McKibben
opens his article about the degree of which we have impacted the environment
with an analogy. The invisible line in war such as the nuclear bomb draws a
whole new hand with which chaos can be wrought upon the land. The invisible
line in environmentalism was crossed once people found out that our actions
have changed weather patterns, dried forests, melted ice that has existed for
centuries, and killed off or endangered hundreds of species. Attempts in the
past have been made to fix this but have ultimately done very little in the
grand scheme of things. Humanity’s search for wealth, resources, and power has crippled
its ability to see the damage being done to their very home and it is almost
too late. Even with McKibben’s suggested shift to an environment-based economy
it would be tough to save the Earth, and that’s only if we could somehow
convince everyone to do this. McKibben also blames the United States by saying,
“(they’ve) eaten all of the world’s cake, and are now making it hard to put
even bread on the table.” This highlights the problems that America’s consumer
population has given to the world. But McKibben also points out that local
farmers markets are a fast growing sector of the U.S. economy and believes that
a shift back towards local and regional awareness will help to grow the environmentalist
movement as well.
If the current economic system can't adapt quickly enough, the bioregionalism and evironment-based economy may be the only solution.
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