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Saving the World

Campaign for Farm Service: Empower You(th), Feed A Nation

By Rebecca Tarnas

The essay by Rebecca Tarnas has been withdrawn from publication.

When I was eighteen years old my life was changed by a profound yet simple experience: I learned how to grow my own food. Working on a biodynamic farm in Northern California, I learned how to build healthy compost piles, prepare beds for planting, nurture lettuce, garlic, cucumbers, melons, and an abundance of other crops until they ripened to maturity, to prune and train tomato plants to maximize their fullest succulent potential, to feed and care for cows who produce milk, sheep who produce wool, chickens who produce eggs, and draft horses who worked the land with us. Perhaps, most importantly, I learned how to work hard in the hot sun over long days, and to take responsibility for my own ecological footprint upon this planet.

            This experience was the inspiration for the ecological program I helped develop, now widely implemented in 2050, which radically changed the way food is produced in the United States—an effect that has since spread to many other countries. Back in the earlier decades of the twenty-first century, the majority of food grown in the United States was not produced in the manner I have described above. The food production system was dominated by industrialized commercial agriculture, which produced a small number of crops on large tracts of land cultivated as monocultures, enriched with petroleum-based nitrogen fertilizers, and continuously sprayed with deadly chemical pesticides and herbicides. The bulk of these uniformly produced crops were distributed by a minimal number of multinational corporations. At the time, both the number of farms and the number of corporations were rapidly decreasing as all aspects of the food system were consolidated into a few large conglomerates. Back then, when so few corporations were allowed to amass such a monopoly on trade, smaller scale producers, such as the farmers with whom I worked, could no longer compete in the market, and consumers were given fewer choices in what kinds of food they could purchase.

            Up until the changes we implemented in 2024, the prior half century saw the number of farmers decrease while the size of the farms increased. In the 1960s, government policies pushed for fewer farmers working larger tracts of land because technological advances in farming equipment could make farms more efficient than human labor alone.[1] As of 1997, 61% of agricultural products grown in the United States were produced on only 163,000 farms. Of these farms, 63% were contracted to larger corporations which processed and distributed their products.[2] In 2024, the number of farms were continuing to decrease because the same policies had continued to push for greater economic efficiency on farms. The former U.S. farm system, which was heavily subsidized by taxpayers, would not have survived if it were not for the support of government policies.[3] Changing government policy in regards to food production was the key to decentralizing and reforming the system to make it more sustainable and resilient for both the land and its farmers.

            Food was a particularly compelling issue on which to focus because it is a symbol and daily reminder of our dependence upon a healthy Earth. The food we put into our bodies is comprised entirely of other species, whether plant, fungus, or animal, and is nourished by the complex interactions of solar radiation, the hydrologic cycle, bacteria, minerals, insects, and many other factors. The quality of our food determines the quality of our health, and, in the long run, our ability to survive. In the development of our program, we asked ourselves such questions as: How might food be produced if the plants, animals, soils, and waters on which we depend each had their own right to health? What if agricultural land had rights? For example, the right of soil not to be eroded, of aquifers and ground water not to be depleted and contaminated, or of land to be free of contamination by pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizers? What if human beings were given the right to always have access to healthy, uncontaminated food with higher nutritional value?

           There are many different ways these issues could have been addressed, but it seemed that implementing some kind of shift to universal production of organic, regenerative agriculture was necessary in order to grant the right to health for agricultural land, and the right for human beings to have access to clean food. Organic agriculture can be a sustainable and regenerative endeavor when it is designed to mimic a natural ecosystem on a small scale.[4] Examples of such biomimicry techniques include animal husbandry (using composted animal manure to fertilize fields) and intercropping (in which multiple plant species are grown together in harmonious symbiotic relationship), among many other practices employed on organic and biodynamic farms. The costs of transitioning to organic production, and of acquiring organic or biodynamic certification status, once was borne by the producer, which often was a barrier for many small-scale farmers and therefore opened the door for large corporations to come in and take over the organic niche market.[5] Scale is an important factor, because the larger the farm the less likely it is that the farm will be able to maintain ethical, sustainable, and regenerative practices in the long term. Land cannot be cared for if efficiency is the bottom line, and large-scale farming production tends to prioritize short-term efficiency over long-term attention and care. Our program sought to change that trend.

            In the earlier world governed by these ideals of capitalist efficiency, the initial costs of converting a conventional farm to organic production could be quite high and discouraged farmers from changing. One major drawback to organic agriculture was the need for more human labor if the practice was to be sustainable and regenerative. Organic farms that tried to remain competitive in a corporate market usually relied on machines to till large tracts of land and suppress weed growth.[6] To decrease fossil fuel use and implement regenerative practices, farmers would either have to pay their workers a higher salary for more labor or employ more farm hands, both of which were a high increase in expenditure.

            Unavailability of arable land was another obstacle to organic farming, but we were able to partially overcome this issue with the use of urban plots and green roofing on city buildings. Green roofing is a method of covering the roofs of urban buildings with gardens. It is a simple and effective idea that keeps cities cooler in summer by converting much of the cities’ carbon dioxide emissions back into oxygen and helping clean the air of other pollutants. The gardens also contribute to the food consumed by urban dwellers, which otherwise would have to be transported across the country. Green roofing cuts transportation costs and energy usage, and is a form of carbon sequestration as well.[7]

            Food is essential to all human beings in a way that no other commodity is. Therefore, reconnecting people to food production was vital to changing attitudes toward farmers and the cost of food. In order to overcome the shortage of farm workers necessary to convert conventional industrialized farms to organic agriculture, we implemented a required civil service system in the United States for all young people when they graduated from high school. This plan was not dissimilar to earlier European civil service policies, called Zivildienst, in such countries as Germany and Austria, where conscientious objectors to the required military service could opt to do community service instead. Such a solution was radical and required a fundamental transformation of values, but it brought about the kind of change needed to fix the food production system in the United States.

            Under this policy, when U.S. citizens turns eighteen they are required to submit a form demonstrating eligibility for farm service. The young citizen works either on a farm in a rural area, or on a green roof plot in a city. On the service form, citizens indicate their future plans, such as whether they will be attending college or university, or working at a job outside of their farm work. They can also show preference for an urban or rural working environment. Distribution is based on state, so that people are not taken far from their families. If someone wishes to work out of state that can also be arranged.

