Wednesday 29 October 2008

Election.

If Obama loses the upcoming election, what is the future for America?

McCain has as his VP candidate a person who is the embodiment of why the rest of the world laughs at the American education system. Palin signifies ignorance, hatred and fear of knowledge. She mocks those who see intelligence and reason as a virtue as 'liberal elite', as though those who are educated and experienced are somehow unqualified to run a superpower.

If the republican party is elected again, we can expect to see Creationism and it's cheap-tuxedo equivilent 'Intelligent Design' tought in American public schools as an equal to evolutionary theory.
To teach the dressed up version of a theology is a crime, where children go for knowledge and learning, they will be indoctrinated with religion. 

I.D itself is full of holes, and if it's tought to students on a par with scientific theories, then there is a real danger of those students becoming mistrustful of other scientific theories, and retreating into ignorance.

America, if you wish to avoid this you can do a simple act. Deny ignorance. Vote for Obama.

Saturday 18 October 2008

Gaming.

Gaming as an artform.

 

Gaming will never be recognised as an artform. A bold statement, you say? Let me add a clause, ‘not yet’, at least. This is the justification. Negative media portrayal. Many of you will be familiar with the game Grand Theft Auto, whether you are gamers or not, you will also probably be familiar with the claims of some of the media that it is the cause of a number of murders, such as a thai boy allegedly wishing to see if hijacking a taxi was as easy as it was in GTA. There are similar stories to other violent games, such as Manhunt and Condemned, which have had censors rushing to refuse certification.

Surely, you cry, it is not just games that have been blamed for this. That is exactly my point, throughout history, new media has felt the wrath of the popular press. It is new, threatening, challenges the status quo and, god forbid, makes people question authority. Yet, with time, these are recognised as baseless claims, quickly ignored in favour of the potential revenue. This is what is slowly happening with gaming, the Wii has brought gaming into the living room, exposed several generations to the media and is therefore reducing the stereotype of the gamer as a lone, rather pasty teenager sitting alone in their bedroom at 3 am *cough*.

In a few generations perhaps, we shall all view the sensationalist reports in the daily mail with the same derision that we now view claims against rock music. We can but hope.

Thursday 16 October 2008

Urbanism

The case for increased urbanism

The human race is expanding, roughly at 2.37 people per second. Needless to say, all these new people require feeding, clothing and many expect to be equipped with all the amenities that consumerist society will say that they deserve. However, the impact of this on the planet is, as the media tells us nearly every day, devastating. More and more of the planet’s virgin territory is being given over to the farmer’s plough; forests are devastated to make way for crops to feed the animals that we slaughter for food and the oceans are being stripped of biodiversity as the result of intensive fishing disrupting the life cycle. Species disappear every day as a result of our drive to survive, while we cut ourselves off from the planet in our steel and concrete cities. Green gives way to silver and grey.

This snapshot is not the whole picture of our crime against the planet. As we cut down the forests and strip the earth and oceans we pollute on an unimaginable scale, and as we do so we slowly render the planet hostile to life.

So, what then is the remedy to this? Some have advocated a back to the land movement, where we shift from a individualistic life in vast cities, to a collectivist society focused on self sufficiency based around small communities. Yet surely with the amount of people on the earth this would increase out impact, if each person was a small plot of land with which to grow food. Furthermore, this would also require technological and societal change, people would have to abandon the western focus on the individual and return to a mindset more familiar in the east, where the individual is less important than the collective. The reason for this is that if we continued with the attitude whereby personal gain is applauded, then we would in time return to the old way of things, the carelessness for how our actions are affecting others. Technologically speaking we would also require bioengineering as only some of the planet is conducive to growing certain crops and to ensure that famine would not be the very real danger it would be if we all grew our own food.

A reformed view of city living then, perhaps has the answer. If we were to move farming away from the earth itself and transferred it to large buildings, then we would avoid the need to destroy large areas just to feed ourselves. By building up, rather than out, we would be able to avoid the negative impact of urbanisation upon the planet, while allowing ourselves greater personal space within these structures, overcoming the social minuses that people dislike about living in apartments. We would, of course, have to ensure that these cities would have less emissions that our current society, yet the technology to enable us to shed our reliance on fossil fuels is already here. Greening these cities, i.e by intertwining plant life with architecture would mean that each of us feels closer to nature, and perhaps would even increase our happiness.

 

Copyright Daniel Waterfield 2008.