Archive for the 'ecology' Category

Ethical Protein at Luminous Green, Singapore

I have just run a session on ethical protein provision for the luminous green event 31st July in Singapore 2008. Luminous Green is a series of gatherings about a possible future; about a human world, that is enlightened, imaginative, electrified and most importantly – living in a fertile symbiosis with the rest of the planet.

The session went well, it was on ethical protein concentrating on meat although I am more confused than when I started. I wanted to look at a number of protein sources, but we did not touch vegetable proteins, as the group had much experience with meat

Meats place in theworld is very complicated and there were a number of issues to discuss before even concidering the meat licence. As the panel was made up of 5 self selecting people (3 from the SE Asia and India), me living in uk, we had the opportunity to discuss the complicated picture.
So, imediately it was apparent that the people in my group had a far better understanding of meat, hunting and killing than me. Three had experienced a village and hunting culture in their youth.

We also got to start exploring the meat and religion. From its diverse population, there is a majority of people that rever the cow(88%) and the minority that don’t(12%). So depending upon who you talked to, there was a completely different attitude to beef.

In other news, to save on land space, holland is concidering a pig skyscraper/farm to supply its pork.

I found the SE asian viewpoint on hunting to be rich, with the slightly controverial idea that livestock/meat is money on 4 legs for the disenfranchised/people without land. As a source of protein, its ethics do not come into it if it is the only way they can sustain themselves.
Just a few provocations…..ethical meat the supermarket way is unstainable/affordable for masses.

The Meat Licence is an interesting probe for the uk, but outside the western world, where there is a better connection with the land, it makes the idea irrelevant. For immegrants coming into the UK will they have to be licenced if they cant prove that they have been involved in the slaughter of meat?

It is interesting that these asian regions are going down the same route of industrialised farming.

From one participant, there was also a strong reaction to another law in the already overregulated UK, do we need another law?

Brian

something smells fishy, everything is shit

Anatomy of a coral polyp.Image via Wikipedia

Why do the terms fishy and shit so negative?

I think it is a disengagement or disenfranchisement event. It is a woprd that connects with the intense olfactory reaction…..bus can we get past its olfactory unplesantness and explore what we could activate these terms for the betterment of ourselves.

I am still thinking….but my initial thoughts (influenced by people at the urban climate camp and luminous green as part of ISEA2008, Singapore) is that there is something strange going on. These terms (or their describe an ecological approach to food/energy production and a awareness  of diversity. So when we talk about food/energy production…. through the reintroduction of biomass to the land, or burning biomass for generation of  energy… we are talking about shit, a totally natural part of life.

Fishyness is a connection with the underwater world, and through this ourselves. Fish in their water world are a metaphor for our own. We want to use the power of uniqueness against the tide of monoculture. In some ways something that unique/endangered is now valuable…..so why are we replacing what is unique (through draining swamps, growing monocultures for biomass production etc) with what is a unsustainable monoculture?

Diversity is both shit and fishy….It is frugal, but generates wonder, through careful hand to hand passing of a small packet of energy/information through a number of membrane systems.  Rainforests and  Coral reefs, frugal mass producers of diversity. One link (energy return system) is shit…. how wonderful is that?

Monoculture on the other hand, asorbs energy at a incredible rate, for a small output,requires constant maintenance. High energy use translates into economic transactions, which become a losing battle as non-renewable resources are consumed….

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