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BlueWolf: Questions for our future PDF Print E-mail
Written by James BlueWolf   
Sunday, 24 June 2007

Over the last decade, I have achieved some notoriety for writing letters to the editor that could charitably be described as somewhere between preaching and diatribe. My true intent has generally been that of education however, like most opinionated adults, I have served my own ideals and agendas with little apology.


Though I probably will continue in this fashion in other articles this time I will hold myself to questions that are of importance to Lake County residents. The questions I pose will, I hope, stimulate reasoned and comprehensive discussions of issues important to the future of our county.


What concept of growth or progress should we accept? If the traditional western model of continual population expansion, construction and development is to be accepted, how can we escape the eventual overcrowding, destruction of rural agrarianism and degradation of our natural resources that inevitably follows?


What are the qualities of Lake County we cherish the most? What makes Lake County special besides the personalities and energy of its citizens? If we value the open space, the trees, birds and animals that share it with us and give it character, how can we protect their future?


If it is the quality of our water; the lake, creeks, springs and wells that sustain us, what can be done to absolutely insure their quality and abundance?


If it is the soil that holds the seed of our sustenance should modern systems fail, what can be done to insure that enough remains open and available to agriculture to provide food or fuels for our future survival?


If it is the quality of the air, purest in the state, how can we demand that every aspect of our development and lifestyle preserve that purity?


Should we decide that the preservation of the previously described natural resources be a priority of commitment, these questions set the boundaries of other questions.


As a small rural community, can we reasonably expect the same levels of service and maintenance that larger cities provide or will we instead embrace and be proud of our rural nature, understanding the economic limits to public services that our priorities will sustain?


Do we continue to widen our streets and highways for the inevitable obsession of additional automobiles or do we make commitments to a myriad of forms of public transportation for our workforce, as well as senior and disabled citizens?


Can we keep our communities from spreading uncontrollably until, in some far future, they grow together to create one continual town that encircles the lake? What can be done to grow them internally so that each is its own self-contained community that holds all the necessary elements for its citizens so they are not required to drive elsewhere for necessities?


If we commit to controlling our growth and development, how can the businesses that depend on that growth continue and prosper, or must the concept of mushrooming profits that define “progress” be redefined to allow only the best and most respected to survive? What type of new business growth could contribute to a “green” and “organic” and more “self-sufficient” Lake County?


How can we begin to treat the epidemic of drug and alcohol abuse sickness that affects so many of our citizens? Could a commitment to the arts, music, entertainment, family agriculture and education contribute to gatherings and community spirit events to promote that healing?


How will we encourage growth in businesses or technologies that provide a living wage and how can we restrain the price of land and homes so that our own children can afford them, rather than seeing them purchased by higher income urban refugees looking for investment properties?


These are just some of the questions we need to discuss. What are your opinions?


James BlueWolf lives in Lakeport.


