Pre-occupied with the war on terrorism, we have lost sight of a more dangerous enemy of social peace and progress - the inability of the world's people to access the ecological goods and services they need to maintain and build their societies. By 2025, the combined demands of continued economic growth and the reduction of global poverty will require, annually, the... More ecological equivalent of three or four earths. If history is our guide, the options for meeting these enormous "provisioning" needs are extremely limited. Like the tribes, cities, and nations of earlier times, we can fight our neighbours for privileged access to declining ecosystem goods and services. This confrontation will inevitably pit the wealthy beneficiaries of the global economy against the billions of excluded, and lead to accelerated ecological collapse, the derailment of growth, and social chaos. The only alternative to this dismal prospect is to mobilize on a scale as if for war in order to meet this provisioning challenge on the battlefields of directed technological innovation.
RFC (post: 1263495) wrote:I'm currently reading Star Wars: Dark Apprentice (the second book in the Jedi Academy trilogy). Yeah, I know. I'm such a nerd.
Technomancer (post: 1264139) wrote:I've just started Roy Woodbridge's The Next World War: Tribes, Cities, Nations, and Ecological Decline
KhakiBlueSocks wrote:"I'm going to make you a prayer request you can't refuse..." Cue the violins.
king atlantis (post: 1264543) wrote:well, was reading the complete hitchiker's guide, but took a break after the 4th book or so because i saw Artemis Fowl #6 was out...
'upon reading it, i remembered just how much i truly enjoy the Artemis Fowl series, and REALY enjoyed some *ahem* long-awaited happenings that the author MUST build apon in his next novel.
THEN i had the displeasure of learning it may be his LAST Artemis Fowl book, or at least the last one for about 3 years.
which sucks, considering #6 left on quite a HUGE gripper, which could VERY easily lead to the next book.
so much so, i would think #7 could, in all attentive purposes, practically write itself!
i also learned that Eoin Colfer, author of the Artemis Fowl series, gets to finish the un-finished Hitchiker's book...which im not sure if im glad of or not. their writing style is incrediously similar, so it POSSIBLY could work...
bigsleepj (post: 1264468) wrote:WOw! you always read the most fascinating books I've never heard of.
KhakiBlueSocks wrote:"I'm going to make you a prayer request you can't refuse..." Cue the violins.
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