Thursday, December 13, 2007

Sustainability

An interesting comment on sustainability:

Toronto's poet laureate argues that environmental sustainability cannot be achieved until people become better neighbors and create better communities.

"I shall make a plea for the salvific aspect of the act of walking. Yes, salvific. Not just to save the environment, but to save ourselves, and not just by regarding the environment.

We will not save the environment until we have found a reason for living together.

Until we discover civic care in each other, until we restore the city to its definition as a place of unexpected intimacies, not just as a place of amenities, convenience, business, and entertainment, we will not have sustainability.

For sustainability is about replacing an ethic of entitlement with an ethic of sufficiency. And sufficiency is what we find in each other.

In an era that glorifies independence and even inter-dependence we are shy of admitting the awful truth: that is, we are dependent on each other, not by connectedness, but because we are one body breathing the same air.

It is not cars that are the enemy of the pedestrian. The enemy is the absence of civic communion, the lack of empathic citizenship, our inability to see cohabitation as that place where we enjoy ourselves, by enjoying others."

From Planetizen

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

One cannot escape irony of this quote being used by this organization.