A few quotes:
"It is a great oddity that a corporation, which properly speaking has no self, is by definition selfish, responsible only to itself. This is an impersonal, abstract selfishness, limitlessly acquisitive, but unable to look so far ahead as to preserve its own sources and supplies. The selfishness of the fossil fuel industries by nature is self-annihilating; but so, always, has been the selfishness of the agribusiness corporations. Land, as Wes Jackson has said, has thus been made as exhaustible as oil or coal." p.16
"...we are no longer talking about theoretical alternaties to corporate rule. We are talking with practical urgency about an obvious need. Now the two great aims of industrialism-- replacement of people by technology and concentration of wealth into the hands of a small plutocracy-- seem close to fulfillment." p.22
"No amount of fiddling with capitalism to regulate and humanize it, no pointless rhetoric on the virtues of capitalism or socialism, no billions or trillions spent on "defense" of the "American dream," can for long disguise this failure. The evidences of it are everywhere: eroded, wasted, or degraded soils; damaged or destroyed ecosystems; extinction of species; whole landscapes defaced, gouged, flooded, or blown up; pollution of the whole atmosphere and of the water cycle; "dead zones" in the coastal waters, of mineable minerals and ores; natural health and beauty replaced by a heartless and sickening ugliness. Perhaps its greatest success is an astounding increase in the destructiveness, and therefore the profitability, of war." p. 22
"To live we depend unconditionally on our membership in the community of creatures, living and unliving, that we call the ecosphere. Every life in the terrestrial ecosphere depends unconditionally, in turn, on a thin layer of fertile topsoil that in most places is a few inches or a few feet deep and that accumulates slowly. In a climate such as ours it deepens by perhaps one inch in a thousand years. This layer of topsoil is made by the decay of rock, by sunlight and rain, and by the life and death of all the creatures, but mainly of the plants-- mainly perennial plants-- that grow from it, die into it, and by covering it year-round protect it from erosion and hold it in place." p. 72
"Too much of the talk and politics of conservation consists of slogans such as "Think globally, act locally" or even single words, such as "green" or "sustainable" or "organic," that act like slogans. Such lazy language does harm. It becomes useful, in fact, to land-abusing corporations." p. 88
"Our fundamental problem is world-destruction, caused by an irreconcilable contradiction between the natural world and the engineered world of industrialism. This conflict between nature and human interest may have begun with the first tools and weapons, but only with the triumph of industrialism has it become absolute." p. 89