Archive for November, 2008

Are High Tech Devices Consistent with Simple Living?

admin November 15th, 2008

I believe there are good and practical reasons for simple livers not to invest so much of our time and money in high tech gadgetry like PCs, cell phones, PDAs, etc. I hate sounding like an old fart throwing a wet blanket on all the fun – after all, I own and enjoy using some of these things myself (you hypocrite!). BUT, it seems to me there are clearly diminishing returns on these gadgets: diminishing each of us personally as well as the world as a whole. IT’s actual total cost could put us all in the poor house and help turn the planet into a cinder.

I know this will not go down well with most people, because we have become addicted to all things IT, and most people can’t conceive of living without them – either because we love electronic toys (like me) or because we deeply believe that it is the best and most efficient way to live in the 21st Century.

I’m writing this because I think it reinforces, from a purely rational, economic, and environmental point of view, a basic tenet of Christian simple living – that we shouldn’t put our time and energy into accumulating money and stuff – in this case electronic stuff. Although my comments below are arguments from reason and research rather than faith, I think it’s useful for Christians to know that economics and reason also support Jesus’ most basic teachings about how we should live. In fact, some of the side effects of the high tech revolution might be a parable that Jesus himself might tell if he were preaching to us today.

Just one declaration before I begin: there is precious little research data or knowledgeable analysis out there on this topic, and I certainly have not done the research myself, so what follows is based on my own observations and reasoning as well as having read as much as I can find on the topic. And my bias, of course, is based on many Biblical citations that warn us to beware of accumulating stuff – especially complex and expensive stuff (for example, the parable of the rich man in Luke 12:15 ff and the Tower of Babel in Genesis 11:1-10) – regardless of current research or the lack of it.

Love is Blind

As a world-wide society we have fallen in love with high tech, but like most lovers, we have been blind to the substantial down-sides of it. Many of us assume that IT and other high tech ‘solutions’ will help us become sustainable because it will make things more efficient and will enable new greener ways of doing things. A basic assumption underlying this is that there is always a technological solution to resource degradation, pollution, global warming, and energy needs, so we don’t really need to do anything difficult ourselves, like be satisfied with buying less stuff! However, it is likely not true that technology will solve all of our problems because our biggest problem in this regard is not our lack of green technology, but rather human psychology which most often defeats the intended outcomes of technological solutions as well as reason and common sense.

Manufacturers and marketers always tell us that using high tech devices of all kinds is much more efficient and environmentally friendly than using old fashioned analog or manual systems, and that they will save us money as well as save the environment. But in making this argument, they only focus on the operational efficiency of the devices, i.e., how functional are they when we use them, and how much the devices minimize energy use and environmental damage, in addition to the amount of work they can accomplish while being greener.

There is a major error in this kind of reasoning. In fact each device has a much longer economic-environmental history and impact than what occurs during the short time we actually use it. It seems obvious to me that leaving these longer-range costs and side-effects out of the efficiency equation is an economic, environmental, and social mistake.

Unintended Consequences

Let’s start with some of the unintended consequences of IT and other technologies.

1. It makes everything much faster: Gee, isn’t that great?

· Not really. Computerization of all kinds speeds up our consumption of everything, resulting in far greater resource depletion and dramatically increasing pollution, including production of the high tech devices themselves (and their inappropriate disposal). The Web, for example, makes it vastly easier to buy virtually everything, thereby greatly cranking-up consumption in general. IT also makes it possible for businesses to produce and market more, faster. These two factors, in turn, increase the amount of packaging/shipping material used and increases resource depletion and adds to global warming with the inefficient distribution system it has spawned. All those little UPS and FedEx trucks delivering the items we would not even have bought before the advent of the Web, waste a tremendous amount of fuel and contribute mightily to air pollution.

This means that we are burning our furniture (natural and non-renewable resources) to keep ourselves warm (or, in this case, merely ‘happy’) at a faster and faster rate. This would be impossible if we were not riding the crest of the “IT revolution.”

