There are so many things I wish I’d make it a habit to do at least once each day. One of them is blogging. Hah. There’s also flossing, studying Chinese, tidying up my trail of newspapers and notes. And wht was it I heard from Tony Robbins or someone like him once? Spend an hour of each day working on success. Yeah, well. That’d be nice. I waste more than several most days continuing my education on how horrible everything is. And I consider myself to be somewhat prone to depression. I guess I still see it as training myself. I expect things to get worse.
The horror is making it into the newspapers almost every day these days. Yessiree, with the groundlessness of the Iraq attack, white phosphorus, even depleted uranium getting some coverage, it’s quite remarkable how well everybody is holding up. Well, I guess some of them lived through the Kennedy era, and there was the Gulf War - a turning point for my basic mentality - but I am still in awe of everybody’s ability to behold the horror and pretend that everything is perfectly normal. What solace is there? Some stupid theory like this one?
I really do want to make the world a better place. That’s why I “waste” so much time — more and more lately — honing my skills as a social critic that no one ever listens to. Why should they? People won’t even listen to me when I tell them Aspertame is bad for them. People who know I have biology and journalism degrees; Even after I tell them I researched it thoroughly and that I’m telling them because I’m their friend and I care. Not only do people believe what they want to believe. I’ll tell you this. People, more surely, don’t believe what they don’t want to believe.
Just Googled it. Only six hits for “don’t believe what they don’t want to believe.” Had the thought as I was writing. I’m a genius. That’s it. All my wasted time was worth it. I now know the truth. We got it all wrong. Some people believe what they want to believe, but most people don’t believe what they don’t want to believe. Okay, obviously I didn’t quite coin it, but hey. Maybe this is a place to start, ’cause we got a lot of fixing to do to deserve our consciences to be free from the guilt of apathy and inaction.
I was going to move on to Exhibit A, a story from today’s paper about dying children (billions of them nearly - just because we won’t donate a pittance to establish basic water services), but maybe I better stick with the new revelation for a moment. Let’s say that is the problem. Thinking out loud here. Duh. Smack me. Um… I was reading a great book a while ago, “How to Win Friends and Influence People,” really it’s a great book, and I remember he starts off, and that was about as far as I got although I insist it’s a great book, and he says firmly, with a lot of evidence (I talk like this too) that you simply cannot convince anybody of anything by fighting with them.
He’s right. I know it’s a bit hard to believe, but he convinced me with all his evidence, that successful people have an uncanny ability to never browbeat others into agreeing with them. Carnagie says successful people rather engineer their opponents into agreeing with them. Can this be done on issues of global concern, like our environmental mess and the fact that idiots seem to control everything and are driving us toward total destruction at an accellerating rate? How can concerned people engineer a soft sell on this one? I’ll have to think about that one.
On with the exhibit! Here’s the link:
Many kids still dying for a glass of water
Excerpt:
In the next 24 hours diarrhea caused by unclean water and poor sanitation will claim the lives of 4,000 children. The annual death toll from this relentless catastrophe is larger than the population of Birmingham. Dirty water poses a greater threat to human life than war or terrorism. Yet it barely registers on the radar of public debate in rich countries.
At any one time, close to half the population of the developing world is suffering from water-related diseases. These rob people of their health, destroy their livelihoods and undermine education potential. The statistics behind the crisis make for grim reading. In the midst of an increasingly prosperous global economy, 2.6 billion people still have no access to even the most rudimentary latrine.
Over 1 billion have no source of drinking water.
In Britain, the average person uses 160 liters of clean water each day.
Ouch! Read that again. That’s gotta be heavy, right? Really. Read it again. Can that be for real? I’ve been backpacking to a lot of nooks and crannies of Asia and I’ve never seen a place where I couldn’t get bottled water. Then again, I’ve never been to Africa. And anywhere that backpackers go, a trail of money provides bottled water for all.
Bottled water is part of the problem really. Read on.
The slum was Kibera. With a population of 750,000 it is one of the largest informal settlements in Africa and accounts for one-quarter of people living in Nairobi. Over 90 percent lack access to a latrine, giving rise to a phenomenon that didn’t figure in the movie: the “flying toilet.” Lacking any alternative, people defecate into plastic bags that are thrown into the street, with terrifying consequences for public health.
Kibera is a microcosm of what happens across the developing world. Rapid urbanization and a crumbling water and sanitation infrastructure in cities like Jakarta, Manila and Lagos have left millions of poor people in overcrowded slums facing a constant threat from water infected with human excrement.
To add insult, the poor pay more for their water than the rich. In Kibera, you pay three times more than in Manhattan or London, and 10 times more than in high-income suburbs of Nairobi. Similar patterns are repeated across the cities of the developing world. The reason: water utilities pump subsidized water to well-off customers, but seldom reach the poor. Most slum dwellers face a choice between buying water from high-cost private traders, or taking a long trip to the nearest stream.
Meeting the UN’s millennium development goal of halving the proportion of the world without access to clean water would cost US$4 billion a year for 10 years. That amount represents just a month’s spending on bottled mineral water in Europe and the US.
For less than people in rich countries now spend on a designer product that produces no tangible health gains, we would roll back one of the main causes of preventable childhood death. And for every US$1 invested, another US$3 to US$4 would be generated through savings on health spending and increased productivity. So why have rich countries been cutting aid to water and sanitation for the last five years?
I would like to add for comparison that the Iraq Invasion has cost nearly US$250 billion so far. So I guess that money could hve been better spent. If you feel sorry for children dying needless painful deaths that is.
But don’t believe it! I’m not trying to convince you of anything. I’m sure that story is simply not true. There is no way that the leacders of America, who have the best intentions in their hearts, would ever knowingly allow money to be diverted away from saving the lives of children and put into efforts that destroy the lives of (Arab) children. What is described in the story is an oversimplification and obfuscation of the real truth which is that America does everything a country could possible[sic] do to export Democracy and a proper Way of life for all the people of this great world, thank you very much, and what was the question? Do we ignore mountains of death due to simple problems with low tech solutions? Well, we can’t have high tech without the low tech, now can we? No we certainly can’t. Amen.
I can’t wait for the day I stop including myself in the we. Is there a real war, a just one, I can sign up for and earn my stripes fighting this all-too-old world order? God bless America. Really. Her people need some help. After we help the children. I don’t know how. Go ask Bono.
And go read the whole story. It’s by Kevin Watkins, who is director of the UN Human Development Report Office. Man, the UN can sure come up with key staff members that know how to tell whoppers! Do you remember those weapons inspectors? How about that, huh?
Next issue: the raping of the oceans; Back to you, Jane.