Global Sustainability / Globale Nachhaltigkeit / Sustentabilidade Global / Sostenibilidad Global

At the start of the 21st century, the problem of global sustainability is widely recognised and a common topic of discussion by journalists, scientists, teachers, students and citizens in many parts of the World.

The first decade of the new century, at least, will be one of reflection about the demands placed by humankind on the biosphere.

The physical World is a place where all things, regardless of station or preference, are subjected to entropy and chaos. Life, however, is different. Life is organized, and biological systems strive for order.

It must be this way in order for life to thrive against chaos and entropy. This is an age of science and technology, an age of global connection at the touch of a button, an age where science rules supreme.

It is not that Humans are smarter than centuries ago; it is that we are bombarded constantly by an influx of information.

Despite this digital age wherein more data is introduced to the Human brain within a single day than ever before.

Not only have we failed to create a sustainable civilization for our species, we have actually created additional problems, we have embedded them into our culture.

We are no longer bound to the land. We lack ties to cultural heritage. We are floating in space, rootless.

It is not more information that we require; it is a better process to incorporate and understand this information. This must become embedded into the very social fabric of our reality.

We must strive to create a culture which is not simply a contribution to sick Society, but rather, is sustainable and functions to enforce not morality but a value system hierarchy within the conscious lives of mankind.

Without a sustainable culture, and without sustainable life, we are met with a deeply disturbing and pressing issue which plagues modernity far more than even the ancient plagues.

We are left with a World overcome by a systemic plague which eats at the very fabric of mankind.

This host is distinguishable by many characteristics, yet none so obvious as its mindlessness, an emptiness of higher cognitive function, and its insatiable hunger: a parasitic horde of apparently undead enemies which at one point were living Humans.

The truth is that zombies have no social organization to speak of. There is no discernable hierarchy, no chain of command, and no drive toward any type of collectivization.

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