            Each citizen serves the equivalent of at least two years, with the time distributed according to one’s school and work schedules. A person can work full-time on a farm project and complete their required service in two years. Those who choose this method receive a living-wage salary based on the income of an average job in their locality. This salary is provided by the government from the funds that used to be spent on crop and fossil fuel subsidies. If the farm workers already have employment to which they would be returning after their service is complete, they can also opt to be on a sabbatical at those jobs to secure their positions.

            A part-time arrangement is made for those currently holding half-time civilian jobs, so that they do not need to leave their work positions. On the other hand, full-time students are able to work every summer for four years, or make other comparable arrangements. Those who choose to work in a rural area usually work full-time, whereas those working in urban areas can work either full or part-time depending on their preferences and skills. If a person wishes, they can serve one year and then spend their second year training new farm hands. After two years, those who wish to continue farming can do so on a full-time salary.

            Living arrangements are made according to each person’s lifestyle, work, familial situation, and marital status. Those who farm in a rural area tend to live on or near the farms. Those who farm in the city have the option of living anywhere in or near that city. When possible, arrangements are made for workers to live in the building under their allotted green roof. Persons or families who have houses with green roofs or personal vegetable gardens have the possibility of exemption from the farm service if they fulfill a certain quota of food production.

            An increase in gardens and workers had the positive effect of making U.S. cities into partially self-contained ecosystems able to provide much of their own food. A larger proportion of the carbon dioxide and pollution in city air is now converted to oxygen or decreased, and more green spaces are available for citizens to enjoy. Furthermore, the universal availability of organic produce has made the overall population healthier, and it undermined the corporate control of the majority of our food system. The current generations of young farm workers in 2050 are now given the same opportunity I was at age eighteen, of learning to use the skills of my body, mind, and heart in service of the Earth and a healthier humanity, connecting not only with plants and animals, but with soil, water, and weather as well.

           The implementation of these changes over the last few decades has remade the United States into a country with partially self-sustaining cities and small-scale rural farms producing organic food that is both less expensive and safer to eat. This plan was not easy to implement within the prior world system, and was adjusted in many ways to fit the diversity of this country. However, major, radical changes needed to be made to revolutionize the practices of food production and transform the education of most citizens in regards to their food. The education now provided to youth by working on farms has fostered a more Earth-centric world view that has helped nurture in young individuals a deep love for our planet.

           When we first began implementing this program, we started on a smaller scale to test out how it worked in certain areas. The San Francisco Bay Area was an ideal location in which to attempt such an experiment, not only because the Northern California climate is ideal for growing many kinds of produce but also because San Francisco has been called “the place where new ideas meet the least amount of resistance.”[8] Furthermore, several organizations in the Bay Area were already doing work in this field, and were open to experimenting with such a program: for example, the EcoCenter at Heron’s Head Park in San Francisco’s Hunter’s Point, a project of Literacy for Environmental Justice,[9] and the Food First organization in Oakland.[10] At a different level, the farm service proposal also supplemented the work being done by such programs as Americore and Teach for America. The slogan for our campaign was “Empower You(th), Feed A Nation!”

           Despite the welcome our program received in the Bay Area, implementing it on a national scale was met with much more resistance, which was to be expected. We learned that rather than implementing a mandatory national farm service program, it was easier to begin with a paid volunteer program. Youth who chose not to attend college, or who were taking a gap year, were the most inclined to join our program. We also had many younger volunteers between the ages of sixteen and eighteen who had dropped out of high school, who found the program to offer a gratifying and meaningful direction for their lives as they figured out their next steps. Interestingly, the areas where we met the most resistance were in the older generations, especially among parents, rather than amongst the youth themselves who were doing the farm work. Fortunately, as more young volunteers signed up for the farm service program, integrating it into their educational and career plans, the more national attitudes began to change about regenerative agriculture and food justice.

            Ultimately, instituting a youth farm service program was to change the way Americans, and then citizens of other nations, were interacting with the Earth. Introducing every young person in a country to the means by which their nourishment is created empowers them to be self-sustaining and to know that their survival is in their own hands. The education provided by such a program is literally life-saving. Furthermore, it also fosters a care for other species, for the plants and animals with which these youth interact. Learning to farm also fundamentally changes the human relationship to waste, teaching that there is no such place as “away” to which waste can be thrown. Rather it brings ideas such as composting and re-use into the everyday rhythm of life.

           We had created a program for youth to directly combat the myriad ecological crises, and this paid opportunity for engaged action gave them an empowered sense of hope, which in turn inspired the development of many new programs addressing a variety of environmental and social crises. It was the enthusiastic participation of the youth that began to transform collective attitudes towards the human relationship with the Earth community as a whole. After a few generations of such a program, the policies enacted by the adults who learned to grow their own food are now far more Earth-centered than our policies were back in the early decades of the twenty-first century. The farm service program, which grew from a local to a national scale, inspired many other countries to adopt such policies. Furthermore, the model of the youth service program was applied to a wide range of other ecological challenges, from reforestation and fire management to wetland restoration and ocean clean-up, leading to radical planetary change and socio-ecological rejuvenation. By first implementing this farm service program, we got to a resilient, sustainable, and regenerative flourishing world we have in 2050.

–

[1] Frederick Kirschenmann, “The Current State of Agriculture,” in The Essential Agrarian Reader, ed. Norman Wirzba (Washington D.C.: Shoemaker & Hoard, 2004), 101.

[2] Kirschenmann, “The Current State of Agriculture,” 102.

[3] Kirschenmann, “The Current State of Agriculture,” 117.

[4] Kirschenmann, “The Current State of Agriculture,” 113.

[5] Laura Raynolds, “Organic and Fair Trade Movements in the Global Food Networks,” in Ethical Sourcing in the Global Food System, ed. Stephanie Barrientos & Catherine Dolan (Sterling, VA: Earthscan, 2006), 52, 57.

[6] Michael Pollan, The Omnivore’s Dilemma (New York: The Penguin Press, 2006), 159–60.

