Typhoon Hagupit continues to slowly sweep across the
Philippines, causing damage. Around a million people have taken shelter in
evacuation centres. Fortunately this typhoon did not wreak the havoc or death
that a typhoon named Haiyan did on 8 November 2013. One year on, the government
is still rebuilding a province that was wiped out but the reconstruction is way
too slow, dragged down by politics and corruption.
Tragically, Hagupit and Haiyan are unlikely to be occasional
natural disasters to hit the Philippines, or any other country, as the global
climate crisis intensifies. The result will be more and more destructive storms
and similar environmental catastrophes are bound to happen.
‘Scientists have warned for decades that pumping greenhouse
gases into the atmosphere has and will continue to cause global average
temperatures to rise and the result will be more and more extreme weather
events,’ says Kristin Casper, a Legal Counsel for Campaigns and Actions at
Greenpeace International in an article on the changing climate.
The culprit? The entire capitalist system and its greed for
profits by making consumers consume more and more.
Filipino documentary
photographer, Jes Aznar, explains:
“Capitalism’s
relentless need to produce more products and profit has finally come to terms
with the striking reality – we consume and become consumed, and the great
industrialization’s effect on the environment has and will give a huge blow to
poorer countries like this one.”
'Morally impressed'? Whatever that may mean.
ReplyDeleteHello. May I suggest you a subject to post about?
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Given the credibility and voluminous instructive quality of this blog, I think it would be an interest thing to post about, if possible, of course. I am an almost daily reader of this blog.
Best regards.