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Donna Christopher Author | 06-24-2007 10:46:48
You ask great questions. Unfortunately as a species we no longer have the requisite knowledge to answer them. We used to, but it has been replaced by greed and ignorance (by design I contend). Al Gore thinks we have 10 years to get it together in order to save the planet. I think we passed the point of no return in the early 90's.Thats the big picture. On the local level we now have some folks in office who only care about how much they can get out of what they have here so they can move to some other rural place because they screwed Lake County up so badly in their hurry to make it look like a northern suburb of the Bay Area. Lather, rinse, repeat. As a species we are doomed, perhaps rightfully so.
Raphael - Vision... IP:12.218.156.xxx | 06-24-2007 19:15:40
Hi Jim, great idea to ask questions and start a forum on this...
It is my opinion that we cannot change the course of this civilization without a vision...It is not merely a matter of survival, but of redefining our place within the living universe...(It is ultimately a philosophical and spiritual question, not simply a practical matter of switching technologies).
Yet spiritual beliefs and philosophical outlook cannot and should never be forced on anyone. We are curently still living under a mixed influence (the outcome of centuries of coercion) of Greco-Roman and Middle Eastern (Christian) patriarchal world views (the latest discoveries of quantum physics have yet to influence our political systems and social structures, not to mention our medical practices), and these beliefs complement each other to separate us mentally, emotionally and spiritually from the natural creation in the following manner: science told us in the 19th century that the universe was a mechanic, made of purely physical "stuff" whose only motivation was blind survival and consequently competition and conflict, which lead to the idea of chaos and to the validation of our own patriarchal social systems of competition, wars, conflict, conquest, domination and of lack of humility, cooperation, sharing, balance and harmony (all considered feminine and "unworthy", "inferior" or even "evil" ideals).
Religion told us the wilderness (the untouched creation) was the abode of the "devil", which validated in the eyes of the agressors the destruction of indigenous people who were then said to live under the influence of such "devil" (the wilderness) because living close to and in harmony with nature...It still teaches the myth of the fall from paradise and the essential cursing and abandonment of the natural earth by the Christian God, which translates into the complete conceptual separation of the Creator from the creation, and, like materialistic science, takes spirit or consciousness out of the physical world and paves the way to desecration, abuse, to the rape on the environment, even to the extreme belief that to destroy the earth is to do "God's work" by speeding up the "second coming"...
The most dangerous and destructive view however is a fragmented perception of life that this civilization has embraced since the Greeks began their scientific and mathematical inventory of the living creation. It causes us, to this day, to remain unable to connect the dots in the most basic manner between causes and effects, to be surprised when our war against nature (our attempted conquest and mastery of nature) has negative consequences because its disrupts the order and balance of the natural world.
Without a change of perspective, which would also be a form of spiritual healing because our civilization is borderline schizoid (conceptually rooted in divisions, separations and conflicts), how could we hope to simply and magically return to balance?...
Balance requires humility, something that is profoundly lacking in this civilization. It requires us to accept that we are not and will never be the masters of nature, of the living universe, but its guests and caretakers. It requires us to accept more humble lifestyles, to relinquish our imperial aspirations, to live within our intended means and in harmony with all life.
What is harmony? If we do not know, we can learn by patiently observing nature, not under a microscope or in the laboratory, not through a computer model, but in a direct and holistic manner, by looking at the whole picture, at the cycles of life that all complement each other. We can also test our own sustainability by burying everything we discard in our own backyards...if it makes our properties inhabitable because toxic or because we run out of room to bury our junk, we are not living in harmony with the earth. When we at last understand the basics, we can then rebuild a culture based on this comprehension, which would lead to spiritual understanding and knowledge, because the spiritual and physical world cannot be separated, and this is actually the key, the way to our survival: to understand the basic oneness of the creation.
Do we have time to undertake this learning process? no. Has the world the will to even begin? no. The poor, the sick and the oppressed are, as in Africa, too busy attempting to survive, the wealthy and powerful are too busy becoming more wealthy and more powerful, and the average are made to remain entranced by myths of progress, of endless technological breakthroughs and of scientific omnipotence or, for some, by Christian promises of rapture and of the second coming...
Humanity will learn oneness the hard way, not through the middle path of balance as in buddhism, but through paradox: through global destruction and hardship, humanity will finally comprehend that it, and all of nature, are one, inseparable, undivided, as one living organism, one in consciousness and in physical life...(not one as in everybody being the same, which is uniformity under authority, the patriarchal death model, but one in multiplicity, which is infinite diversity within creativity, the feminine life principle).
Without such a global shift in consciousness, how can a locality resist the unslaught of social engineering (globalization) or of the general folly of eternal production-consumption that invade not only a physical area but our psyches? The only people who are able to resist effectively do so outside of the mainstream, forming their own intentional communities around a consensus of fundamental ideas that generally reject the status quo and the irrational phylosophical premises of the dominant culture.
These people might be the only survivors, or the role models, when humanity finally reaches its destination, and reaches it at full speed: the inevitable brick wall it has erected long ago in its own consciousness.
patsy - the endless "me decade" Registered | 06-25-2007 12:31:47
good thinking, Blue Wolf.
when author Tom Wolfe coined the phrase "the me decade" for the 1970s, who could have guessed it would be endless?

