Yesterday, I asked some moral questions about our oil addiction [6]. Today, I'd like to suggest some steps for moving away from our oil addiction.
Let's assess our situation: Some estimates suggest that 100,000 barrels of oil per day are streaming out into the Gulf [7]; half the world's wetlands were destroyed in the 20th century; 90 percent of our big ocean fish are now gone; we continue polluting our rivers, lakes, and streams while they are getting dangerously warmer and evaporating; the global mining industry and industrial agriculture are sucking our ground water and aquifers dry; whole mountaintops in Appalachia are being removed for their coal [8]; tens of thousands of people are losing their homes; the world's economies are beginning to collapse; America is addicted to entering perpetually immoral wars fueled by our war industrial complex; the global climate is changing because of our immoral practices and our world has never faced a greater threat than it does today. I could go on
Links:
[1] http://sojo.net/blogs/gods-politics
[2] http://sojo.net/biography/randy-woodley
[3] http://sojo.net/blogs/2010/07/08/we-must-ask-moral-questions-about-our-oil-addiction-part-ii#comment-covenant
[4] http://sojo.net/letter-to-web-editor?post=We%20Must%20Ask%20Moral%20Questions%20About%20Our%20Oil%20Addiction%20%28Part%20II%29
[5] http://sojo.net/donate
[6] http://blog.sojo.net/2010/07/07/we-must-ask-moral-questions-about-our-oil-addiction-part-i/
[7] http://blog.sojo.net/tag/bp-oil-spill/
[8] http://www.sojo.net/index.cfm?action=magazine.article&issue=soj1006&article=destroying-west-virginia-one-mountain-at-a-time&cookies_enabled=false