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A Planetary Culture
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What is needed is a new international
humanitarian era based on the common ground of humanity
- looking to life and common humanism as the core value
for a sustainable society. This means not just human life.
It means the whole spectrum of life that creates the biosphere.
People cannot live on beliefs, ideals
and other imponderables alone. They need food, work, education
and satisfaction of desires for themselves and their children.
A sustainable society will look at new ways of producing
sustainable energy and sustainable agriculture. A new
global era implies the imbuing of education literacy and
life affirming values in every global citizen.
For too long the vast populations of
our planet, through ignorance, misinformation and silence,
have been unable to understand the cause - effect relationships
between the real origins of their misfortunes and the
destruction of our planet. Ingrained and elitist attitudes
of governments and industries prevent non-polluting, free
energy producing systems and sustainable production of
food for all.
It is the consciousness of the ordinary
global citizen which can create an alternative plan and
a New World Peace Era for the planet.
A Planetary Culture implies science,
technology, healing relationships, economics, government
and education seen from the broadest perspective - not
nation based, but global and holistically based, stimulating
new ways of thinking to enhance our connectedness, and
goes beyond isms and ideologies to recognising the sacredness
of all life. It implies the creation of new art, literature
and music, and the development of a life philosophy which
is based on the universal principles inherent in human
activity.
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The Old Paradigm
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Social Political and Economic
Transformation
Present economic, corporate and
social policies are largely inconsistent with viable,
long term global development and are being made without
the vision of a viable global future in mind.
Structure of Relationship Between Developed
and Developing Nations
There exists a crisis in transferral of technology and
resources to the developing world. Further, there exists
an overwhelming Third World debt.
Two conditions must be satisfied before
international economic exchanges can become beneficial
for all: the sustainability of ecosystems on which the
Global economy depends must be guaranteed, and the economic
partners must be satisfied that the basis of exchange
is equitable. For living standards to grow in order to
alleviate poverty, trends towards depressed commodity
prices, protectionism, intolerable debt burdens and declining
flows of development finance must be reversed.
Macro - Environmental Global
Issues
The 1990s will see the largest
number of children ever born in a single decade (1.5 billion).
82% of children in the world live in developing nations.
Every two seconds a child dies
In the developing world a billion
people live below the hunger line. Many of these people
are illiterate. Environmental phenomena such as the greenhouse
effect, climate change, ozone depletion and acid rain
are intricately interconnected. Technology developed in
the name of progress, and high resource and energy consumption
by the developed world, is at the root of the destruction
of the environment.
No threat is greater, no crisis
more profound to common humanity, than the threat of nuclear
war. There are between 40,000 and 50,000 nuclear warheads
in the world today - enough to destroy sixty times Earth's
population. Fifteen to twenty developing countries will
have nuclear capability by the end of this decade.
For a fraction of arms race spending,
about $1,000 million annually, sanitation and clean water
could be supplied to all the deprived peoples of the world.
Widespread diseases could be prevented; schooling and
medicine provided.
Specific Global Issues - Crisis
Between Rich and Poor
By the end of this century
there will be at least 6 billion people on this planet,
compared to 1.5 billion at the start of the century. Three
in every five people will be hungry and very poor if current
trends persist. The crisis between rich and poor causes
increasing enmity. The increasing population leads to
further degradation of the environment. Priority must
be given to stabilising and reducing the population, and
therefore the demand on world resources, by the use of
family planning and contraception.
A Global Crisis of Social Values
The global crisis is symptomatic
of the inadequacies of our social values. Ethical and
moral value systems have not evolved swiftly enough to
keep up with technological inventiveness, thereby keeping
rampant greed in check. We are living through a crisis
of international relationships in which only a profound
social epiphany, leading to a paradigmatic shift unlike
any other in history, can save us from total self destruction.
We must re-appraise the way we define
ourselves and what it means to be a human being. We must
re-examine and redefine concepts of good and evil and
how we apply them to ourselves. We must stop valuing each
other, and ourselves, by an unsteady hierarchical system
which instigates suspicion, defensiveness and secrecy.
Instead, we must develop an outlook of partnership and
mutualism, whereby the individual is encouraged to develop
fully and then contribute their unique abilities to the
planet as part of a synergistic whole.