Meaning of/in (human) Life/Nature.

I suppose I have to have hope in humanity (i.e., in its quest for scientific knowledge, humility, empathy, compassion, respect, discipline & integrity, and in its capacity for Truth & Prudence) … and hope for quality life for all!!??!! “Positively Ethical Applied Community Ecology-PEACE” across curricula & campuses (EACC), of all human organizational entities, will enable us to critically think, and intelligently make critical decisions and take action toward!!??!! :

o redistribution of power resulting in empowering of the poorest across the hemisphere,

o knowledgeably, wisely, prudently reflecting on the resilience, sustainability, quality of: Nature versus Artificial

o proceeding forward with caution & tentativeness in actions of “artificialization”,

o sustainable livelihoods & light ecological footprints for all,

o holding corporations/small businesses/others accountable for externalities, pollution, all short-term & long-term costs and to not extract from Nature or to pass on their ecological debts/deficits on to future generations,

o weaning ourselves off of fossil energy and materials made from oil, coal, etc., including plastics, a universal single-payer health care [preventative health care & other health-care, quality drinking & recreational water, healthy food, basic fiber & shelter needs and other basic (Maslov) needs as rights versus capitalistic commodities],

o open borders,

o appropriate applied agroecology,

o setting 1/2 of the Eaarth (becoming Earth once again) aside for Nature as proposed by E.O. Wilson,

o using all means possible … including using flash protests … for realizing PEACE versus War.

pbm

[ 7 S’s / VV->^^ ]

Dr. Norman Borlaug and the Green Revolution: Neglect of the Precautionary Principle

The WSJ has it mostly wrong today re the Green Revolution on their editorial page … and the PBS Norman Borlaug documentary is on the right track.

It should be common knowledge by now that:

1. Dr. Borlaug et al. didn’t abide by the Precautionary Principle,
2. there were better routes toward quality life for all (including other species) back in the 1950s/60s … and
3. Dr. Borlaug and those of the Green Revolution made many big mistakes, among them:

• tremendous colonizer arrogance after the Allies “won” WW II and lack of listening to & working with local agriculturalists, campesinos, and local governments & communities to address local food and resource issues profoundly & holistically for the short AND long term,

• too much dependence on fossil energy and materials (including “synthetic” fertilizers as well as biocides) … and

• treatment of the plant breeders as Gods during this period of agricultural research, … and neglect of truly identifying the real root problems and approaching the challenges in an interdisciplinary/transdisciplinary way.

This was changing somewhat in the 1970s with a farming systems and sustainable livelihoods approach, but then the appropriate winds of change were misdirected again worldwide with the right-wing wave of Thatcher & Reagan et al. in the 1980s. This right-wing colonizer, neo-liberal capitalistic, transnational corporation, authoritarian, strong-arm approach began to soften somewhat toward the end of the George W. Bush years and into the Obama administration.

But now the world has really tended to go over-board with deplorable right-wing and authoritarian administrations.

(Of course, the COVID-19 pandemic IS revealing big problems with our industrial big ag systems/agrilogistics. But will it truly wake up a world which has grown used to masking the terrible effects of neglect of a dynamic homeostatic symbioses/”nature” with fossil energy and rampant artificialization?)

https://www.wsj.com/articles/battering-norman-borlaug-11587769611

https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/films/man-who-tried-to-feed-the-world/

https://borlaug.tamu.edu/

……………………………………….
(I’m tagging via Facebook some folk who have studied this Green Revolution/sustainable community history much more thoroughly than I and would have a much more in-depth and accurate assessment and conclusions)
*******************************

pbm 4/25/2020
[ 7 S’s / VV->^^]

 

My Memories of the Amazing Educator Lawrence Alton Martin (April 22, 1948-January 28, 2010)

Memories shared at brother Lawrence’s funeral service ten (10) year’s ago in the same church where the funeral service of our beloved and highly respected Coach Marvin Gustafson was held ( https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/name/lawrence-martin-obituary?pid=139164488 )–

[Lawrence gifted me with the book in the photo above, Paideia Problems and Possibilities, and invited me to present one afternoon to his O’Connor High School–in a very interactive, Socratic way–what I now call “Positively Ethical Applied Community Ecology” … with an emphasis on energetics (illustrated in the poster above).]

“Barbara, Mom, Lisa, Matt, all of you wonderful folk …

I’m Paul, … also know as Pablo, or Paul Bain—or “Paulwayne” … as Lawrence used to say it years ago when we ran around with Greg Jasik and Paul Clay Lessing down in Devine. …

I’m next up in line from Lawrence, with the rest of our four (4) siblings being younger–and wiser.

We honor Lawrence Alton Martin today! But in doing this, I think he’d be pleased if I mentioned a few of those who helped make him the wonderful and amazing man he became.

