I had an experience yesterday that I can't shake.
I was driving home from
As I was trying to get back to the freeway I was told "Left to I-90 West" by a sign I had never seen before, though I'd been on that road a number of times. So I turned as it told me to, thinking, "They must have built a new on-ramp." I was in a small ravine at that point, on a wide new road that soon began to rise up into a clearing. The first thing I saw was a huge parking structure, called the "
I drove up the road another 100 yards, nearing its peak, and I suddenly had an unobstructed view all around me. I was top of a small hill, surrounded by machine flattened land, land that fell off behind, in front and to the right of me, and rose up through more hills to the left. This area certainly used to be all pine trees; you could see where the clear cutting had stopped at various clumps of dense trees. Farther in the distance all around were beautiful green hills and mountains, the foothills of the Cascades.
It was as stunningly beautiful place, except that is was not. Track housing had been started up the hill to the left, all the other land was green grass covered flattened lots, prepped for building, to the right some digging had already begun. A shopping center/mini mall was already built and running, and wide roads connected everything. I soon dropped down the hill in front of me, down to the freeway and back to
I'm sure you've all seen the third Matrix installment, “Revolutions” (if you haven't you should, it's pretty entertaining, though in no way ground breaking like the first movie). There is a scene near the end where Neo and Trinity send their hover craft flying in a steep arch up through the cloud cover, up away from the black wasteland that is Earth, and they suddenly break through the violent clouds, into the bright sunshine, where they hover at the top of their arch, Trinity whispers in awe, "it's beautiful....," before they plunge back into the black. I had the same feeling yesterday, only exactly the opposite. I rose up out of beautiful countryside, up into horrifying human sprawl, into land that was once spectacularly beautiful, but was now defiled. The curve of the road was a perfect arch, man made to resemble the path of some flying projectile. I felt like I had entered some terrible fantasy land, poked my head up above the clouds, and 30 seconds later descended back down.
From my view on top of that hill in California a number of years ago I had the feeling that if I just reached down I could scrape off the human scab that was creeping up over the land, expose the earth again which would soon heal itself. I sometimes feel that we are a plague on this earth, eating it up one acre at a time, blissfully jaunting to the local mini-mall hub in our giant SUV’s, uncaring about the destruction that we wreak as we go. It’s going to come back to bite us in the ass though I fear, sooner or later, and I won’t be able to say we don’t deserve everything we get.
3 comments:
I see pictures of this kind of thing in Mexico City and read about it in rural Washington, and I feel a mixture of things. Disappointment, anger, and so forth.
But I always come back to my science. We are animals, and animals use resources. Animals utilize all the resources they can until scarcity causes them to die in vast numbers in a sort of population correction.
It's embedded within a concept called carrying capacity. All you're witnessing is humans pushing the boundaries of carrying capacity. We're a long, long way from utilizing all our resources, but we will. And not even for many, many generations. But we're animals and we will use all our resources.
I think the only thing that could save us is a global cultural change. Anything less would simply permit gluttonous, wasteful cultures to overrun the restrained and efficient ones.
I agree PC, we are animals doing exactly what animals do, and will suffer the consequences in the end, though they be far in the future. The one difference is that we are conscious of the decisions we make, we have choice in the matter. We can stop before we use up all our resources, we don't have to fit into the game of eat or be eaten. Global cultural change is exactly what is needed, and I've had a few ideas on that, perhaps I will write a new blog entry on it while I wait for WoW to get its act together :)
I can agree with the concept of carrying capacity. & I also agree that we are consious of the decisions we make. This gives me hope that A global cultural change can save us.
Will the trouble be that we all have our individual ideas of what that means? & how do we arrive at a mutual understanding?
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