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Created: May 30, 2007
Updated: Oct 11, 2008
Viewed: 222 times

David W. Potter

SustainableDavid
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User Info 

Email: AmyrisSophora [at] awesomenet.net
Address: Corpus Christi, Texas
United States
Phone: 361-739-4380
I Speak: English, y Espanol un poco
I Am: Activist, Advocate, Networker, Parent, Scientist, Student, Writer
Member Since: May 30, 2007
Local Time: Tue Dec 2 03:33:40

Areas of Focus 

Corporate Ethics (1689 people)  |  Globalization Impacts (1689 people)  |  Water and Sustainable Development (1525 people)  |  Socially Responsible Investment (2143 people)  |  Indigenous Rights (1426 people)  |  Fire Ecology (291 people)  |  Fair Trade (2106 people)  |  Environmental Justice (1688 people)  |  Environmental Ethics (1425 people)  |  Energy Efficiency and Conservation (1921 people)  |  Fair Electoral Process (930 people)  |  Rural Farming Communities (1077 people)  |  Sustainability Education (3212 people)  |  Forest Ecology and Conservation (875 people)  |  Gardening (2094 people)  |  Composting (1547 people)  |  Sustainable Energy Development (2966 people)  |  Soil Conservation and Management (822 people)  |  Water Supply and Conservation (1248 people)  |  Culture and Sustainability (2115 people)  |  Democracy and Civil Society (1529 people)  |  River-Lake Ecology and Biodiversity (558 people)  |  Sustainable Building (2383 people)  |  Sustainable Minerals Industry (514 people)  |  Government Oversight and Reform (519 people)  |  Institutional Accountability (847 people)  |  Global Food Supply and Sustainability (1929 people)  |  Wildlife Management (643 people)  |  Conservation Biology (670 people)  |  Agricultural Policy (896 people)  |  Marine Ecology and Conservation (883 people)  |  Wildlife Habitat Conservation (1742 people)  |  Biodiversity Conservation (2204 people)  |  Wildlife Ecology (1244 people)  |  Sustainable Transportation (1491 people)  |  Sustainable Living (2795 people)  |  Sustainable Forestry (1547 people)  |  Sustainable Communities (3143 people)  |  Democratic Participation (1175 people)  |  Restoration Ecology (970 people)  |  Prison Reform and Policy (376 people)  |  Human Population Growth and Impacts (1188 people)  |  Literacy (951 people)  |  Endangered Plant Species Protection (826 people)  |  Seniors' Health (345 people)  |  Democratic Reform (862 people)  |  Sustainable Production (2055 people)  |  Environmental Law and Policy (946 people)  |  Sustainable Fishing (817 people)  |  Water Law and Policy (530 people)  |  Endangered Animal Species Protection (1116 people)  |  Access To Education (1710 people)  |  Responsible Business Practices (2224 people)  |  Sustainable Agriculture (2768 people)  |  Organic Farming (2493 people)  |  Peace and Peace Building (2468 people)  |  Climate Change (3493 people)  |  Natural Capitalism (1932 people)  |  Electric Power (764 people)  |  Energy Security and Sustainability (1032 people)  

About

Hey, all:

I am primarily a Wildlife Biologist, with experience in endangered species and invasive species ecology, and have added over the years prescribed burn manager, sustainability practitioner and advocate, and I live off-the-grid out in the country, about an hour from Corpus Christi, Texas USA,  with Wind (wind turbine) and Sun (photovoltaic), solar domestic water heat, and roof-top water collection systems.   The wind turbine and photovoltaic equipment supply all my electrical energy needs, so I close all my Internet correspondence with "Messages done with sustainable energy, with Wind and Sun!".

I have free-range chickens (with a "chicken tractor") and I do some organic gardening.  I am interested in strawbale and rammed earth construction, habitat restoration, and reducing human impact globally, including human overpopulation.  A huge portion (if not all) of these goals require the participation of all peoples, cultures, and males and females with full equity and rights. 


Scientists, Researchers, and Writers as Advocates and Activists
I would like to appeal to biologists, scientists and researchers in other fields, and informed writers of high ethical standards who have concluded that there is a global emergency, and we are among the best qualified by our background, experience, passion, and observations to assist in real solutions.   We can provide the evidence and clear explanations of why and how humans have damaged the abiotic and biotic characteristics of the planet, and we can support rational, practical, non-greed-driven actions to halt and reverse the damage.