My brother Lawrence had–I think–the best balance of traits from Mom Louise and Dad Alton … of all of us six (6) kids. He was a critical listener and life-long learner and the good stuff he got from Mom and Dad was enhanced by what he learned in the fields from Tony Cruz & Salame Gallegos, and on the field from Coach Comalander.

And from Coach Marvin Gustafson. … Coach Gus! … It really is fitting that both Lawrence’s and Coach Gus’s funeral services are and were here in this beautiful church. Really appropriate because Coach Gus had such an influence on Lawrence—and of course directly and indirectly he influenced many of us who are here today.

Also, Lawrence learned from Coaches Robbins, Alexander & Padron.

And vo-ag teacher Mr. Henry Moss, … Mrs. Allen, Mr. Sechist and Leo Bohl, the Outlaws of Black Creek, Gary Wilkinson, Frank Dodson, Dunar Kielman, all the Jasiks, Irwins, Peñas, Chapas, Pompas, Haasses, Ehlingers, Campseys, Bendeles, Bains, Jungmans, and Haywoods; Lilian Sauter, Matt Williams, Ken Milam, Dr. Debbie Sonnen, and Dennis Ann Strong.

I could go on and on and name many others from whom Lawence learned, … because as I’m trying to stress–Lawrence truly was a great listener and learner!

He was sometimes strongly opinionated. But he was open-minded. And he did learn from all of you who are here today—and lots of others.
………………
Lawrence was quietly humble, loving, compassionate, tolerant, devoted, and devout, disciplined, punctual, … unassuming, … but he was also skilled, hard-working, daring, persevering, and relentless. He was a very likeable people-person. … He was real people!

Lawrence was a role model’s role model. … And I stress again, … his character and integrity resulted mostly from humility, discipline, … hard work to hone his talents into skills, … and lots of innate love. … Love. Man does he love his grandkids, kids, wife and parents, and the only grandparent we knew, Grandma Eva Martin.

Moreover, as his son Matt so beautifully put it Wednesday at the Library dedication ceremony for Lawrence, Lawrence truly believed that everyone is very important, and he treated them that way always–and each and every day. Moreover, he was “adamant” in encouraging and demanding that all live up to their potential in life’s journey—no matter how rocky the road.
…………………
Lawrence was 15 months younger than I but over the years he taught me a bunch in varying ways. Through the years he gave me:
healthy competition,
some discipline and order,
friends,
a place to live,
employment,
great roommates,
a beautiful wife, kids, and grandkids,
a solid pragmatic socio-political view …
and of course, so much more.

He was a really good brother!

I could tell 100s of stories about Lawrence. But don’t worry, I won’t stay up here much longer. And Barbara, … I won’t tell any of those stories where you scold me with, “Oh Paul, quit telling those stories.”

But here’s several Lawrence stories which I think are telling about his character.

1. Our youngest sibling, our only sister told me this one this last week.

It’s a hot July day at that little non-airconditioned two(2)-bedroom house in Devine on Texas Highway 173 where Triple C Restaurant is now, where eight (8) of us slept and ate, and bathed in a tiny bathroom with a tub—and where your right leg burned from the space heater in the winter when you sat on the toilet.

Anyway, Linda, John Russell and Charlie are watching Lawrence cut into a cold Black Diamond watermelon out on the hot sidewalk. Lawrence just shallowly slices out a big chunk of the rind and then quickly plunges in with his hands and pulls out the whole heart, buries his face in it, and then says, “Here, y’all can have the rest.” Sister Linda said she was too young to really understand what was happening, but immediately brothers Charlie and John Russell were not happy campers.

Lawrence could be mischievious!

2. Lawrence was a craftsman—a builder of beautiful things … furniture, Dr. Sonnen’s house, his weight machine (Maybe the weight machine isn’t so beautiful, but it is beautifully functional.). … Let’s go to hot, sand-duned, desert-like Lamesa, Texas just south of Lubbock in the early 60s. A couple of brothers are welding on a pea viner—or big pea sheller–which Uncle Peggy Martin was constructing at Cotton King Gin on the road to Punkin Center.

“Good lord! What the heck is this. That splattering mess will never hold Paul Bain!”
“Wow!! Look at that beautiful bead. Way to go Lawrence!! Great work!!!”

(That was our work supervisor, future Dad-in-Law of Lawrence’s, Matt Williams who checked over our welding work. … And yes, Lawrence was a good welder.)

He was a good tractor driver too, and could really effectively run, trouble-shoot and fix the sort of Rube Goldburg bean-harvesters Uncle Peggy purchased and modified in the 1960s.

3. OK, now—another hot day; early summer. Lawrence and I are in a cotton trailer full of pink-eye purple hull peas … out in front of the old icehouse and next to the train docks and tracks in what was then agricultural-Devine … tossing the pea pods with pitch forks into another cotton trailer to keep them cool.

