Hello Earthlings!

April 11, 2010

Welcome to the HumanCoral Blog! Here you will find the latest about our network as we simultaneously cut through uncharted territory and reinforce our roots, individually and collaboratively. Enjoy!

-The HumanCoral Team

Above: Young girl putting UN dignitaries in their place at UN meeting about the environment in Brasil.

Below: A short fusion between Weiner’s Pulitzer-prize winning account of the Grants’ fundamental research in evolutionary biology, The Beak of the Finch, and Freire’s seminal contribution to critical pedagogy, Pedagogy of the Oppressed.

We are living through the sixth mass extinction. The first to be driven by the expansion of a single species. The first that this species is conscious of its effect on its surroundings. Evolution is accelerated as conditions change. Like all organisms, humans must find new niches that are favored by the new conditions in order to survive. Unfortunately, we are often not allowing our population to explore the diversity of currently empty niches because a minority of humans is imposing their will over other humans, making them “less human”. Such dehumanization is often recognized with the socially, economically, and culturally marginalized worldwide. I want to explore the missed evolutionary opportunity for our species when we dehumanize younger generations. Their particular situation this planet in crisis: as relatively new arrivals to Earth, as subject to the decisions of older generations, as the largest portion of global population, etc. has carved out a clear niche for them in the evolution of our species and our planet.

The evolutionary niche of the younger generations is to liberate themselves and older generations from environmental disaster. The unsustainable lifestyle and actions of living generations lead to environmental degradation. Environmental degradation is a legitimate form of oppression towards future generations – the fact that the living generations are taking more than their fair share as a generation result in future generations being left with diminished lifestyles – Just like the socially, economically, culturally oppressed that share this Earth with their contemporaries, this oppression cannot be overcome by the oppressors. In other words, the oppressed cannot be liberated; only they can liberate themselves AND their oppressors. This can only be accomplished through dialogue, critical analysis, and action. However, as oppressors, how do we engage in dialogue with those who do not exist yet (future generations – the most oppressed)?

Younger generations are the most affected by this oppression from the past few generations (especially those since the industrial revolution up to those currently living) and have the least amount of time participating as oppressors themselves. Responsibility falls upon them to speak for their generation and of those coming after them, as they are the ones who can most legitimately claim “oppressed” status.

Current trends show accelerating global resource depletion and increasing exposure to harmful environmental conditions caused by pollution and natural disasters. We have imposed upon future generations, through our unsustainable lifestyles, the most unfair distribution of resources and exposure to environmental hazards – they will bear the brunt of our actions the most while reaping the least benefit from our resource depletion and polluting of Earth. Yet the fact they are young does not make them any less human, and so should not mean that they are any less entitled to those resources than an adult. After all, everyone was young, and its only a matter of time before the young become old.

In this case, everyone is simultaneously oppressor and oppressed, some people (the majority) are just more oppressed than others (the minority). After all, you will not lead as full of a life, environmentally speaking, as your predecessors did (they ate fruits you will never taste, breathed air more pure than that you will ever breathe, saw animals you will never see, ) and likewise, your progeny’s welfare will be diminished even further than your own (you eat fruits they will never taste…etc)

As intergenerational OPPRESSORS, what can we do? We need to trust young people are able to reason in order to engage in an honest conversation with them as equals. Meanwhile, we must abandon unsustainable lifestyles: intentions don’t matter if we do not translate them into actions. To ask for the abdication of an oppressive, unsustainable lifestyle, while not living like those oppressed is a farce.  “Think seven generations ahead”, famously said the Iriquois. What would it mean to be sympathetic with people a couple hundred years into the future? How would you live if you were to live like they will have to live?

As intergenerationally OPPRESSED, what can we do? We must break the cycle of oppression by no longer defining ourselves in contrast with those who oppressed us. i.e. we must not yearn to have as much material possessions as those who came before us, use as much resources as those who came before us, lead the lifestyle of those who came before us. We must not become oppressors ourselves, and thus perpetuate the oppressor-oppressed dependency cycle. We must create a new identity for ourselves, go a new direction that does not involve gauging ourselves as humans based on the measuring stick of past generations (often wealth and power). Fulfill our humanity in a new way, find a new meaning in life.

