January 9th, 2013
My first ever blog post and I never thought it would have to
do with my education!
At this point I am not certain of my expectations for this
class. When my brother in-law told me this was a graduation requirement and
spoke of its contents I rolled my eyes and scoffed. He has long since graduated
and though we agree on many fronts about the environment, he did say he enjoyed
this course. So that perhaps is a ray of hope for me!
Unlike many of my friends, schoolmates, and others I come
across, I hold deep anathema for the “man-made” global warming movement. I for
one believe it to be fraudulent as another way to create crisis among the
population to continue and maintain control. Please do not think I am a
conspiratoralist (I am not, I assure you) but given the nature and history of
how this movement came about, I find it difficult to believe that the so-called
facts haven’t been twisted to suit theories in order to fulfill personal
agendas and power.
I hope to learn more about our rich environment here.
Perhaps my husband can accompany me as he loves nature and our local areas’
history. He teaches me things I never knew as he explores the land for hours at
a time!
Sustainability in itself derives from the “green” movement.
No one had any idea what that concept was until very recently. Case in point,
the fact that this course has come to fruition or was part of the building
process of the school, again is a derivative of the global warming “epidemic.”
Being “green” and “sustainable” are interchangeable terms and are thrown around
quite loosely in my opinion. I attended SWFC’s Interior Design school for a
year and many of our classes and curriculum were based on such notions. I have
the most familiarity with those concepts and my understanding of sustainability
comes from that field. Whether it be a building (hotel, hospital, commercial
work space) or a product specified in a project, it means to me that the
product or products were made by an eco-friendly company or perhaps taken from
a true natural resource (cork from the Cork Tree) and was designed to last
longer than it’s more man-made synthetic product (which can be refuted in some
instances).
Being a business major I’m not certain yet where it could
fall in my career directly but it is omnipresent anyway, whether I notice it or
not.
I think everyone likes to think they have good, “sustainable”
habits. But the truth is, unless you have a lot of money to drive a true hybrid
car, have solar panels on your home, and a great water system (or cistern),
most of us have a dirty “carbon” footprint. Unless we all would like to be
thrown back into the stone-age and live in mud huts next to candle light we are
not willing to give up our creature comforts. I for one certainly won’t! The
sustainable attitude I have is purely selfish – me, me, me. Nothing I do that
is "sustainable" is for the environment, it is from my own volition, satisfaction, and is purely
money driven (by that I mean our financial budget, i.e., we don't own big cars, frigid
thermostat, etc. All that costs more money than we are willing to pay for not because we care about being "green"). I find value in small things such as recycling (I hate the
term and concept but that is for another day) because I am not forced to do so,
I pick up larger pieces of trash sometimes because I find value in doing so, I
cut up the plastic rings from our soda cans in the event that it ever did get in
the water systems wouldn’t potentially hurt marine life. Again, for my own
satisfaction. When or if I am governed to do so, I will stop.