This will be our day’s work, just tossing peas to keep them air-cooled before there are enough coming in from the field for a full semi load to send to Allen Cannery in Siloam Springs, Arkansas.

I’m the big brother and I try to keep up with Lawrence—and because of this, our Uncle Peggy, for whom we were working, is really getting his money’s worth. … But there is no way I can compete with Lawrence. He’s like a machine, quickly filling each fork-load with pea pods and tossing them high without stopping. Like a relentless machine!!

4. Now let’s travel up old Highway 81—this is before President Eisenhower’s Interstates were completed–on a school trip to the old “natural” pool at Landa Park, New Braunfels—the wonderful town where my Mom was raised. There’s a tall tower at one end of the pool which has since been removed because of danger to divers—and I am too scared to go off of this high tower.

But not Lawrence! I watch him all afternoon–along with all the pretty girls around the pool—go off that tower time after time—doing flips and spins and somersaults and twists and tucks… perhaps not so beautifully, but truly amazingly. (He was already “The Amazing Mr. Martin.”) Lawrence’s body was totally cherry red from hitting the water every which way, … but up that tower he’d climb again.
………
OK, we need some audience participation! … How many of y’all saw Lawrence walk on his hands at some time in the past—maybe in the school reception area up on the bar or at a Pep Rally? …

He could get kind of crazy sometimes.

5. This is the last story, and this time it’s late fall and much cooler. It’s actually a beautiful crispy cold Friday night, a Warhorse playoff game in Devine which I’d come home to from College Station to see. We Warhorses won the toss to play at home and it is an excitingly wonderful game to watch. There’s this little roving monster-man, my tough daredevil of a brother Lawrence, fighting off blockers and stacking three (3) or four (4) of them up play after play, and still getting tackle after tackle at near the line of scrimmage.

And in “Double A” Devine you were in shape and went both ways—offense and defense. In addition to all his tackles as linebacker, Lawrence also did his share of great blocking as offensive guard that night.

I could tell other stories, but I think these 5 are illustrative of some of Lawrence’s many good and amazing traits and skills.

…………………………….
I congratulated Lawrence some years back when he received a principal of the year award for work at Zachary Middle School. He sloughed off the congratulations saying, “They love the heck out of you one minute and are ready to can you the next!”

Of course, that never really was true in the case of Lawrence. And I know y’all will all continue to love him and will honor him by being life-long learners to the good of others, society and the ecology. I know you’ll keep learning from Lawrence Alton Martin.

Discipline, humility, compassion, love for all, tolerance. For Peace … not War. Belief in all humans—and their importance and expecting the best out of each of you! …

Discipline, humility, compassion, love for all, tolerance. For Peace … not War. Belief in all humans—and their importance and expecting the best out of each of you! …

Thank you again Matt/all of you for this honor to speak a bit about Lawrence.”

pvm
[ 7 S’s / VV->^^ ]

Fifty Years of Earth Day (Ecological Literacy and Values and Appropriate Action … or More and More Plagues?)

 

What would an ethical and rational critical thinker and decision-maker expect?

Two hundred thousand years of living in dynamic homeostatic symbioses
through a light ecological footprint..
Then from one million in 8000 BCE to one billion in 1800 to eight to ten billion!
Daily consumption by some of these humans rising
from 20,000 kilocalories to 200,000 plus!!
Artificialized “symbioses”, battered “nature”;
most of the Earth now already Eaarth*!!!
YES! We’ll have more plagues, erosion, droughts, desertification, hurricanes, flooding, pollution,
disparity, famine, stress, abuse with synthetic chemicals and of the relatively powerless, Wars …
YES!!! More plagues.
This is the legacy we’re leaving the next generations.

 

What else would an ethical and rational critical thinker and decision-maker expect?

Unless we make some difficult systematic systemic changes.
………………………………….
Ross Douthat …

I did listen to your Catholic Conservative-educated decadent words
this weekend on C-SPAN** …
Yes. Ecological literacy and values are a tremendous challenge
and Eden is an impossibility.
Nevertheless Ross, listen to the PositivelyEthicalAppliedCommunityEcology-makers.
Listen to Wendell, Wes, E.O., Herman, the Davids, Helmut, and Vaclav***.
Homo sapiens has over shot;
We are drawing down on topsoil, quality water, biodiversity,
and daily solar photosynthate and the net primary productivity …

We (in)human(e) beings

are rapidly changing

a favorable Earthly climate/ambience

and serious challenging homeostatic symbioses
on which quality human life depends.

We MUST learn … and lighten our collective ecological footprint.
We gotta have True Hope and not overdo your Catholic praying
and mea culpas and gratia agos to the Divine (including Donald John Trumps).
We’ve gotta take Real and True well-planned ethical action
through ecological knowledge and critical thinking and decision-making.
(Moreover, technological fixes won’t cut it!)

