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Deep Sustainability
Deep Sustainability: A Vision
For The Global Villager In Us All
by Roar Ramesh Bjonnes
It's shopping day at your local natural foods market.You are
looking for yogurt as usual. But today is different. You are
not only shopping for health and taste. You are shopping for
quality. Deeper qualities. You want to know which brand is better
for the cows and the earth? Which brand that is the most sustainable?
Should you buy Horizon, Stonyfield or Nancy's?
If you talk to marketing representatives from each company, they
will likely claim that their farming methods are very sustainable.
But, in reality, one is prone to be more sustainable than the
others. Which brand? And why?
Horizon, a $127 million public corporation from Colorado recently
bought Organic Cow from Vermont and specializes in "ultrapasteurized"
milk. This process--which "kills the milk," destroying
its enzymes and many of its vitamins--is applied so that they
can sell milk over long distances. Horizon, I am told, is known
for its factory farms. Thousands of cows that never encounter
a blade of grass spend their lives confined to a fenced dry lot.
Horizon controls 70 percent of the organic milk retail market,
thus writer Michael Polan calls
the company "the Microsoft of organic milk." Does it
sound sustainable to you?
What about Stonyfield Farms? The New Hampshire-based yogurt maker
claims that when you buy a cup of their organic yogurt, you're
helping save family farms, prevent ecological degradation, and
improve human health. All in one tasteful cup! While all of that
may be true, you don't live in New Hampshire, you live in Oregon.
So, why support the shipping of that yogurt container across
a whole continent of gas-guzzling highways?
Maybe the most important sustainability criteria, and one that
is often overlooked, is that products should be locally produced.
The closer to home the better. Thus Nancy's yogurt starts to
look like a favorite. Because Nancy's organic milk products fits
all of these criteria, and more. Famed for its delicious yogurt
and kefir products, Nancy's hails from our own bio-region, more
precisely in Springfield, Oregon. Moreover, if you read the label
carefully, Nancy's organic yogurt is made from milk produced
by the family farm members of
Organic Valley Cooperative. Sounds like a winner to me.
Cascadian Farm--started in 1971 by Gene Kahn as a food collective--is
a sustainable company, right? Maybe not. Now owned and operated
by General Mills, and with Kahn as a controversial millionaire,
many organic farmers and activists believe Cascadian Farm is
a symbol of a disturbing trend: the gradual takeover of the sustainability
movement by corporate agribusiness. What a confusing world we
live in. You buy a jar of Cascadian Farm organic strawberry jam
at the local coop, visualizing you are supporting Kahn's original
dream. In reality you are buying a corporate showcase.
You may recently have noticed that your local supermarket is
selling organic Dole bananas, and you may think the world has
changed overnight. But has it? Dole is still a $5.1 billion company,
and the world's largest producer and marketer of conventional
fruit and vegetables. Just imagine how many tons of pesticides
and chemical fertilizers this company consumes every year! But
if you talk to Sharon Hayes, director of environmental affairs
for Dole Food Co, she will simply tell you that Dole has a "commitment
to environmental leadership and consumer choice." So, is
Dole going completely pastoral, or is it just marketing and business
as usual? Confusing times indeed.
When shopping for sustainability, we must therefore look beyond
the wholesome brands and the organic labels. We must ask deeper
questions. We must distinguish between shallow sustainability
and deep sustainability. So, how can we better support a sustainable
economy, culture, and worldview? How can we cultivate sustainability
in our own lives? Below are some suggestions:
Sustainable Vision:
What should the underlying values of a sustainable economy be
based upon? The late British economist E. F. Schumacher wrote:"No
system or machinery or economic doctrine or theory stands on
its own two feet: it is variably built on a metaphysical foundation,
that is to say, upon our basic outlook on life, its meaning and
its purpose." For author David C. Korten, this "basic
outlook" is our spirituality. He affirms that "a sustainable
society needs a spiritual foundation." Why? Because spirituality,
not materialism, is the ultimate foundation of life. What we
can do: Open our inner vision through study and practice of both
spirituality and science. Learn how the world of matter and spirit
complement each other. Embrace the alchemical truth: As above,
so below.
Sustainable Spiritual Practice:
Philosopher Ken Wilber believes that we cannot achieve a sustainable
society without leaders and activists rooted in sustainable spiritual
practice. Our mutual agreement on how to solve our environmental
and economic problems, he says, "depends absolutely upon
individuals who can transcend their egoic and selfish perspectives
and rise to a more worldcentric, global consciousness."
And the best way to achieve this, he thinks, is through an inner
process of spiritual transformation. To truly be able to understand
and serve
Gaia, we must also understand and serve our higher Self.
What we can do: Start a daily meditation or contemplative prayer
practice. Combine that with a more body-oriented practice such
as yoga and tai chi. As within, so without.
Local Economics: From sustainable development theorists to environmental
activists, from bio-regionalists to natural capitalists, from
Thomas Jefferson to the Indian sage-philosopher P. R. Sarkar,
economic decentralization is seen as the only panacea for the
economic exploitation caused by centralized economies. Paul Hawken's
natural capitalism speaks of the need to "replace nationally
and internationally produced items with products created locally
and regionally."
What we can do: Vote with our dollars by supporting local enterprises,
especially small businesses, artisans, cooperatives, and their
products. The more local, the better. Boycott multinational franchises
such as Wal-Mart, McDonald's, etc.
