Armistice Day … For Ever and Ever!

I am very much a mess
And I do know it.
And I hardly never ever not show it.

Perhaps I should wish I were a Bible Thumper, a Christian with a big “C”,
A believer kneeling often, chanting “Hail Marie”.
A soldier, a patriot
Comfortable standing with hand over heart
For the National Anthem, for Flag,
For You My God …
Thou Art.

But I don’t
And I won’t!

However, this 1960s (mess of a) child
Who thinks things are so wrong,
Will be all right,
ECOLOGICALLY!,
When we ALL get along.
…………………………………

Wait! … Let me do more with this song
Lest you feel I do you wrong.

There were many of my family and friends
In the Pacific, North Africa, and Europe …
In the Wars “Over There”.

o A true elder, Ossie Davis’ young brother,
Near and dear to our hearts
Returned from the Korean War
Shell-shocked and with wound.
Doc’ Davis still needs VA treatments
Which will not end soon.

o Childhood friend, Robert Cruz, left Vietnam
With terrible PTSD scars.
(LIFE IS NOT FAIR!
I sort of beat the system
And as a gringo Naval Aviator, never went.
I DORed.)

o Dad, Marine Master Sergeant Alton Martin,
With eyes and songs that were truly blue,
Was at the horrible Battle of Peleliu.

o And Uncle Bain–
Blasted into bits–
In Germany remains.
This left the family and many friends …
Of this quiet Clark Gable,
Of this horseman and athlete
So extremely able,
Of this beloved son of rural south Texas …

It left his loved ones in terrible fits.

“Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori.”
So much bullshit!!!
From the European Front near that old Rhineland
Uncle Oscar Bain Martin, my namesake, said it true,
For the world, for the Red, for the White, for the Blue …
“If PEACE is planned as well as War is,
We should never have War to go through again!
We’d have PEACE forever!”
“Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori.”
So very much bullshit!!!
………………………………

Wait! … I’m sorry,
But there must be more
Before we sort of begin
To close the door on War.

It’s known that the process is tough and lengthy
Needing
• Sophisticated peaceful plans,
• Peaceful strategies,
• Peaceful tactics,
• Peaceful measures.
• Peaceful replanning.
• And then new workable peaceful measures.
It’s complicated
Especially with inept leaders
And inept systems of ecological education
And inept ignorant masses.

We should fight the Might
Of status quo
And the powerful evil within.
Fight the ambush killings in our schools
De facto facilitated by the NRAs
And Trump and Trumpists
With their tweeting ways,
Massacres of the good in our Social Fabric,
War on dynamic homeostatic symbioses,
“Nature”, the environment.
We must win against misogyny, the overly ignorant;
Racism, xenophobia, tribalism;
Neoliberal capitalism, consumption, greed;
Warmongering, love of guns, adoration of soldiers and military;
Hallowed battled grounds and hallowed military machines; …
Against lust for Lands;
Against power-drunken, pompous, narcissistic inhumanity;
Against despots, “demigods”/demagogues, dastardly bad tyrants;
Against Neo-Hitlers, -Mussolinis, -Francos,
-Stalins, and -Perons.

Such terrible asses.
……………………………………

Wait! … Maybe all is okay?

God, the invisible hand of neoliberal capitalism;
Trump, Duterte, Putin, Jong-un, al-Assad, Bolsonaro, Erdogan
Will lead the way.

They’ll have us go for the Gold,
Fight for the tribe,
Pro patria
And we, the masses, can complacently and apathetically
Close our eyes, plug our ears, resist the temptation to feel,
Continue to be brain-dead,
Marching onward pro patria
With our guns and our bombs,
Our gas and germs,
Our words–
Nasty infectious evil propaganda–
From indoctrinated, pent-up, bombastic,
Hateful hate of haters
Behind our Divine, Holy, Blessed, Prayed-over
And all-knowing leaders.

We and Thee
Can doze away with Prayer
And Be Blessed.
……………………………..

Deep down few truly believe
This warped bullshit.

And though some thoughts do go to despair
Each and every day—

• We know a profound, comprehensive, and holistic Golden Rule;

• The humble, gentle, peaceful, and ecologically educated
Maintenance of our genes; …

• Hope and charity;

• PEACE;
Armistice for ever and ever

These are The Way.

pbm
[ 7 S’s / VV->^^ ]

Humankind and Truth*

Humankind.
Kinds of humans.
Kind humans???

Whether relatively wealthy or very poor,
Fossil-fuel greased or with calloused hands,
… Most, deservedly? or greedily?, seek MORE!

And even with promises made to tithe and do with less
We all generally continue to clutch power possessed
… WithIn our abominable mess.

Food, fiber, and shelter from, or in, far-away places.
Expansive homes; extravagant, landscaped spaces.
Land with too many cleared, paved, asphalted, concreted lanes.
Eaarth with far too many automobiles and planes, …
And PCs and androids,
And loud electronic and mechanical noise.

………………………………..

Elegant poems, real poetry,
Non-algorithms of ancient and contemporary times,
Can be—perhaps should be—
Succinct and short?
Let me try … toward Truth–

Ali’s “Me, We.”
Keats’ “Beauty is Truth, Truth Beauty.
That is all ye know on earth,
And all ye need to know.” …
But perhaps with lots of Thoreau?

But what–then–is Me, and who are We?
And is there actually more to Beauty? And more to Truth?
The anti-algorithms,
Especially if elegant and real–
Succinct, short–
Prod us to ponder.

Overshoot? Rape and exploitation? Disparity?
Are not these, Truthfully, challenges to real Beauty?
For Me? For We?

Life that is prudent,
Simple, humble, and sharing.
Solidarity!
Positively Ethical
Applied Community Ecology.
PEACE.
That should be Me.
That IS “We!”
It’s beauty.
It is Truth.

