Consumption, Carbon, And Toxins: Chapter Analysis

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Overpopulation/Consumption, Carbon, and Toxins
Theile quotes Leopolds understanding that humankind must transform itself from “conqueror of the land-community to a plain member and citizen of it.” (Thiele 18) This outlines the concept that the Earth is made up of mutually interdependent individuals that must cooperate to make our home a stable and healthy one. Although this point of view may pose challenges to individuals who are in different parts of the world. One pressing challenge that threatens the short-term welfare of human or non-human inhabitants is the preservation of all parts of our planet and storing these parts in consideration to how they can be contributed, as Thiele puts in chapter 1. The challenge of this in retrospect to
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“There’s a need to manage air, water, soils, minerals and living species including man, so as to achieve the highest sustainable quality of life.” (Thiele 21) Thiele’s approach on social empowerment has a big role in promoting response’s both societal and collective on this challenge of overpopulation and consumption. The challenges that this approach attracts is power is not evening distribute among individuals, as Thiele puts it “the biggest losers are the world’s poor. The biggest winners are the large corporations engaging in finances and trade, and the individuals and nations that profit by them.” (Thiele 51) This is a form of environmental injustice that reflects on the unfair distribution of power among individuals solely influenced by wealth …show more content…
The greatest impact that these carbon emitting technologies is cultivating is global climate change. The green house gases daily technologies produce is the leading cause of our chemically disrupted atmosphere. Global climate change is a long-term challenge to human and non-human inhabitants and it effects everyone in a different way depending on location. For example, biodiversity is paying the ultimate cause, their lives. Global warming is the top cause of species extinction, for species are unable to adapt to such rapid environmental changes across the globe. As for short-term welfare challenges is the technological aspect that modern technologies rely on the burning of fossil fuels. “The current level of atmospheric carbon dioxide is growing many times the rate as it has in the past.” (Thiele 4) The technological efficiency approach the problem solver for this short-term challenge regarding carbon emissions and global warming.
It is widely known that global warning and global cooling have both repeated themselves throughout time, but when comparing carbon levels of the present day to carbon levels of the past the differences are alarming. Some challenges that limit society