Since the new year started, the world has continued its
downward spiral into chaos. Whether we end up in true chaos remains to be seen.
Of course, one can look at it the other way--that everything that has happened
is business as usual, or politics as usual. Who can say? Since the beginning of
January, the American president took out a high-ranking Iranian general, Iran
responded by bombing American military bases in Iraq, Iran's military shot down
a commercial plane carrying innocent passengers using two missiles and killing
all onboard, Iran withdrew from its nuclear treaty, there have been several
earthquakes in Puerto Rico of all places, hurricanes along the English coast,
Australia's bushfires are out of control and it's estimated that a billion
animals have died in addition to nearly twenty-five people, Meghan and Harry
(Megxit) have seceded from the British monarchy in order to pursue independent
lives, the push for impeachment of the American president continues, 2020 is an
election year for the American presidency, leading most to wonder how impeachment proceedings will affect election activities during the year, one of
Norway's prominent young writers/artists who committed suicide on Christmas Day
was buried on January 3rd in one of the saddest and rawest funeral services I
have witnessed on national TV, climate change continues to dominate global
conversations (as well it should), top companies in the USA and in Norway are
having economic problems/going bankrupt leading them to close stores nationwide
and lay off many people. And the list goes on. It's as though all the world's
loans and bills 'came due' simultaneously, meaning that we now have to pay back
and pay out in full for our greed and foolishness and ostrich-like behaviour.
We cannot afford to keep our heads stuck in the sand any
longer. We cannot shove the problems before us for the next generation to
solve. Greed has caused so many problems, globalism likewise. The quest for
greater profits, large company mergers, global solutions for what should be
national solutions, global expansion at all costs in the name of profit, is
killing the world slowly. Respect for the life around us has taken a back seat.
We cannot continue on this path.
I have talked to many people, young and middle-aged, about
these problems, and most agree that we need to change the way we live our
lives. It doesn't have to be dramatic, but if everyone does their part, there
will be noticeable change on a global scale. We can start by living simpler
lives, walking and exercising more, eating less (and cutting down on meat
consumption), buying less food and not throwing it away when it is unused,
buying what we need instead of buying impulsively, watching less TV, not buying
new cell phones and new cars every year or every other year, repairing
appliances instead of tossing them (this also means that companies must step up
to the plate and do their part to manufacture appliances that last longer than
five years, in other words, they need to eliminate built-in obsolescence in the
name of profit). We can cut down/eliminate our use of plastic bags, and try not
to buy bottled water (although this means that community water purification
systems have to function optimally at all times in order to provide drinkable
tap water). We need national healthcare in the USA that is affordable and
equitable for all. We need to elect politicians who think this way, who are
interested in preserving the planet, who are not hypocrites when it comes to
how they live, who are service-oriented and kind people. We need more Jimmy and
Rosalynn Carters, who have spent their retirement years building homes for
others, not just thinking of themselves or traveling around the country
lecturing and earning millions for their lectures so that they can buy fancy
homes. We need politicians who are willing to serve and to inspire their
constituents. We need more respect for others and less argumentativeness, we
need more service-oriented attitudes and less self-entitlement, we need more
generosity and less greed, we need more kindness and less bullying and hate
talk. We need to get on the same page in order to solve the problems in front
of us; the solutions are not black and white. We cannot rely on religion to
show us the way, because many religions have their own internal problems to
solve first before they can preach to their followers about how they should
live. In short, we cannot wait for others to show us how to live; the changes
must come from us, from the grassroots, and move upward. It should not take a world
war or a pandemic to force us into the action necessary to change us and to
save our planet.