………………………………………..
*One of several poems I started developing today after stimuli from Sylvia Manning and the Creekside Poets, Seguin, Texas.

pbm 11/4/2019

[ 7 S’s / VV->^^ ]

Alexander Madison Erskine of Seguin, Texas (1831-1917): A Portrayal by paul bain martin (Historic Riverside Cemetery Tour, 10/29/2017)*

“I am glad to be with you here today on this beautiful day in January of 1917.  My name is Alexander Madison Erskine, the father of Mary Browne, or Mary B., Erskine and I am honored to tell you the little tale of my life to date.**

I do believe I have met most of you now. … I am 85 and I trust that you won’t mind my using some notes to jog my memory and also hope that you can clearly understand my slight southern drawl. Moreover, I need to recognize my daughter Mary as having helped me to prepare this morning. As an excellent educator, she stressed that I need some visual displays to aid the audience in absorbing what I am trying to get across, as well as to help my failing memory. Perhaps Miss Mary B. will stop by later.

Okay! Let’s get started! … My roots after Scotland on my father’s side, are the southern states … the South. I was born the ninth of 10 children in 1831, the year social reformer William Lloyd Garrison published the first issue of his abolitionist journal.

That year former slave Nat Turner led an uprising against human bondage. Faraday demonstrated the first electric transformer. Louisiana and Arkansas were the first states to recognize Christmas as a holiday. Edgar Allan Poe was booted out of West Point. And Charles Darwin began his revolutionary, evolutionary voyage from Great Britain to South America … and around the world … on the ship the Beagle.
………………………….
My Father Michael was a successful farmer and stockman and when I was a very young child he moved us from Alabama to Mississippi and then to Port Lavaca, Texas in 1839. Port Lavaca at that time had a population of 200 free men and 80 slaves. Why … in 1836 the year of Texas Independence & not be long before our family arrived in Texas, all of the nation of Texas had only about 30,000 whites, 14,000 Indians, 5,000 Negroes, and 3,500 Mexicans.
…………………………
What we mostly saw as we crossed the coastal plains of Texas was an abundance of native grass like this little blue stem, an ‘ice cream’ of forages that cattle really love, sideoats grama and some native prickly pear cactus and Chile pequins. But also, we saw mesquite … and in Gonzales, Texas an abundance of peach trees. … And we also witnessed numerous bands of wild horses running across the grassy coastal plains of Texas. (I might also mention that when we traveled & found lodging, we were generally served cornbread & bacon for every meal, with perhaps some buttermilk if our hosts had a milk cow.)
………………………..
After a brief time of living in the Port Lavaca area we moved to El Capote Ranch 12 miles southeast of Seguin … where Father Michael Erskine and two of my brothers eventually owned and managed thousands of acres of land. Father and these brothers Andrew and John were more adventurous souls than I and at one point in 1849 brother Andrew and Father began to get California gold fever. Concerned … I wrote them from where I was in school in Lewisburg, Virginia, and I’ll read some excerpts from that letter:

‘Brother have you really any intention of going to California in search of gold? Are you willing to hazard your life for the gain of a little shining dust? Already in your fancy you’re a rich man! You already have gold in abundance more than you can make use of, but go to California and your glorious dream, your golden visions will dissipate like mist before the coming of the bright king of day. … You have a wife. What will you do with her? Certainly not take her with you. Remain at home!’ … Also ‘use all your endeavors to persuade Father from going to California. He is too old to undertake such a wild adventure.’
………………………………………..

Back at El Capote while I was studying in Virginia, sportsman Andrew was doing some hunting of various wildlife … including bear!!! However, cattle raising and marketing were his and Father’s top priority. And in 1854 they even drove cattle for sale all the way to California and later made several cattle drives to New Orleans.

At 17 my brother Andrew joined the Texas Rangers and served under Jack Hays. He was wounded in both the Battle of Bandera Pass and the Battle of Salado. Brother John and Andrew eventually took over management of El Capote. (Father died in Louisiana after a cattle drive in 1862.) Also, Andrew and John were involved in surveying Castro’s Colony back in 1847.

In their agriculture ventures, John and Andrew did use some slaves. In 1846 historian and traveler Ferdinand von Roemer wrote that every Texas farmer wished for slaves. If you wanted some real U.S. dollars and desired to accumulate wealth you needed to grow some cotton. And growing substantial acres of cotton took slaves.

Now … speaking of slavery, Andrew and I joined Company D of the Confederate Army in 1862. Andrew was killed at Antietam at the age of 36 … and I was wounded there at Antietam in my left arm, and twice in my side.

After the war I settled into a life of surveying and working on realizing the City Plan of Seguin. Surveying has been my livelihood for supporting my family but more than this is that I’ve had a wonderful life simply living in Seguin with my lovely wife of 59 years.

My wife, Elizabeth and I had 5 children. Our old maid of a daughter Mary Browne (And I’m just teasing about her choice not to marry.) … anyway, daughter Mary Browne became an excellent and dedicated teacher and role model here in the early school system in Seguin.

Last year, 1916, was a very active year for the United States. The United States was preparing to enter the Great War. It seems we’re always at War … with Indians, Mexicans, abolitionists of slavery, … . Last year in our ‘war’ against anarchist Emma Goldman, we people of the U.S. threw her in jail for her positions on birth control.

Now we’re in the first month in the year of 1917. Our family and family interests have crossed paths with many colorful characters William Bollaert, Ferdinand von Roemer, Frederick Law Olmsted, French Smith, Jack Hays, the illustrious Mr. King, Judge Leroy Denman and Theodore Roosevelt. … At this moment right now, I feel a bit feverish and fear pneumonia. This could be the year I die.
…………………………………….
Well … at this time, despite my ill health, I will try to answer any questions you might have.”

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

*Dress: Light khaki shirt, thin tie, suit pants and vest, dress shoes, felt hat
Props: Surveyor tripod, Sextant, Waywiser, measuring tapes, level, plumb bob. Prickly pear cactus, Chile pequin bush, little bluestem clump, sideoats grama. Basket of peaches, cornbread, bacon.

**”I wish to give special thanks to Diane Gesick for researching my life and helping me recollect various details.”

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

pbm

[7 Ss / VV->^^ ]

William Henry Burges of Seguin, Texas (1838-1898): A Portrayal by paul bain martin (Historic Riverside Cemetery Tour, 10/27/2019)*

“How are you good folks today? … Wonderful!

It is a beautiful day today here in Seguin? Don’t you think? …

But let’s not be piddling around. Let me get down to business. (By the way, I am speaking with considerable poetic license. I hope that this doesn’t offend. … Also, y’all be prepared to ask me any quick questions when I finish.)

