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Eco-Imperialism: Green Power Black Death Paperback – January 1, 2010
- Print length192 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherMerril Press
- Publication dateJanuary 1, 2010
- Dimensions5.22 x 0.41 x 8.24 inches
- ISBN-100939571234
- ISBN-13978-0939571239
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Developing countries need to be free to make their own decisions how to improve their people's lives. Great book!" --CS Prakash, Professor of plant genetics, Tuskegee University
Eco-Imperalism provides terrific intellectual ammunition and is outstandingly written." --Rabbi Daniel Lapin, Toward Tradition
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Product details
- Publisher : Merril Press; First Edition, First edition (January 1, 2010)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 192 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0939571234
- ISBN-13 : 978-0939571239
- Item Weight : 7.2 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.22 x 0.41 x 8.24 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,309,050 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #536 in Social Sciences Reference
- Customer Reviews:
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Drinker of the Green Kool Aid will undoubtedly dismiss 'Eco-Imperialism' out-of-hand, falling back on their tired and tiresome accusations of Driessen as simply another 'corporate pawn.' However, as Driessen so forcefully articulates, it is in fact the fat cat bureaucrat environmentalists and politicians who are profiting at the expense of struggling third world nations. This is a proactive and chilling expose - should be required reading in all US Public Schools, if for no other reason as balance to the steady diet green pabulum our students are fed today.
The author even takes to task a number of large corporations who have jumped onto this bandwagon. They do so, if for no other reason, then to earn billions of dollars from their investments in so-called green technologies. This is why they often seem so willing to partner with those dedicated to destroying capitalism. Driessen points out that the environmental crazies have no problem with funding. The big bucks only go to causes such as global warming hysteria. Government bureaucracies and the larger non-profits have often been captured by left-wing ideologues. They dictate policy and punish those daring to oppose them. I strongly encourage you to read Eco-Imperialism. You might even want to purchase copies for your friends and relatives.
Let's accept as fact that a significant number of people in 3rd world countries died because their use of DDT was curtailed after the publication of Rachel Carson's Silent Spring . By any ethics that I'm willing to consider, that, standing alone, is not good, it's a bad. But that's not the end of the story *unless* one holds a very anthropocentric ethic -- that other lifeforms have value only inasmuch as they serve human lives. If we consider a non-anthropocentric ethic, then the ethical judgment of whether the use of DDT was a good or bad (or just how bad it was) becomes an empirical matter. And it's not just an issue of trading off the lives of mosquitoes who got to live against people who died in the 3rd world -- there's an entire food chain to consider. Mosquitoes convert algae into (their tiny bodies full of) protein for the diets of fish and some wading birds. As pesty and even dangerous as humans find these little creatures, fewer mosquitoes means fewer fish have a meal and fewer fish means fewer lifeforms up the food chain (including humans) have something to eat. And ... any use of DDT means that this poison gets into the entire food chain.
Ignoring the obvious point that humans faced DDT in the food chain and surely had fewer fish to eat ... to put zero weight on other species dying sooner than otherwise and thereby not recognizing any tradeoff whatever b/w the death of humans via malaria vs death of other lifeforms via starvation or DDT poisoning is a an anthropocentric ethic. I for one regard all forms of life as sacred.
Just as it is important to recognize an implicit might-makes-right ethic that allowed the 1st world to impose restrictions on DDT in the 3rd world, we might want to recognize the might-makes-right ethic implicit in the anthropocentric values that makes the welfare of less powerful lifeforms subservient to the needs and wishes of humans. Do other lifeforms have the right, by our values, to live in the wild outside of our zoos?
Writers who have focused on the need to abandon anthropocentrism include
Carl Sagan Pale Blue Dot: A Vision of the Human Future in Space
George Sessions Deep Ecology for the Twenty-First Century
Penelope Smith Animal Talk: Interspecies Telepathic Communication .
Daniel Quinn Ishmael: An Adventure of the Mind and Spirit
Nathaniel Wolloch The Moral Status of Animals in the History of Western Philosophy
R.R Tolkien The Lord of the Rings: 50th Anniversary
As long as the two sides of this issue can not talk to one another I'm haunted by the lyrics that Jim Morrison so famously sang -- The Doors - No One Here Gets Out Alive