[7] “Green Roof Benefits,” Green Roofs for Healthy Cities, accessed February 7, 2024, https://greenroofs.org/.

[8] Brad Newsham, “The Spiritual Center of the Earth,” SF Gate, November 23, 1999, accessed February 7, 2024, http://www.sfgate.com/entertainment/article/The-Spiritual-Center-Of-the-Earth-2894518.php.

[9] “EcoCenter at Heron’s Head Park,” Literacy for Environmental Justice, accessed February 7, 2024, http://ecocenterheronshead.blogspot.com/.

[10] “Food First,” accessed February 7, 2024, http://foodfirst.org/.

Filed Under: Saving the World

How the World is Saved by 2050

By Tamara Bell

How the World is Saved by 2050

 

This inspiring contest allowed me to see that in 2050, it’s all about the power of love.

 

Love comes from my center as I do my spiritual work. When I give astrology readings, I put myself in the shoes of whoever is my recipient. When performing requested energy healings, I bring in the awesome loving power of Mother Mary. As I write my weekly astrology column, I offer how people can best use the sky’s energies to make their lives flow easier and happier. I volunteer at the local Community Christian Church in Morgan Hill, California. Among my duties, I write cards in response to prayer requests after our church team, and I have prayed for them. Currently, I’m training through the Correctional Institutions Chaplaincy in Milpitas, California to give hope and guidance to incarcerated juveniles. These children can be the guides for future generations. They will be adults in 2050 after many of us have passed. Also, I’m a mother and a UCM California Certified Reverend.

 

Where we get to in 2050:

 

We begin the year with retrograde planets Mercury, Ceres, Juno, Jupiter, Uranus, and Neptune. This configuration has us slowing down, and cautiously moving forward while being mindful of our past. 

 

Sun: In Capricorn, joined Venus, sextile Powerful-Pluto, cohabit with Saturn who is in his own sign. We will be cautious but ultimately, it’s all about love. We will have the foundation and structure to see our plans played out to fruition. Venus/Sun trine with Uranus, so implementing changes effectively and easily will be our passionate direction. Parallel with Venus so Loving-Venus is truly in the heart of the Soul-Sun.

 

Moon: In Aries square Jupiter and trine Mercury bodes well for communication abilities and seeking comfort through technology. Moon is answering to Mars who is in his own sign of Scorpio which further strengthens the Moon. Our emotions are being dealt with clearly and with support. We will do what needs to be done effectively (Aries). People have energy to take on important tasks. The Moon is In her first quarter from the Sun, so we will be curious and open to learning.

 

Mercury: In Sagittarius so we are entertaining higher goals. Mercantile-Mercury retrogrades from Governmental-Capricorn and he will return back to Capricorn after he hears everything Big-Ideas-Sagittarius wants to share with him. Mercury trine Moon, and quincunx Jupiter giving us curiosity about how to make our lives even better. Parallel Saturn, Pluto, and North Node which shows clear support for ideas and innovations. Humanitarian endeavors will be high on our list. Creating a sustainable future will be within our grasp and understanding. Mercury trine Moon, so the public will have generous support as they trade with each other. Since Mercury is re-ingressing back into Sagittarius, people might be crossing borders, or borders could be re-aligning.

 

Venus: Joined with Sun which is a Cazimi. This is where she beacons love out to the world since she has the backing of the Life-Giving-Sun. Venus is traditional and loyal when she resides in Capricorn. Like the Sun, Venus is co-present with Saturn who is in his home sign, making her able to structure her love out to the world effectively.

 

Mars: Mars is in his home sign of Scorpio which makes him feel strong and capable. North Node and Mars come together in his sign-Scorpio so we are actively pursuing our highest paths. This supports initiating good works for the future. We feel secure that we are on the correct track. Investigations go into high gear as we want to thoroughly understand our desires. Action-Mars sextile Inventor-Uranus in Mind-The-Details-Virgo showing innovation through paying attention to current needs. Mars is opposite and contra-parallel to Dreamy-Neptune which cautions us to not blindly barge ahead without first considering the outcomes. Trust is earned instead of assumed.

 

Jupiter: In Leo, Jupiter can strut his beliefs that everything is going to be alright especially if governed by love. Jupiter is answering to the Sun who is answering to Saturn, who is in his home sign. This strengthens the energy for love to help solve our problems. He trines (working with) Healer-Chiron and Where-We-Are-Going-North-Node. Jupiter talks to Saturn through opposition, which allows us to see both sides of issues. Jupiter is contra-parallel (seeing things from a different advantage point) to Mercury, Saturn, Pluto, and North Node which opens us up to grok other people’s beliefs. This is a recurring theme of acceptance of others that I see in the chart for this time.

 

Saturn: Is in his home sign of Capricorn, which makes him stronger to operate at his best. Go-For-It-Mars is in his home as well. Action-Mars trine Structural-Saturn creating beneficial structures and strategies. Goal-Oriented-Saturn is co-present with the amazing Venus/Sun which includes him in sending this greater love out to the world. Saturn trine Universal-Love-Neptune who is in Earthy-Taurus and sextile (cooperating) North-Node. Bringing effective changes for the love of community. Saturn is opposite with Co-Teacher-Jupiter so they are telling each other where they can be coaching the collective on how to make positive choices. Saturn is parallel to Information-Mercury, so they are maneuvering together while building structures. Saturn also parallels Transformational-Pluto and North-Node which backs up his already very strong energy to build up the future effectively. Saturn is in a contra-parallel to Jupiter which allows for different religious beliefs to be tolerated. Plus, the separation of church and state continues allowing people the freedom of their own beliefs.

 

Uranus: In Virgo, where forward steps are analyzed before leaping ahead. Perfectionism is strived for. Alternative healing methods are sought out. Uranus trine Sun/Venus is bringing about changes using love as a base for implementing anything new. Uranus is also trine with Neptune who are both in earth element signs. People are going to do very well tending the Earth with love and respect. Mars is sextile with Uranus so researching before initiating will be supported. There may be openness for cohabitation with extraterrestrials on our planet, and not only in our skies.

