RACHEL CARSON

RACHEL CARSON

SPACESHIP EARTH

"We travel together, passengers on a little spaceship, dependent upon its vulnerable reserves of air and soil, all committed for our safety to its security and peace; preserved from annihilation only by the care, the work, and, I will say, the love we give our fragile craft. We cannot maintain it half fortunate, half miserable, half confident, half despairing, half slave to the ancient enemies of man, half free in a liberation of resources undreamed of until this day. No craft, no crew can travel safely with such vast contradictions. On their resolution depends the survival of us all."

ADLAI STEVENSON, 1964

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

EVERY DAY IS EARTH DAY: WE LOVE YOU MOTHER EARTH :)

 MOTHER EARTH
 RACHEL CARSON
CHIEF SEATTLE

EARTH DAY IS EVERY DAY: WE LOVE YOU MOTHER EARTH :)

Progress towards a 'planetary consciousness' does not necessarily involve the 'planetization' of human consciousness but DOES require efforts on our part to understand, comprehend, value and love Mother Earth as the planetary being she truly is. We have NO IDEA of who or what she really is: we are miniscule individuals comprising one species of life on Mother Earth, only ONE member of her vast family of life, mitakuye oyasin, 'all my relations.'

To me, Rachel Carson is perhaps the greatest 'advocate of Mother Earth' who has yet to grace Mother Earth in human form. Her books about the sea and then 'Silent Spring' are testaments to her true love and appreciation of life, her scientific acumen, her literary creativity and her spirit of environmental activism.

Check out my blog dedicated to her and to the 'Rachels Carson of Today'

SILENT SPRING, Rachel Carson, 1962 (excerpts)

THE OBLIGATION TO ENDURE (chapter 3)
 

"The history of life on earth has been a history of interaction between living things and their surroundings. To a large extent, the physical form and the habits of the earth's vegetation and its animal life have been molded by the environment. Considering the whole span of earthly time, the opposite effect, in which life actually modifies its surroundings, has been relatively slight. Only within the moment of time represented by the present century has one species—man—acquired significant power to alter the nature of his world.



During the past quarter century this power has not only increased to one of disturbing magnitude but it has changed in character.The most alarming of all man's assaults upon the environment is the contamination of air, earth, rivers, and sea with dangerous and even lethal materials.

It took hundreds of millions of years to produce the life that now inhabits the earth—eons of time in which that developing and evolving and diversifying life reached a state of adjustment and balance with its surroundings. The environment, rigorously shaping and directing the life it supported, contained elements that were hostile as well as supporting. Certain rocks gave out dangerous radiation, even within the light of the sun, from which all life draws its energy, there were short-wave radiations with power to injure. Given time—time not in years but in millennia—life adjusts, and a balance has been reached. For time is the essential ingredient; but in the modern world there is no time. 

The rapidity of change and the speed with which new situations are created follow the impetuous and heedless pace of man rather than the deliberate pace of nature. Radiation is no longer merely the background radiation of rocks, the bombardment of cosmic rays, the ultraviolet of the sun that have existed before there was any life on earth; radiation is now the unnatural creation of man's tampering with the atom. The chemicals to which life is asked to make its adjustment are no longer merely the calcium and silica and copper and all the rest of the minerals washed out of the rocks and carried in rivers to the sea; they are the synthetic creations of man's inventive mind, brewed in his laboratories, and having no counterparts in nature.
 

To adjust to these chemicals would require time on the scale that is nature's; it would require not merely the years of a man's life but the life of generations. And even this, were it by some miracle possible, would be futile, for the new chemicals come from our laboratories in an endless stream...

Some would-be architects of our future look towards a time when it will be possible to alter the human germ plasm by design. But we may easily be doing the same now by inadvertence, for many chemicals, like radiation, bring about gene mutations. It it ironic to think that man might determine his own future by something so seemingly trivial as the choice of an insect spray. 

All this has been risked – for what? Future historians may well be amazed by our distorted sense of proportion. 
How could intelligent beings seek to control a few unwanted species by a method that contaminated the whole environment and brought the threat of disease and death even to their own kind? Yet this is precisely what we have done…"

"We travel together, passengers on a little spaceship, dependent upon its vulnerable reserves of air and soil, all committed for our safety to its security and peace; preserved from annihilation only by the care, the work, and, I will say, the love we give our fragile craft. We cannot maintain it half fortunate, half miserable, half confident, half despairing, half slave to the ancient enemies of man, half free in a liberation of resources undreamed of until this day. No craft, no crew can travel safely with such vast contradictions. On their resolution depends the survival of us all."

ADLAI STEVENSON, 1964

"What we do to the Earth, we do to ourselves." Chief Seattle

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