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As Green As Green Can Be?

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There has been debate here lately about whether we, as “Greenies” should buy anything at all. This is a long-standing issue in the environmental community: Should we shun all consumer products and grow our own food, make our own clothes and educate our own kids (the time that takes tends to limit your ability to do much else, I’ve found)?

Or should we engage in society as “regular” folks and try to change the system by supporting environmentally-friendly companies, products and services? I would guess that most Greenies do both, to varying degrees (since I live in the Northeast, I can only garden for part of the year anyway, for example). 

I’ve always had trouble with the ‘back to the land’ approach as I see many (certainly not all!) communities that are set up that way as having traditional gender roles. I have little interest in cooking and even less in having babies, sewing my own clothes or spending all day canning food.  I love the fact that I get paid for using my brain all day, writing, thinking, researching, asking questions, and interacting with all the other nerds that like that kind of work. At the same time, I realize my existence is predicated on people much poorer than myself doing all that hard (boring!) labor I don’t want to do. OR that some fossil-fueled machine has to do the work. So I try to buy Fair Trade and organic, and I clean my house myself, and I go to farmer’s markets and I grow my own summer veggies and I compost and I adopt rescued animals, and I try not to drive too much, and I recycle and reuse like crazy.  How are we supposed to come up with solutions if we are laboring all day? I need time to think, dammit! 

What about you? What do you do? What tradeoffs do you make, and why?

Comments
  1. Danielle said:

    You have to get off that other guy’s back! Those people that are doing the hard and boring labor are enabling you and I to sip tea and contemplate life’s mysteries. There has to be a giving back. It may come in the form of intellectual work. But its easier to see the work when we eat it and use it to keep warm than it is when its my own judgment about the work I’ve done with my brain all day.
    So, the guy out there doing the “boring and hard” work is enabling me to lead my lifestyle. How am I helping him or her as an individual? I dunno.

  2. starre said:

    I agree Danielle, there has to be a giving back. Is my intellectual work enough?

  3. Danielle said:

    Only you can tell!

  4. Steve said:

    I do some of that ‘boring and hard’ work, and I love it.
    I love my connection to the land, my health and other peoples. I get off on creating wealth, by growing something people want/need and adding something to the world. My comment to you is I admire your lifestyle, and you might admire mine, if you really knew it. Nothing is for everyone. There is no one answer. It will many people on a lot of levels to create clean energy, and other things we need. So, take care folks…. Steve

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