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Nurturing the Emergence of a Thrivable Future - http://thenextedge.org/
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Confessions of a Recovering Environmentalist | Orion Magazine

Confessions of a Recovering Environmentalist | Orion Magazine | The Next Edge | Scoop.it

"I became an “environmentalist” because of a strong emotional reaction to wild places and the other-than-human world: to beech trees and hedgerows and pounding waterfalls, to songbirds and sunsets, to the flying fish in the Java Sea and the canopy of the rainforest at dusk when the gibbons come to the waterside to feed. From that reaction came a feeling, which became a series of thoughts: that such things are precious for their own sake, that they are food for the human soul, and that they need people to speak for them to, and defend them from, other people, because they cannot speak our language and we have forgotten how to speak theirs. And because we are killing them to feed ourselves and we know it and we care about it, sometimes, but we do it anyway because we are hungry, or we have persuaded ourselves that we are."

 

by Paul Kingsnorth

ht @DavePollard

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Feeding the world while protecting the planet

Feeding the world while protecting the planet | The Next Edge | Scoop.it
The problem is stark: One billion people on earth don't have enough food right now. It's estimated that by 2050 there will be more than nine billion people living on the planet.

Via Wildcat2030
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