· Both good and the bad things travel around the world within seconds. Our current financial crisis is a good example of a bunch of bad practices (CDOs, CDSs, MBSs, SIVs, and other securitized obligations, hedge funds, lending abuses, etc.) which were invented in the U.S., spread very rapidly around the world eventually creating universal havoc rather than a hiccup in just one place. IT made the rapid spread to every corner of the world possible.

It seems similar to the problems caused by computerized stock trading where computer programs choose what gets traded when and in what quantities – automatically with little human intervention. This became such a problem several years ago, that now trading can be halted to prevent market crashes because thousands of computer trading programs reacting simultaneously to an event can easily precipitate such a crash. Not a good thing!

2.But isn’t it a lot more efficient?

Maybe not.

High tech, broadly understood,may not be very efficient, cost effective, or cost efficient as is almost universally claimed!

· When you include in this calculation, as we must if we are going to be honest with ourselves, all of the costs of design, raw materials, manufacturing, distribution, use, maintenance, and disposal of both the hardware and software, it looks like a net loss to our already unsustainable economy and the physical world which unfortunately has to support it.

My informal efficiency calculation includes:

o The environmental costs of mining all the materials, some of which are highly toxic and often mined in Third World countries where workers are abused and where social justice is unheard of. For example, coltan (columbo-tantalite), a critical semiconductor component, is mainly mined in The Congo where the mining process has devastated wide swaths of natural areas while holding many of its workers in poverty.

Then there is the transportation of the raw materials to plants in many locations around the world which obviously uses a great deal of fuel and produces prodigious amounts of pollution;

o The manufacturing process which, for most electronics, requires vast amounts of water, huge amounts of power, and use of highly toxic materials: it turns out that although most manufacturing plants don’t produce a lot of thick, black smoke from their smokestacks, they are quite ‘dirty’ industries when you look beyond their ‘clean rooms’ to the materials they work with and the large quantities of waste that is produced, then stored, or otherwise disposed of.

For example, a typical plant producing semiconductors uses 240,000 kilowatt hours of electricity and over 2 million gallons of water every day. While recycling and reusing of water does occur, extensive chemical treatment is required for remediation, and in dry or desert areas such as Albuquerque, New Mexico, home to plants for Motorola, Philips Semiconductor, Allied Signal and Signetics, Intel, and other high-tech firms, the high consumption of water necessary for the manufacturing of semiconductors can pose an especially significant drain on an already scarce natural resource. 1

o The transport, literally half way around the world, of countless numbers of components from manufacturers to assemblers, and finished devices to suppliers, wholesalers, and retailers results in a huge amount of resource waste and pollution;

o The tremendous investment business and industry has to make to install hardware and software, train users, create large support systems, maintain, replace, and dispose of equipment each year, not to mention construction and maintenance of the server farms required to store, protect and distribute the trillions of files we create.

Home user’s costs are proportionally just as high as those of business and industry: we have to buy, figure out how to install and use the equipment, use a lot of electricity to keep it running (of course even after we turn it off unless we unplug it all, including peripherals), spend a lot of time and/or money to maintain and upgrading the hardware and software – often at unconscionably frequent intervals. What did we ever do with our time and money before we bought these gadgets?

o Then there is the well-known disposal problem at the end of each machine’s life cycle, with much of our disposed electronics ending up in Third World electronics dumps where the toxics leach into the water and sicken or kill people and wildlife. Although this might improve over time, it is a very big current problem, and any future systemic solutions to the disposal/recycling problem will have a substantial cost attached to it and will never be 100% effective.

I believe that when we add all these costs together, they at least match if not exceed any potential efficiencies – especially when you consider that some of these unanticipated (and unplanned-for) consequences, could be catastrophic for our world.

But Won’t Productivity be Lower Without Computers?

Yes!

It has been an article of faith in neoclassical economics, and particularly for Milton Friedman’s Chicago School of Economics, that we must always improve productivity, i.e., grow (a lot) in order to raise the GDP and make increasing amounts of money and we must endlessly become more efficient in order to achieve that. All economists, except the small but growing, group of ecological economists such as Herman Daly, tout this as the only real possibility.

