The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) does not ignore the challenges we face as the global human population passes 7 billion, but does stress optimism in their 2011 State of the World Population (UNFPA, 2011). Positive thinking can be helpful, but the UNFPA is unfortunately stuck in the mindset of perpetual economic growth. We must acknowledge that global economic growth is inherently unsustainable if we are to understand the nature of the challenges we confront. Throughout the report there is the underlying assumption that economic growth is always the fundamental goal, even in industrialized nations. There is, however, a hint of the problem in the section on environmental issues tucked at the end. The problem, one expert notes, is not growing population but growing levels of consumption. Economic growth, if we fill in the dots, means an increase in consumption.

UNFPA, 2011. State of the World 2011, United Nations Population Fund, http://foweb.unfpa.org/SWP2011/reports/EN-SWOP2011-FINAL.pdf, accessed 31 October 2011.

The global human population reached 7 billion today, according to the UNFPA’s 2011 State of the World Population.

Occupy Shawnee!

Demonstrators in Woodland Park on 14 October 2011

OK, I was there and I briefly held a sign, but isn’t the message kind of lost here? After all, the 99% already occupy Shawnee. The point is more clear on Wall Street. Nevertheless, spirits were high in Woodland Park, and the people did outnumber the squirrels. Passersby seemed receptive once the message was explained to them. The veteran’s sign says “I fought for all of America not just 1%”.

An article in the Shawnee News-Star tells us that free books can now be downloaded on your Kindle at the public library. Thank you to librarians across the country for convincing Amazon to loosen their license to allow this!

At the Catalpa Cottage we have partial water pressure. We are conserving water, cognizant that some households in Shawnee have none. A good excuse to blog instead of wash dishes!

There have been multiple water main breaks. The city crews have been working to repair eight or more breaks, plus there is hypothesized to be a big break as yet unlocated. I understand the hot, dry weather causes the earth to shift and lines to break. In Shawnee the temperature exceeded 110 Fahrenheit today. It’s forecast to be warmer tomorrow!

Read my new essay on software!

backhoeWe had to have a new sewer line put in at the Catalpa Cottage. It took out my row of cucumbers, but they weren’t weathering the drought very well anyway. Hopefully some of the bean plants will survive. We should have gone for a composting toilet and a washboard, but maybe next time.

fireworks

fireworks at Shawnee Twin Lakes

We drove up to the picnic area and unloaded the car. We walked to the picnic table, Karen carrying the tofu salad and I carrying the baby. A police officer immediately drove up and informed us that the park was about to close, although it was teaming with boaters and anglers. We packed up the car and drove around the corner to a gravel parking lot that was not a city park, sat on the grass, ate our salad, and watched fireworks across the lake. We wouldn’t want to break any rules!

Community Garden

Swiss Chard at the Community Garden


I visited the Shawnee Community Garden this morning. I thought it was supposed to be a work day. There was no one there, but obviously someone’s been tending it! My own backyard garden has been struggling with the heat. I’ve been watering it by bucket; we finally hooked up a hose today.

Zheng and coworkers (2011) report that rates of deforestation currently exceed rates of afforestation in all regions of the continuous United States of America (USA). Their analysis indicates that forest disturbance is associated with reductions in carbon sinks. Thus we may conclude that forest policy in the USA is exacerbating anthropogenic climate change. Climate change, in turn, feeds back to affect the frequency and scale of forest disturbances that contribute to deforestation and destabilize forestry-dependent economies (Keskitalo et al.,2011).

Keskitalo and coworkers (2011) argue that forestry sectors need to adapt to environmental change and economic change concurrently. We need to recognize that these changes are aspects of the same phenomenon, the inherently unsustainable nature of expanding economies.

Literature cited

Keskitalo, E. Carina H.; Nicole Klenk; Ryan Bullock; Andrea L. Smith; and Dawn R. Bazely 2011. Preparing for and responding to disturbance: Examples from the forest sector in Sweden and Canada. Forests 2:505-524, doi: 10.3390/f2020505

Zheng, Daolan; Linda S. Heath; Mark J. Ducey; and James E. Smith 2011. Carbon changes in conterminous US forests associated with growth and major disturbances: 1992-2001. Environmental Research Letters 6:1 014012 doi: 10.1088/1748-9326/6/1/014012, http://iopscience.iop.org/1748-9326/6/1/014012/, accessed 3 April 2011.