"For, being green, there is great hope" (quote from Shakespeare's HENRY VI PART 2, ACT 3 SCENE 1)
By Di_Hard
- 2034 reads
Some people are angry that Just Stop Oil threw coloured cornflour at Stonehenge. Because the structure is old? A symbol of how humans have survived for thousands of years? How we are capable of working togather to achieve something that must have seemed unachievable to many?
As unachievable as a Green Revolution?
No one, now, knows the purpose of Stonehenge. New examples of the intelligence of those distant minds who dreamed it up continues to come to light, many ways of mapping the movements of stars into the future.
We can see into the future, but we choose not to. We can see that climate change is happening in the floods and heatwaves. We know how to stop it becoming unstoppable
but we choose not to.
We say, smugly, the Younger generation, our children, they will fix it.
The younger generation we imprisoned in their bedrooms during Covid. The ones whose chances of work are being honed down and down to Amazon warehouses and waitressing. The ones who have worse mental health than ever before, who have suicide as one of the leading causes of death.
Or maybe they are already too old. Maybe the ones at preschool now? Those innocent ones who sit infront of their screens with the sole purpose of keeping them quiet. We used to watch stuff when we were their age, didn't we? Carefully crafted, magical programs we remember even now. The internet must have far more examples from all over the world for children to watch and be stimulated by, guiding them into being curious about life, stimulating their imaginations, introducing ideas of ethics and responsibility, of trust and kindness.
But there are so many, many more hours of screentime to fill these days as parents have to work longer and longer hours and are more and more tired. How to make all these extra much needed programs without increasing licence fees or asking for subscriptions? AI of course! Adults might notice the difference, the lack of coherence, the UNHUMANNESS, but little children, they won't. And though AI produced content doesn't need the work of human writers, actors, animators, musicians, those who take the trouble to put it online need a living, which is where advertising comes in. Beautiful, expensive, carefully contructed advertisements aimed at guiding children into trusting a brand, stimulating their imagination that they could be happy if only they could have that one enticing product. And the next, and the next.
There is to be an election. The other day, in an interview, someone was asked about education. He mentioned with pride how many children go on to Further education - did not mention how funding for further education has been cut and cut, resulting in much of the equipment at the college my son goes to being irrelevent to current practices, or broken; nor how the last months before the end of term more and more days the college has been closed while their tutors strike for more pay, leaving modules untought. Compared to the Health service, "Our" National Health, it is not a priority (even in the Health service there is inequality - some children have waited over half their lives for an operation)
My son is old enough to vote, but he won't. He cannot see the point as no one cares about his generation, no one will care for decades.
This is what happens when there is no opportunity for creative expression in schools, when childen are not given the tools to express their hopes and fears, to explore their imaginations, to make dreams come alive on paper.
Perhaps that was the point of all the changes to education, to make it all about grammar and report writing, all about still life in art and playing other people's music.
Teaching children passively to watch success in other people's lives and know it is as unobtainable as the toys they could not have as little children because their parents were not paid a decent living. Teaching them not to expect to own a home, be healed when they are sick, breathe fresh air, safely drink water from the tap....
Those in Power shout warnings about the Right and the Left, shout with anger at anything they see as a threat to the past
while taking away the Future.
I don't know what Stonehenge was for, but an edifice that took so much time and effort to create must have had importance, must have commanded respect, attention. Maybe offerings were made on its stones to ask for a good harvest, for healthy families, for making the right decision
perhaps human sacrifices?
Orange coloured cornflour seems tame compared to all the deaths that climate change will bring, the sacrifice we seem willing to make to keep using oil to manufacture plastic, fertilizer, deisel, electricity.
If we do not take climate change seriously, continue to rely on fossil fuels, only stones will survive
and our disposable plastic of course
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Comments
A rant from the heart - thank
A rant from the heart - thank you for sharing Di. I'm so sorry to hear that your son doesn't feel it's worth voting.
Is the title a quote from somewhere?
