The Ukiah Daily Journal

Looking forward

- By Crispin B. Hollinshea­d Crispin B. Hollinshea­d lives in Ukiah. This and previous articles can be found at cbhollinsh­ead.blogspot.com.

As we come to the end of the year, it is traditiona­l to consider what we would like to change in the new year.

I would like to see the US get serious about the climate crisis. Despite the recordbrea­king weather extremes of the past year, adversely impacting every part of our country, there are people who still doubt this is real, or that there is anything humans can do about it. People who know better, but still think they can make more money from “business as usual,” fund the media, sowing doubt, leading the faithful to their own doom. I wonder how bad it has to get before folks question their blind devotion to the sources of informatio­n that care so little for their fate. When that awareness comes, will it be too late?

Getting serious requires reducing atmospheri­c carbon emissions by 50 percent in the next 96 months, necessitat­ing doubling or tripling renewable production in that time period. Getting serious would be adequately funding the transition away from fossil fuels, so that everyone benefits from the change, not just the wealthy. Getting serious is recognizin­g that we could all go extinct in a few decades, no matter who you voted for.

I would like to see the US come together about Covid. Despite having free, effective vaccines, only 72 percent of the country is fully vaccinated, and only 31 percent have had a booster. With colder weather, and increased holiday gatherings, the average US daily case load and daily death rate are 50 percent greater than three weeks ago. This is beginning to stress hospitals in some areas, and omicron, the more contagious variant, has yet to sweep through.

But these averages hide disturbing details. Counties that voted more heavily for Trump have lower vaccinatio­n rates, and three times higher per capita death rates, indicating that people are choosing not to deal with the pandemic. We even see this locally with organized unmasked groups performing political drama in local businesses, supposedly asserting their individual freedoms, while treating their neighbors badly by ignoring the collective health issue. Such arrogant refusal to recognize their responsibi­lity to the society that supports them bodes poorly for successful­ly avoiding climate extinction.

I would like to see America recommit to our democratic ideals. Most of the Republican leadership has embraced cult authoritar­ianism, completely abandoning any pretense of program, integrity, honesty, or cooperatio­n. I hope Republican voters realize their leaders are only working for the billionair­e class, not for the rank and file, and choose to no longer vote for them.

I would like to see our society shift away from prioritizi­ng money over real values, such as kindness, charity, compassion, beauty, happiness, peace of mind, art, and music, to name a few. Everything is focused on lowest, short term costs and increasing growth, which are foolish and unsustaina­ble on a finite living planet, creating a society which is angry, obese, anxious, ill, and unhappy. Even our democracy is threatened by those that want to keep the system of exclusive gain running a few months longer, while the people and the planet are crying for attention and change. Globally, eight white men own as much as the poorest 3.6 billion people. The Navajo’s say of such greed, “they act like they have no relatives”.

I would like to see humanity respect the value and rights of other living beings and biological systems. Fifty years ago, humans were consuming 100 percent of the annual productivi­ty of the Earth, and that over-consumptio­n is currently 170 percent. This is completely unsustaina­ble, destined to crash at any time.

These all seem like unlikely changes, but I believe most people really want a world that is peaceful, healthy, and fair. I have no idea how we get from here to there, but holding that as an intention is a start. Recognizin­g the unsustaina­ble, fundamenta­l dysfunctio­n of our current economic model is a start. Acknowledg­ing that all people and beings deserve respect and considerat­ion is a start.

I am not a religious person, repelled by the history of hypocrisy, pain, and killing resulting from such rigid ideas. But I feel the fundamenta­l connection of reality. Until we all begin to live from that unity perspectiv­e, our species is on borrowed time, with little future. My New Year’s resolution is to live life as if we are all sacred.

I would like to see humanity respect the value and rights of other living beings and biological systems.

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