‘Entwicklung, und was danach?’ - ein offener Abend mit Vandana Shiva

Thursday, March 13th, 2008

Der relativ kleine Raum des Schumacher Colleges war voll, richtig voll. Klar, Vandana Shiva ist echt ein Erlebnis! Zusammen mit Transition Towns Totnes veranstaltet das Schmacher College regelmässig offene Abende, diesmal war Vandana Shiva eingeladen: ‘Transformation of societies: Development, what next?’

Vandana Shiva ist eine inspirierende Persönlichkeit, einfach und freundlich im Auftreten, mit bestechendem Intellekt. Sie hat die Gabe, ausser den Fakten und Zahlen auch die Dynamiken und Strukturen, die dahinter stehen, anschaulich und sehr zugänglich darzustellen.

Als Einstieg gab Vandana Shiva einen kurzen Abriss ĂĽber fĂĽnf vorherrschende Annahmen, die der westlichen Ă–konomie zugrunde liegen und legte deren zerstörerische Auswirkung auf Natur und Menschen dar. Dann ging sie eingehend auf das Thema Biogas und Biodiesel ein. Irgendwo war mir schon klar, dass Biogas/Biodiesel im grossen Stil ‘Schmarrn’ ist, so to speak, aber ich war geplättet, dass weltweit in Biogas/Biodiesel eine ‘Lösung’ gesehen wird und geschockt darĂĽber, wie weit die Umsetzung fortgeschritten ist, geschockt ĂĽber das Ausmass der Auswirkungen auf die Umwelt, auf Bauern, auf ganze Kulturen. Und alles nur, um den Zusammenbruch unserer bestehenden Ă–konomie und unserer Lebensweise, die auf Ă–l basieren, ein paar Jahre hinaus zu schieben! Macht mich sprachlos. Und was fĂĽr einen Stellenwert hat Mobilität, das Auto, in unserer Gesellschaft, und was fĂĽr einen Einfluss die Autoindustrie!

Read more!


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This entry is part 7 of 11 in the series SOS on Tour

‘Enjoy life while you can’?…

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

earthRead this article about a meeting with James Lovelock, one of the most visionary climate scientists around. Lovelock comes across quite controversial at times. He seems to shift between a pure statement and personal, emotional reactions and interpretations. However what he says definitely needs to be considered, and it can be pretty inspiring: Lovelock is stating that global warming has passed the tipping point and that catastrophe is unstoppable. So: Will we be able to understand and integrate what that means, and will (much fewer of us) finally understand that this is not our planet and learn to live with it? What do you think?…

‘Enjoy life while you can’, by Decca Aitkenhead, The Guardian, Saturday March 1 2008

By the way: James Lovelock is a regular teacher at Schumacher College which is one of the places we visit on our trip. Check out the ‘Sound of Sirens on Tour’ posts.


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This entry is part 2 of 11 in the series SOS on Tour

Rediscovering Ways Of Understanding

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

For those of you who are worrying or wondering about a lifestyle of health and sustainability…:

‘…Within this current benign and remarkably stable interglacial climate, humanity has developed agriculture, what we call civilisation, and finally global industrial culture. All of them have accelerated the pace and power of human cultural and environmental change, but all are dependent on the fragile stability of the interglacial paradise. While the adverse effects of global warming have created a reason once more to contemplate our dependence on larger forces and circumstances, any serious consideration of the next ice age (due any time in the next thousand years or so) would have us designing a modest, generalist, flexible culture, carried by a small global population able to make the transition into and through the long slow years of ice age. We need to break out of the delusion of apparently linear acceleration of human material and numerical progress to a world view in which everything is contained by cycles, waves and pulses that flow between polarities of great stability and intense change, all nested one within the other.
This cyclical view of time is not some new idea, but simply a rediscovery of ways of understanding that are embedded in human cultural history and our collective unconscious.’

Excerpt of: Permaculture / Principles and Pathways Beyond Sustainability by David Holmgren

You can keep digging in that context at www.art-ecology-education.org


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