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That is amazing! What
That is amazing! What foresight he had! It's not really a copyright thing Di, it's just a: I was curious, and b: it's considered usual when you quote to cite your source, that's all. You could put an asterisk at the end of your writing, then it doesn't get in the way of the impact of anything
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There always have been and
There always have been and always will be frustrations in this fallen world, Di. That is not to say we don't try to work to put right the inustices, foolish wastes etc that we see at any given time, but it keeps from despair and self-righteousness. And to see that the most urgent need of all, young and old, is to have the Creator's help as we live in the world we are living in and amongst the situations we find ourselves, and our young people find themselves. To have grace and hope (for daily help, and a future without waste or climate danger) and love when we wake and go to sleep is what Jesus Christ came to make possible and to offer each personally. And he can and will save this world properly. Which as said is not to say we don't do what we can and urge others too, but also work on the small problems and above all encourage that personal relationship for each with the Almighty. Rhiannon
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Thank you for posting this,
Thank you for posting this, Di, definitely one from the heart. It is so sad when young people feel a vote is worthless and they have no investment in democracy. It is very true that many people feel the climate crisis is something vague in the future, when of course it is happening around us now, and we are leaving a terrible legacy for those young people.
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Your concern for the future
Your concern for the future of our children, our society, and our climate and its effects, shines out intelligently from your article. I enjoyed folowing your thoughts on these matters and I do agree. As with some other very relevant pieces, I would like to share this one on my facebook, to my very limited audience, if you are happy with that, as I think it is well worth sharing?
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Pick of the Day
This is our Facebook and Twitter/X Pick of the Day! Please share/re-post if you like it.
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I love a good 'ol rant, Di.
I love a good 'ol rant, Di. Not enough folks ranting about stuff that needs to be ranted about. Something like that. Glad yu had the right stuff. x
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A thoughtful piece
Sorry to read that your son can't see the point in voting. I understand his frustrations, but feel that lets politicians off the hook. If his main concern is environmental issues a vote for the Green Party counts forr something as the numbers rack up, even if our present electoral system deprives them of seats in Parliament. I fear that people saying they won't vote gives politicians a green light to follow paths that reflect the opinions of people who are in a minority but will vote.
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Depressingly good
This is a depressingly accurate account of the mess that the world is in at the moment, and nobody seems to be doing anything about putting it right. We can recycle our empties, and turn our lights off and we can struggle to shelter our kids from the mass media but what we can each do personally to improve our circumstances only scratches the surface of what needs to be done by governments and global companies. I feel despair and frustration every time I read the news. What's the point of even thinking about it all?
I can understand your son not wanting to vote. If I lived in Britain I wouldn't know who to vote for. It's important that people do vote though because democracy seems to be gradually drifting away from us and giving up our votes is giving in to those who want that.
It was these words of yours that struck a chord with me...
Those in Power shout warnings about the Right and the Left, shout with anger at anything they see as a threat to the past
while taking away the Future.
Good on you Di.
Turlough
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The same wavelength
Thatcher was an awful woman but at least she knew what she was doing.
What you have written matters a lot to me too. It's good to be on the same wavelength.
Turlough
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I can't fathom it
I can't fathom how she could live with herself at all. She brought so much misery.
Turlough
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New shoots
I regret that I find it impossible to justify or forgive Thatcher's actions. Too many destroyed businesses, broken homes, nervous breakdowns and suicides lay in her wake as well her damage to Britain's industry. Then there was her atrocious handling of the Falkland Islands, the North of Ireland, apartheid in South Africa, the Hillsborough disaster, the miner's strike, Reagan's cruise missile bases in Britain and friendship with fascist dictator Pinochet in Chile. And after all those Christmas dinners with him, she must have known something about Jimmy Savile. But similarly I cannot forgive Blair for the war in Iraq.
Our garden is sort of tidy and there are a few new shoots on the trees that survived but there will be no fruit or flowers this year. The clearing up operation was heartbreaking... dozens and dozens of wheelbarrows full of grapes, pears, figs and plums mixed with leaves and branches. On the plus side we have a compost heap as big as a whale. Our two cars went to the scrapyard last Wednesday and the insurance fella's coming to talk to us about a new roof on Wednesday.
But we're alive and the weather is beautiful when it's not trying to destroy us and the whole thing seems to have brought us closer to our lovely Bulgarian neighbours.
I hope all's well with you and yours and your lovely island.
Turlough
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Maria of the Two Houses
It's really sad. There aren't many leaves on the trees and their aren't many birds around since the storm. It's very quiet in a garden normally filled with birdsong. I'm hoping they've gone somewhere else but I have some doubts about their welfare.
Maria of the Two Houses gets a bit bad tempered at the best of times and over indulges daily in her homemade rakia. She won't be making rakia this year though because all her grapes were destroyed. So maybe that's a blessing. Though hers was probably the best I've ever tasted because she distills it twice. Her chickens were outside when the hail struck so there were casualties amongst them too.