However, we must understand and accept that we must act with humility and recognize that sometimes there are issues beyond scientific solutions.  There is a an excellent paper by Garrett Hardin:  Hardin, G. 1968. The Tragedy of the Commons. Science Vol. 162.  6 pp., in which he correctly asserts there are some human-caused problems for which "...there is no technical solution...."  Hardin defines a "...technical solution... as one that requires a change only in the techniques of the natural sciences, demanding little or nothing in the way of change in human values or ideas of morality."  For these problems, and there are many, morality combined with social action must instead be used to affect improvement.  We can do both, as recognized and as needed: advocate for techological and scientific improvements in life, and socially and morality based improvements as well.   To do so, we must be able to discern the correct approach.


I claim the first "Father/Daughter" signup on WiserEarth!   I sent my daughter the link and she signed up 24 Sep 2007.   Teresa Potter is my daughter's name and she graduated in May 2008 from Texas A&M University at Galveston, Texas, with her Bachelor's degree in Marine Biology.   Say Hi! to her!

In the past 20 years I have become a stronger and stronger supporter of populism and progressivism, and opponent of the corporate oligarchy and gobbleization--steering further to the left as time goes by.   My primary focus in practically all arenas has become sustainability, since that is the universal guide for surviving and ultimately thriving in concert with the abiotic environment and the biotic community.  Sustainability also extends to social issues, since unjust policies and social structures ultimately cannot be morally sustained.   Social justice and sustainability are mutually essential, and achieving social justice requires full human rights.   Finally, sustainability applies to energy production and distribution, for electricity and transportation, and the need to immediately and completely end the use of both Carbon and nuclear energy as energy sources. 

There is not a single stage in the extraction and use of Carbon-based energy that is sustainable, and in fact, most steps are environmentally destructive and they exacerbate economic disparity worldwide.  Even terrestrial Carbon, as biomass energy, only creates and falsely extends the excuse for continued Carbon extraction and therefore destruction.  Biomass Carbon introduces its own conficts, between land for food, land for human habitation, land for energy, and land for habitat for all the others in the biotic community.    The last category listed here always gets the least consideration.

The conclusion from all this is the stark reality that we have to Kill Carbon as an energy source.  The writer Mark McElroy has said we need to"...kill our worst ideas when they occur before they kill us."  Number One on this list of 'ideas to kill' has to be to Kill Carbon as an energy source. 

 

A very similar situation exists in nuclear energy.  So many buy the line that it is 'cheap and clean', even progressive environmental groups, but it is in fact neither, and is instead extremely costly, both near- and long-term, and extremely hazardous.  Everyone also focuses on the disposal of wastes, but as above with the Carbon industry, there is not one single step in the nuclear process that is sustainable.  It consists of two parallel tracks: the material used (Uranium) and the facilities (power plants), and both must be considered.  From  exploration, extraction, transportation, purification, all the way to ultimate disposal, the Uranium material has destructive, hazardous steps throughout.  Power plants impose their own tremendous damages, in vast volumes  of construction materials used, vast land use, to air and water pollution, thermal impacts, all the way to the final decommissioning and dismantling of power plants at the end of their useful 30-50 year life.  Not one step is sustainable, and in fact all are terrribly destructive.  The Nuke and Carbon industries also share the same structure of vast externalized costs, both financial and environmental, which are borne by billions of people powerless to prevent them. let alone the entire non-human biotic world.

 


The lovely yellow flowers I display here with my user name are those of a cactus, Thelocactus setispinus "Twisted Rib", native to my part of Texas, and the pictured plant was found 83 feet (yeah, I measured) from my front door, where I live among the South Texas brush.  It is quite inconspicuous when not in bloom, and illustrates the subtle beauty and diversity of wilderness which we can discover when we can take the time to appreciate it.  Unfortunately, billions of us in the world do not have the slightest opportunity for such appreciation, rather it is a matter that if a meal or other use is possible for something we observe, little else matters.   As a result, the vast global biodiversity is disappearing utterly and eternally.   This returns us to sustainability in all our actions as the most important, essential focus. 



