Thursday, July 19, 2007

Social IS environmental; the environment IS social

I constantly find myself pulling out social and environmental bottom lines when I'm creating promotional materials, writings and deliverables. Each time I write something like "developing a business that manages to profit and a social/environmental bottom line" I feel frustrated that many of us in the social enterprise field and many in the environmental sustainability field don't necessarily behave as if social and environmental issues are intertwined. I believe they are. How can a social service organization claiming to be addressing issues of poverty not also take under consideration that poverty and the environment are linked? For example, a worldwide reduction in farmland combined with farmers planting corn to be used as alternative fuel instead of food has caused an astronomical 60% increase in the price of tortillas in Mexico. The poor who can barely afford to eat cannot afford even the most minimal of food staples. How can an environmental organization who is interested in helping people reduce their carbon footprints not also take under consideration the reality of a working class American family that may buy conventional foods and petroleum-based plastic products because they are by far cheaper than organics and items made from natural materials? When you're living paycheck to paycheck, you are thinking about surviving today, so solutions need to be put forth that are achievable for everyone. For example, teaching people to buy used - shop thrift stores instead of running to Wal-Mart is a place to start. I get that we are all doing the best we can and that we can't all attend to every issue out there. However, I think we all need to think about the interconnectedness of everything - bring social and environmental issues closer together - without a society, there wouldn't be a need to attend to the environment. Without an environment, there is no society. I look forward to the day when we can stop separating the two and know that they are two parts of a whole.

"We have spent 99% of our history in the wild. Sky, water, and trees are embedded in us. Sever that and we've severed what it is to be human." -John Todd

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