Sunday, January 24, 2010

We are the Avatars

Avatar delivers a strong message that only the people can stop large corporations. The greed for resources is totally destroying all life on Earth.

I was reluctant to see the film. I pictured these flying blue beings in some glorified video game. However, a friend recently commented that he saw the film and said it had ties to the war in Iraq. OK, how can flying blue beings (Navi) from another planet called Pandora have anything to do with the Iraq war here on our blue planet?

For those that haven't seen the film, the computer effects will blow you away, but while that aspect had some bearing of enjoyment, it was the film's message that had the heaviest impact. Many action films have a shallow story based on heroism, romance, and killing of course, but Avatar was much more than that.

The media wonders why audience members leave the theater feeling depressed after viewing Avatar. It is called the
Avatar blues. How can anyone who knows anything about reality on this planet be happy about this movie or what's happening in our world? There are very good reasons for being depressed after viewing the movie and it has nothing to do with the film but the message. We are destroying life on Earth and we are the Avatars.

We are
over populating the planet beyond our resources and expecting other nations to be developed like the U.S.A. and Europe. Oil is not renewable. Water and food are limited resources. We continue to destroy forests all over the world and are responsible for the sixth extinction. We are also impacting the climate of the planet. How is this sustainable? We currently live in the sixth extinction, where massive numbers of species are becoming extinct in our lifetimes caused primarily by humans due to resource exploitation, lack of habitat, and pollution. This is the largest extinction in humankind's history. This sixth extinction can equate to mass extinctions caused by asteroids and ice ages, only the current asteroid comes in the form of almost seven billion humans on Earth.

Now, that we consider multi-national corporations persons, according to the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling last week, we may have our fate sealed as money is now considered free speech. We are the disabled wheel chair bound soldier at the mercy of huge corporations because we are desperate for jobs at any cost to survive. We are told that those people over there are terrorists, savages, and sub-human, but they are much like us. They wish to live in peace, but we are using up our resources so we must take resources from others. We call it the war on terror. We believe we are righteous in our religious beliefs and way of life that we must change those who are different from us. We are told by the corporate media that we're spreading freedom and democracy, but instead we help these multi-national corporations steal from other countries in order to make a profit. The "savages" defend themselves (Iraq, Afghanistan, etc.). We call it terrorism.

When Jake Sully realizes that the Navi are interconnected to all life in the forest, we reflect on how disconnected we are to all life on our planet. This is why some viewers leave the theater depressed. We wish we were part of a super living organism where we live in harmony. Instead we are part of super human consumerism where we are programmed to destroy all life in order to survive.

We have no idea that our throw away society kills all life on the planet every day. We are blinded by propaganda from media controlled by money machines not by individual human beings that actually want to save our precious planet.

America needs to wake up and face this reality that we are the Avatars and we will face the same demise as the "savages" in the movie. It may not be that dramatic and colorful, but we will lose all our resources if we don't change our ways. We must become active citizens, not absent and apathetic consumers.

The film reminds us of what our ancestors had perpetrated on other cultures like the American Indian, the Aborigine, Africans, and many others because we had the technology to destroy them and their way of life. We took their land and resources because we could, but it didn't mean it was right. We continue to do so.

The ending of the film may have been unrealistic, since the Navi didn't have the technology to confront those with political power and billions upon billions of dollars for sophisticated weapons of mass destruction. However, the film leaves us with hope that if we all work together we can create the change we wish to see in the world, as Ghandi put it.

My hope is that we will. Avatar was more than a movie; it was a political message that we like Sully, must wake up to the reality that we are being dominated and force fed to consume ourselves into extinction. We can do something about. Get active, get educated, and get involved. Use your mind and your resources to make the change to save life on this blue planet. This includes humankind.

We don't have any other blue planets or moons to live upon so this is it! There isn't a Pandora out there that we can just fly to. Earth is our home. What do you want for your children and grandchildren?





Friday, March 27, 2009

Multi-national corporations stifle communities

Are multi-national corporations stifling communities?

There’s a movement in the air and you see it everywhere. People are being called to action and are taking the challenge. People are flocking in large numbers to events involving renewable energy, energy conservation, and community gardening. Americans are beginning to meet their neighbors and participating in community events.

I don’t know if it’s because
President Obama has asked us to do our part or if Americans feel an impending doom looming (peak oil, global warming, resources running out, etc.) on the horizon. Maybe citizens are noticing friends, family, and neighbors losing their jobs, homes, and lives in the name of profits for multi-national corporations.

Is it quite possible that Americans are finally waking up to the corruption taking place for the past 30 years or more? People are fuming about the
bank bailouts, AIG, and other scandals involving our tax dollars. Many of these citizens never took much interest in politics before, but when it comes to the people’s pocketbooks and their faltering futures they begin to take notice.

So maybe it’s time to talk to the neighbors and become citizen lobbyists. Maybe this is a fight against the million dollar corporate lobbyists for our freedoms and our rights. Communities are supporting small local businesses and community organizations for sustainable change. The birds are singing and everything will be wonderful again.