Question Authority


Challenge the Status Quo


Be Critical of Convention

 

 

*******************************************************************************************


20 Jan 2009:

George W. Bush's

 LAST DAY IN OFFICE!!  YAY!!

*******************************************************************************************

(Too overtly political?  Well, perhaps, but there are BILLIONS who feel the same way!)





"Think on Every Scale, Act in Every Locality."

I have for a long time felt that the statement, "Think Globally, Act Locally." was somewhat obsolete, having been coined in the very early 70s.  It captured the thought of the times, but perhaps times have changed.  I recently wrote the above statement as a replacement, since it reflects the vast improvement in knowledge and the increased power of cooperative effort aided by advances in communication, and the reality that if people only act locally, there are huge gaps in the potential coverage, i.e., we can't be everywhere.  And if we can bring collective attention to issues in remote areas we can be an unstoppable force for improvement.   This statement also challenges us to think and act outside of our comfort zone and experience--'We're in this together'  versus 'you're on your own'.  It also provides the potential for mutual help for problems.


I enjoy reading, but my tastes do not typically run to current popular publishing.  The most recent popular book I have read is probably Field Notes from a Catastrophe, by Elizabeth Kolbert.  It is very good, in providing examples of the range of independent research which have lead virtually all of mainstream science to conclude the reality of anthropogenic climate change.   One of my favorite books is Sand County Almanac by Aldo Leopold, which I read repeatedly for its lesssons and inspiration.   Perhaps my absolute favorite title of all is Civil Disobedience, by Henry David Thoreau.  The value of this tiny little book, its principles, and its history-changing lineage, cannot be overstated.   What other books can be traced through, embraced by, and practiced by Leo Tolstoy, Mohandas Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Nelson Mandela?  I highly recommend this little book, and you can download it in a minute or two, right here:

                                                  http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/71


Other books I enjoy are those by Twain, Amory Lovins, Wendell Berry, and several others.  

 

Below are some quotes which I love or live by (or both!):

Perhaps we are approaching a new vision, a new synthesis.  As we start to see, in Alwyn Rees's phrase, that when we have come to the edge of an abyss, the only progressive move we can make is to step backward, we begin to realize that we can instead turn around and step forward, and the the turning around--the transition to a future unlike anything we have ever known--will be supremely interesting, an unprecedented central project for our species. 

Faust, having made a bad bargain by not reading the fine print and so brought disaster on the innocent bystanders (Gretchen's family), was eventually redeemed and accepted in heaven because he changed his career, redevoting his talents to bringing soft technologies to the villagers.   We need, like Faust, to refashion hubris into humility; to learn and accept our own limits as a fragile and tenuous experiment in an unhospitable universe; and to grow content to live as a people, not as gods.  Our choice of the "road less traveled" can truly make all the difference.  But if we wish to have the chance to tell of our choice, "somewhere ages and ages hence." then we must chose soon, and choose wisely, for all the ages. 

                               --  Amory Lovins, Soft Energy Paths, 1977


This is the only place on Earth blue bonnets grow
And once a year they come and go
At this old house here by the road

And when we die we say we'll catch some blackbird's wing
And we will fly away to heaven, come some sweet blue bonnet spring.

                              --  Nancy Griffith, James Hooker, Danny Flowers,  "Gulf Coast Highway"

 
To know and not to know, to be conscious of complete truthfulness while telling carefully constructed lies, to hold simultaneously two opinions which cancelled out, knowing them to be contradictory and believing in both of them, to use logic against logic, to repudiate morality while laying claim to it, to believe that democracy was impossible and that the Party was the guardian of democracy, to forget whatever it was necessary to forget, then to draw it back into memory again at the moment when it was needed, and then promptly to forget it again: and above all, to apply the same process to the process itself.  That was the ultimate subtlety: consciously to induce unconsciousness, and then, once again, to become unconscious of the act of hypnosis you had just performed.  Even to understand the word ‘doublethink’ involved the use of doublethink. 

                                --  George Orwell, "doublethink", from 1984


Things do not change; we change.  --  Henry David Thoreau

Everyone thinks of changing the world, but no one thinks of changing himself.   --  Leo Tolstoy

Be the change that you want to see in the world.   --  Mohandas Gandhi

Lead by example.  --  Anon.