 

Neptune: In Taurus where she can implement the practice of understanding the importance of living with the land, and not just on the land. Neptune opposite and contra-parallel to Mars, trine Saturn, trine Uranus, thereby forming a helpful grand trine in our skies. Neptune on the South Node will be reminding us to contemplate the past in order to proceed forward securely. Chiron is contra-parallel to Neptune again allowing us to consider alternative medications/medical procedures.

 

Pluto: In Healing-Pisces square Chiron who’s in Other-Cultures-Sagittarius. Profound healing among nations will occur. We can clearly see where best to implement changes. Sun sextile Pluto shining a light on power seeking, and thereby exposing what needs to be exposed. Pluto is parallel to Jupiter, Saturn and North Node, and contra-parallel Mercury. So empathizing with the truth will take on major importance.

 

Ceres: In Mother-Earth-Cancer where she can grow abundant food sources.

 

Vesta: In Vestil-Virgin-Virgo in what most astrologers believe is in her own sign of the zodiac. Building strong families and communities.

 

Chiron: In Sagittarius where he can provide healing through religious beliefs and higher understandings. Chiron will trine with Let’s-Get-Along-Jupiter who is in We-Can-Do-It-Leo. Plus, the way we go about higher learning will be positively impacted.

 

Pallas: In Aries which many consider her home sign. She can fight for what she believes to be the best for all when placed here.

 

Numerically, 2050 is a 7 year. We will research and elevate justice. We will be interested in backing up our beliefs with what we can scientifically prove to be true.

 

The Chinese year starts with the Intelligent-Snake and moves into the Happy-Cheerful-Horse on January 23, 2050.

 

What a wonderful year 2050 will be. 

 

What brought us to this wonderful positive year:

 

Pluto traveled through Aquarius which is a fixed sign. Would-be conquerors may attempt to control others. This brings out the non-conformists and anti-heros as a balance. Aquarians welcome outsiders. Humanity will be open to the possibilities of UAPs and ETs. The world will come to terms with the fact that we are not the only inhabitants in this universe.

 

By the time 2050 rolls around, Pluto will then be in the mutable/adapterable water sign of We-Are-In-This-Together-Pisces, which is ruled by Joyful-Jupiter. This is a time of spiritualism, inspiration, beliefs, visions, and dreams. This Kumbaya sign of we are all one will truly bring out the best of humanity. Since borders can shift and melt in Pisces, I believe aliens will be culturally integrated into humanity during this long transit. Inventions will be made using water (Pisces) and (air since we are in a 200 year cycle of air which was initiated in 2020). This was kicked off by the joining of Saturn and Jupiter.

 

Neptune will have passed through Aries where it has been known for pioneering, and civil wars. Borders change dramatically when Neptune travels through Aries. The European Union might not remain cohesive during that time. Some states in the USA might become their own republics. However, new technology is usually invented                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  such as photography was the last time Neptune was in Aries. Then Neptune will settle into Taurus where people work very close with our Mother Earth. A better form of currency is settled on which has intrinsic value like silver and gold, or bartering.

 

Uranus will have gone through Gemini, Cancer and Leo during the meantime. From 2025 to 2032 Uranus will be in Gemini where new travel possibilities will be embraced. Borders will be rearranged. Uranus will be in Cancer from 2033-2039 where people tend to be patriotic, warm, receptive, intuitive, imaginative, and emotive. New states/unions will be formed worldwide. From 2040-2046 Uranus will be in Leo. People will be ambitious, entertaining, grand, and talented. Innovation will go into high gear. Finally, Uranus goes into Let’s-Get-the-Details-Right-Virgo. Brilliant life hacks will be implemented. Planets in Virgo solve problems. Uranian ideas flash into our consciousness like thunderbolts.

 

Saturn will have almost finished going through all the signs, All the other planets will have whizzed through as well. 

 

Thank you for creating this contest. Through astrology, I see that by 2050, love will sustain our civilized economy. This will forever more have me walk in the comfort of hope.







Filed Under: Saving the World

 The Story of the Vegan Grandmothers and How they Healed the World by 2050 

By Tami Hay

 The Story of the Vegan Grandmothers and How they Healed the World by 2050 

By Tami Hay & Paul P. 

Once upon a time—the year 2022, to be more precise—a group of wise women began to gather from every direction in order to form A Million Vegan Grandmothers. Their mission was to transform the trauma created by a culture of violence into a force for love. They drew their warriors’ strength from ages past, maintaining their resilience in the face of the greed and corruption engendered by agribusiness, a world so upside down and backwards that the abnormal and un-Godly passed for normal. 

“Enough! We have all had enough!” they cried. “No longer will we allow wildlife, oceans, and air to be poisoned, leaving no planet to inherit! The storms are raging, the heat is rising, as is the water, except where there is drought and famine. There, the planet is on fire. No longer will we let corruption paralyze the world into apathetic grief! It is time to return to love! It is time to protect the Grandchildren of all species!” Their voices were strong enough to echo through the infinite galaxies. Their thunder woke the other sleepwalkers from their trance, who looked up and saw for the first time the burning and killing machines at work around them. 

Ancient prophecy said that when the earth had been thus ravaged, a new species of human—homo ahimsa—would reclaim the earth for all life. That time had come, the time of the sixth sun, when animal exploitation began coming to a close and we started to heal our war-torn, grief-stained hearts in order to create a new, love-based society, where whole plant food and herbs and healing water would be known as the medicine available to every being. 

The grandmothers were wise and weathered, fresh and fiery, calm yet passionate. They alchemized their grief into the gold of purpose, and told new stories—love stories—from the depths of their broken, open hearts. They narrated in a collective voice, a community of truth re-generators who refused to let the carcasses be burned, bulldozed over, and 

forgotten, but who planted and sowed the seeds of love in that same soil, redeeming it with life. They were the grandparents of us all, declaring and pledging to protect this precious land and every living being on it. In doing so, they laid the groundwork for the new species. 

