Hope
is Hopeless: On the Dangers of Hopium
Professor
Guy McPherson on transforming abstract hope into concrete action.
15
November, 2013
I
held onto hope for decades. But I’ve come to see hope as wishful
thinking, also known as hopium.
I’m
not giving up, and I constantly encourage acts of resistance that
will allow opportunities for the living planet to persist into the
future. In so doing, I’m channeling iconoclastic Tucson author
Edward Abbey: “Action is the antidote to despair.”
Hopium
is the drug to which we’re addicted. It’s the desire to have our
problems solved by others, instead of by ourselves. It’s why we
keep electing politicians while knowing they won’t keep their
promises, but finding ourselves too fearful to give up the
much-promised future of never-ending growth on a finite planet.
Knowing
we cannot occupy this finite world without adverse consequences for
humans or other animals, but afraid to face that truth, we turn away.
We watch the television, go to the movies, gamble at casinos, play on
Facebook, and pursue similar avenues of using up our precious time.
Many Americans applaud while the world burns and we take a
flame-thrower to the planet. Nietzsche nailed it, as usual:
“Hope
in reality is worst of evils, because it prolongs man’s torment.”
Finally,
I’ve come to the conclusion that Nietzsche was right. I used to
think hope differed from hopium, back when I had hope. Gradually,
I’ve come to see hope and hopium as one. Let’s get off the crack
pipe and onto reality. May Pandora release the final gift from her
container (usually incorrectly referred to as her box).
Lest
the reader forget, I am by no means suggesting we abandon (1)
resistance or (2) joy-filled lives. Life, including human life, is a
gift. Let’s live as if we appreciate the gift. Let’s live as if
we appreciate the others in our lives, human and otherwise. Let’s
live as if there is more to life than the treadmill onto which we’ve
been born.
Let’s
live.
Guy
McPherson – Earth Extinction 2030
November
15, 2013
Guy
McPherson discusses his latest book Going Dark.
We
are the last individuals of our species on Earth. How shall we
respond? How shall we act? If industrial civilization is maintained,
climate change will cause human extinction in the near term. If
industrial civilization falls, sufficient ionizing radiation will be
released from the world’s nuclear power plants to cause human
extinction in the near term. In the wake of this horrific conclusion,
conservation biologist McPherson proposes we act with compassion,
courage, and creativity.
He suggests we act with the kind of empathy
for which humans are renowned. In other words, he suggests we act
with decency toward the humans and other organisms with which we
share this beautiful planet. Going Dark is the story of one
scientist’s response to the horrors we face. It is a deeply
personal narrative infused with abundant evidence to support its
terrifying claims.
Going
Dark peels the shadow from the cosy dreams we’ve all bought into –
that technology will save us from climate change; that the products
we consume are endless and untainted; that our modern idea of
happiness and convenience doesn’t crush others; that the heartbeat
of the industrial economy that pulses within us is sustainable and
ethical. McPherson’s latest work will make you think twice.
To
listen to podcast GO
HERE
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