Now …. Who the heck am I?

I am William Henry Burges and have lived here in Seguin, Texas for much of my life. Normally I would keep a longer beard, but this morning my wife Mary Lou, who lies here beside me, pleaded with me to trim my beard back considerably for this occasion and for the telling of my tale.

Also, I am a practicing lawyer and like to speak from outlines and notes. Therefore, I brought my journal here from which to speak.

Okay. First of all, let’s establish this point: Am I a Texian? Well I have lived most of my years here in Seguin. Therefore, certainly I am a Texian. … Yes! But by way of Tennessee.

I was born in Jackson, Tennessee in 1838, the year the great colored statesman and orator, Mr. Frederick Douglas escaped from slavery. (Tennessee was one of 26 states in the United States of America then.) The year 1838 was also the year Nicaragua and Honduras down south of here declared their independence as sovereign nations, only two years after Texas did so. And it was the year that President Jackson removed the Injuns from east of the Mississippi to the Injun Territory of Oklahoma. Many Injuns died on that long trail of forced settlement from within their Turtle Island.

Back while in Tennessee, my father—a farmer—died in 1853, and Mom Eugenia Ann Fenner Burges moved us young uns, and our coloreds, to Seguin in what was by then the state of Texas within the United States of America. My Uncle Timothy Pickering Jones lived in Seguin, his wife Aunt Catherine had died in the birth of cousin Kate, and Momma moved us to Seguin to help raise Kate. Momma eventually adopted Kate into our family of brothers Richard, Robert, and Pickering, and sister Eugenia. … We joined the lovely St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church up the way from here when we arrived with our coloreds (who by the way, at that time had a worth of over $10,000, which was a substantial amount of money in the 1850s!)

Now, I have a question for y’all. How many of you have experienced War directly? Raise your hands!

Well, I can tell you that War is Hell and I don’t really like to talk about it. But the War-Between-the-States broke out in 1861 and I served for four (4) years in that terrible and bloody conflict (And what War isn’t terrible and bloody? … even immoral and unethical??).

During this very bad mess of brutal fighting, I was in an outfit that came to be called Hood’s Brigade of the Confederate Army. Hood’s Brigade, or the Texas Brigade, was led for a brief time by the daring and well-respected Colonel John Bell Hood who had become a Texian, at least temporarily. Well over half of my fellow soldiers with whom I fought in Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, and in my old home state or Tennessee were killed. According to some future thing called Wikipedia (see immediately below): “Of the estimated 5,353 men who enlisted in the three Texas and one Arkansas regiments [including Hood’s Brigade], only 617 remained to surrender on April 9, 1865, at Appomattox Court House in Virginia.”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_Brigade https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Bell_Hood

[By the way, the fellow who is serving as my medium today, returned via Amtrak last evening from a board meeting in Garden City, Kansas. While at the board meeting in Garden City, he learned that a contemporary of mine, a prominent businessman and benevolent community leader of Garden City in that era, Frederick Finnup, fought against those of us in Hood’s Brigade … as a Union soldier at the Battle of Chickamauga, Georgia. … A crazy coincidence!?!!]

A year after the War ended, I came back to Seguin and married Bettie Rust … and we had children William Henry, Lone, Alfred, and Richard. (And I will tell you that son William Henry had a much more interesting and colorful life that I did. For example, as a lawyer he was a champion of the large Chinese population of El Paso and represented the famous prostitute madam, Tillie Howard. https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fbu72 ) … My wife Bettie died giving childbirth and I then married Agnes Erskine in 1875 who died two years later at the age of 40. Shortly afterward I courted Mary Louisa Jefferson and we were wed in 1879. And we were fortunate to have the lovely children Matilda, Bettie, and John.

During the 25 years after the War, Guadalupe County developed to a population of about 7000, Germans, 5000 Americans who came in from other states, 4000 coloreds, and 150 Mexicans and 20 Hebrews. In 1887 according to census records, Seguin had 2000 inhabitants and in Guadalupe County cotton was king in acreage followed by corn, oats, and millet. We had 9,000 horses and about 8,000 milk cows.

Now, if you are a typical audience, you will say that you don’t care much for lawyers and politicians! Well … I have been proud to have practiced law since before the War-Between-the-States. And I served as Texas Senator under the governorship of Sul Ross (later President of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas). I was senator in the Texas Legislature during a period when Progressive Populism was starting to take hold. During that legislative service I was even honored to be President Pro Tempore.

(From my experiences in the Texas Legislature, at St. Andrew’s, and with the young Mary B. Erskine, I will predict that someday a great Democrat from this region will emphatically and truthfully say that “the only thing worth being is a teacher, a preacher, and/or a politician!” Moreover, I’ll predict that we’ll even have a Farmers Union here in Texas and be a leader in that aspect of the union movement.
https://www.humanitiestexas.org/news/articles/lbj-teacher
https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/aaf04

Now let’s return to my service as a senator. In the three (3) legislative sessions in which I have participated, I am proud that we resolved to strengthen the regulation of the railroads and to take care of the needs of public education, the summer normal institute, the Lunatic Asylum, the widow of the State Fish Commissioner, Texas veterans & widows of veterans, and crippled Confederate soldiers.

Okay. Now I am going back to the subject of Wars. So many Wars in my lifetime. The Mexican-American War! The dreadful Apache and Comanche Wars!!! The terrible War-Between-the-States!! These Wars involved grabbing more Land and extermination of Injuns, including by the killing off of the food and livelihood source for many of them, the buffalo. It’s why we are now 45 states of America in Land that was of the Injuns, up from 26 when I was born. And now we are declaring War against Spain! Finally, these Wars are only the ones in which we Americans were or are involved. There were many others in my lifetime when the world as a whole is considered.

I am tired of Wars! I’m just tired period. I think it’s time to go. To just pass away.

(But I am a Knight of the Templar!!! I’ll be okay!)
……………………………..
Now y’all head on out through this cemetery and stop in for a wonderful tale of one of our good coloreds, Harry Burges. That boy Harry was baptized at St. Andrew’s and regularly took communion there. … A good colored!

Thank y’all!