They had their work cut out for them. In those early days, humans had already transgressed six of nine planetary boundaries identified by climate scientists as critical to the stability and resilience of the Earth system. Climate change was just one of these. But whereas most of the mitigation efforts at that time were directed towards reducing fossil-fuel emissions, the Grandmothers began drawing attention to an even greater culprit: animal agriculture. In addition to releasing massive quantities of both methane and the (then) lesser-known greenhouse gas nitrous oxide, animal agriculture also destroyed an important carbon sink: namely, trees. By that time, the industry had destroyed half the world’s forests in order to create grazing land. The missing trees—3 trillion, by some accounts—were not there to store the excess carbon heating the planet. 

This deforestation by the animal agriculture industry was key to another boundary transgression, land system change. Because forests are key components in the water cycle, bind soils, and provide habitat for countless species of plants and animals, to name just a few ecosystem services they perform, their loss caused desertification, erosion, and loss of wildlife globally. 

Like falling dominoes, wildlife loss led to the transgression of yet another planetary boundary, biosphere integrity, which is dependent on a high level of genetic diversity. Largely as a result of animal agriculture, only 4% of mammal biomass on Earth at that time was made up of wild animals; the rest was a genetically homogeneous mass of livestock (62%) and humans (34%). 

These transgressions, when combined with animal agriculture’s negative impact on the quantity and quality of the world’s fresh-water reserves, its unbalancing of nitrogen and phosphorus cycles with a glut of synthetic fertilizers, and its introduction of such novel entities as genetically modified organisms, added up to a level of planetary mayhem with the potential to end life as we knew it. 

Thankfully, though, this seemingly intractable set of problems was susceptible to a single solution: end the animal-agriculture system. This was the logic behind Dr. Sailesh Rao’s proposition “This House Would Go Vegan,” which he eloquently defended in his now famous 2023 Oxford Union debate. The good news 

was that, by going vegan, we had the power as individuals not just to avert our existential crisis but to undo the damage that had led up to it. 

In the beginning, we relied more heavily on letter-writing campaigns to save millions of sick and dying animals from slaughterhouses, but by the end of 2025, 50% of the world had already gone vegan, and many of the concentrated animal feeding operations were repurposed, their buildings deeply cleaned and given over to the growing of mushrooms and microgreens. The liberated animals lived out their lives in sanctuaries, many feeling grass under their feet for the first time! 

Wild animals’ lives improved as well. Over the course of the next few years, we began restoring 3-trillion-trees’ worth of wildlife habitat (sequestering enough carbon in the process to reverse climate change). And all we had to do was leave the land alone! Without animal agriculture’s insatiable appetite for grazing land, the forests grew thick and lush again. The old, dying model of extraction, which merely assumed infinite growth, was succeeded by the life-giving model of interaction, as the Aspen forests re-rooted and spread their truly infinite network of healing mycelium. Called back, wild animals wandered this wooded world without fear of bullet or trap. Some of these forests were food forests, on the model of Sadhana. Formerly desertified and degraded, they became providers of sustainable food security to revitalized local communities. 

And it wasn’t just the land that began to recover. The ocean—its bottom once scraped clean by industrial trawlers, its coral reefs bleached by rising heat, its waters darkened and choked by runoff-fattened algal blooms—was finally able to catch its breath and regain its colour. The seabed, its coverings repeatedly torn off by ploughs pulled blindly from above, was finally remade with the return of sponges, anemones and sea stars. By 2029, the Captain Paul Watson Foundation had put an end to whaling, and by 2033 they had halted all extraction from the living waters. 

And the people kept coming. More and more remembered their caretaking roles and joined the Grandmothers. Many wrote books: Tastes Like Love, Blackbelt in Tofu, EarthGut, HomoAhimsa, to name just a few. They advocated for, and succeeded in implementing, a plant-based curriculum in every school and university. They taught how to Eat for The Earth and make veggie soup for the chicken’s soul. They hosted podcasts and yoga retreats, and created vegan versions of everybody’s favourite grandmother dishes! By 2040, community kitchens existed in every neighbourhood around the globe, producing pots of unity stew and gut-healing ferments. The Vegan Grandmothers would not stop until all people of the world had nourishing vegan food and a place to grow it! 

Once we stopped eating animal foods, we stopped delivering concentrated doses of chemical pollution into our bodies through bioaccumulation. Cancer and heart disease, along with so many other diseases that people had come to accept as inevitable, disappeared. And it wasn’t our bodies alone that we healed; going vegan rid us of the feelings of loneliness and despair that had arisen when we cut ourselves off from both our inner and outer ecology. Once veganic growing practices had restored the soil’s and our own microbial diversity, we became so healthy physically and spiritually that we found ourselves with infinite energy for love and service. 

The Vegan Grandmothers went forth and taught their holistic health specialties to everyone! No one was left out. Physicians and professors joined forces and created an international plant-based system, and by 2040 these health teaching centres replaced the sick-care system hospitals, the latter now only used to treat accidents and injuries, which were less frequent in a calm, focused and cruelty-free world! 

—- 

So many earth-shaking—or, rather, earth-calming—developments…. 

Now it is time, finally, to sit back and contemplate them for a moment. For today marks the first day of 2050 and the fulfillment of the prophecy. 

The Grandmothers have all arrived, infused with the purest unconditional love ever felt. Never on planet earth has there been such a force to be reckoned with; it is a power that resounds through the canyons and the grottos. 

Over the last 28 years, they have fed, loved, planted, watered, and danced the world home, restoring right relationships in the true spirit of Homo Ahimsa, now and for all generations to come! 

Make us a lighthouse, 

The kind that cuts through all mist and grief so dense Even fog horns cannot sound through it 

Or, better, make us in the likeness of a tree, 

The kind that, while living, gathers community beneath its leaves, 

But in death, gives life to those growing among its boney roots. 

For once we can rest, we’ll provide compost for strapping, sapling grandchildren, 

whose new mycelium will itself uncoil into the forever 

from which new Grandmothers always rise, 

inheritors of the wise, divine world of 2050!

Filed Under: Saving the World

The Flourishing of 2050: A Story of Human Ingenuity and Earth’s Resilience

By Julie Pierce

In 2050, Earth stands as a beacon of cooperation, sustainability, and well-being, a testament to humanity’s ability to transform its future. This remarkable achievement traces back to a series of personal initiatives and significant engagements that ignited a global movement toward unity and ecological harmony. This essay delves into the pivotal actions and philosophical shifts that spearheaded this era of prosperity as a testament to the precious and lasting benefits of conscious, evolutionary, and relational processes.  