I disagree, and in fact I believe that if, as a society, we don’t voluntarily shift into low gear instead of overdrive, the world of physics, the natural world in which we live, may force us into what Daly calls “steady state economics.” This would be an economic system based on no growth in the neoclassical economic sense. It is a system that does not require ever-expanding consumption, resource degradation, and pollution, and it does not require technological miracles to achieve sustainability.

However, being ‘forced’ is almost always a very painful train wreck, as opposed to consciously, purposefully shifting to a new economic model with better prospects for sustainability. Never-the-less, I believe economic down-shifting will happen, either voluntarily or involuntarily, because the pyramid scheme that we call our economy will eventually collapse. That could be a good thing!

A steady state economic system might put us in a world where more people work to produce fewer goods and services. This would certainly decrease productivity but, much to our benefit, use-up far fewer resources, reduce pollution, slow global warming, and ensure that most everyone has a job even in a down-turn rather than having massive layoffs. In such a system we might actually begin to focus on the value and quality of the work we do and the products we produce, as well as the folks we sell them to, rather than being mindlessly focused on increasing stock prices, market capitalization, stock options, and the size of golden parachutes.

Yes we would probably have substantially fewer glitzy gadgets from cell phones to SUVs and McMansions. Our country (the USA in my case) might not always have the largest economy, the biggest military, or the most clout as a result, but then we don’t need to always be the biggest and best. Many countries and societies have done very well without all that, thank you very much. (I can hear the screams about that thought even as I write) but instead we might have a great deal more joy, real security, better family lives, and sanity. Sounds good to me!

But I also believe that from a purely Christian perspective, our nationalism and what our governments might or might not do or be, is not of primary concern. It is our behavior as individual followers of Christ that matters, whether the whole country or the whole world follows or not.

Jesus may have known better than the economists!

Tell me what you think: comments@christiansimpleliving.org

Web Resources on this Subject

John Nolt, University of Kentucky, Environmental Effect of Computers, http://web.utk.edu/~nolt/radio/computer.htm

Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition, http://www.etoxics.org/site/PageServer

Info world: UN study: Think upgrade before buying a new PC http://www.infoworld.com/article/04/03/07/hnunstudy_1.html

IPS: Environment: Where That “Recycled” E-Waste Really Goes, http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=44707

USA Today: Don’t recycle ‘e-waste’ with haste, activists warn http://www.usatoday.com/tech/products/environment/2008-07-06-ewaste-recycling_N.htm

National Science Foundation/Jackson State University: IE-Waste Research, http://e-waste.jsums.edu/

Washington Post, EPA Lets Electronic Waste Flow Freely, GAO Report Says, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/09/16/AR2008091603225.html

Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association, Computer Productivity Defies Definition and Confirmation, http://www.afcea.org/signal/archives/content/Feb00/computer-feb.html

University of Guelph, The Environmental Impact of Desktop Computing, http://www.accessola2.com/superconference2007/thurs/307/green.ppt

United Nations University, Study tallies environmental cost of computer boom, http://update.unu.edu/archive/issue31_5.htm

University of Michigan, Coltan Mining in the Democratic Republic of Congo http://sitemaker.umich.edu/section002group3/coltan_mining_in_democratic_republic_of_the_congo

DieOff.org, Steady-State Economics, Herman Daly, http://dieoff.org/page88.htm

Footnotes:

1 Taken from The Environmental Impact of the Manufacturing of Semiconductors, Connexions, http://cnx.org/content/m14503/latest/

Economic Crisis: The Mother of All Hangovers

admin November 6th, 2008

Even in the heart of this deepening recession many perpetrators of the real estate and financial bubbles are quite un-repentant about their role in the mess, and are simply looking for yet another opportunity to make a killing when the market recovers – on the backs of consumers of course. They don’t seem to be able to help themselves… which is the definition of addiction.

But many of us living on Main Street can’t help ourselves either. We should be even more concerned about the fact that we ‘consumers’ are biding our time too, until better times return and we can get back to spending again – except for those who are using the recession and financial collapse as an opportunity to re-evaluate their ways of living so they can begin living more sanely.