Any quick questions?
…………………………………………………………………….
*I am grateful to Ms. Diane Gesick, Seguin, Texas for sending my medium pdfs of the historical background of myself and Harry Burges.

I do apologize for my medium’s not having props and poster boards in order to facilitate learning about me. However, he was quite busy in the month proceeding this presentation.

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

pbm
[ 7 Ss / VV->^^ ]

Green New Deal (A Letter to the Honorable Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez)

605 Elm Street
Seguin, Texas 78155-4827

October 30, 2019

Honorable Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
U.S. House of Representatives
229 Cannon HOB
Washington, DC 20515

Dear Representative Ocasio-Cortez:

Subject: The Green New Deal and a Need for Ecology across Curricula & Campuses and for Ecological Values Which Would Move Us toward Light Ecological Footprints

• -I just finished a wonderfully tasty & nutritious meal of local wild venison & greens which I quickly prepared from a buck my wife sustainably harvested and processed late season and from an organic community garden.
-Yet several years after I started building a rain-water catchment system here for our home, I still haven’t gotten around to completing it. And we don’t have a composting toilet.

• -Several evenings ago, I arrived home from here in south Texas via Amtrak from a board meeting in Garden City, Kansas of a wonderful NGO which was started to help save dying human populations in rural ecological communities across much of the Great Plains.
-This NGO does seem to be doing much good for a sector of humanity. However, at times I have been frustrated that the board of this NGO hasn’t actually established a goal of true sustainability … NOR measurable sustainability indicators of social justice or ecological soundness.

• -During this November & December I am being honored with various opportunities to work with some fantastic youth & adults on insect ecology & other ecological activities here in Seguin & San Antonio, Texas at our Outdoor Learning Center & at Friedrich Wilderness Park.
-Yet I generally feel my hands are tied with respect to teaching ECOLOGICAL VALUES of consuming less, having a lighter ecological footprint, using appropriate technologies, and living in concert with nature.

The point is that I am rarely satisfied with my/our progress in transforming what Bill McKibben calls the Eaarth of the Anthropocene to a neo-Earth of quality life for all for as long as possible.
…………………………..

You, Representative Ocasio-Cortez, and Senator Sanders, in particular, are good leaders of amazing energy, intelligence, and integrity in the political arena and in attempts to move us toward sustainability, i.e., social justice, humaneness, and ecological sanity … or what I call Positively Ethical Applied Community Ecology (PEACE). Moreover, I very much appreciate the Green New Deal resolutions you and Senator Edward J. Markey submitted in February of this year.

The most important component of your resolutions was the statement that a Green New Deal will require …

“providing resources, training, and high-quality education, including higher education, to all people of the United States, with a focus on frontline and vulnerable [ecological] communities, so that all people of the United States may be full and equal participants in the Green New Deal mobilization.”

However, there are two glaring problems with your resolutions.
1. There is entirely too much emphasis on technological fixes through so-called “renewable energy”. Renewable energy is diffuse and generally of low quality and takes inputs of transformed (embodied) energy (in today’s world … oftentimes fossil energy) to be realized as useful … and there is relatively little to no energy returned on investment. Renewable energy is not necessarily Green Energy.
2. Moreover, within your resolutions are a subtle (false hope) suggestion that “renewable energy” will allow us to continue to sustain high input, high throughput artificial systems, and even growth in these systems, while maintaining quality life here on Earth (or Eaarth). This is even though this would continue our processes of overshoot; and drawdown of the natural resource base of topsoil and quality air, quality water, and biodiversity and dynamic homeostatic symbioses, or “nature” (and severe exploitation of humans who are relatively powerless and disenfranchised). … Herman Daly’s steady-state economy and H.T. Odum’s “prosperous” way down is a must.

My personal mantra, which I wish were the mantra of all people and peoples, is:

• “Live Sabiamente*, Simply, Smally, Slowly, Steadfastly, Sharingly, Sustainably” (i.e., “Live the 7 Ss”). [*Wisely]

In keeping with that mantra and a goal of quality life for all, including other species, we must level off human population growth, and reduce consumption and power of the Haves by perhaps as much as two-thirds (2/3rds) while sharing that power with the have-nots, including other species. I depict this process with this symbol: “VV->^^”.

Therefore, some major points you must seriously consider in further development of Real Green New Deals are:

1.”Renewable” energy is of low quality and requires much embodied energy in order to be “usefully” transformed. It is important but is definitely not close to being the ultimate answer!

2.High input/high throughput systems are destructive of our social fabric and dynamic homeostatic symbioses, or nature. Sufficiency is much more important than efficiency. And

3.We desperately need to educate toward PEACE, or “positively ethical applied community ecology” through continuing education using ecological curricula across and integrated into the campuses of all human organizational entities.

Now after this “scolding” I have done herein these immediately previous paragraphs, at his point I must interject that I do realize you have collaborated with and listened closely to Naomi Klein (e.g., A Message from the Future) as well as worked with and learned from various climate scientists, scholars & academicians, and policy experts who have emphasized the points I have made herein (and much more … and much more credibly and eloquently). Moreover, I am certain that you agree with Ms. Klein when she says (in On Fire: The Burning Case for a Green New Deal) that–

“The bottom line is that an ecological crisis that has its roots in overconsumption of natural resources must be addressed not just by improving the efficiency of our economies, but also by reducing the amount of material stuff that the wealthiest 20% of people on the planet consume.”

and when Ms. Klein quotes Vandana Shiva that—

“the roots of our crisis lie ‘in an economy which fails to respect ecological and ethical limits.’”

……………………………………
Representative Ocasio-Cortez, you are a wonderfully important person who is facilitating real and good change. I do wholeheartedly support your efforts!! … But I also do hope you will continue to seriously consider what I have touched upon herein concerning ecology across the curricula & campuses, limits & dramatically reducing our ecological footprints, and “so-called” renewable energy.

