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First published March 3, 2020
all of the want and suffering in the world - all of it - arises not from the earth's inability to produce but from our inability to share
All human beings are a lot better at describing what is happening than at predicting what will happen. Somewhere along the way, however, we began to hope that scientists were different--that they could be right all the time. And because they're not, we kind of stopped listening. By now we're quite practiced at not listening to things scientists say over and over again.
The more we eat, the more we waste: in 1970, each American wasted 1/3 pound of food a day, on average. Today, that figure is 2/3 of a pound.
Twenty percent of what American families send to the landfill each day is, or recently was, perfectly edible food.
America is not an oil rich nation: the proven oil reserves of the US amount to 3% of the global total, which is bad news for a country so thoroughly committed to the automobile.
I stress one thing above all else: Having hope requires courage. We risk our own paralysis with the message that we have poisoned the earth and so the earth rejects us. I warn my students: Do not be seduced by lazy nihilism.
"We are all part of what is happening to the world, regardless of how we feel about it, regardless of whether we personally "believe" or "deny." Even if you consider yourself on the right side of environmental issues and a true believer in climate change, chances are that you are actively degrading the earth as much as, or more than, the people you argue with. An effort tempered by humility will go much further than one armored with righteousness."