Our cars were only written off because all of the lights and mirrors were smashed and because they were old it was impossible to get new parts for them. If we'd only needed a couple of bits I'd have tried scrapyards (though I'm no expert) but we needed eight lamp units and four electrically operated wing mirrors. The bodywork was covered in hundreds of dents too. Mechanically they were fine but legally they weren't fit to drive.
We look at it as an unfortunate but rich experience that we will never forget but hope it won't be repeated on such a scale. Fingers crossed for the rest of our lives.
Turlough
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I was wondering where you
"We say, smugly, the Younger generation, our children, they will fix it."
For sure, all that will be left is stones but I would question the JSO shenanigans at Stonehenge. Of all the places to protest, the spiritual capital of the country and somewhere synonymous with nature, history, mysticism and a long line of other things seemed incredibly counter-productive and simply alienated many people sympathetic to their message. There are rare lichen living on the stones apart from anything else and it was a desecration of a revered site. Yes, protest by all means but choose appropriate targets. I know they went on to orange powder Taylor Swift's jet which seems a little less ludicrous but maybe more in sync with their values.
I see governents trying to get to grips with the Climate Crisis but struggling with the seemingly intractable costs involved. For everyone to switch to electric cars by 2030/35 in the UK, a whole heap of things need to happen but the main thing is to get the average price down. Ordinary folk will never be able to afford £35K+ to replace their car or whatever the mean cost of a second hand car eventually settles at. Ditto with replacement boilers and the llst goes on.
Notwithstanding, the severe consequences of evolving weather extremes are with us and have been for quite a while so answers need to be found and found now. Our leaders need to get together at a global level and take the issue far more seriously and with less self-interest.
Your points about how young people view the world particularly resonated with me, Di. I know you have said before about students being stifled within curricula and a dogmatic approach to what's important.
I commented on another post recently that I am sure that overall wealth has skewed in favour of the older generation at the expense of the younger over the last few decades. High house prices, massive deposits needed, large student debt leaving University (albeit I think it's still free in Scotland to nationals?), the insecurity of renting. It's a much tougher transition post school than it was for my generation.
Again, I am not saying older people are minted (far from it for many) but when there is a finite pot of money, I believe that youngsters have been getting an increasingly raw deal. I think this needs addressing properly. Our sons and daughters are our future and they should start out in life with optmism and ambition and not saddled with huge debt. I could go on about the vagaries of the university system and how it's become a money-making conveyor belt not fit for purpose but I won't. For now :)
A thought-provoking piece, well written and beautifully articulated. You raise critical questions that need sensible answers.
I think we all want a better future. It's how we get there that's the challenge.
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I should clearly be listening
I should clearly be listening to Radio 4 so much more.
Labour are talking about using "grey belt" land to build some of the 1.5m new houses over the next 5 years. So land like disused former petrol stations that have gone to seed. The concern is green belt land being classified as "grey belt" with landowners manipulating any new definition. I think with Labour's huge majority and the fact that they have already re-instated manditory new build targets, it's hard to see how this all doesn't involve greenery being concreted over with new towns etc.
Re universities: My point there is that back in the 70s and 80s something like 1 in 5 students went on to University. As I have been droning about this for so long, a friend of mine validated my claim and I think it was something like 17% in the late 70s. Everybody else went on to apprentiships or work. There wasn't an assumed snobery around taking up a trade.
Over the last few decades, that percentage has got so high that virtually every school leaver thinks the next step is to go to Uni and the take up in things like plumbers, electricians, builders etc has suffered meaning significant reliance on people coming from other countries who don't shun that way of earning a living. Not everyone can get a degree and go straight to being a CEO.
The mindset has started to shift now, probably due to the residual debt young people end up before they even start out in life. Other options are becoming more prevalent like a revised focus on apprentiships, practical skills training and work-based sponsorships. University was traditionally suited to the most academically gifted rather than being a one-stop shop for all. Economically, that historic model should still apply.
These are just my thoughts and many will disagree with me. I just think young people should find the right place in life to suit them and that is NOT automatically via a university system that doesn't necessarily mirror what businesses want from the next generation of employees.
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Thanks for those links, Di.
Thanks for those links, Di.
I guess the shopping list of issues to be resolved will always be weighty. Human beings are a deeply flawed species. On the upside, young people seem to be more aware and in touch with things like environmental challenges and I am hopeful that they will turn things around as they go out into the world after leaving school/college/Uni.
In the meantime, I hope your son revels in his time at Uni. As much as it's about creating a platform for a career, it's also about a lifestyle experience and everything that entails. Yes, I hope he enjoys it and comes out the other side happier, wiser and stronger. There's a big future waiting for him.
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