The Emperor Has No Clothes A Practical Guide for Environmental and Social Transformation (28 page)

Read The Emperor Has No Clothes A Practical Guide for Environmental and Social Transformation Online

Authors: John Hagen

Tags: #political, #nuclear power, #agriculture, #communes, #ethics planet earths future, #advertising manipulation, #environmental assessment, #history human, #energy development, #egalitarian society

BOOK: The Emperor Has No Clothes A Practical Guide for Environmental and Social Transformation
13.92Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

If you are interested in finding actual
information produced by climate scientists, the Skeptical Science
web site is a good place to look. A link to their web site is
provided below.

~~~~~~~~~~

http://www.msc.com/
(Monterey
Aquarium site.)

http://www.msc.com
(Marine
Stewardship Council site.)

http://www.skepticalscience.com/
(Scientific Climate Information.)

~~~~~~~~~~

Planet earth is very clearly showing us that
it is moving from a benign state into a new mode that will be more
challenging for human beings to live in. We should take heed of
what is being presented to us. It should be kept in mind that
planet earth can adjust to our activities and continue on without
human beings. Human beings, however, need a planetary environment
that can not be significantly different than what currently
prevails to survive. Looked at from this perspective individually
and collectively we need to discontinue and avoid engaging in
environmentally disruptive practices. PR, gloss, and trying to
lawyer our way around these problems will not work.
We need to
look at these problems as clearly as possible. We also need to be
very pragmatic and use what we have to solve these problems.
Ideologies and theories are traps that prevent us from taking
effective action; they need to be abandoned or ignored. We need to
get the gold dust out of our eyes it's not possible to see these
problems and solve them when we are blinded like this. Some further
observations; the past is only useful to draw lessons from. It
should not be held onto or tried to be recreated. The past is gone
and can not be changed.
The present is the only
time when anything can be effected.
The future is created by
what we do in the present. So waiting or hoping for some type of
imagined future to appear by itself is a complete waste of time and
another trap. Therefore, we must
act now; there is no other
time.
Lets restore our planet to a beautiful healthy state that
can provide all our needs indefinitely, now.

The last question is what kind of personal
traits should the segmented networked society develop and support?
In my view it should provide the means to produce individual and
collective happiness. Therefore, I will conclude this book with
what Shakyamuni Buddha said is the sources of happiness.

~~~~~~~~~~

Mangala Sutta

The Sutra on Happiness, Shakyamuni Buddha

The Buddha was living at Anathapindika
Monastery in the Jetta grove when a deva (a radiant being) appeared
and asked him a question in the form of a verse:

“Many gods and men are eager to know

what are the greatest blessings

which bring about a peaceful and happy
life.

Please, Tathagata (the Buddha), will you
teach us?”

(This is the Buddhas answer ):

“Not to be associated with foolish ones,

to live in the company of wise people,

Honoring those who are worth honoring-

This is the greatest happiness.

“To live in a good environment,

To have planted good seeds

And to realize that you are on the right
path-

This is the greatest happiness.

“To have a chance to learn and grow,

To be skillful in your profession or
craft,

Practicing the precepts and loving
speech-

This is the greatest happiness.

“To be able to serve and support your
parents,

To cherish your own family,

To have a vocation that brings you joy-

This is the greatest happiness.

“To live honestly, generous in giving,

To offer support to relatives and
friends,

Living a life of blameless conduct-

This is the greatest happiness.

“To avoid unwholesome actions,

Not caught by alcoholism or drugs,

And to be diligent in doing good things-

This is the greatest happiness.

“To be humble and polite in manner,

To be grateful and content with a simple
life,

Not missing the occasion to learn the Dharma
107

This is the greatest happiness.

“To persevere and be open to change,

To have regular contact with monks and
nuns,

And to fully participate in Dharma
discussions-

This is the greatest happiness.

“To live diligently and attentively,

To perceive the four Noble Truths,

And to realize nirvana108-

This is the greatest happiness.

“To live in the world

With your heart undisturbed by the world,

With all sorrows ended, dwelling in
peace-

This is the greatest happiness.

“For the one who accomplishes this

Is unvanquished wherever she goes,

Always he is safe and happy-

Happiness lives within oneself.liv

