I may get around to commenting on this soon, but the guardian seems to be doing a pretty good job at that - in the meantime here’s some video. I am hoping that there will be some daily video reports appearing, but I hear they are having trouble due to police blocking access to the site.
Well - it wasn’t a hoax, Peter got a bit confused with semantics and wrongly accused the tribe as being reported as undiscovered. He seemed to be mixing up ‘unknown’ or ‘undiscovered’ with ‘uncontacted’ (which is how Survival International described them) and unfortunately for him, he shouted about it in a national paper.
Anyway - as if that wasn’t bad enough, he then (in a moment of panic?) telephoned Survival International and threatened to sue them:
“Hello, this is Peter Beaumont from The Observer here. I’m getting extremely irritated about the way in which you’re associating me with the allegation that you may have been responsible for a hoax. If you use that word once more, either in association with emails or letters sent to my office or anywhere else, I will be taking legal action and I will sue you for defamation or libel, whichever is appropriate. I’m available at 077x xxx xxxx. You are really on the brink of going too far, so I suggest you get in touch with me.” Listen to the actual voicemail
Stephen Corry, Director of Survival, said today, ‘This is the first time in 39 years that a journalist has threatened to take legal proceedings against us. What makes it all the more astonishing is that the wave of reports precipitated by Mr Beaumont’s article has seriously undermined the fight for tribal peoples’ rights. So far from taking responsibility for the inaccuracies of his piece, he’s going to sue us unless we keep quiet! It might reflect better on The Observer if they simply acknowledged that they had got it wrong, and that our original story was completely accurate.’
I was directed to this video on Eating the Seasons blog tonight - if you have 45 mins to spare - do check it out. Very funny, thought provoking and eye opening cycle powered stand-up routine. I won’t say any more - here’s the link:
Have we stopped evolving? Only time will tell of course… but I don’t think so - I think we have started our own evolutionary track - call it ‘technology’. It remains to be seen whether we will continue to evolve physically, but I suspect we will just re-engineer ourselves and possibly everything around us based on the current mindset of the majority. It might get a bit out of hand though.
It is fair to say we are at a fairly crucial stage in our relationship with the natural world, having given up being shaped by our environment and deciding to make it do our bidding…
I am not really wanting to get into Oryx and Crake territory - although I suspect that if things go horribly wrong for us in the future - it will be because someone in the present wants to maximise their gain by exploiting present day resources at the expense of successive generations. This will probably be due to shareholders wanting to increase their value in a company so that they can sell it off and enjoy the profits before they shuffle off this mortal coil. Very few corporations are concerned with ‘doing the right thing’ - it is contrary to their nature, and usually if they seem to do so, it is because they see it as a PR opportunity - a chance to ‘sell more stuff‘ by convincing you that they are doing it for your benefit.
I find the non-commercial nature of open source technology refreshing. It’s about people coming together to solve a problem because it needs solving, and often the participants want nothing in return except to see the software evolve. The value is in the solution and the reward is in contributing.
So, back to the title of this post, I think that the dystopia can be avoided by taking the open-source movement’s approach and applying it to almost everything. Let’s start with the foundation for life - our planet. It is our planet, yes. But it is also their planet - like this kid:
So - let’s imagine we are on his side, and we are capable of thinking beyond our own life span - how would we actually make a difference? I can assure you that it won’t be big business that saves his world, we won’t get there by buying more stuff - no matter how much is spent on persuading us otherwise. It probably won’t be government to the rescue either, politicians are more concerned with staying in office or getting into it. All this ‘Punch and Judy’ party politics is just a big distraction. So - what exactly am I proposing? Well, for now I propose that we get together and work it out. After all - there are some great open source software tools out there that will help the process, by connecting together the greatest minds and problems solvers, and let’s remember, as we surf around, that much of what we are doing is only made possible because of the fundamental human drive to sort out problems and that things only start to happen, and evolve when you get involved and contribute.
In the words of the great Buckminster Fuller:
“Take the initiative. Go to work, and above all co-operate and don’t hold back on one another or try to gain at the expense of another. Any success in such lopsidedness will be increasingly short-lived. These are the synergetic rules that evolution is employing and trying to make clear to us.They are not man-made laws. They are the infinitely accommodative laws of the intellectual integrity governing universe.”
Last year I grew some carrots from seed - and chucked some spuds in the ground - the carrots worked but the spuds got blight - still got some nice little earlies though. We also grew some tomato plants in a grow-bag outside and got a few tasty trusses (one of the plants got blight too though - it was awfully damp last year)… although I didn’t really know about topping them…
Anyway - this year - I have gone a little overboard! I do love the bit where the seed germinates and bursts forth full of promise with its cute little cotyledon. Here’s some of the seeds I have planted this year:
Marjoram
Sweet Basil
Greek Oregana
Thyme
Summer Savory
Coriander
Parsley
Barlotta Lingua Di Fucco Nano
Carrot
Potato
Chinese Cabbage
Little Gem
Pumpkin
Red Onion
Pentland Brig Kale
Melon
Strawberry
Most of them were from Tucker’s Seeds but I also picked up a few cheap packets from Lidl.
I was going to bore you with an account of this year’s horticultural endeavors, but I found this great site called myfolia.com and will be detailing it all in excruciating detail (if I manage to find the time to update it in between watering everything, weeding and fighting slugs and snails!). This isn’t a gardening blog btw