by Soft_Landing » Mon 23 Aug 2004, 11:52:36
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Leanan', 'I')s convenience evil?
Many Americans assume it is. We feel guilty for using disposable diapers. That environmental quiz someone recently posted penalized people if they used convenience foods. Etc.
But is all this convenience really harmful the earth?
I'll suggest something out of left field.
Perhaps the convenience=evil is a dogma that merely fails to correctly specify the correct underlying target.
In other words, people see bad things going together with modern convenience, and find it too easy to associate the two.
Although I may well be making the same error, I'd like to suggest a different construct that may underlie the popular convenience=evil relationship.
I suspect that the real problem is when people lose perspective of the amount of energy they consume, and the amount of waste they produce. In general, anything that increases the perceptual distance between a person and what sustains them could be this (though I truly loathe the word, I'll conform for the purposes of this discussion) 'evil'. And probably, modern conveniences, be they more or less energy or waste efficient on a case by case basis, have a near universal effect of distancing the consumer from awareness of his/her sustainence or consequences.
I have found this approach useful when introducing people to peak oil. At first, I had something of a dismal track record, people didn't take kindly to the message. Now, I prefer to be playful and coy, inviting others to tell me how much oil the human race extracts from the earth each day.
Needless to say, EVERYONE underestimates, even very worldly people. It seems to make them think, sets off the imagination. I frame the problem as a problem of ignorance, not a problem of geology or economics, which tends to allow one to get too bogged down in little details, missing the main point. Anyway, I have decided myself that the main problem is one of ignorance. If everybody the world over understood peak oil, there would be a much greater chance of getting through peak oil transition without unthinkables. The challenge is motivating the masses. I'm not really sure how it can be done.