Wait a minute...there’s a stumbling block in the road. It’s more than a block it’s a
BIG BOX! “No, you can’t post your flyer here for your small business,” the (insert big box store) customer service representative replied. I was posting flyers for a company I work for this week and received the same answer at many other large corporate stores. (Toys R Us, King Soopers (Krogers), and Whole Foods were the exceptions.)

Remember the days as a kid and we’d put up a flyer in the grocery store or other business to advertise babysitting or lawn mowing? Now even grocery stores and other large stores are shutting the doors to supporting local small businesses. Non-profits are okay, but for profit small businesses that aren’t even competing with these stores are not allowed.

Even large corporations want to
stop workers from organizing unions. Yet give millions in bonuses to CEOs who fail in their positions.

Let’s not forget the huge
insurance companies. They won’t insure many of us because we have pre-existing conditions and/or insurance premiums are so high they’re untouchable.

How about the corporate media being
owned by only six people? The news media seems to be enamored with stories on murders and terrorists. We rarely see headlines on local or national movements or businesses creating positive change.

No,
multi-national corporations are not for communities. Many of these corporations pride themselves in the amount they give back to communities in donations and participation in community events. Yet, their big box buildings, labor practices, outsourcing of jobs, pushing employees onto welfare, and accepting tax subsidies, credits, and bailouts on the backs of taxpayers FAR OUTWAYS any small gesture to communities. The damage they create in low wages, destruction of the environment, and encouragement of wasting resources seems to be having a negative impact on the global society. Stuff is much more important than people it seems in American culture according to the corporations. Can Americans find true love and honest friendships through the stuff they accumulate?

No, the last thing these multi-national corporations want us to do is to talk to each other. If we actually talked to each other we wouldn’t be so afraid anymore. If we aren’t afraid anymore we won’t buy all the stuff they push upon us like a drug. Wait
pharmaceutical corporations push drugs onto the public and doctors all the time. Doctors focus on medicating instead of finding ways to improve our health and well-being. Why don’t doctors promote more exercise, diet, preventative care, and building positive relationships with fellow human beings and nature?

If Americans stopped buying so much stuff and began actually sharing with others that could quite possibly create a cultural shift where people come before profits. Americans could quite possibly be energy independent, create their own products, and not ones produced across vast oceans.

The last thing the mega corporations want are citizens creating community. If we continue to be unthinking and unquestioning consumers, we give up our freedoms. That’s good for big business. Shall we will continue to give our money away to corporations in bailouts, tax subsidies, and legislation in favor of big business? Will Americans stand up and speak out?.

Americans could very well become the creative inventors, entrepreneurs, and caring people we really are deep inside. We could become much more powerful than any multi-national conglomerate and we could quite possibly work as quickly as we did during the space race to make this happen. Can Americans, not corporations, become the world leaders we once were?

Shall we continue to allow corporations to stifle community building? Or should we begin to get involved and take action?

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Near Zero Homes Not Nearly Green

Green is in! Go green! Even the U.S. Department of Energy is going green! NOT!

I had the opportunity to visit the "Near Zero Energy Homes" designed by Harvard Communities Architects with help from the Dept. of Energy. The development is located out at Stapleton in Denver, Colorado. The homes are built to LEED standards and may be energy efficient, but they are NOT green.

I can't understand how a 4,000 square foot home, located at 9126 E. 35th Avenue, and selling for $758,000 would be considered green. Most homes of this magnitude and price range usually only house two to four people, even though they could house many more. The rest of the house is used to fill up with STUFF. The homes promote consuming not conserving. It also has a two car garage to fill up with more cars or more stuff. To learn more about how consuming is not green check out www.thestoryofstuff.com.

Now I will give the builder credit for using recycled building materials, solar panels, excellent insulation, and thermal heat exchange. The builder stated that the power bill for an entire year would be no more than $525. Great! What about the cost to buy the place? What about the cost to build it and all the resources whether recycled or not that were used? Is that green? Who in this economy can afford that? Are only the rich allowed to be green?

What about south facing windows? The south facing windows in the upstairs were so tiny and up so high that they were only useful for ambient light. Passive solar is virtually non-existent in this home, which is important in green building.

You should check out the bathroom! It had two shower heads, a garden tub, and two sinks, with a huge counter in between. This a great place to collect more stuff. Not to mention the attached walk-in closet that Imelda Marcos or Carrie Bradshaw's (Sex in the City) shoes would love. Again I ask, "A green home?"

I was pleased with the recycled glass countertops and the home was insulated well. However when the designers were asked why the home was so huge, they stated that the cost of EE upgrades ($50,000), had to be a smaller fraction in comparison to the value of the home.

So those of us out here living on a middle to low income and want to buy a home valued at $250,000, you still would have to pay $50,000 in green upgrades. That is a larger fraction in the cost of building the home to larger more expensive home. Therefore green isn't valued in our society for middle to low income people. A view of the mountains is more valuable than saving energy. I think that's sad.

When I mentioned straw bale homes and how efficient they are to the builders, they scoffed and one designer claimed that straw bale homes have an R-value of only 16. Who did this guy think he was talking to? Anyone who knows straw bale knows the R-value is 35-48.

While the attempt at a green community is notable, the homes are not green. If you want to learn about truly green and affordable homes, check out: http://www.greenhomebuilding.com/ask_the_experts.htm