Thanks.

paul b. martin, ph.d.
[ 7 Ss / VV->^^ ]

Retired, Biology-Natural Sciences, St. Philip’s College
and volunteer for PEACE
(Positively Ethical Applied Community Ecology) …
focusing primarily on youth

cc. Senator Edward J. Markey
Senator Bernie Sanders
David Orr
Naomi Klein
Bill McKibben

Faith, Hope and Charity within Humankind?: Can We Rally Around Limiting embodied Human Appropriated Net Primary Productivity?1

Eaarth to Neo-Earth

It is blatantly obvious that            We must go beyond realpolitik … Or ….
                  Realpolitik is now
                                            What we previously called idealistic.

No! It wasn’t Kool-Aid!!

However, I did drink the earthy, healthy atole of awareness, hope, and action from the early progressive conservation movement of ca. 1890-1920, Vatican II, and pro-civil rights, anti-War, and pro-ecological-sanity sit-ins, marches, songs, poetry, speeches, articles, and books, and effective non-violent protesting (and lobbying and voting) of the 1960s-70s. A bit later the 1973 crisis in energetics spiked that wonderful elixir. And more recently the exponential accumulation of challenges of social injustice, inhumaneness, and ecological insanity of the Anthropocene here on this Eaarth2 have truly strengthened this ancient tonic which I both metaphorically and actually imbibe routinely.

One very hot afternoon in August when I was about ten years of age and struggling to mow my wealthier Uncle Peggy and Aunt Joe Bailey’s expansive lawn possessing steep and very difficult slopes, an extremely beautiful Carmelite nun from Mexico stopped and gave me a glass quart (Ball Mason jar) of cold refreshing “atole”. This young brown-and-white clothed angel was one of several who were teaching us catechism at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church that summer. They had been invited for supper into our very small two-bedroom home on the outskirts of Devine (for a family of eight) and the chilled “atole” was a gift for my family of eight. (“For my family!” Nevertheless, I quickly drank this unbelievably great manna from heaven all down my young gullet after la angelica floated away west on Highway 173 toward town & St. Joseph’s on that blistering sunny day.)

I am now in my 70s, my knees are stiff and don’t function as they once did. At times I feel really miserable up in the afternoon or when I get out of bed in the morning, and especially after long car trips (or working for long periods on este procesador de textos y máquina de búsqueda de google). But I do regularly become refreshed and recharged by atoles of very adorable and knowledge-seeking youth with whom I learn about PEACE1 and kid around with–through NGOs like Kids on the Land, Generations Indigenous Ways on Pine Ridge Reservation, Dos Pueblos (Arco Iris) in Nicaragua, Ogallala Commons, the Seguin Outdoor Learning Center, HEB camps on the Frio River, Seguin community gardens and especially the LULAC garden, and Episcopalian service efforts in Honduras & Mexico … as well as in family gatherings with my beautiful grandkids.

The primary reason for this little book of PEACE1, is that I want to bring us back from Eaarth to Earth, and to provide for some of the youth of the world some of the dynamic homeostatic symbioses, or “nature”, which I was able to learn about and thoroughly experience in my own lifetime. I fervently wish to have a small part in helping to leave a world system of quality life for all, including other species, for as long as possible

My life experiences and academic learning with respect to realizing sustainable community have primarily been in agriculture and biology3. And much of my academic learning has focused on agricultural entomology. Although I can communicate “Scientifically” to some degree, I do prefer relating personal stories to make my “scientific” points in a socio-economic/political and psychological (i.e., ecological) context about sustainability. Personal anecdotal situations in which I have been that have a sustainability message of needing to persevere and to live wisely and humbly and in a giving way include:

• A plethora of warm (and not so warm & fuzzy) tales from a five-acre diversified hog farm of the Alton and Louise Martin family in a south Texas ecosystem
(near where the transnational Wal-Mart and other businesses now cover an area which was mostly photosynthesizing pasture; these largely parasitic structures slickly market stuff which isn’t appropriate for realizing sustainable community).
• My brothers and I burying numerous of my uncle’s hogs which had died of cholera in his relatively large and more artificial swine facility in the 1960s.
• Wrecking a semi-trailer truck near Premont, Texas, twice in one night, after a long & hurried haul of black-eyed peas from the Winter Garden area of south Texas to a Brownsville cannery in the Lower Rio Grande Valley.
• Going to the state meet in the 440-yard dash … definitely not because of athletic ability or disciplined & rigorous training, but as a result of persistence (and substantial luck).
• Almost passing away in an avalanche of cottonseed hulls in a poorly lit, hustle and bustle of feed mill in my hometown (pre-OSHA).
• Killing three beautiful large male boars my Dad had recently bought in the Pearsall area to rapidly finish out and take to the Swift & Co. slaughtering plant in San Antonio; they died because of rushed castrations.
• Coming close to dying in cotton insect research plots in the Brazos Bottom from the very toxic, cholinesterase-inhibiting biocide, aldicarb, ultimately produced through groupthink and callous transnational corporations (There were other near-death experiences. My Mom says I am a cat with nine lives who has used up most of them.).  [I also have stories about inappropriate technology and engineering from chemists, biologists, agriculturists involving persistent chlorinated hydrocarbons, neurotoxins, and other biocides … and the hormone-mimics in Agent Orange, etc.]
• Religious and military experiences in the 1960s and my sort of ignostic-psyche as influenced by this period and my Marine Master Sergeant-dad and through being in a Catholic-Protestant family pre- and post-Vatican II.
• Screwworm, lacewing, tobacco budworm, and boll weevil micro-evolution.
• Loss of fields laden with beautiful green beans grown in a high energy-input way in the Winter Garden of Texas (lost to weather because the inability of big machines to traverse through wet fields).
“Unusual” (but natural), sort of quiet, secretive, “subversive” damage to popcorn near Pearsall, Texas by fall armyworms.
• Devastation of non-sustainable monocultures of coastal bermudagrass in the SE U.S. and Brachiaria in far western Brasil by fall armyworms and spittlebugs.
• My Don Quixote-type protests against the greasing of the path for non-sustainable, high-input industrial agrilogistics by Land Grant universities.
• Many stories of the suffering, exploitation (including sexual), and perseverance of recent brown-human immigrants in Texas, U.S.A., or those seeking to immigrate.
• Experiences on the Sugar Land Texas prison farms and seeing the brown & black de facto slaves work the fields while white trustees on horseback with guns looked over these imprisoned field laborers. I was there as an entomology student-worker as a result of biocide-resistant tobacco budworms eating up their cotton and subsequent USDA band-aid-type research done for transnational corporate profits.
Las aguas prietas de imperialismo (Coca-Cola) at the Colegia Superior de Agricultura Tropical, Cardenas, Tabasco, Mexico.
Land reform and the mosaic of Roberto Strang’s fazenda in the Mato Grosso do Sul, Brasil,
• A month of work in a community garden in Krakow, Poland which changed dramatically after the Wall fell … and involvement in other community gardens.
• Gifts of caps, meals, and fishing and hunting trips, and campaign donations mostly from large transnational corporations—power3 and quid pro quo corruption at Land Grant institutions, experiment stations, and regulatory agencies, including my own failings (Oh come on … you too have experienced some of this!).
• Stories of the powerful and not so powerful during my period as a farmer-stockman in south central Texas.
• Because of non-adherence to the Precautionary Principle, toxins from old tick-control dipping vats within the Alamo Ranch subdivision, SA, military bases , drenching of nursery products to combat fire ants, chemical spills at the Devine Municipal Airport, etc. … exist and persist in our soils and water.
• Many other stories, primarily from Texas, which pop into my head and come forth from my boca to make a point about needs for and ways of achieving sustainable community.