I have to confess that as a recovering consumaholic, I keep watching the Dow Industrial Average – half of me wanting it to go back up so my retirement fund regains a little value, and the other half feeling good that it went down (probably to about where it ought to be anyway) because it is teaching us another little lesson and forcing all of us to live more simply.

I feel like the alcoholic who looks wistfully at the bar as he walks by.

Oh yeah, I’m hooked! I need to keep reminding myself about that.

The thing about recovering from an addiction is that the hangover and withdrawal can be hell.

Obviously each person who shifts to living simply suffers a little because we have to give up a number of things we’ve become used to, and may even think we’re entitled to.

But think about the economy as a whole: now there would be the mother of all hangovers!

If a large number of consumers gave up their addiction and became simple livers instead, what would happen to an economy that is based entirely on excessive consumption? Many industries and businesses would dramatically down-size or close. This would not just hurt wealthy business people and financiers, there would also be a loss of hundreds of thousands, if not millions of jobs and a concomitant loss of homes, and savings – probably a great deal more than we have lost in the current bust. We would all hurt… a lot.

Almost no one wants to even contemplate this kind of train wreck, just as addicts don’t want to contemplate going ‘cold turkey’. They would literally rather die than quit.

But we are in the same boat with all the other addicts. Our national god has been perpetual, dynamic, and unsustainable economic growth, which a growing number of scientists and ecological economists tell us will kill us if we don’t dramatically down-shift.

Yet the neo-classical economic model on which our economy is based, assumes that profligate consumption must continue if we are to survive economically (keep the good times rolling!) – even if it means turning the planet into a cinder and burning our own furniture just to keep warm. Of course mainstream economists, engineers, and supply-siders argue that technology will save us from ourselves, and we’ll be able to go on consuming until the end of time… even though there is lots of evidence that this will not happen.

So there will be lots of very bright and very important people saying that living simply would be a catastrophe for us and the world, and we should give up such naïve, “simple-minded” ideas. Many of these will be fellow Christians.

So does that mean we should give up the idea of living simply as a society or as the Church? Does it mean that few people will ever shift to simple living because the pain would be too great… so we should forget it? Or will we not live more simply just because we are told it can’t or shouldn’t happen?

I’m not smart enough to answer those questions. But both the Old and New Testaments have told us over and over that it is unwise and immoral to focus our lives on making money and having a lot of stuff. We have been told, by One who is a lot smarter than all of us put together, that simple and humble is the way to go, and I believe that, so I’ll base my decision on the Bible rather than economic models which have been so wrong so many times before.

And it appears that He wants us to spread the word about it, so I will continue to remind folks that there is another way of living – a better way, that is not only sustainable, i.e., it will save our butts, but is, more importantly, moral, as Jesus would define the word.

And there is this: humanity has been through bigger train wrecks and natural calamities before and we’re still here! And we know that large-scale change always brings pain along with it. More importantly we know that Jesus told us that we would have to suffer for our faith, and he never promised us an easy road or lots of money.

Maybe an economic train wreck is what 21st Century Christians, along with everyone else, must suffer just as the 1st Century Christian were fed to the lions.

So let’s press on!

It Won’t Matter Who Wins the Election

admin November 3rd, 2008

Campaigns, Governance, and Christian Simple Living

The election is tomorrow, and there may be many excellent reasons to vote for one presidential candidate over another, but I don’t believe it will matter which person wins as far as promoting simple living is concerned, and certainly not Christian simple living.

Neither presidential candidate, if elected, will primarily or consistently pursue policies that would move us substantially closer to “living simply as Christ intended.” I think of Christian simple living as coming a bit closer to The Kingdom: caring for, and loving other people, as well as our enemies, and seeing ourselves as a part of, as well as caring for, God’s creation, instead of just feathering our own beds and filling our houses with stuff we don’t need. This is not what any president is about.

Both candidates will make lots of campaign promises (some, in which they might fervently believe) which they hope will get them elected. And we should note that they are both firmly committed to increasing consumerism and the economic ‘prosperity’ they hope it will bring, as well as a blind faith in neo-classical economics. Both candidates are in support of the perpetual motion machine or pyramid scheme that we call our economy. This consumer economy which will always stay focused on how much ‘wealth’ we have (and raping God’s world to achieve it), rather than the real health of our families, communities, and churches.

