate mouthpieces force feed us absurdities whose sole design is to protect the company bottom line, our slow death is assured.  
These absurdities include the stance that a belief in environmental destruction due to uranium mining near the Grand Canyon is in itself an absurdity.  Located “within 10 or 15 miles of the north rim of the Grand Canyon” translates into non-justification over concern of environmental changes to one of the great wonders of the natural world.  Would that be 10, or 15?  There is no justification for concern “by any stretch of the imagination,” so states Ron Hochstein of Denison Mines.  No justification whatsoever. 
What is our bottom line, as a world civilization?  When will we begin to effect change in that global civilization?  What are we, as a consumer driven society, willing to live without?
At what point is health the bottom line, not just ours, but the natural environment that is our home?  In a world so full of so many natural born losers, it’s no wonder we’re fighting a losing battle.