These stories deal with human overshoot of carrying capacity, drawdown on the natural resource base, and the tremendous disparity and poverty in the world. They underline the need to live the 7 Ss which means individually- and collectively-living: Sabiamente (Wisely), Simply, Smally, Slowly, Steadfastly, Sharingly, Sustainably. These tales point out the need for a dramatic leveling off of growth of populations of humans and domesticated biota and reduction of consumption by the Haves, as well as a gracious sharing of the power3 of the Haves with the havenots of Eaarth (including other species).

I will be employing some of these short stories herein this little book.

Embodied-Human Appropriated Net Primary Productivity.4 Back in the late 1980s/early 1990s I had some brief and uncomfortable arguments with cantankerous (but very intelligent, clairvoyant, and focused) Allan Savory and some of his “Holistic Resource Management5 disciples about planned-controlled-grazing (which is a good tool for consideration and employment in sustainable systems), Allan’s set-in-concrete “rules and taboos”, and some of his dogma. Nevertheless, I sincerely and deeply appreciate Allan for helping me think more holistically about what I now mostly call PEACE1 and the need for developing clear goals and a strategic plan of action. (And I have tried to explain some of what I gathered from Allan in several papers/publications to which I have contributed.)6

Allan emphasizes the importance of monitoring and replanning after actions toward sustainable community. If you don’t have sustainable measures of sustainable community and ecosystem assessments, then you are mostly living in the dark and are not going to reach profound and holistic quality life for all for a truly significant period. Later in this little book we will present a taxonomy of sustainable indicators which can assist in realizing a goal of sustainability for all, i.e., social justice, humaneness, and ecological sanity.

However, in this introduction, I would like to focus on what is perhaps THE key indicator which should be monitored in order to travel toward sustainable community and a neo-Earth, i.e., embodied Human Appropriated Net Primary Productivity (eHANPP). It is basic, holistically profound and comprehensive, and an indicator for determining if your livelihood and lifestyle is socially just, humane, ecologically sane, i.e., sustainable; moral and ethical.

As with many sustainability indicators, quantifying eHANPP somewhat precisely and accurately is generally complicated and difficult. However, eHANPP data can provide a composite focus on the impact humans and various sectors of human populations are having on the natural resource base and on life systems which are conducive to quality life for humans and associated life forms.

Units for energy are joules (or one could convert joules to calories or British Thermal Units/BTUs). Moreover, remember from your biology7 classes or general reading, listening, and viewing, that …

life is matter (carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, nucleic acids, cells, populations, communities, etc.) organized with inputs of energy (or calories).

And for the most part energy to run the world (Nature’s Economy and its subset, the Human Economy) is from daily solar energy and the daily solar energy of the past, i.e., savings-in-the-bank which we call fossil energy. Daily solar energy is mostly transformed into a useable form by what are for the most part the only real producers on Earth, or Eaarth, i.e., plants and other photosynthesizers.

What these unique producers (plants, autotrophic protists, chromists, and blue-green algae) capture in terms of energy in a particular area, in an ecological community of biota, in an ecosystem, or across the landscape of a nation or an ecosystem is called primary productivity (PP). PP could be expressed as energy; however, since photosynthesizers are capturing solar energy in chemical bonds of chains of carbon (which is biomass), scientists generally measure carbon, biomass, or dry plant matter to estimate PP.

The PP left over after the cellular respiration, metabolism, maintenance, and propagation needs are met for the photosynthesizers (or “plants”) is termed net primary productivity, or NPP. NPP can be utilized by heterotrophic organisms like bacteria, heterotrophic protists, fungi, or animals such as humans or their domesticated carnivores up the food chain or trophic levels.

On Eaarth, or in the Anthropocene, humans get the lion’s share of NPP. If human actions result in harvesting large amounts of food for humans and their pets, extensive areas of pavement, plowed fields and non-native vegetation, over-grazing & -browsing, clear-cut forest-Land, and excessive built structure, exorbitant amounts of NPP are appropriated for human use (HANPP) and PP and NPP can be diminished. Moreover, in order to construct the machinery and provide other inputs for paving, constructing, fencing, sawing and logging, etc., materials are appropriated from the targeted Land areas as well as from other parts of the globe over periods of time (eHANPP).

What I would encourage you to do now is to take a minute and walk out across your local landscape and view the amount of paved area, extravagant homes, business structures, automobiles, plowed fields, pastures with cattle, other grazers and perhaps browsers, and/or deforested area. Now think about how the local human population is affecting NPP. Despite (and sometimes because of) the Endangered Species Act, CITES, EPA regulations and Superfunds; WWF, Greenpeace, the Nature Conservancy, the EDF, the NRDC, the Tuskegee & Land Institutes, old LISA & more recent “modified-LISAUSDA initiatives, the Gates, Buffett, Kellogg, Ford, Rockefeller Foundations, and Master Naturalist programs, “organic” agriculture, “renewable” energy development, innovative “sustainability” entrepreneurs, etc., etc., etc. … we continue to rampantly increase our appetite across the globe for NPP, with end results of there being little of the life-giving NPP for the relatively powerless, impoverished, landless, and disenfranchised (undocumented; refugees), or poor humans and other species.

