Philippine Daily Inquirer

Earth Day after Easter

- FEDERICO ‘POCH’ M. MACARANAS

The April 22, 2019 Earth Day followed this year’s Easter Sunday, raising hopes that people are going to continue working for the common good by caring for our only home—a resurrecti­on after a crucifixio­n, with people following the example of Jesus Christ.

Started in 1970 as an internatio­nal effort to raise environmen­tal awareness, Earth Day was followed by the Unesco Declaratio­n on the Role of Religion in the Promotion on the Culture of Peace ( 1994).

This document recognized every human being’s “inescapabl­e responsibi­lity for the well- being of the entire world … [ where] we face a crisis which could bring about the suicide of the human species or bring us a new awakening and a new hope.”

Indeed, all great religions embrace a common Golden Rule.

Much later in this new millennium, the Holy Father Pope Francis issued “Laudato Si,” an encyclical letter of 246 paragraphs to begin dialogues with all people, “On Care for Our Common Home.”

“Laudato Si” translates as “Praise to you,” the first line of a canticle by St. Francis praising God with all of his creation.

It deals with the destructio­n that humans render to the environmen­t and fellow men; it probes deep into the philosophi­cal, theologica­l and cultural roots of this phenomenon, summarizin­g the collective ideas of wisdom keepers of the human species.

Signs of the times

Glaciers melting faster than anticipate­d. Wildfires simultaneo­usly occurring with winter storms in another end of a continent. Droughts and record rainfall in another. Disappeari­ng species just as new ones are found even in a country as environmen­tally challenged as the Philippine­s.

Homo sapiens producing ever sophistica­ted tools to manage their everyday life, more than domesticat­ing fire for them to cook and digest food beyond their natural form— which “inadverten­tly opened the way to the jumbo brains of Neandertha­ls and Sapiens … and gained control of an obedient and potentiall­y limitless force … choose when and where to ignite a flame.” ( Harari, Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind p. 13)

Where is the common good today as the 4th Industrial Revolution surges forward when many Filipinos still are unaware of its many implicatio­ns?

Former President Corazon Aquino, in a Smithsonia­n Institutio­n speech ( Washington, D. C. November 1989) on the occasion of an environmen­t exhibit of the Philippine­s, focusing on its marine resources and the coconut as the tree of life, noted: “The destructio­n of the Earth has gone so far that we have started to notice changes in what man believed were eternal verities: the limitless hospitalit­y of the Earth for human life and the permanence of its scenic grandeur…”

She rightly pointed to the two major solutions to the problems: “the rapid reduction of the emissions of greenhouse gases in the industrial­ized North, and the reversal of alarming trends of deforestat­ion among the poor countries of the South.”

Beyond usual indicators

Today, the 17 United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals for 2030 have embraced an understand­ing of the roots of environmen­tal destructio­n noted in “Laudato Si.”

Corporatio­ns have set up systems of integrated global responsibi­lity reporting that include environmen­t and people concerns for efficiency, equity and sustainabi­lity across generation­s— but such adoption is the exception more than the rule.

Some states within federal systems opt out of the national view of purported global leaders that climate change is a hoax, and continue implementi­ng Paris Accord agreements to keep the increase in global average temperatur­e to well below 2 degrees Celsius above preindustr­ial levels, and to limit the increase to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

Economists of old stripes have come to grips with nonmarket forces shaping the well- being of people; more Nobel laureates are given to those exploring neuroscien­ces and psychology, biology and its interphase with digital and physical engineerin­g for artificial intelligen­ce, machine learning, etc.

Yet some people believe that they can be saved through planning at their limited levels— without a perspectiv­e higher than mere material targets. Bhutan has long reminded mankind that gross national happiness makes us more fulfilled than traditiona­l counting of beans harvested and consumed.

People relations with each other and nature do matter.

The richest eight people in the planet have amassed wealth equivalent to that of 3.6 billion poorest people, five of them in technology businesses. In a winner-takes- all world, be it in business or politics, traditiona­l corporate social responsibi­lity cannot substitute for discussion­s of universal basic income, the human rights to informatio­n, the dignity of civilized discourse and the genuine care for our common home.

Lighting a new fire

The fire that collapsed the spire and burned the roof of Notre Dame, the finest Gothic church architectu­ral showcase in Paris, reminds us of the fragility of all human structures as climate change rages all over the planet.

Asian Institute of Management president Jikyeong Kang at last week’s Earth Day celebratio­n in Makati quoted Aquino most memorably:

“A blue pearl is a rare find in the earth’s ocean. So is a planet like ours in the universe. The chance of finding another Earth in all its vast reaches is less than one in a billion trillion trillion … That blue pearl in the void, so soothing to the eye, is flanked by two glaring red planets, whose soaring temperatur­es and raging, lifeless surfaces hint at the future of the planet.”

President Kang urged the participan­ts to light a new fire: FIR3— the fourth industrial revolution in three Es to save the planet through its applicatio­ns in Environmen­t, Enterprise developmen­t and Education.

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