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Sustainability – the greatest farce?

We exist not to exist. Now, what does that really mean? Well, in simple terms, it means we are born to die. As grim as this unwanted reality sounds, it is the basis of why people do what they do and behave the way they do.

Some live to enjoy that short moment and blissfully hope it doesn’t come sooner than later. Others strive and prepare for that day with the hope they make an impact and leave a lasting impression.


That lasting impression, in turn, can be for good or bad reasons – often confused by the individual.


Martyrs and suicide committers, for example, tend to feel that their unpleasant actions are doing a great cause to society.


Though their loved ones would beg to differ, it is the individual who decides whether that impact they leave behind is a good or terrible one.

The irrational human mind

One thing one learned in earlier days as undergraduates studying economics was that as individuals, we are mostly self-consumed and irrational.


Some refer to it as being emotional – but all irrational traits to what ideal? After all, that is what separates us from machines and robots!

Living for the present is an inherent human attribute that is hard to change or condition.

We have so quickly moved on to adopt artificial intelligence without mastering our own level of intellect and compassion.


We are certainly not advocating for a utopian state where everyone gets to the level of Albert Einstein. Emotional intelligence, however, unlike the more numerically rigid intelligence quotient, is inherent but can be honed or learned if one is willing.

Difficulty implementing

The problem with its adoption is that it takes effort. This is something not everyone is enthusiastic about – like math, chemistry, or gym class in high school.


One must ponder why significantly less than 10 percent of the world owns all the riches. Meanwhile, we currently still must deal with world hunger, disease, and abject poverty.


We must revisit the above notion of emotional intelligence. This is because one of its inherent traits is compassion – something most of those individuals don’t have or consciously try to avoid. Though this should be one of the obvious attributes that separate us from so-called beasts. Animals only have instincts to help with their decision-making processes. We, on the other hand, still struggle to use them.


Sociopaths, psychopaths, dictators, and oppressors are, therefore, not far from beasts. They lack the compassion that would even amaze the most ruthless animal predator if they had the consciousness to see what was going on in our world. These people also lack what we basically have mythologically termed – a soul.

A greater role to play

This piece is however not to criticize or state the obvious about such people but to try to explain why they behave as they do.
Psychologists and sociologists alike perhaps need to revisit their curricula and amend them to focus more on this very important but often ignored concept.


This should be added in both subject areas but must begin the analysis from the grassroots level – from childhood.
The stigma of seeing a psychologist (clinical, child, or industrial) would first need to be eradicated somehow for this to happen.


These professions play a much larger role in shaping the world that we live in. A lot more than they may realize.


It is when we learn to be compassionate and more emotionally conscious, that the concept of sustainability, conservation of any resource for future generations becomes a reality.

7 thoughts on “Sustainability – the greatest farce?”

  1. Thats actually an interesting idea that you discuss here and I agree with you in many ways. I wondered if you thought that part of that inherent irrational, selfish and greedy trait of humanity is not also brought on by the capitalism system we live in? If we maybe went into some utopian socialist ideal world that many argue for, though I can’t say I support it, then we would not need such emotional education.

    1. Thanks for the comment 🙂 Systems need to be mixed for starters because any system in its purest for will fail….pure capitalism leads to huge wage gaps….pure communism leads to inefficiency with also a bourgeois group that controls…a pure socialist system…well, leads to decent because it restricts the hardworking from reaping rewards of their work fully and allows for free-loaders…so it must be mixed. The mindset of people, is the hardest to ‘change’…we need to think collective and not individually …now THAT thought process is VERY hard for some!

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