Band aids or long term solutions – Saving the Amazon rain forest
July 3, 2008
One of the things that I regret is that while I was living in Colombia I never went to visit the Amazon rain forest. It is one of the world treasures that Colombia has. The problem is no my unfulfilled wish but the fact taht the Amazon is disappearing quickly.

I was reading in a recent article that each year a area the size of Belgium is cut down (12,500 square miles). The total area of the Amazon jungle today is 3 million square miles. So in a matter of 267 years there will be no more Amazon. Doesn’t sound so bad actually. That’s just the problem. That we live in a society that puts band aids on the world problems instead of looking for long term solutions. Even our way of solving problems is merely superficial.
I was eating dinner with my great friend Åse yesterday and she was telling me about when she arrived in Sweden in the 70’s how all political decisions where discussed on the television and radio constantly. And the question politicians always asked themselves was, “How is this going to affect our children?” How wonderful it would be to live in a society that thinks in this way, where the leading factor in making decisions is not money, but the well being of all children. What governmental actions would take place immediately if the leaders of the USA began to think this way? More money to schools, free medical health, economic assistance to families with children, more paid leave for parents after childbirth, homes for all families, more parks and green areas, social assistance for homeless children and those with physical and mental illnesses.
All of these things remind me of Sweden. Schooling is free (even University studies) and all children are fed free lunch everyday (up to High School graduation). Health care is free for everyone. Every family receives about 200 USD per child per month. Parents have the right to 450 days of paid leave (to be split between the mother and father). If a family does not have the means to pay rent, the government provides assistance. All cities are full of parks and green areas and excellent public transportation to minimize the need for cars in the city! It’s to bad that most of this is quickly going down the drain…
What inspires me to mention the Amazon today? Recently Greenpeace celebrated a protest in Brasilia in honor of Sister Dorothy Stang who was assassinated in the area of Anapu, Brasil where 31 illegal lumber industries which, despite working 24 hours around the clock, where unable to quench the thirst both the USA and Europe has for wood. What is the solution? We could put all of the workers and their illegal bosses in jail (just put a band aid on the issue) or we could reevaluate our own lives and the society of consumerism we live in.
For whoever is interested, find out what Greenpeace is currently doing and how we can all be involved in helping stop the deforestation of the Amazon jungle.
Entry Filed under: My Thoughts, World Awareness. Tags: 24 hour, Amazon, Anapu, Andrés Solé, assistance, band aid, Belgium, Brasil, Colombia, consumer society, consumerism, deforestation, Dorothy Slang, Education, EEUU, Europe, free lunch, Greenpeace, handicapped, health, health care, home, illegal, jungle, long term, lumber, schooling, socialism, soleworld, Sweden, thirst, wood.
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1.
fpteditors | July 3, 2008 at 3:45 pm
Here is a long-term solution: free public transit. Thiis will encourage a return from the suburbs and the energy waste associated.
2.
David Stang | July 8, 2008 at 2:19 am
I thank Greenpeace for the support of my sister Dorothy Stang who was murdered in the Amazon on Feb. 12 2005. May 6, 2008, the court in Belem Brazil freed my sister’s murderer even though less than a year earlier this same man was sentenced to thirty years in jail for the murder of my sister. When a country cannot provide justice for its people then can there be hope for its environment? I appreciate Greenpeace confronting this lack of justice and impunity that reigns in the State of Para.
David Stang