Or else …

 

What should an ethical and rational critical thinker and decision maker expect?

pbm
[ 7 S’s / VV->^^ ]
******************************
*From Bill McKibben, but for me the extra “a” is for agrilogistics and artificialization in the Anthropocene. http://billmckibben.com/eaarth/eaarthbook.html
** https://www.c-span.org/video/?469651-1/the-decadent-society
***Wendell Berry, Wes Jackson, E.O. Wilson, Herman Daly, David Orr, David Pimentel, Helmut Haberl, Vaclav Smil.

Mom Louise’s Mother’s Day and Birthday. 2020

My mother Louise had this letter (and photo) in her cedar chest (which seems to be bottomless). My sister Linda Louise gave it to me the other day … a few weeks before Mother’s Day 2020:

“14 May 1967

Dear Mother,

Today is Mother’s Day and I am sorry I’ve not done more Mother to make you proud that you are a mother. You’ve seen me do a lot of crazy things, but you’ve always sort of let them ride and seemed to still accept me for your son. Maybe someday I’ll be a parent and will be able to share some of those hurts and burdens I put on your heart.

I guess it’ll be some time before I understand what it is to be a parent, but until then I hope you do realize I do appreciate all the great things y’all have done for me. …

I really doubt if you’ll ever get repaid for the [wonderfully beautiful, peaceful and humble] life you’ve lived … on this earth anyway.

Thank you, Mother.

Love,
Paul Bain”

When I wrote this letter, I would have been up at Texas A&M in my first summer of working for a USDA Cotton Insects Research laboratory and being introduced to ecological management … but also doing many of the crazy things some Aggies do like spending too much time at the Lakeview Club and drinking too much ethanol.

(Above in the photo are: Mother (whose birthday this year is on Mother’s Day), my brother Lawrence whose birthday is on Earth Day (or rather, Earth Day is on Lawrence’s birthday), and me. [* https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/sanantonio/obituary.aspx?n=lawrence-martin&pid=139164488&fhid=8918 ]

The whole original letter to Mom for Mother’s Day in 1967 is immediately below.)

 

Knowing the Truth, Living a Lie

Those who believe they know “THE TRUTH” and “THE WAY” live the biggest of lies.

We all live, at a minimum, little lies even though we may wish not to acknowledge it.

For too many, Truth is that More is good for our Eaarth.  That is a very big lie, disappointing, and sad!

For some “the Truth’ is the good God in Heaven … even though they may reluctantly admit that “It” is a mystery and unknown.

 

truth for many might be de facto be humility interwoven with the wonder of nature in dynamic homeostatic symbioses.  Dynamic homeostatic symbioses is the closest to a good truth.  It should be the way, the truth, the life.

pbm

[ 7 S’s / VV->^^ ]

Olman 2006: 22 and 2

My poor family deserves more!
I’m leaving for that good-paying roofing work in Texas tomorrow..

Twenty-two days of walking; rickety school buses; coyotes;
La Bestia; crossing hot, blistering, cold-at-night desert.
Siguatepeque to Nuevo Laredo …
and more coyotes.

Two hours in San Antonio.
¡Pinche putos cabrones!
¡¡¡La migra!!!

Back to Honduras the next day.

………………….

It is a bull shit world!

pbm
[ 7 S’s / VV->^^ ]

 

Bicycle Ride in the Time of the Coronavirus Plague, Seguin, Texas, April 6, 2020

There is no racing high like when pushing it
and then coasting in a final stretch.
Racing and its high have long since petered out for me!

Nevertheless, in this evening’s bicycle ride along Walnut Creek
I am moving, grooving. The ride is smooth, soothing!
The evening air cool and clean.
The path and the waters below with a beautiful sheen.
Peace! Tranquility.
………………………………………..

From … the frontline! …

“Shift in our covid units today. It’s pretty intense …
And, the disease is affecting people of all ages. …
The next month … is going to be really sad for our country.”

“The hospital is crazy man:
PPE is sparse,
ICU is at capacity,
and people are dying on the floor.”
………………………………………

Guilt creeps in and out as I ride. I’ve seen death and don’t fear it.
This energy transformation into other, into immortality, seems peaceful.
But this core of a RNA genome along with its team of proteins and sugar-proteins …
this passive-aggressive invader
of benevolent, human life-essential respiratory cells …
appears not to be.

For now, I am very much alive … and at peace …
and sincerely believe I deserve to be.
And others? especially those who do not have?
Yes!!! We all should have the same rights … equal POWER.
But … don’t.
…………………………………….

(Personally … I’m not so sure about some of these folk’s “God”???)

pbm
[ 7 S’s / VV->^^ ]