Production for consumption, not profit. A consumption economy
is an integral aspect of a decentralized economy and should not
be confused with a profit-oriented consumer economy. A consumption
economy is an economy where goods are produced as per people's
needs. A consumer economy is an economy where goods are produced
and sold solely for profit. Since, the consumption economy's
main goal is to satisfy basic human needs, it also provides the
economic security needed for people's non-material sources of
fulfillment--family, community, culture, and spirituality.
What you can do: Reduce your material consumption. Support local
businesses that produce basic human needs, such as bakeries,
farms, agricultural coops, community gardens, farmer's markets,
etc.
Cooperative enterprises. The Darwinian notion that competition
promoted the evolutionary survival of the fittest individual
is outdated. New research reveals that evolutionary success had
more to do with the survival of the fittest community through
interwoven cooperation. Thus cooperation, not competition, must
be the cornerstone of a more equitable and sustainable economy.
What we can do: Support our local food coop, farmer's coop, etc.
Purchase products made by coops rather than by corporations.
Small-scale private enterprises. Proponents of today's free market
capitalism seem to have forgotten that their mentor, Adam Smith,
proposed a market structure in which there were no corporate
businesses with monopolistic powers. Similarly, P.R. Sarkar claims
that excessive inequities can best be avoided if private enterprises
consists mainly of small businesses such as restaurants, stores,
artisan shops, service and cottage industries with only a few
employees. Small-scale, private capitalism stimulates the entrepreneurial
spirit and purchasing power of individuals and families, yet
avoids the gross disparity and poverty so often caused by unbridled
concentration of wealth in the hands of corporate monopolies.
Large corporations can in turn be transformed into cooperatives.
What we can do: Support your local bookstore, clothing store,
artisan, and other local merchants on Main Street, USA. If possible,
boycott large corporations.
Eco-villages. While most eco-villages are located in the affluent
countries of the North, some also focus on helping poor, rural
communities in the South achieve self-sufficiency. One such project
is the Future Vision Ecological Park in the interior of Sao Paulo
state, Brazil. According to its founder, Didi Anandamitra, the
goal of this project is "to provide a practical model for
social and economic life that can be replicated in communities,
especially rural communities, anywhere." (www.sustainablevillages.org)
What we can do: Start an eco-village, a co-housing project, a
community garden, or simply visit such a project for learning
and inspiration. Create community by starting or joining a discussion
group.
Economic democracy. Concentration of wealth and economic power
corrupts the political process. In Third World countries, especially,
money buys votes outright, and the moguls of capital maintain
the ultimate veto power of capital flight.Money must not be allowed
to rule politics, and power must be extended beyond the political
sphere and into the economic sphere.
What we can do: Support Living Wage initiatives as well as measures
that redistribute wealth from the top down.
Self-sufficient, regional economies. People can best collaborate
in social and economic development if they work together within
regional socio-economic units that are defined on the basis of
common economic potentials, common economic problems, similar
geographic features, ethnic similarity, and common sentimental
legacy. Regional economies need to control their resources and
capital and be totally free from any kind of domination by outside
economic forces.
What we can do: Seek out and support local, organic farmers and
other businesses that utilize local resources. Support Native
American causes. Boycott "foreign companies" that exploit
local resources and labor.
Deep ecological ethic: The ultimate solution to all environmental
problems lies in a deep spiritual understanding of what nature
is and how it operates. From this deep understanding of human
psychology and spirituality, on the one hand, and the natural
world, on the other, humanity can develop a genuine environmental
ethics. In other words, develop a balanced socio-economic philosophy
based on the dynamic interrelationship between the fields of
ecology, economy and spirituality. At this point in history,
this is one of humanity's most urgent tasks.
What we can do: Meditate and study. Learn from science, from
nature, from local elders, and from indigenous cultures.
Free and fair trade. The giant globalization efforts by the World
Trade Organization, the International Monetary Fund, and the
World Bank is promoting "free trade" and "free
markets" as a panacea for creating prosperity and sustainability.
Yet, today's so-called free trade between rich and poor nations,
between the North and the South, is neither free nor fair. It
favors large corporations over small scale enterprises, it has
widened the gap between the rich and the poor, and it has increased
environmental degradation.
What we can do: Shop locally, think globally. But if you can't
shop locally, support "fair trade" businesses.
Cultural vitality. The irony of material development is that
it has created what Paul Wactel calls "the poverty of affluence."
While consumerism has enticed people in the Western world into
gorging on material things, it has failed to provide a sense
of inner fulfillment. Restoring a community's non-material treasures
and cultural roots is an integral part of overcoming the inner
poverty of affluence.
What we can do: Support local music, arts, theater and crafts.
Support your local church, mosque, ashram, or temple.
Sustainable globalism. Decentralization, self-sufficiency, and
smaller scale industries does not mean neglecting a global agenda.
We need a global movement with at least three, separate, yet
integrated goals: 1) a strengthening of the global polity through
the UN, combined with a gradual movement toward a global federation,
or world-government that can safeguard the needs and rights of
people and the environment, 2) the formation of self-sufficient,
socio-economic regions of free and fair trade zones--that is,
a global grid of
sustainable and self-sufficient trading partners, and 3) the
development of a global movement rooted in a life-affirming vision
of spirituality and oneness with all of creation.
What we can do: Protest against the current globalization efforts
by the IMF and the World Bank. Donate money or your labor to
activist groups. Cultivate a global, sustainable vision of oneness
with Spirit and of cooperation with Gaia.
Roar Ramesh Bjonnes is a freelance writer, a contributing editor
of New Renaissance magazine (www.ru.org), and co-founder of Center
for Sustainable Villages (www.sustainablevillages.org). He lives
in Marshall, North Carolina. |