This is not to say that neither of the candidates will put forth some policies that might promote an issue simple livers care about or feel is critical to Christian simple living. It also is not to say that one may not come a little closer than the other to our “simple values.” But either of these men, as have all past presidents of all political parties, will pursue government and political agendas which will sometimes be strongly at odds with what we value as simple livers or as Christians.

Both John McCain and Barak Obama are good and honorable men, but their primary concerns – their job, if elected – will be politics, power, and executive government leadership. The presidency is a secular job, and gaining and using political and military power is a secular occupation with a vastly different set of goals and methods than those we use in living a faith-based simple, sustainable, and just life in community. One of these men would be, after all, in charge of the entire country including all of its various faiths, beliefs, philosophies, races, and cultures, and what they all want and need – not just what we might desire. There will also be a certain amount of ego and political ideology involved.

So I’ll vote based on a whole bag full of political issues, but not with any hope that my candidate will move our world toward Christian simple living – it ain’t his job! No more than it was Ceasar’s or Pontius Pilot’s job. Jesus didn’t expect it, and neither should I.

But, it is his job to be sure that you and I can pursue our faith and our simple living as we choose, so we’d want to be sure that we vote for a candidate who fully understands and supports the establishment clause in the constitution so that we don’t get run over by something even approaching a state-supported religion. I don’t think that will be a problem for either Obama or McCain.

Take a page from the Christian Anarchy folks – the government is the government and it isn’t ever going to be God’s kingdom no matter how hard we may wish it.

Christian Anarchy – Oh My God!

I think that what I’ve written above can best be summed up through the lens of Christian Anarchy.

Sounds subversive doesn’t it? It really isn’t. But it does cut to the heart of how Christians, and Christian simple livers, can view the relationship between government and our faith lives.

Christian Anarchy is not some radical theology by some new upstart fringe movement. It has its roots in some of the 19th and 20th Century’s greatest and best-known theologians and writers including Jacques Ellul, Karl Barth, Søren Kierkegaard, J. C. and Christoph Blumhardt, and Dietrich Bonhoeffer, so it has some substantial support!

To keep it short, Christian anarchy (‘an,’ meaning un- or not- ; and archy meaning priority, primacy, principal, or prince) proposes that Christians, as well as Jews, according to the Bible, owe their ‘primary’ allegiance and obedience to God and Jesus, and not to any other power including a government or other secular authority or organization – including churches, schools, philosophies, social standards, advertising, or psychological and sociological theories – which may lay claim to our allegiance.

The reason Christians should be non-committal, skeptical, or disinterested toward conventional secular powers or ‘archy’s’ (in this case government and presidents) is that secular ‘archy’s’ are all human inventions, and as with all human inventions, they are fraught with huge faults (shortsightedness, lack of wisdom, self-centeredness and selfishness, lust for power and control, etc.) regardless of how good their hopes and stated intentions are. So allowing oneself to be guided by them as opposed to being led by God (the real archy) is in essence the kiss of death. We will be deserted by them or at least disappointed by them eventually.

It is only in following God and Christ that we have true leadership based on love, care, and justice. All the other archy’s are fatally flawed in this sense, and we should know that before we throw-in with them. Better yet, as the Anabaptists would say, be a non-conformist to the secular powers and culture. We need not oppose them per se, but we do need to be clear about who we follow and why – and it isn’t a president. We should be patriotic, and we can support a president or senator for any number of reasons, but we shouldn’t rely on them for continuous truth, love, consistency, justice, healing, or comfort, etc. – if we do, we will often be jilted.

Our true archy is Jesus who taught us to live simply, justly and lovingly, not because a president or Congress passed a law or promulgated a policy, or that a social movement’s research ‘indicated’ that we should, although any of these can, from time to time, be useful to society and us as a whole.

Withor without this government or any given president, we will still follow our real archy.

An excellent online book on Christian Anarchy is: Christian Anarchy: Jesus’ Primacy Over the Powers by Vernard Eller, http://www.hccentral.com/eller12/part1.html.