1950:
Once, when we were younger,
when the world was less damaged, abundance seemed to be everlasting. Oceans
were clean and teeming with fish. It was incomprehensible that whole river
systems could ever die. Land was fertile. Our surroundings were attractive. It
was unimaginable that the world could be turned into a slum. But over a
relatively short period of time, with each person saving their own skin, we’ve
nothing left to pass on. The damage is done and we haven’t been able to stop
ourselves from continually taking, and taking more and taking faster.
Instead of learning from our
mistakes, the human race has refined cruelty, increased slavery, wrecked
forests, polluted the air and land, and generally become addicted to an
increasingly unsustainable lifestyle. Now we’re in all sorts of trouble.
From a state of plenty we’ve
built up a debt burden. Our collective debts won’t easily be paid back. But we
must try to make a start. It isn’t impossible, surely?
Debt mentality gave us the
false impression of being richer than we were and, like any bubble, it had to
burst. That realisation dawned on us slowly at first, then we caught up with
reality, and then it gathered speed as we took more and more for granted. Now,
with less clean air, less fresh water, less bird song in the morning, we’re
learning the big lesson about debt – that it seems so benign at first but becomes
inevitably toxic. It’s a bit like animal food itself or anything else we’re not
entitled to - it kills the best in us.
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