Practice what you preach.  --  Anon.

There are a thousand hacking at the branches of evil to one who is striking at the root.  --  Henry David Thoreau

If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem.   --  Anon.

Lead, follow, or get out of the way.  --  Anon.


David
Messages done with sustainable energy, with Wind and Sun!


Comments (1 - 12 of 12)

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fostertlu 3 months ago

Thanks for your invite.

 

I was wondering if you were aware of the work being done by Transition Boulder County? http://www.bouldercountygoinglocal.com/transitionbouldercounty.html

 

They are the first Transition intiative in the U.S. and I'm going to be working with them.

 

Cheers,

 

Teresa

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oblio69 4 months ago

"The more clearly we focus our attention on the wonders and realities of the Universe around us, the less taste we shall have for destruction."

- Rachel Carson

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JAM777 7 months ago

David

Do you have any Water Conservation Devices/Systems in place in your "off the grid" homw?

If not I would like to suggest a System whcih will reduce your Utilization percentage by 40% without effecting you daily consumption or over all cost. It's a System I designed and prototyped  myself.

J. Arthur Mensah, Sr.

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debhamson0 9 months ago
This comment was removed by a WiserEarth editor for the following reason:
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sulina 9 months ago
This comment was removed by a WiserEarth editor for the following reason:
Spammed across many members' profiles. Not the worst example of the type but still not appreciated.
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CherylHoney 10 months ago
What a valuable contribution you are making. You are a true inspiration. I'm honored you felt compelled to connect with me and my work in the world through Community Weaving. I share your beliefs and in preparation for the great turning, focus my efforts on helping people to pool resources at www.familynetwork.org and live intentionally in community with one another. If I can be of service, let's connect. The article you referenced in your profile has provided me with great insight. Thank you.
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rosatell 11 months ago
Hello David! Thank you for contacting me. I have a PhD in Mathematics with a minor in Biology and Biochemistry and have been working in cancer, birth defect and general community health issues since 1969. I am retired but very busy with the veteran illnesses, which I think are basically caused by the new DU ammunition. I believe strongly in inter-disciplinary collaboration and has learned so much since I began to meet with colleagues in other disciplines. I will be off line until 27 Jan 08. Rosalie Bertell
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Enerquest 11 months ago
Hello David,

Thank you for inviting me to your "friendship circle". I read your principles and I agree with most of them. I do believe that we have to go back to the roots, so to speak. However, communities will embrace sustainability as long as those principles will not undermine their economic development. I have a project in the making and I do see challenges as how this can be accomplished. I welcome your comments.
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statue 11 months ago
HI DAvid,
Thanks for inviting me a friend. You are the first one I listed a friend in WIser Earth. I think I could gain lots of knowledge from you in wildlife biology as well as in sustainable energy. Hope you will share and guide me for my future research and professional career.
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bowo about 1 year ago
Hi David,

It's good to know a real traveler of the "the road less traveled". I hope that professors in the world's universities share your vision of justice and sustainability and project it in their professional lives the way you passionately are doing it by being the change you want to see in the world.

I hope someday to follow your lead in having a house I constructed myself in the countryside applicating the principles of the permaculture design philosophy. But for now, I have to be content situated in the suburban sprawl where my home is.

It's good to meet so many "beautiful" people in WiserEarth that I can hardly meet in the real word. Helps me to stay on course.

Nice to know you.
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flattail about 1 year ago
David,

Thanks for signing up for the sea turtle conservation group and suggesting adding HEART. I saw your comments about how people are using Wiser Earth, and I share similar frustrations. I think this is an amazing resource, but it is sitting vacant. I'm not sure what needs to happen to spark the enrollment of thousands and then millions, but I'm hopeful it will happen. I'm going to present at our local Bioneers conference today and try to be a catalyst there.
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SustainableDavid about 1 year ago
This WiserEarth initiative is a wonderful Idea, since greater wider organization is essential for improvements in all aspects of human existence. We should even continue to improve the organization, on all levels and in substance, and not just in technology. Improvement, not mere change, is key. The folks at NCI deserve thanks for recognizing that key.

David
Messages done with sustainable energy, with Wind and Sun!
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