For full disclosure, I do wish to say that inputs of fossil energy and limiting factors such as water and key minerals (N, P, K, S, Fe, etc.) can increase PP and NPP. However, these local or regional actions generally affect global PP and NPP detrimentally and/or can change the globe such that it is not conducive to quality life for humans, and biota associated with humans (i.e., resulting in: loss of productive water-sheds/natural foodsheds; dead zones at the mouth of major rivers, especially in the developed, very industrialized parts of the world; global climate change; acidification of the ocean; bleaching of coral reefs; etc.).

Moreover, I need to emphasize herein that there are many sustainability indicators and ways of assessing sustainability in addition to eHANPP which have been proposed by various psychologists, socio-political/economic researchers and other ecologists, i.e., scientists studying various aspects of PEACE/Positively Ethical Applied Community Ecology8.

It is just that I consider eHANPP to be the key indicator for staying on track toward sustainability for all.

Now … even though we will deal with appropriate actions toward sustainable livelihoods and sustainable community in illustrations and other narrative in this book, let’s give some thought at this point to:

What are major actions we can take to reduce eHANPP?5
1. Learn about PEACE principles, processes, and values through PEACE1,8 across curricula and campuses of all human organizational entities.
2. Learn to curb our appetite for stuff and inappropriate kinds of and excessive amounts of food, fiber, shelter, travel/transport, conventional air-conditioning, information, electronics, technology, engineering, recreation and entertainment. … Food is the largest component of your ecological footprint. Compost and raise your own food. Eat local. … Primarily walk, use a bicycle, and travel by train & bus. … Wean yourself from air-conditioning, large home, and automobiles. … Try to never travel by car simply to “go & exercise”.
3. Cut manufacture of armaments, arms, and military spending.
4. Regulate in various ways toward curbing consumption.
5. Tithe+ and share with the truly poor in the world.
6. Reparate, give welfare & health care assistance, and “act affirmatively” when we should. And realize Land reform. … Remember, if it doesn’t work for the poor, it isn’t sustainable.
7. Seriously consider capping income and curbing the accumulation of capital/assets. If we have power3 over people and resources (or NPP) we’ll use it. If we don’t … we won’t!

And now I reiterate:

If it doesn’t work for the poor it isn’t sustainable.

If we don’t have an excess in power3, we won’t be able to use it excessively.

If we don’t … we won’t!
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This little book on PEACE1 is not so-much about the insurmountable (even though challenges exist which may seem so) and the Catch-22 Human Economy (even though this exists). It calls for a much needed “idealistic” realpolitik. It is a grito “de ¡Si Se Puede!” which deals with the Why?? What? And How??? of the process, or of our journey, primarily by utilizing illustrations, poetry and short stories.

• The Why?? is basically that an ethic of reciprocity is a major tenet in all of human spirituality, in human secularism, and in the various religions. Moreover, the drive in all species of biota is to maintain the species in suitable symbioses and to not go extinct.

• The What? is to live sabiamente, simply, smally, slowly, steadfastly, sharingly, and sustainable in a socially just, humane, and ecologically sane way. Currently we need to level off our human and domesticated species populations, and the Haves must share their power3 with the poor, disenfranchised, and relatively powerless.

• And the How??? begins with PEACE1 across “curricula” and “campuses” of all human organizational entities.

My plea to you in this moment and others is to please read, cogitate, seek out and learn about principles & processes of ecology, advocate, protest, lobby, VOTE!!!, agitate, and take appropriate actions toward sustainable livelihoods and a neo-Earth for all.
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1 A possible introduction to PEACE*: Embracing a Profound and Holistic Process for Good (A Heavily Illustrated Little Book on Applied Ecology for Kids from 12 to 120 Years of Age). *PEACE is “Positively Ethical Applied Community Ecology.” [I am continuing to work and post pieces of a first draft and will do more word-processing and editing over the coming months. Then I hope to have a copy of a draft ready for some major outside editing and possible publication in the “near” future.]

2 Eaarth is a Bill McKibben term for the currently carbonized and otherwise ecologically-challenged version of what was a relatively healthy home for Homo sapiens and associated life-forms before the Anthropocene, i.e., Earth. http://billmckibben.com/eaarth/eaarthbook.html

3 The ability to produce an effect, but also energy/time measured in watts.

4 I must thank Helmut Haberl for this. He very, very graciously sent me numerous publications when I learned of his work through a colleague researching ecosystem energetics at the Land Institute while I was working with two St. Philip’s College students at the Department of Energy lab, Richland, Washington through an NSF grant . I hope I haven’t disappointed Helmut with my relatively weak efforts herein. https://www.aau.at/en/social-ecology/team/haberl-helmut/

5 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allan_Savory
https://www.context.org/iclib/ic25/wood/

6 Martin, P.B. and P. Prather. 1991. Sustainable agriculture: a process at the community level. American J. of Alternative Agriculture. 3(1)

Martin, P.B., K. Schantz and P. Sechrist. 2003. Toward conservation and development of sustainable community (locally and globally). Proc. Coloquio Internacional de Desenvolvimento Local, Universidade Catolica Dom Bosco, Campo Grande-MS, Brasil www.ucdb.br/coloquio/arquivos/Paul.pdf

Martin, P.B. and P. Prather. 1991. Towards a sustainable agriculture for quality life and protection of the natural resource base. Proc. 2nd Agroforestry Conference, Aug 18-21. Columbia, MO

Abel, A., P. Prather and P.B. Martin. 1992. Sustainable agriculture and migrant farmworkers. J. Sustainable Agriculture 3(1): 99-106

7 The study of life, or of learning about all which is truly important to us.

8 Humble but robust search for means of ethically understanding appropriate relationships of biota and the physical environment.