~~~~~~~~~~

Thank you for spending your time reading this
book, J.F. Hagen

~~~~~~~~~~

Resources

The following is a listing of some sources of
information on the formation of intentional communities and
networking:

The Federation of Egalitarian Communities –
http://www.thefec.org
.

LEX is accessed from FEC.

The Fellowship for Intentional Community –
http://www.IC.org

The International Communes Desk –
http://www.communa.org

Twin Oaks Egalitarian Community –
http://www.Twinoaks.org

New Economy Coalition –
http://www.neweconomy.net/

~~~~~0~~~~~

References

i
Black Elk: Black Elk Speaks,

ii Hallowell, Irving. A:
Ojibwa Ontology, Behavior, and world View , Teachings from the
American Earth, Edited

by Dennis Tedlock and
Barbara Tedlock.

iii Banyan, Thomas: The
Essence of Hopi Prophecy,

ausbcomp.com

iv Okumura, Shohaku:
Living by Vow (Wisdom Publications, 2012) P.56

v Okumura, Shohaku: Living
by Vow (Wisdom Publications, 2012) P.56

viLindstrom, Martin:
Brandwashed (Random House, 2011) P.70

viiPublic Papers of the
Presidents, Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1960, p. 1035-1040

viii Tuchman, Barbara W.
The March of Folly, G.K. Hall & Co. Boston 1984

ixMcCann, American
Company, P.45.

xCole Blasier, The
Hovering Giant: U.S. Responses to Revolutionary Change in Latin
America, (University of

Pittsburgh Press, 1976),
pp.55-56; Ronald Schneider, Communism in Guatemala 1944-1954 (New
York; Prager,

1959), p48.

xiSchlesinger, Stephen
& Kinzer, Stephen: Bitter Fruit,( Doubleday, 1990) pp
86-87.

xiiMcKillop, Heather: The
Ancient Maya, (ABC-CLIO inc., Santa Barbara, 2004) pp.
122-129.

xiiiWebster, David: The
Fall of the Ancient Maya, (Thames and Hudson, New York, New York ,
2002) p.301.

xivMontgomery, David R.:
Dirt, (University of California Press, 2007) p. 137

xvIshikawa, Eisuke: The
Edo Period had an Ecological Society, (Kodansha Publishing Co.,
2000)

xviTotman, Conrad: The
Green Archipelago; Forestry in Preindustrial Japan, (University of
California Press,

1989).

xviiMarten, Gerry: How
Japan Saved its Forests: The Birth of Silviculture and Community
Forest Management,

pp. 1-4: excerpted from
Environmental Tipping Points, (Journal of Policy Studies (Japan),
No.20 (July 2005)

xviiiIwamoto, Junichi: The
Development of Japanese Forestry, (Internet Source).

xixDiamond, Jared:
Collapse, (Viking/Penguin press, 2005) p. 305.

xxMcClain James, L: A
Modern History of Japan, W.W. Norton & Co., New York, 2002) p.
131.

xxiGreene, D.C.,:
Correspondence between William II of Holland and the Shogun of
Japan A.D. 1844,

(Transactions of the
Asiatic Society of Japan 39 (1907), pp. 110-115.

xxiiNational Snow and Ice
data Center: Contribution of the Cryosphere to Changes in Sea
Level, 6 February

2010.

xxiiiFeely, R. A.,
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, July 2008. ; Data
from Mona Loa & Ocean

Station Aloha.

xxivKoenig, Seth: Dead
Muds, (Bangor Daily News, 7 October 2011).

xxvEPA (2010), Methane and
Nitrous Oxide Emissions from Natural Sources

xxviDressler, Andrew, et
al.: American Geophysical Union (excerpted from NASA web site) 18
November 2008.

xxviiEPA; (2010), Methane
and Nitrous Oxide Emissions from Natural Sources.

xxviiiKusky, Timothy:
Climate Change, (Infobase Publishing, New York, New York., 2009) p
49.

