URITIBA, Brazil, Mar 23 (IPS) -
Affect, care, cooperation and responsibility are the four central principles of
a new ethics that humanity urgently needs to adopt, in order to avoid becoming
extinct as "a victim of itself," Leonardo Boff, one of the founders of
liberation theology, said Thursday.
Emotions and sensitivity are "the essence, the core dimension of
the human being," said the Brazilian theologian at a panel on "ethics,
biodiversity and sustainability". The panel formed part of the Global Civil
Society Forum, held parallel to the Mar. 20-31 Eighth Conference of the Parties
to the Convention on Biological Diversity (COP8).
It is not reason but feeling that is involved
in our first contact with reality, and "today's great crisis is not economic,
political or religious, but a crisis of affect, of the capacity to feel a
connection with others," he said.
It is indispensable to "take care of
all living things," and science shows that cooperation is the "supreme law of
the universe," he added.
"The world is not made up of objects but of
relationships. It was cooperation that made possible the leap from animal to
humanity, and without it we are dehumanised, which is what occurs in the case of
capitalism," the theologian told around 300 activists, most of them small
farmers.
He added that the principle of responsibility underlies the
criticism of transgenic products, the need to take precautions in the face of
unpredictable and unknown consequences, the possibility that genetic
modification of food could break down the balance between the "billions of
bacteria" and molecules that make up a human being.
Boff, who left the
priesthood after suffering sanctions at the hands of the Vatican for expressing
"dangerous ideas" over the past two decades, has outlined his ecological
concerns in several books. He has been invited to give talks at several panels
at the COP8.
Boff is one of the founders of liberation theology, which
is based on a "preferential option for the poor", whose proponents' involvement
in the struggles of the poor and marginalised sectors of the population often
brought them into conflict with a more conservative Catholic Church hierarchy in
the past.
The expression "sustainable development" is "a deception to
undermine the demands of environmentalists" by joining together two
contradictory concepts, he told the participants in the Global Civil Society
Forum.
Development "comes from the capitalist economy," which supposes a
constant rise in production, consumption and wealth as part of an illusion of
"infinite resources," while sustainability has to do with biology, "the dynamic
equilibrium of interrelated beings," he said.
In order for the
consumption levels of industrialised countries to become universal, "two
additional planet earths" would be needed, he said.
But earlier
international conferences have already concluded that by continuing along that
road, the earth would no longer be sustainable by 2030 or 2035, and would suffer
major catastrophes, said Boff. "We have become the earth's Satan," said Boff.
"Either we change or we die."
An equally menacing portrait was painted
by Louise Vandelac, director of the Environmental Sciences Institute at the
University of Quebec at Montreal (UQAM), Canada. Vandelac focussed on the area
of biotechnology, and warned that more than biodiversity, it is "the world's
biological security that is threatened by the cannibalism of the market."
A second generation of transgenic research and technology has now
emerged, devoted to producing genetically modified animals, she said.
The research being carried out today is very different from that of the
previous 25 years, she noted. Scientific literature from the last few months
reveals that more than 200 tests have already been conducted on pigs, rabbits,
cows and fish, and soon the first transgenic salmon could be unveiled in Canada,
she reported.
This technology has been highly concentrated up until now,
with just four countries - the United States, Argentina, Brazil and
Canada - accounting for 96 percent of transgenic commercial production.
Moreover, 95 percent of this production is made up of only four crops, namely
soybeans, cotton, corn and canola. In the meantime, Monsanto Roundup Ready (RR)
soybeans occupy a full 75 percent of the total area planted with transgenic
crops in the world today.
The biotechnology industry's marked interest
in developing pesticide-resistant plant varieties owes to the fact that
producing a new pesticide costs ten times more, said Vandelac.
Roundup
Ready seeds, which produce crops that are resistant to Monsanto's own
glyphosate-based herbicide Roundup, have guaranteed continued sales of the
weedicide. The use of Roundup on transgenic crops dropped off during the first
few years, but is now growing at a rate of four percent annually.
Studies reveal a 70 percent decline in the toad population in areas
where transgenic soybeans are grown. One hypothesis is that Roundup herbicide is
altering the animals' hormonal systems and thus interfering with their
reproduction, said Vandelac. Nevertheless, there are "new hopes" emerging as
people are becoming more aware of the threats posed by transgenics and pushing
for clear regulations that enforce limits on the ambitions of private
enterprise, with social movements joining with environmentalists, trade
unionists, feminists and other activists in defence of biological security, she
concluded.
Argentine lawmaker Marta Maffei called for efforts to combat
"cultural domination," the mother of all dominations, in her view. Maffei
maintained that politicians adopt decisions "without knowing anything about
environmental issues," and depend on the advice of specialists who work for
private companies that have no interest whatsoever in preserving biodiversity.
Social mobilisation is the only way to break this "vicious cycle of
environmental domination," she declared. |