Indigestion

Posted by Steven Gervais

Posted on Tuesday March 9th, 2010

This ‘Great Pacific Garbage Patch’ I wrote about in my last blog is not biodegrading; the plastics disintegrate into ever smaller pieces, while still remaining a plastic even on the molecular level. They get ingested by birds, sea turtles and fish who mistake the small plastic pieces for plankton (food). The plastics that do decompose within a year of being in the water leach toxic chemicals like bisphenol A, PCBs and derivatives of polystyrene, which also get ingested.

While creating these hazardous materials in the first place might be a ‘cheap’ way of meeting our packaging and industrial efficiency needs of today, the cost comes back to us eventually; whether it is to us immediately, to our lineage of children or to theirs.

Where is ‘Away’?

Posted by Steven Gervais

Posted on Friday March 5th, 2010

There is a patch of thousands of square miles of bits of floating plastic, chemical sludge and other trash in our Pacific Ocean, floating with the currents of the North Pacific Gyre in a clockwise cycle, rotating between California/Mexico, Indonesia and Japan. A similar patch of trash is found in the Atlantic Ocean.

The idea that there is this place called ‘away’ for us to throw our things is evidently not true. There is no such thing as throwing ‘away’, because ‘away’ is ’somewhere’; it is some place. We might not be conscious of where these places are, but they do exist and they are home to a diverse network of aquatic life.

For a video, see http://www.thegp2project.org/

Health Insurance

Posted by Sam Folin

Posted on Tuesday March 2nd, 2010

The March 2 2010 New Yorker has a good article on why our health costs are so high. It points to the Mayo/Geisinger models as a solution.

http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2009/06/01/090601fa_fact_gawande?currentPage=8

We know that DC understands this. We suspect that for political gain our legistative geniuses continue to ignore the obvious.

Neither our system of health care/insurance or our governing model is sustainable it seems.

OSF 3/2/2010

Geothermal Tremors

Posted by Steven Gervais

Posted on Thursday February 25th, 2010

It was no surprise to me that the Basel geothermal plant in Switzerland was suspended, because more than 10,000 earthquakes occurred in the first 6 days of water injection, with some earthquakes measuring 3.4 on the Richter Scale (http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2007AGUFM.V53F..08D).

After all, Earth is a whole, living organism; a ‘mother’ for all life. All of life is birthed ‘in Earth’ and kept alive by her waters, nutrients and air. I say ‘in Earth’ rather than ‘on’, because Earth is not just a surface in which the drama of our lives is unfolding - she extends up into the fullness of the atmosphere to transport water vapor, moderate temperature, Read the rest of this entry »

Sustainable Farming and Investing

Posted by Ben Bingham

Posted on Wednesday February 24th, 2010

Many do not know what they are invested in, like homeowners who sprinkle Agent Orange on their lawns to kill dandelions only to have their children play on toxic turf. I think the future depends on us reconnecting to the wisdom inherent in sustainable agriculture. This may lead to a new view in investing, a view that considers all stakeholders and the long term horizon.

Ben Bingham 2/24/2010

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