What if this denouncement of intergenerational injustice, voiced by the younger generations themselves, goes through the proper legal means to influence policy/regulation? What if engaging young generations in the exercise of critical reflection and action to change their condition as “environmentally oppressed” by past generations becomes the praxis of educators (in this case, the revolutionary leadership)? What if, in their search for a new way of life which does not emulate that of its predecessor’s, the young generations free themselves, and older generations from environmental collapse? What if this niche is so fitting in the face of current environmental degradation that it is able to drive the evolution of our species, through our economies and societies, and the planet into a sustainable, non-oppressive direction?

Global population pyramids comparison in developing and developed countries 1950, 1990, 2030. Notice the pyramyds are wider towards the bottom. Most people are towards the younger side of the spectrum. Most people live in "developing countries". Two forms of the oppressor-oppressed dichotomy are depicted: by age and by "developed" vs "developing" countries (oppressor & oppressed countries, respectively). In both cases you have those who consume the most resources as the minority: People towards older side of spectrum & people in developed countries.

Works Fused:

Weiner, Jonathan. (1994) The Beak of the Finch: A Story of Evolution in Our Time. Vintage. New York.

Freire, Paulo (2006). Pedagogy of the Oppressed. 30th Anniversary Ed. Continuum. New York.

Biodiversity loss is one of those excruciatingly pressing issues that most people ignore because its implications are hard to grasp with traditional linear thinking. Most people are not even aware we are living through the sixth mass extinction. Humans have already driven more species to extinction than the meteorite that wiped dinosaurs off the face of the planet. Its consequences are hard to encapsulate in bite-size pieces without undermining its intrinsic complexity; this is why it is a subject that has usually been shrouded in uncertainty, reduced to photos of charismatic megafauna, or simply ignored altogether.

A UN-backed report recently found that one in four business leaders thought the decline in biodiversity was a threat to their business growth and detrimental to profits.

“We are entering an era where the multi-trillion dollar losses of natural and nature-based resources are starting to shape markets and consumer concerns” – UNEP Executive Director Achim Steiner.

This find was echoed in the latest McKinsey Global Survey results:

“…a majority of executives, 59 percent, see biodiversity as more of an opportunity than a risk for their companies. They identify a variety of potential opportunities, such as bolstering corporate reputations with environmentally conscious stakeholders by acting to preserve biodiversity and developing new products or ideas from renewable natural resources.” -McKinsey Quarterly

Running the risk of supporting greenwashing, any publicity is good publicity when it comes to raising awareness about our choices’ effects on the biosphere. However, the most successful businesses in the long run will be those that truly reinvent themselves to incorporate biodiversity conservation into their agenda. After all, considering mass extinctions are such a rare event in the history of the planet, it would seem logical that its prime time for business opportunities that address biodiversity, right?

“Respondents say consumers, followed by regulators, are the stakeholders with the most impact on the actions their companies take to address biodiversity.” – McKinsey Quarterly

I was especially pleased to see how the McKinsey Quarterly  emphasized that it is the consumer that has the most leverage to change the way we do business, above regulators even! You can change the way business is run with every dollar you spend simply through choice. Don’t sit wait for top-down solutions, because the ones on top are waiting for feedback from the bottom-up.

Our first adventure will be to befriend a key link of the Galapagos Islands: the Galapagos giant tortoises. We will follow a group of these armored gentle giants as they are reintroduced to Pinta Island, an island once devastated by invasive goats and currently devoid of tortoises. As powerful ecological engineers, the idea is to find out if these turtles will be able to rehabilitate the island by doing what they do best: being tortoises.

Two of the 39 turtles that will be part of what is being called "one of the most important projects the Galapagos National Park has seen in the past 10 years"

The adventure will last 3 months and will begin on May 1st. Due to technological limitations while this adventure is under way (a team of four people will be in an uninhabited island with 39 turtles, and possibly with no connection to the outside world) please refer to Project Pinta’s official blog for the latest information about this fascinating project:


CLICK HERE FOR AN EXPANDED DESCRIPTION OF THIS PROJECT