It began with the dedicated efforts of concerned citizens. We made a staunch allegiance to deepen our collective identity and relationship with the living Earth, a commitment to embody and share the profound realization that humans are inextricably linked to Gaia. Embarking on a path toward a stronger connection with the Earth, we acted as purposeful agents of transformation, motivating our fellow citizens to acknowledge their capacity for change and to take action. 

We taught a powerful perspective of “deep time” inherited from Joanna Macy’s The Work that Reconnects, sharing that the value of this perspective comes from our tendency to relate everything according to the passage of time. The perspective of deep time provides a method for locating our human experience within the bigger picture of the wholeness of time. Within deep time, we gained the capacity to locate or find ourselves evolutionarily, literally. 

Mostly, people found this perspective relieving, especially when feelings of doom were overwhelming. In critical moments of threatening isolation and disconnection, the deep-time perspective enabled us to locate ourselves relationally with everything that had come before and would come after. 

With deep time, we gained our evolutionary longitude and latitude on the holographic map of a 13.6 billion-year cosmic evolutionary process. We carry it still because it describes and makes sense of the intersections of the deep, evolutionary past of the cosmos and the deep, evolutionary past of Earth; the functional processes and workings of the universe; and, most important to our survival, how humans make choices related to creating a vibrant future. 

We also taught the active choice of “power-with” in contrast to “power-over.” 

When we started this transformative journey, we lived in a society that perpetuated the standard of patriarchal hierarchy, which was the foundation of the social, economic, and political systems of our industrial civilization. Power-over meant that a select few had valuable or desirable qualities, resulting in few being in power and controlling resources, while the rest were at the mercy of those few. 

Power-over was destroying our planetary home, and in order to survive and thrive, the dominant society had to shift into power-with ways of thinking and being. Power-with means that every individual has something contributive and collaborative to offer the collective, resulting in mutual benefits for all through sharing resources and skills. 

In the past, we thought of the required inner strengths or skills as something some have and others do not, as described and modeled by the power-over structure. But, we now understand and think of these inner strengths — like courage and determination, for example — “as things we do rather than things we have — we understand that each of us is innately equipped with the capacity to develop these qualities. They emerge from our engagement with actual situations and dynamics of our interactions. This approach is relational, and we call it power-with.” 

We taught everyone about the powerful perspective of deep time and the dynamic-change paradigm of power-with. We shared these teachings in community gatherings, schools, government organizations, and private corporations. 

By living the concept of deep time and the mindset of power-with, we initiated consultative projects that demonstrated the tangible benefits of cooperation, small-scale innovations, and the pursuit of a vision greater than oneself. These projects, ranging from local sustainability initiatives to global awareness campaigns, showcased the viability of a cooperative approach to solving our most pressing social, economic, and environmental challenges.

Humanity’s glorious transformation gained momentum as more individuals and communities recognized their roles as integral members of Earth’s living system. This collective awakening to interconnectedness fostered a shift towards sustainable living and governance models that prioritize planetary and, consequently, human health over short-term gains. Educational programs and public discourse have evolved to emphasize our responsibility to each other and to future generations, leading to the widespread adoption of practices that nurture rather than deplete our environment.

The narrative of transformation was further enriched by understanding Gaia’s journey through the lens of deep time and acknowledging the cyclical nature of growth, decay, and renewal. Humanity’s collective efforts to navigate the challenges of the 21st century mirrored Gaia’s developmental spirals, teaching us the value of resilience, adaptation, and the beauty of interconnectedness. This philosophical shift has redefined success from individual accumulation to collective well-being and environmental stewardship.

The pivotal moment came when society at large embraced the idea of The Great Turning, acknowledging humanity’s participatory role in Gaia’s evolution. This acknowledgment translated into actionable policies and practices that respected all forms of life, leading to a harmonious balance between human activities and natural processes. The transition from a culture of consumption, isolation, and destruction to that of contribution, collaboration, and creativity marked a significant leap forward, with innovation and technology serving the greater good.

As with most change, youth made a big push. For example,  by sharing what they were learning at school about the importance of soil health, elementary kids influenced how their families acquired, used, and disposed of food and material goods. You see, from the school garden, these kiddos had learned and practiced a new perspective of cycles, creating a shift away from seeing waste to recognizing usable raw materials for the creation of something new or renewed. For example, in the school garden, lunch leftovers, including cardboard or paper containers, were used for composting to enhance soil health. Seeds were collected from eaten fruits and vegetables to generate more food in the garden. The connective circle of health of the soil to health of the human who eats what is grown and then back to the health of the soil flowered into common wisdom. And soon, the connective circle of all of Earthly life was being demonstrated in the kitchen, the building site, the corporate board room, and public systems. It was hard not to see relational process everywhere. 

The deep entanglement of humanity’s and Gaia’s fates, once revealed and activated, spread like the most beautiful virus. Civic and local business leadership led the way with choices that promised benefits to meet community needs now and into the future. Economic rewards were offered via government programs and policies to incentivize projects and resource use that contributed to a circular economy. Community leaders directly recruited citizens to participate in public programs to share social burdens and reframe our living spaces as intrinsic to the whole health of our shared planetary home, shifting consciousness about where we spent money and time and, ultimately, deepening our collective identity and humanity’s relationship with the living Earth.

By 2050, the story of humanity’s journey to a thriving Earth is not just a tale of survival, but a vibrant narrative of flourishing in harmony with all life. This legacy, born from personal initiative and blossoming into a global movement, is a testament to the power of collective action fueled by a shared vision and imaginative possibility. Our journey to this thriving moment was paved with stones of deep-time identity, interconnectedness, and a commitment to the well-being of the entire planet, demonstrating the profound impact of leading by example and inspiring change through personal engagement and dedication.