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Thoughts After Dr. Ken Kramer’s* Wonderful Presentation at Texas Lutheran University Last Eve, 9/24/19 (“The Art of Effective Advocacy: Championing Creation Care & Social Justice”)

1.Like many folks currently here on Eaarth, I have a list of “important” things to do i.e.,
• read the papers & magazines on my desk from the past few days;
• use this energy intensive & ecologically-disruptive technology to contact family about trying to travel to a young & special nephew’s football game in Gonzales & attend the rodeo in New Braunfels with grandchildren the same evening;
• iron some clothes for funeral services of an old childhood friend from Devine;
• send some money via Xoom for hands-on sustainable community learning by a young friend who had been detained by ICE for a year, denied asylum, and then deported;
• mow the lawn and do vacation stops for mail & paper delivery prior to traveling to Lambshead Ranch for ecological activities with youth;
• take food scraps out to compost;
• eat something and get a bit of cardio exercise;
• do some needed repairs on the house;
• (just now, after a call from an old friend wrestling with heroin addiction, I stopped development of this blog piece to take him to an AA meeting);
• etc., etc., etc.

Nevertheless, to stop the pinging of nagging thoughts in this vacuous, yet cluttered, head, I “just have to” post this blog piece here at paulpeaceparables.com, and stick it on Facebook, and bother some family & friends via email with these “obviously very important thoughts” … since they are in MY head.

[I interject at this point a promise to myself: after this next week of ecological activities, for the next four months I hope to mostly set aside and largely ignore my lists and focus on developing the little heavily-illustrated book on applied ecology (Positively Ethical Applied Community Ecology/PEACE) for kids from 12 to 120 years of age. Major collaborators on this are my wife Betsy and Laura Salazar et al.

2. I do apologize for always being hard on my loved ones (family and friends), e.g., last eve on my wife Betsy, Bobbie Maddox, Chris Frels, and even Dr. Kramer.

I am just as hard or harder on myself. However, I do realize this isn’t an excuse for picking on others. Anyway, Dr. Kramer did emphasize, articulately and eloquently, this past evening of September 24, that the start to effective advocacy means adding an honest, truthful, fact-informed, determined, persistent, CONFIDENT internal voice.

3. After considering my background, energies, talents and skills in attempts at being an effective advocate for a bit of good, I believe I have largely followed Dr. Kramer’s sage advice for steps which should be followed, i.e.,
• Be confident
• Develop clear goals
• Identify key members of community who help realize these goals
• Understand the other side, empathize, and find common ground
• Collaborate/build relationships
• Recognize that knowledge is power
• Appreciate and celebrate positive results

However, despite my general adherence to these steps, my voice has largely been an ignored and unheard cry in the cluttered Eaarth of rampant ecologically-destructive neoliberal capitalism, a world in the Anthropocene of conversion of dynamic homoeostatic symbioses (‘nature”) to artificial clutter and chaos.

4. I do have some very major problems with Dr. Kramer’s “Be realistic!” statement last eve. Truly being realistic means making some very radical and big (but appropriate) changes in our psychology (our individual & collective psyche) and socio-political/economic (i.e., ecological) systems.

Below are a couple of “little” examples–
a.  Ultimately, water issues and other challenges in ecosystem/ecosphere blocks of: biogeochemical cycles, transformation of energy, and biotic diversity … and threats from excessive embodied human-appropriated net primary productivity … will not be resolved by technological fixes and tweaking (or tweeting). What Greta and other wise ones are trying to tell us (whether they profoundly realize it or not) is that Eaarth will not be restored to somewhat of a neo-Earth of quality life (for more, including other species, for a longer period) until we 7.7 billion, going on 11 billion, human beings begin to practice the 7 Ss, or make intensive and extensive dramatic changes toward living Sabiamente (wisely), Simply, Smally, Slowly, Steadfastly, Sharingly, SUSTAINABLY. [This is why the SAM of STEAM (STEM with the very necessary Art component incorporated) is what is most important in this acronym.]

b.  Heavy and extensive reliance on so-called “renewable” isn’t realistic and is a false hope.  I have dealt with this in a previous blog:  http://www.paulpeaceparables.com/2018/05/01/renewable-energy-as-the-key-asset-of-commonwealth-in-community-by-paul-bain-martin1/

…………………………………………………………….

In my own recent efforts at effecting appropriate change, I have collaborated with others in developing community gardens and in performing veterinarian services, realizing potable water systems, and building–along-side some physically & mentally challenged folk–sturdy cardboard furniture as well as building adobe school libraries and composting toilets in Latin America, have served on the board of a NGO with a mission to “foster a holistic approach to community socio-economic development in the Great Plains Region”, and facilitated the learning by youth of ecological principles and processes for a number of years.  And the relationships, dialogue, empathy, and solidarity realized through these interactions over the years HAVE been very rewarding.  Moreover, hopefully as a result of these strong and strengthening connections, more of us are learning about and practicing “positively ethical applied community ecology”/PEACE and doing more profound and real critical thinking and ecologically-appropriate decision-making.

Nevertheless, I am not satisfied that any of these efforts is radically realistic enough!!  “It is no measure of health to be well-adjusted to a profoundly sick society.”  (From Jiddu Krishnamurhi via Facebook friend Michael Roberts)  (We are a very profoundly and extensively sick world society here on Eaarth.  PLEASE do not be complacent, exploitive, and well-adjusted in an ecologically-sinful status quo.)

5.I served for a number of years on the St. Philip’s College President’s Lecture Series committee, and I truly do realize that securing excellent speakers is not easy or inexpensive. Nevertheless, during my tenure we did have Ossie Davis, Winona LaDuke, Desmond Tutu’s daughter, Chris Hedges, and other wonderfully excellent speakers impart their experiences on us … and we could have had Jim Hightower for a very reasonable honorarium had our administrators not gotten cold feet about him being too leftist and radical..

My suggestion would be that Siempre Sustainable Network and the TLU Center for Servant Leadership work to get Greta Thunberg, Helmut Haberl, Chris Hedges, Amy Goodman, Stacey Abrams, Naomi Klein, Wes Jackson, E.O. Wilson, Miguel Altieri, Jared Diamond, or speakers of similar stature, knowledge and wisdom to speak at our next event. The title might be: “Solidarity & Ethical Action to Sustainable Community: Doing Our Part as Quasi-‘Gretas’?”
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* Former Director of the Lone Star Chapter of the Sierra Club.

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