Author Archives: benflikshteyn

About benflikshteyn

My name is Ben Flikshteyn and I am a student at Macaulay Honors College at CUNY.

Posts by benflikshteyn

Weekly Response 2 Society, Government, and Capitalism

The Earth is equipped to handle some degree of pollution and use of its resources. After all, animals eat plants and use nature as a giant restroom. The real problem lies in the rate at which the environment can recover as compared to the rate at which it is used and damaged. This is why high-density cities are such hubs of environmental disaster. The speed with which industry, agriculture, and waste disposal from everyday life makes a place unlivable is staggering.

The situation in Brazil’s Rio de Janeiro is an excellent example of the problems caused by high-density cities. The first challenge that jumped out to me was how many different factors contribute to pollution. Underground gas storage tanks leak into ground water, which finds its way to the river. Rain passes over oils, pesticides, and salts before flowing into the water. Garbage is dumped directly into the Rio de Janeiro and sewage is flushed into it as well. Cities spring up around bodies of water because of their usefulness for trade, agriculture, and recreation. That is why I was so surprised that there are visible chunks of fecal matter floating in the river.

At first it seems that this is a critical time for the government to step in. With the Olympics and the World Cup both coming to Brazil there is a lot of pressure to clean up. Perhaps all it takes to prioritize the environment is to know that the rest of the world is watching. Maybe an international environmental organization can be set up in which countries apply for grants to decrease pollution. The grants would be allotted based on the validity of the proposed plans and the strides each country has already taken towards the goals. This would take the same competitive spirit that an international spectator sport brings, in this case Soccer or the Olympics, and bring environmental issues to the main stage.

However, even the government may not have enough sway to reverse the damage already done in Brazil. So long as the high-density city pollutes at the rate it does, there is a huge barrier to improvement. It takes societal change as well. Unfortunately, as long as there are two entities with the power to do something, the government and the public, they are more likely to point the finger at each other than take initiative themselves.

This problem translates seamlessly to other high-density cities. 1976, with the passage of RCRA, marked the first year in which the federal government began to prioritize proper waste disposal and environmental protection. But even this morphology in governmental policy was hard pressed to break the inertia of pure capitalistic motivation. The government told GE to clean up PCBs in 1976. GE agreed, but only 32 years later. This is 32 years of bioaccumulation and 32 years with an extremely poisonous, not swimmable, and unfishable river. Public consciousness and action could have pressured GE much more effectively than a drawn out law suit. Companies will always react to supply and demand, as is their nature. If society can have an ideological shift, like the kind RCRA represented for the government, and allow environmental issues to affect their demand for products and services corporations will, literally, clean up their act. Unfortunately, with such an integrated global economy, this initiative would have to be taken up simultaneously by people everywhere.

The temporary solutions are worrisome as well. GE is burying the polluted sludge in Texas in huge clay pits. I cannot imagine that this is infallible. Earthquakes are not unheard of there. One small leak can have repercussions over a long time. This solution has the detached quality of shooting waste into the sun but not the permanence of it. Out of sight and out of mind is not an adequate approach to waste management. It is cheap though, and that may be enough to enthrall society until it is too late.

Weekly Response 1

It is incredible how quickly human beings have altered the environment. The Earth has been around so much longer than us, and is so much larger than an individual, that it feels beyond mankind to have a substantial effect on our home. However, the first image of the Earth viewed from the moon, in 1969, adds perspective to our actions. The Earth is finite and fragile and we are already changing it drastically. Both the pragmatic repercussions of our actions and any underlying morality call for a shift in human behavior. This is not fear mongering either, as the numbers of tons emitted, trees uprooted, and animals slaughtered are a factual wake up call.

I have held a very anthropocentric view, assigning instrumental value to all things aside from mankind. This is not because I believe humans have a special right to the universe or that God favors us. It is because I believe any species subscribes to this practice, although they may not be conscious of it. Animals take care of their survival and well being first and foremost, not even considering the concept of environmental responsibility or morality. Human beings are different because we have the unique ability to debate the morality of what we do. However, we are still animals and still have our needs and even wants at the forefront of our functioning. Because of this, my view has been shallow ecology. So long as our damage to the environment is not irreparable and does not harm mankind, I have been fine with it.

One example of this is the cyclical parable of the bat and the mosquito we mentioned in class. When I was young I was once told that bats were important because they kept mosquitos at bay. In class we said that mosquitos were important as a food source for bats. Of course I do not know about the exact repercussions of eliminating both bats and mosquitos but the metaphor stands. There are some parts of the environment that, if eliminated, would have minimal significance in an instrumental sense.

Despite this, mankind has shown an inability to protect the environment in even an anthropocentric capacity. The staggering rate of overfishing and deforestation are great testaments to that. I was particularly shocked to learn that only 10% of the fish that were originally on the Earth remain. Nutrient runoff fuels dead zones, killing off marine life and making entire areas unlivable. We create dead zones while making food but dead zones kill our food supply. This wastefulness is too prevalent. Cattle ranching is another good example, as we tear through forests, making them unlivable for animals, just to make areas for cattle to graze in. This wastefulness means that even beyond anthropocentrism, humans as a whole are not even working just to preserve their species, but really just themselves as individuals and perhaps their family and just a few generations ahead.

Perhaps ironically, this has pushed me to consider deep ecology as a tool for shallow ecology. This means that as of now my view is still very utilitarian. However, because of the failure of capitalism to quantify environmental costs and the unwillingness of individuals to think in the long run, a major shift in attitude is necessary. It is unsustainable to consume at the rate we do and fear for the future of our species is far off and almost as alien to us as the desires of a beetle or tree. If humans begin to think of themselves as a part of nature’s web, respect all life and assign it intrinsic value, they will be much more fit to survive as a species.

Of course there is always the school of thought that technology will evolve at a rate that races pollution and other environmental problems. Efficient means of harvesting solar energy, purifying water, farming food, and filtering emissions are on the horizon of research. In this case, why not consume at whatever rate makes us happy and wait for science to fix our problems? I am not necessarily advocating this plan of action, it is risky and arrogant, but some may think this way.

Comments by benflikshteyn