the satirical news source The Onion sums it up:
[b]'Me Decade' Celebrates 35th Year
[/b]
NEW YORK—The "Me Decade," a period beginning in 1970 and marked by self-awareness and self-fulfillment, celebrated its 35th year Monday. "With careerism, materialism, and general self-involvement as popular as they were decades ago, the Me Decade may well go on for another 35 years," said historian and Columbia University professor Dr. Vera Conklin. "It's been the longest-running decade in American history, beating the selfless 'Greatest Generation' of the '40s by a good 15 years. Selfishness, it seems, is here to stay." Author Tom Wolfe, who coined the term in his essay "The Me Decade And The Third Great Awakening," was unavailable for comment, as he is working on his memoirs.

Will we ever get to the "us decade"?
Raphael - Too bad... Author | 07-01-2007 22:17:37
...no more interest and responses came out of the issues raised by Jim...Are there only 3 or 4 people who read this on line paper? (Donna, Patsy, Jim, DW and I?)
Why is it that we cannot look at the larger picture?...Given the fact that this civilization is moving forward at a neck breaking speed, shouldn't we start looking at the map to see where we are going, particularly since we seem to be globally headed for a cliff? Or have people been beaten into believing that only "experts" (with a corporate agenda of profits at any cost and no responsability to the people of the world) and bureaucrats are qualified to address such important issues? We can see the job they have done so far, can't we?
lcnewsadmin - Some folks are just shy Super Administrator | 07-06-2007 15:05:12
But you can take it from me that the numbers of people on this site are quite high and growing daily. Maybe a lot of people aren't used to having a place to share ideas broadly and be counted as part of the community. Maybe they are suspicious of something new, open and free.

One thing is sure, they are here reading and watching, the thoughts and ideas in BlueWolf's question are now part of the community lexicon.

John
Donna Christopher Author | 07-06-2007 11:06:54
More people read this site and more people really do care. It is just so overwhelming at times that even a flappy lipped windbag such as myself is stunned into silence. The answers for sustainability are out there and have been for some time. There's just alot more greedheads. What is visited upon us in the near future is of our own doing, either thru indifference or outright neglect. Oops, I forgot the God made me do it crowd, you know, the world is our oyster, so suck'em up and lets not be late for the rapture. Feel free to leave without me.
Raphael - I understand being overwhewlme Author | 07-08-2007 02:52:31
especially under this administration that assaulted and almost eliminated 30 years of environmental gains, and is generally speaking the most demented (possessed?) I have seen so far...Yeah there is the "God gave it to us and we will do as we please with it" dominion crowd, and then there is the "Omnipotent Science will find a way out" crowd, and between them and us overwhelmed and overworked "producers-consumers", it can seem hopeless...but looking at Mendocino county, it seems they are doing a lot more to keep their economy local, to grow organic food, to keep the GMO's out, etc...It seems they are more willing to fight for what they believe...is Lake County that much more conservative? It's really idiotic to make sustainability a partisan issue, since a polluted planet will ultimately kill everyone regardless of color or creed, but as you say Donna some just want to get what they think is their share even if it means sacrificing their own children's future in the process, and this mentality is difficult to understand, because it is neither human nor animal...are we dealing with mutants?
I think admitting that we are all overwhelmed is a good start to begin a conversation about our local and global future, because it is not a natural state...I think we are made to feel this way and kept in this condition of alienation, passivity, powerlessness and hopelessness by the powers that be, who gain ever more control while we have ever less. Reaching out to other people, we might understand that our feelings of powerlessness or confusion are not personal failures but designed by those who manipulate us (medias, politicians, etc) to keep us defeated. It is ultimately a lack of communication, trust and cooperation between us the people that allows the government of any nation to become that much more overpowering and possibly oppressive, as in the old "divide and conquer", and to rob us blind among other things (pollute us blind, etc)
I am glad to know a lot of people read this site.
In case some people remain silent because afraid of being monitored by some government agency for speaking their mind, let them monitor us until it becomes a crime to have an opinion, at which point it will be time to either leave the country or make them leave!
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