The story we have chosen to live, one of interconnectedness and cooperative evolution, shaped our now thriving Earth of 2050. This new story infuses our existence with meaning, guides our choices, and defines our identities within the larger narrative of Gaia and the universe. Our journey of transformation has not merely been about survival; it is about thriving in harmony with all forms of life, ensuring a legacy of resilience, wisdom, and unity for future generations. The year 2050 on Earth is a demonstration of the strength of shared aspirations and actions, serving as a source of optimism for the boundless potential that arises when we engage as aware contributors to the grand, interconnected web of existence.

Filed Under: Saving the World

The General’s Daughter on the Front Lines of a Food Revolution

By Elizabeth Gary

It’s New Year’s Day 2050, 7:55 AM…the usual daily bugle call to colors from the loud speaker at our local Naval nuclear submarine base is now silent. The base was closed.

A butterfly passes by as I sip on my coffee in the morning sunshine by the pool. I’m reviewing all the glorious vegan recipes and food photos that are set to be published in my local grocer’s newsletter.

People are celebrating plant-based foods and the world is humming with the healing energy that was manifested into being by dedicated activists that served on the front lines of a food revolution for many years.

They said my generation would not live as long as their parents. That worried me, and I saw a lot of my friends and family die young from diseases brought on by the Standard American Diet. Thankfully, I went vegan early enough to endure the challenges of our times.  Today, I am a survivor and I’m enjoying life like I never could have imagined.

It was no simple job creating change. It truly felt like being on the front lines of a food revolution. Thankfully, I had my father to look to for courage. Before passing away at 91 years old, my father and I talked in depth about the need for reform in our food system.  He was the wind beneath my wings. He believed in my vision of a plant-based world and he knew I could help make a difference.  My father was a descendant of a signer of the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Nelson Jr., the Governor of Virginia, 1776.  My father told me he knew I had what it took to go forward and help the country “Declare Independence from Animal Agriculture.”

And we did it! Better than the 4th of July fireworks and celebrations….we now also celebrate January 1st, 2027 as the Day of Independence from Animal Agriculture.

It was a hell of a battle to create change. The social and psychological brainwashing people had become victim to were difficult to overcome. It was like awakening an angry giant, who wanted to continue sleeping. But we chipped away at it and never stopped until the giant did awaken.

My top three targets for creating change where K-12 education, chef training programs, and our health care system.

It took over a decade to influence change in K-12 education. The United States Department of Agriculture School Nutrition Guidelines (that supported the meat and dairy industries) were a constant barrier to change. Schools could discriminate against plant-based foods educators and prevented them from being hired for not agreeing to include meat, seafood, eggs, and dairy in their curriculum. Schools silenced and banned any student or parent who challenged meat and dairy. They did not want students to be informed consumers and took great lengths to hide, conceal, and deceive students into believing that eating animals was healthy, normal, and good nutrition….all while the world was on fire with climate change and a health care crisis.  Students were too smart to let the deception continue, they were hungry for the truth, they were ready to be the SOLUTIONS GENERATION…and they did it! Our K-12 students from Vegan Clubs at schools everywhere. They produced video programming in their digital media classes with peer to peer food news programming. They crafted recipes and school cookbooks to share with their community, they hosted school wide assemblies promoting plant-based living. They did it. The SOLUTIONS GENERATION, they helped lift this humanity from the dark ages of dependence on animals as a food source to independence from animal agriculture and created a wide open field of opportunity in food and lifestyle innovation.

Then there were the chefs. Menus are a reflection of a chef’s training and in the early days it was all about consuming animals and seafood.  I tried to crack into teaching in a culinary arts program in the early years and found huge interest with students, but hard resistance from academic administrators. They too were puppets of the USDA Dietary Guidelines and anyone who did not align with the status quo was an outsider and unfit for employment. So to overcome the status quo, repeated efforts were made to petition academic leaders to create a new track of study for chefs that focused on plant-based foods. After years of rejection I found a way to lift up my local college and label them a hero for helping to create change.

I was a plant-based foods educator but needed digital media skills to write and publish a cookbook.

I went back to the local community college that had hired me as an adjunct faculty member in the culinary arts program, then”let me go for being vegan.”  I enrolled in their Digital Media program. I took every course and managed to make college headlines with my story.

https://sdcitytimes.com/campus-life/2023/03/20/plant-based-foods-educator-returns-to-school-fine-tunes-skills-for-food-revolution/

After that, it took a few years but I published a cookbook that engaged chefs in learning about the incredible versatility of soy….Black Belt in TOFU: Today’s Plant-Based, Protein-Rich Alternative to Meat, Seafood, Eggs, and Dairy. 

That book helped open doors to chef training programs everywhere. The book included knowledege and skills challenges with exams and culinary competitions. Chefs and home cooks could study to earn a White Belt in Tofu Basics that includes the history of soy, how tofu is made, soy myth busters, identifying different types of tofu and tofu butchery.  The challenges continue with a Red Belt in Meat Alternatives, Turquoise Belt in Seafood Alternatives, Yellow Belt in Egg Alternatives, Blue Belt in Dairy Alternatives, and finally a Black Belt in TOFU with Culinary Games, Competitions, and a Final Exam. The book opened incredible doors of opportunity to help the world transition from growing soy to feed animals (and aquaculture fish) to growing the soy, making it organic, and feeding the people. It was a low-hanging fruit of opportunity for change, and now grocery store shelves are filled with organic soy-based staple foods that have replaced meat, seafood, eggs, and dairy.

In the old days the vegan section in our grocery stores was just a few square feet. But the big change started in the dairy section. Gallons of cows milk were replaced with plant-based milks, meat sections continued adding plant-based meat alternatives and tofu in every variety imaginable. There are still small amounts of animal products available for sale but they come with enormous warning labels, they are highly taxed, and are locked up like cigarettes and require assistance from a customer service to access them.

My dream has come true. Today, I can walk through the grocery store and see abundant organic plant-based foods. Restaurants have flipped their menus, where they used to be animal centric, today chefs are are trained in plant-based foods and animal foods are as taboo as smoking in public.

My life’s purpose is complete. It was a horrendous job serving on the front lines of a food revolution but I wouldn’t trade it for anything. BLISS has arrived.

God bless our children and all living beings forever more.

