‘Tis a Mad, Mad (Troubled) World!
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Grace , Quezon City: Apr 23 2008
Made Popular Apr 24 2008

Fired up by earnest concern, downright zeal, sheer creativity, desperation, confusion, or a whole slew of mental and emotional states, some folks have come up with ideas and put out remedies to the malady that ails planet Earth. Some of the initiatives may be downright wacky, still some a bit impractical. But, hey, they’ve made a step towards solving the woes of this one and only planet we call our own – something not all of us can actually claim to have done.

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“Bitublocks” are construction materials made out of junk and waste such as recycled glass, sewage sludge, and incinerator ash. Invented by an engineer at the University of Leeds in England, the refuse with which these materials are made are kept from ending up at landfills. On the other hand, some scientists want to make more environmentally-friendly plastics out of chicken feathers.

Somewhere in Los Angeles, some employees keep a plastic bin of wriggly worms that they feed with their leftover sandwich crusts and apple cores, which the worms turn into compost.

Because carbon dioxide builds up in the atmosphere and warms the Earth, some scientists have proposed to capture plant emissions, compress them, and bury the carbon underground.

China wants to do away with what it calls “white pollution,” or those ubiquitous plastic bags that carry all and sundry, because they clog city street drainage and waterways. Australia wants to eliminate incandescent bulbs, thereby helping reduce greenhouse emissions.

Some scientists have proposed to put a ring of sunlight-scattering particles or micro-spacecraft in orbit around the equator. The ring which could cost trillions of moolah will reduce the amount of solar radiation and cool the planet a bit from greenhouse gases. Think Wayfarers on a beach bum.

Alternatively, some scientists have suggested injecting sulfur into the atmosphere to counteract global warming, in the hope that it could have the same cooling effect that occurs after a sulfur-spewing volcano erupts. Of course, we will need tons and tons of sulfur to do that regularly, as well as expect a lot of acid rain.

There is a suggestion by some people in the know to fertilize parts of the ocean with iron. Iron accelerates phytoplankton growth. Huge plankton blooms will use more carbon dioxide to make food. All the better to make those planktons happy since we have an excess of carbon dioxide.

Some of these ideas may sound zany to you but, most definitely, not to those who conjured them up. Let’s leave them to their insightful concepts. We have some thinking to do on our own, too.

Let’s start to make at least one step towards the solution of the problem. And we’ll do that today, won’t we? If you walk, instead of drive, you will help reduce carbon dioxide emission. The planktons will not be happy for it, but surely they’re already giddy with delight over the glut in CO2. You might also want to consider limiting meat in your meals this week. The meat industry is responsible for 18 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions through fertilizer use, animal manure, and the energy required transporting food and meat, so says the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization.

You may not opt to use “sewage bricks” for your dream home but you can carry your next batch of groceries in a reusable cloth bag. And if you find putting giant sunglasses on earth an out-and-out madcap suggestion, you may simply choose to replace your broken incandescent bulb with a more cost-saving compact fluorescent bulb.

The call is yours. And we’ll take crazy ideas, too, if you have some.

http://www.livescience.com/environment/top10-crazy-environ-ideas-1.html

http://blog.sellsiusrealestate.com/bitublocks-and-vegeblocks/building-houses-from-trash-bitublocks-and-vegeblocks/2007/05/01/

http://phytoplankton.gsfc.nasa.gov/

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1 Stars
Of sewerage sludge and chicken feathers, the symbolic poetry of environmental awareness...

I think it would be great if we could find some way to use principles of quantum mechanics to teleport unwanted carbon molecules (by the countless squintygazillion) to Mars, where they could be used to terraform (i.e. ”green”) the planet. Then we could stop spending so much on weapons and war (a pipe dream) and start sending human beings to Mars. The thing is, however crazy this idea is - people don’t seem to be thinking about the fact that with a growing population and finite resources and real estate - we have no choice - we will need to start a grand interplanetary (and eventually interstellar) exodus. Or fizzle out like a small bacteriological colony suffocating on it’s own waste products on a small, pretty little blue-ish lump of rock adrift in the cosmos.

Crazy enough for you, Grace ? ;)
2 Stars
Grace
Quezon City, Philippines
Sounds crazy but feasible. Man’s imagination can fathom that and he will be able to do that, given a period of time. However, the incongruity between an exponentially ballooning population and the exponentially dwindling finite resources and space stares us in the face, presently.

So, why not add a massive global birth control movement through mandatory dissemination of contraceptive paraphernalia (and the pertinent police action regarding mandated use, as legally supported by strictly enforced internationally ratified laws), much to the chagrin and horror of the Catholic Church.
1 Stars
I have the feeling that the Vatican’s posture on prophylactics is informed more by the fact that they have found that contraception is a place where they can easily influence people (re: the places where religion inserts itself into human activity and influences human insecurities about sex and sexuality). They are probably also more concerned with the proliferation of Catholic believers through the going forth and multiplying of their unprotected parents sexual activities.

How do we convince people to minimise their number of children without becoming Chinese-style procreative dictators (re: one child policy) ?

I have personally found the bible to be positively narcoleptic, however - I doubt whether there is anything even vaguely resembling: ”Thou shalt not use a rubber johnny”. It makes you wonder...

:)
2 Stars
Grace
Quezon City, Philippines
1) Its seat is a miniscule country of non-taxpayers, having its own army. It also happens to be the world’s wealthiest organization. So, there.

2) Its magna carta was initially written, initially packaged, initially promoted, and initially distributed by four men. If only four can do it at the start, well, so can more than four at the moment.

3) Its concept was accidentally handcarried to our shores by a group of navigational explorers whose ship was washed ashore while enroute to Indonesian volcanic islands on what was then the fashion of the times - quest for spices. (Volcanic sulfur isn’t all it’s hyped to be.)

4) Through the relentless parade of centuries, it hasn’t been able to realize its prescribed alternative to contraception becasue this archipelago of 7,101 islands now carries over 88 million people.

5) The Art of Visibility, Graeme, is far more succinct than the Art of Invisibility. :)
1 Stars
Invisibility - Potential.
Visibility - Actual.

Where something does not exist, there is room for growth, for creativity. When something is hidden, it may always be something more than it is. When something is visible it is limited to what it is by our observation of it.
And yet, I yield - yes visibility is more succinct. Invisibility is nothing... void... emptiness... undefined... undefinable. It’s a little Lao Tzu...

The greatest strategy is the strategy of no-strategy.

I am unrepentant and invisible Zen Monkey. :P

:)
1 Stars
Candace
Wellington, New Zealand
Great ideas. It really feels good that people are coming up such ingenious ideas to save earth.

Today what we can only think in dreams can be made reality if each of us contributes our due to the world. It is rightly said that we have not only inherited the earth but also we have made custodians of it for our future generations.
1 Stars
Grace
Quezon City, Philippines
Right. One step at a time. Everyday. Starting now. Even if nature works at breakneck speed, the 6 billion+ action, daily, is a force to reckon with.
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