xxixFrancis, Jenifer A.
& Vavrus, Stephen J: Evidence linking Arctic amplification to
extreme weather in mid-

latitudes, (Geophysical
Research Letters, Vol. 39, L06801, March 2012) p 1.

xxxUnited Nations
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 2014.

xxxiCanadian Natural
Resources: Internet source.

xxxiiWalliser, Jessica:
Good Bug Bad Bug, (Tien Wah Press, 2011) p ii.

xxxiiiPimental, David:
Journal of the Environment & Sustainability Vol. 8,
2008.

xxxivPeng S. et al., :
Proceedings of The national Academy of Sciences: 101:9971-75,
2004.

xxxvDavis, William: Wheat
Belly, (Rodale Press, 2011).

xxxviJensen, Derrick &
Draffan, George: Strangely Like War, (Chelsea Green Publishing Co.,
2003) p 45'

xxxviiEarth Policy
Institute: Washington D.C., 2012 (Internet Source).

xxxviiiRosenberg, Andrew
A., W. Jeffrey Bolster, Karen E. Alexander, William B. Leavenworth,
Andrew B

Cooper, Matthew G.
McKenzie: The History of Ocean Resources; Modeling Cod Biomass
Using Historical

Records. (Frontiers in
Ecology And Environment 3, no.2 , 2005).

xxxixPauly, Daniel &
Maclean, Jay: In a Perfect Ocean, (Island Press, 2003) p
31.

xlEpstein, P. R.,
Buonocore, J. J., Eckerle, K., Hendryx, M., Stout III, B.M.,
Heinberg, R., Clapp, R.W., May, B.,

Reinhart, N. L., Ahern, M.
M., Doshi, S. K., Glustrom, L. : Full Cost Accounting for the Life
Cycle of Coal,

(Annals of the New York
Academy of Sciences, 2011)

xliFreese, Barbara: Coal a
Human History, (Pegasus Publishing, 2003) p 171.\

xliiOreskes, Naomi &
Conway, Erik M.: Merchants of Doubt, (Bloomsbury Press, New York,
2010)

xliiiBlees, Tom:
Prescription for the Planet, (Booksurge.com, 2008).

xlivKeith, David &
Adams, Amanda: Rethinking Wind Power, (Journal of Environmental
Research Letters,

2013 ; Internet
Publication)

xlvBeyea, J., Nicues, JW.,
Susser, M.: Cancer Near Three Mile Island Nuclear Plant, (American
Journal of

Epidemiology,
1990).

xlviCharpak, Georges,
Garwin, Richard L.: Megawatts and Megatons, (University of Chicago
Press, Chicago,

2002).

xlviiCravens, Gwyneth;
Power to Save the World, (Alfred A. Knof, 2007) p. 211.

xlviiiHannum, William H,
Marsh, Gerald E, Stanford, George S: (Scientific American, December
2005) p. 87.

xlix U.S. Agriculture and
Forestry Greenhouse Gas Inventory: 1990-2008. Climate Change
Program Office,

Office of Chief Economist,
U.S. Department of Agriculture. Technical Bulletin No. 1930, June,
2011.

lLal, R.: Soil Carbon
Sequestration to Mitigate Climate Change, (Internet Source) p.
13.

liOrdman, Alfred: Personal
Communication, 2014.

liiKinkade, Kat: Is it
Utopia Yet?, Twin Oaks Publishing, 1994.

liiiFarming Systems Trial,
Rodale Institute, 2014.

livNhat, Hanh Thich, et
al: Translation from the Pali Canon: Awakening of he Heart,
(Parallax Press, 2012) pp.

497 – 498

 

E-book formatting by Bill
Powelson <
[email protected]
>

Other books

Noelle's Christmas Crush by Angela Darling
Birthday Bride by Marie Pinkerton
Facing the Music by Andrea Laurence
Find Angel! (A Frank Angel Western #1) by Frederick H. Christian
Doing My Own Thing by Nikki Carter
The Crooked God Machine by Autumn Christian
Anthem's Fall by S.L. Dunn