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I grew up wanting to write for Ranger Rick magazine. Working for National Wildlife Federation is something I've always wanted to do and I love using the internet as a way to spread NWF's powerful message.
Comments (1 - 3 of 3)
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Remove VanessaSerrao 14 days ago
Hi Danielle, Thanks for joining NatureBreak! I'd love to talk with you more about your work in social media at NWF.
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well done !!!!!!!! keep it up... i think you are realy activist......
Are you someone who is looking to do something
meaningful with your life? Are you someone who believes that the world
should be a better place? Are you someone who wants to make a difference?
There are many of us who would answer all of those questions with an emphatic
‘YES!’ – yet the choices and opportunities put before us by our society,
education and culture often seem to be very inadequate in helping us translate
our intentions into meaningful practice. We are all faced with numerous
questions and issues in all facets of our own lives, as well as that of
society at large, to which there seem to be no answers in sight:
· Are exploitation, poverty, injustice,
discrimination and war an inevitable part of human society or is it possible
to have a just and equitable society?
· Are development and ecological sustainability
always going to be at loggerheads with one another, or is possible to utilise
technology for the benefit of humanity, without disturbing the ecological
balance of our planet?
· Is the education of children just about
rote, memorisation and eventually getting better jobs, or is it possible
to have an educational alternative that not only helps children become
thinking individuals but also better human beings?
· Are human lives bound to be an endless
struggle just to meet one’s material needs, or is it possible to meet one’s
economic requirements as well as lead intellectually and emotionally fulfilling
lives?
· Are relationships between human beings
bound to be full of conflict, differences, inequality, emotional distress
and unhappy compromises, or is it possible to have extremely happy, contented,
meaningful interpersonal relationships?
· Is unhappiness, meaninglessness and discontent
an inherent part of human existence or is it possible for all human beings
to live purposeful, meaningful lives?
The long history of mankind has seen numerous
attempts to answer the above questions. While many religious and philosophical
schools of thought have put forth ‘solutions’ to some of the above problems,
their answers have often been mystical and unable to change the inequitable
and exploitative structures of society. Moreover, these very ideas have
been used as a means to justify religious and communal violence for many
centuries. Postindustrial society has seen an intensification of the above
problems and questions. Consequently, numerous ideologies, socio-political
movements and social experiments have sought solutions in the form of equality
of opportunities, freedom from injustice and exploitation, the creation
of classless societies, equal access to natural resources, as well as protection
of the environment. Undoubtedly, these attempts have had some impact on
the society we live in. However, apart from having their own share of supporters
and detractors, no ideology, movement or experiment has been able to show
any definitive outcomes. As a consequence, many of us have come to believe
that no conclusive outcomes, results or solutions are even possible. We
often work with the assumption that a meaningful life and a truly just,
equitable society are utopian ideals that can only be dreamt about or aspired
towards, but never actually realised or concretised.
Yet the need for answers/solutions remains. In
fact, it is far greater than ever before. We are faced with a rapidly globalising
world, with increasing inequalities, intensifying ecological imbalance,
heightening war and violence and sharpened fundamentalist identities. Moreover,
a materialist-consumerist culture and way of life is spreading in all parts
of the world. The irony of this socio-economic structure/way of life/culture
is that while it creates large numbers of ‘have-nots’, the people who are
at the bottom of the pyramid and are struggling for survival; the very
‘haves’ who are at the top (and higher end) of the social pyramid are struggling
with the meaninglessness and hollowness of their lives. Our current way
of life seems inhuman and unsustainable from all perspectives.
So the question still remains – is there any alternative
to the existing social, economic, cultural order? Is there any philosophy/set
of ideas/worldview that creates the possibilities of a meaningful way of
life, and a humane, just and sustainable society? Is it possible for
all human beings to have all facets of their lives harmoniously interconnected
– be it the personal, inter-personal, social or ecological? What we want
to do now is to go beyond a general hopeful vision and a few promising
small-scale experiments to a deeper, clearer, and more specific understanding
of how such a way of life, and society could actually be developed. Any
such ‘understanding’ would have to be universal; that is, it should satisfy
the needs and requirements of all human beings. Any such philosophy that
seeks to provide answers has to be one that can be examined and analysed
by each individual, that is, it has to be free from any sectarianism, mysticism
or spiritual leaders.
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