Thursday 9 September 2010

Ideas to Change the World

Although extremely idealistic, here are some ideas to change the world:

  • Everyone is “given” a house, all houses will be the same. People will be placed in areas close to their workplaces. This would allow for car pooling, lower emissions and less congestion.
  • Force workplaces to have staggered starting times. For example 6am-11am. This would prevent congestion and some emissions.
  • Have one economical car for everyone, no performance vehicles. Add limits to the vehicles to prevent dangerous driving.
  • Stop production of unnecessary items and foods.
  • Dedicate whole industries to supplying developing and 3rd world countries. We waste so much food as it is and have so much we don’t need.
  • Change the focus of research and development from profit to world gain.
  • Form a unified government throughout the world where every country cooperates, all wealth and resources are shared and no country tries to “1up” the other.
  • Stop trying to change the natural environment to suit us, change us the suit the environment.
  • Stop eating animals, we can easily supplement our diet. We would quickly evolve to accommodate this.
  • Start doing things for other people instead of ourselves.

Wednesday 8 September 2010

The Human Impact

As humans, we take almost everything for granted. We are extremely wasteful, and instead of evolving and living in harmony with nature, we change nature and have a huge impact on the environment. Some steps can be taken to change the impact we have and we need to start looking at ourselves, not just as individuals but as a society. 
Humans have a huge impact on both fauna and flora. From simply using the seas to search for oil sites, we have had a dramatic effect on the feeding patterns of whales. Something more dramatic as the recent BP oil spill is threatening an entire species. Sit and think about the things we are doing and have done around the world from introducing species, clearing out natural habitats, greenhouse emissions and even every day things such as driving to and from work. Humans need to make some huge changes to the way we treat the world.
Humans can take simple steps to improve the state of the natural world. We simply do not need to cut down trees, drill for oil, build new roads while destroying forests or have such a high carbon emission level. We could easily cut down on these things, most of which are for material gain and are never out of necessity. We need to change the focus from ourselves and change it outwards to the rest of the world.
If we change our focus from ourselves, we can make a huge impact. What people do not realize, is that the effect we have one the rest of the world, in turn has a huge impact on us individually. If we stop creating consumer demand for self satisfaction, we will stop the impact on the environment, stop damaging ecosystems through collections of materials and so forth. Every animal and plant in the world has an impact on the functioning and harmony of the world, in turn having an impact on is, either instantly significant or progressive.
We really need to wake up, and smell the roses. We are having such a huge impact we don't realize it, and through simple steps and by changing the focus from ourselves to the rest of the world, we can make planet earth a better place to live. Somewhere that was once a lush beautiful natural world.

Tuesday 7 September 2010

The Mind as an Absolute



Before I start, let me make something clear: This post will probably no more than some random ideas, will probably lack structure, and will probably have a lot of disorder. This will also cover some things I have previously written about. Now to it.
From my perspective, the  mind is the only thing we can really class as absolute. Everything else, even that outside of our control and external to us is relative. The mind can make a situation out of nothing, it can perceive something that isn’t there(or maybe it really is) and it controls everything in the material world.
Thanks to Descartes, we have the rationalization that everything external to our mind cannot be proven. For example, I am longsighted and need to wear reading glasses, this shows that my senses are fallible, it shows that they cannot be relied on. Due to this fact, I cannot know for sure that the information I am receiving from the outside world is 100% correct. If this is the case, how can I know anything is actually real?
This is all ground work to emphasize the main point. Not only does this fallible interpretation apply to information received externally, but it also applies to ideas, the information we process internally. For example: if I tell a joke, one person may laugh and another may not. Why is this? Why is it that another person who also thinks(we will assume this for the moment) reacts differently?
If you can interpret something differently, on both a physical level and mental level, does this not mean that we are the creators of our own world? Yes we have patterns, ways of thinking that to some extent automate our reactions and interpretations of things, but these can be change.
I will leave you with this to ponder however: If we know we are thinking because we observe our own thoughts, how do we know for sure someone else is thinking? How do we know other people are real?

Monday 6 September 2010

Need to Want Less

Check out this groovy page http://recoveringlazyholic.com/needtowant.html I think it makes a bold statement about the world, its focus and what it needs to change to.

Posted via http://blog.boxzen.net - Visit for even more content!

The Human Cage

Something for everyone to ponder: "Money is like a bird cage for people". Would having all the money in the world mean we had no cage? Would it mean we could fly around free? Or would having no money constraints or no ties to an illusion economy be true freedom?

Posted via http://blog.boxzen.net - Visit for even more content!

Saturday 4 September 2010

Sleepless Nights

Lying here, unable to sleep,
Nothing I can do, just end up thinking of you,
It might sound a little weak,
But it is such a feat, something that’s impossible to beat,
That fact that I’m with you.

Friday 3 September 2010

Lame Jokes Collection

What do you call a sleeping cow?
A bulldozer.

What did Batman say to Robin before they got in the car?
Robin, get in the car.

When is a car not a car?
When it turns into a driveway.

What do you call a deer with no eyes?
No eye dear.
What do you call a deer with no legs and no eyes?
Still no eye dear.

What's long, yellow and fruity?
An apple in disguise.

What did the dog say to the tree?
bark!

Why was Tigger looking in the toilet?
To find Pooh.

Why did the booger cross the road?
Because he was being picked on.

What time did the man go to the dentist?
Tooth hurty.

How to you organize a space party?
You planet.

How do you start a book about ducks?
With an introducktion.

Why don't anteaters get sick?
Because they're full of anty-bodies.

What did the digital watch say to his Mum?
"Look Mum no hands."

Two peanuts were walking down a spooky road at night...  One was a-salted.

A termite walks into a pub and asks, "Is the bar tender here?"

What did the apple say to the orange?
Nothing stupid, apples don't talk.

Why can't a chicken coop have more than 2 doors?
Because if it had 4 doors it would be a chicken sedan.

What did Batman say to Robin before they got in the car?
Robin, get in the car.

What's brown and sounds like a bell? 
Dung!

Posted from: Luz's Blog of Life.

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