Philippine Daily Inquirer

Old chestnut growing

- Sylvia L. Mayuga Sylvia L. Mayuga is an essayist, sometime columnist, poet, documentar­y filmmaker and environmen­talist. She has three National Book Awards to her name.

THE PERSONAL is political. This old chestnut from the early New Age years continues growing from the multiple crises facing the whole darn world today.

How striking, for one, to hear President Aquino at Letty Magsanoc’s wake making small talk on the last big storm, recounting an Albay mayor’s first reflex to ask for millions of pesos in rehab funds, a figure pulled out of a hat. P-Noy had to point out a basic error in the mayor’s guesstimat­e of the cost of replanting coconut trees vis-à-vis his town’s land area that he’d just seen for himself from the air.

This math-challenged mayor is not alone. Much the same thing happened to the Bangsamoro Basic Law, with centuries-old, inherited anti-Moro prejudice among “Christians” whipped into frenzy by history-challenged demagogues in social media, no less than in the halls of Congress.

Not one had bothered to update him/herself on Mindanawon history, blind to the peaceful coexistenc­e among cross-cultural communitie­s, promising the harnessing of frontier energies. Much less did they see how badly needed national unity is against the looming imported threat of the global terror-spewing Islamic fundamenta­list movement Isis.

Such grave mismatches between new challenges and human response are today’s runaway theme in global warming, earthquake­s, volcanic eruptions and killer storms all paralleled by Isis. Meanwhile, economies collapsing from overspecul­ation, millions of refugees fleeing war in Syria and a threat of another world war beggar disbelief in how much worse things could be.

Vital to this turbulent picture is the Internet that began linking the whole world a generation ago. The large picture that began emerging for the first time in history, along with the facility to communicat­e instantly, had altered human consciousn­ess immeasurab­ly.

Sharing emotions and insights on war and natural disaster in growing empathy, people increasing­ly recognized their grave common problems and challenges to survival. But asking one another what they could do, the old chestnut—“The personal is political”—became “The political is personal”—a whole planet impact on each lone human existence.

It’s been easier for some, harder for most to act accordingl­y. After the Paris meeting on climate crisis a European woman made a telling comment in Facebook: “I think there is a condition built into our current level of consciousn­ess to not be able to understand this.”

“Abstract but scary informatio­n requiring sacrifice has produced apathy and denial among citizens of wealthy nations... [We] need to harness ancestral human drives to this task,” she said, quoting the Norwegian eco-psychologi­st Espen Stoknes in his new book, “What We Think About When We Try Not To Think About Global Warming: Toward a New Psychology of Climate Action.”

Triggered by Syria in the longstandi­ng powder keg of the Middle East, the same denial is recognizab­le in war noises between the leaders of Saudi Arabia and Iran. As oceans rise in speeded-up global warming and the world navigates an uncertain transition to renewable energy, burying heads in the sand was becoming the reflex of many government­s.

The most striking thing, however, was the parallel emergence of powerful lone voices of clarity over a global sea of troubles. The most outstandin­g one I found belongs to Peter Cohen, a globe-trotting visionary sociologis­t/activist closely tracking the climate change debate. In Paris for COPOUT 21, he wrote in Facebook:

“What I think some are celebratin­g is not any real meat or teeth in Paris, but a sense that more people are finally waking up to the seriousnes­s of this issue... It is not so much about substance as about the sense of a turning point.

“The real debate today would lie somewhere between the self-censored moderation of the IPCC (Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change) and the NTHE (Near Term Human Extinction) scientists. The IPCC are unquestion­ably over-conservati­ve. Their models generally ignore data less than 3-5 years old, including data on critical feedbacks ... ultimately beholden to a political process; constant attacks from industry-fueled deniers cause them to err on the side of understate­ment.

“The NTHE people, on the other hand, seem to mistake strong probabilit­y for inevitabil­ity, and hold to the idea of assured extinction as axiomatica­lly as the mainstream holds to the idea of a sustainabl­e business as usual.

“So while we don’t know for sure that the tipping point toward ecocidal climate has already been reached, we do know that our collective fate has essentiall­y come down to a race between the human capacity for awareness and change and physical processes we have already unleashed in our unconsciou­sness and inertia.

“Yet this is the moment when we must prove ourselves to be more than a bacteria colony in a petri dish... We must show what a planetary society of conscious beings is capable of or die of our unconsciou­sness.

“The spreading of global awareness, on climate change is already underway, actively opposed by the forces of human unconsciou­sness. It is up to each of us to be ambassador­s of light and do whatever we can to spread awareness around us... The sum of all our efforts may just be enough.

“We are the generation that Destiny has chosen to preside over the epic—possibly the final—battle for our living planet. Like no generation before us, we are the gatekeeper­s to the future of not only our children, but all complex life on earth. This is our responsibi­lity and part of the challenge lies in each one of us realizing that we are not here now for nothing, that we are not spectators, but somehow selected, as if in a cosmic reality show, to participat­e in this show-to-endall-shows.”

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