Liz Gary
www.veganculinarymemoirs.com

 

 

 

Filed Under: Saving the World

Valentine’s Day Letter to Future

By Nan Hildreth

Valentine’s Day Letter to Future

Many feared, with good reason, that civilization would collapse before we learned to change our ways from our focus on personal luxury to focusing on serving the Beloved Community of Life. But courageous people ignored their fear and dug into the work of the Great Transition. We emparked on an adventure. In healing the planet, we healed ourselves from the isolation and depression that was too normal back then. I had a very bad case of that. We were too busy loving on the planet and asking humanity to help to be isolated and depressed.

Most of our great forests were in low income countries. We slowly learned that we had to make it easier for everyone to meet their basic needs. If not, the low income folks would, even if they didn’t want to, they would sacrifice our natural treasures to take care of themselves.

Turning our global civilization was like turning that great old ship, the Titanic. Like the Titanic in 1912, our navigators saw the iceberg miles ahead, but the ship had so much momentum and the rudder was so small, that it was difficult to turn fast enough to avoid hitting the iceberg. With the Titanic, the ship sank and most of the passengers died. But unlike the Titanic, we had 8 billion rudders we could turn. Every person could help turn the direction of society.

Too often what we could do was so humble and humbling, we wondered if we made any difference. It was an act of faith to try. But the best thing we could do was ask more people to help.

Most people, even in the USA, were concerned. Of the concerned, a bit less than half were downright alarmed. Of the alarmed, few of them were even “often” talking about it with their friends and family found the Yale survey. And less than half were taking action. What were they doing instead of acting? Running in circles and screaming and shouting? More likely trying not to think about it because it seemed so huge and impossible.

The challenge was to personally ask folks to do a little something. Alas, we knew how to obey much better than how to organize. We knew how to blame much better than how to be the change we wished to see. As we began to win more, this improved a lot.

Energy Transition

In 2024, demand for fossil energy peaked and began to decline. This was shocking for many fossil fuel professionals in my city, Houston, Texas. All their lives demand for their product had grown. They had devoted their lives to extracting it They thought this would go on forever. It was difficult for them when it began to decline, but they could not argue with the Merciless Market. Renewable energy had become cheaper than even natural gas. Those investors and employees that were slow to rethink their ideas got stuck with losses.

The peak inspired the climate activists here in Houston to take heart and double down on their organizing. As we began to win more, climate activists became less negative and more joyful. We began to be charming. This helped attract more to the movement.

Even though there had been for several years clear warnings that oil demand was leveling off, many in the industry and many investors did not heed them. In 2024, the year demand was expected to peak, they produced more than ever. This resulted in a glut of fossil fuels on the Market which drove prices down. A lot of people lost their shirts. Rig count fell. Fracking ground to a halt. Employees were laid off. Some blamed President Biden.

Crisis is also opportunity. We had a teachable moment. Since we had not been through an energy transition for generations, folks didn’t recognize it until it was explained to them. As the activists in Houston explained their messages became more clear, concise and coherent. As they repeated their stories for the millionth time, it began to percolate into the general population.

In the Presidential race between Joe Biden and Donald Trump, Trump carried Texas again but this time by only ½ of 1% instead of 2%. But Trump lost the national election by more than before. In 2020, he lost by 3%. . The Texas cities voted for Biden but in the countryside, folks believed Trump’s ridiculous stories that he could bring back the good old days when Texas oil wells were hiring any able-bodied man. The beginning of the end of those days was 1973, but the elders still remember those good old days. When Trump validated that times were harder for them and said he could bring them back again, they wanted to believe him. They supported Trump passionately.

But now our diligent story-telling was making an impact. Folks realized that President Biden was not to blame for the oil industry’s bad luck. Rather market forces. The story spread that fossil fossil fuels were a dying industry.

Still it took another decade until Democrats in Texas began to win statewide races. When President Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act in 1965, it split the Democratic Party. In Texas, the folks who split off became Republicans. They then allied with the fossil fuel industry and had dominated the Texas capital for 30 years.

Houston was founded on growth. For nearly 200 years it grew in population and attracted people that wanted to profit from economic growth. Renewable energy is a disruptive innovation. It disrupted the great oil and gas industry. With renewable energy, it did not require such vast capital to produce and distribute energy. One characteristic of disruptive technologies is they come from outside existing organizations of power. While the oil industry thought about investing in clean energy, they mostly did not. While the USA thought about investing in clean energy, they mostly did not. Instead China cornered the market on manufacture of solar panels. Later it cornered the market on electric vehicle manufacturing.

Regenerative Agriculture

But years after the peak in fossil fuel demand, carbon dioxide in the air kept on rising. “Why isn’t atmospheric carbon dioxide falling?” became a global question. Long ago, the IPCC had said “Energy is not enough, we have to change land use too” in a 2019 special report, SRCCL.

More and more of Houston’s climate movement began to focus on emissions from land use. So the stories we told began to explain the carbon cycle and define regenerative agriculture. This was not too hard as we had long had a vibrant movement in Houston for backyard gardening and permaculture.

America Needed a Humbling Reality Check

America thinks our way is best. They believe we have the one right way to live. And, too often, the world agrees. We have enormous prestige. The good news is that for more than a generation, some Americans have been rejecting that hubris. In 2000, the demographer said they were a quarter of Americans. Their numbers have been growing but they lack self-awareness and righteousness.

Mother Nature Had to Slap Humanity Around

to Get Our Attention and Keep us Learning

Several weather catastrophes helped capture the imagination of folks around the world. This further strenthened the movement. As it grew, the movement moved from being negative and fearful but instead figured out what it was for. Our message became more clear, concise and coherent. So it grew even more.

Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Finally Begins to Fall

After passing this milestone, there was still plenty that needed doing. But it got easier and also harder. Easier because more were working on it. We knew what to do and had the political will to do it. But harder because climate impacts grew. Finally, the scientists reported that the chance of the climate weirding out began to shrink. The movement had so much momentum it was unstoppable.

By

Nan Hildreth

3939 Luca St.

Houston, Tx 77021

832-244-7814

NanHildreth@riseup.net

Filed Under: Saving the World

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Crop Circles could shift our worldview and got me to be a filmmaker. What on Earth? got a good review in The New York Times.
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