CREATING
A CULTURE OF PEACE:
Sharing
Visions of Equitable, Sustainable Societies
by
Hazel Henderson,
Author and Renowned
Futurist
I am honored to address
this very important conference — which gets to the heart of creating a
culture of peace. I honor all of you — from so many spiritual traditions
— who work so faithfully in organizing for the abolition of weapons and
violent conflict and for your peace-building efforts. I am one who
believes that we humans are not incorrigible or terminally stupid.
I believe we have equal potential for both good and evil — and that we
do evolve toward higher levels of awareness and consciousness. As
we have evolved our technologies and spread our settlements around the
planet — we have created new challenges. Today, the planet itself
is our teacher as the human family has grown so as to consume 40% of all
nature’s primary production: the photosynthesis of plants. Competition
over territory and resources has been a prime source of humanity’s wars
and conflicts. We are even polluting outer space.
At this stage, humans
must balance and de-fang their competitive behaviors with cooperation and
sharing. Thus requires creativity. I wrote
Building a Win-Win
World which was published in 1996 to trace the evolution of human understanding
and about this transition from the win-lose games that worked in our uncrowded
past, to the win-win strategies that would be needed for our survival in
today’s small crowded planet.
To facilitate this
great transition from our 350-year old warring nation-state stage of humanity
— we must employ our collective imagination. We need to create practical
visions and win-win alternatives to the existing global order. We need
detailed, believable, doable transition strategies at all levels — from
the personal and local to the national and global. Examples of such
scenarios are these including my own (which you can read later) in the
new book IMAGINE, edited by my friend Marianne Williamson which
was published by Rodale Press.
Today, violence is
also evident in the ecological destruction that results from over-consumption,
un-regulated market forces and corporate-led globalization. Violence
against women persists. The Taliban in Afghanistan have regressed
to barbarism in their oppression of women. Where are the official
sanctions against this wholesale abuse of human rights? And, we must
heed — more than ever — U.S. President Eisenhower’s famous words about
the growing power of the military-industrial complex — still un-checked
today. He added “Every gun that is fired, every warship launched,
signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not
fed, those who are cold and not clothed. The world in arms is not
spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the
genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children.”
Meanwhile, most of
“We the Peoples” shown in many surveys, do not want more weapons — they
want education, healthcare, clean water, adequate food and shelter, as
well as socially-responsible companies, which are “good neighbors.”
Many scientists and scholars are confirming that we humans can and do evolve
more altruistic behaviors, often out of awareness of our larger, long-term
self-interest, including David Loye’s Darwin’s
Lost Theory of Love published
last year, Robert Wright’s
Non Zero, also published last year and
Mauro Torres, A Modern Conception of Universal History, who argues
that we are at the end of masculine history and embarking on the era of
gender-parity development. These books echo women’s literature from Charlotte
Perkins Gilman’s Herland
in the 1890’s to the works of Riana Eisler,
and Elise Boulding, as well as the spiritually inspired writings of Daisaku
Ikeda, and Josei Toda of the Sokka Gakkai, His Holiness the Dalai Lama,
and many others.
We need to propagate
our visions of how cultures of peace and sustainable societies will work
and how all peoples can take part in helping create appropriate transition
paths in their own situations and societies. In this way, citizens
in all societies can share in these goals and strategies — identifying
the deepest human values and aspirations of humanity. This will be
of great value to world political leaders, including President Vaclav Havel
of the Czech Republic and Nelson Mandela of South Africa. An example
of such efforts is the Earth Charter, based in Costa Rica’s Earth Council
and circulating in grassroots communities worldwide since the Earth Summit
in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. You can find the Earth Charter at www.earthcharter.org.
I have been a fervent supporter and will continue to promote this process
as a member of the RIO+10 Commission.
As we move these strategic
visioning and scenario-building activities into mainstream societies, we
can reduce the resistance of current keepers of the existing order.
Whether politicians, academics, business people, those who derive wealth,
incomes, status and power from the current order will fear change.
This includes most of us who live and vote in the USA and other industrialized,
mass-consumption-driven societies of the OECD. As these countries
and others strive to maximize their GNP growth, they widen the gaps between
rich and poor, as well as the digital divide — while stressing the limits
of natural resources and ecosystems.
Thus, we in this gathering
are at the heart of this lifestyle and its ideology: the Washington Consensus
such as policies of conventional economics and development promoted by
The World Bank, the IMF and the US Treasury Department and their academic
foot-soldiers. I want to show you some visual images of how these
ideologies and their current and past policies have led to mal-development,
and the growing gap in wealth, incomes and information that have helped
exacerbate local conflicts and wars.
How many of you have
been participating in the growing global debate over economic and technological
globalization — and the need to democratize global markets with global
ethics, treaties, standards for human and workplace rights, equitable access
to health, education and decent jobs, within the limits of natural resources
and ecosystems? How many of you were in Copenhagen for the World
Summit on Social Development in 1995 or last year’s follow up in Geneva?
We are seeing the rise
of grassroots globalism. I attended both and joined with thousands of NGOs
calling for taxation of commercial uses of our global commons: our oceans,
atmosphere satellite orbits and electromagnetic spectrum of airwaves, which
media use. All these are the common heritage of humanity. We
also called for fines and sanctions on abuses of these common resources,
including pollution, arms and drugs trafficking and currency speculation.
Much conceptual progress has been made on these issues of global commons,
such as Global Public Goods, published in 1999, which was edited
by Inge Kaul. Activist NGOs have promoted currency exchange taxes among
many of their governments.
How many of you were
in Porto Alegro for the recent World Social Forum — the civic grassroots
answer to the elite Davos World Economic Forum? I did not attend,
but my ideas were there, and my friend, Vicki Robin, author of Your
Money or Your Life sent me a full report — not available in mass media.
Vicki concentrates on the spiritual poverty of consumerism — a theme deep
in all my work on making the non-money “Love Economy” more visible.
A new “Attention Economy” is emerging. Such new paradigms and analyses
are vital in balancing the excesses of the money-driven, GNP-measured economic
growth paradigm based on ever more material consumption. I have summarized
most of this exciting NGO activity and many sensible proposals from global
to local in my Beyond Globalization: Shaping a Sustainable Global Economy
which
was published in 1999.
Money is not wealth!
There have always been two ways of transacting. My work has focused
on correcting this faulty economics whose textbooks still drive policies
and business decisions in the wrong direction — as you see from my visuals.
Conventional Economics, which drives today’s globalization of markets,
deregulation and privatization is rooted in scarcity, fear and competition.
Economics, unlike all other social sciences, does not embrace the full
range of human behavior to include our caring and sharing behaviors, our
demonstrably loving qualities, volunteerism and altruism. Women have
shouldered a great share of the responsibility for such nurturing work
in the families, communities and societies.
We must now insist
that the time has come to create the new sectors of evolving economies,
the peace building sector, the caring sector and expand the education,
health and pollution-prevention sectors fully — along with the renewable
energy and sustainable development sectors. This redeployment of
our tax dollars and public budgets can lead private sector efforts — by
cutting subsidies to the “Old Economy” weapons industries, nuclear and
fossil fuels. Shifting national priorities to education and re-training
our citizens for the Information Age, New Economy is better than
cutting taxes. Let’s build the jobs and work places of the future,
not subsidize obsolete corporations — which are going offshore looking
for cheap labor and unprotected resources to exploit.
As you can see, in
all of my futures scenarios, it is the spirit, the visions and the energies
of women that lead the way in shaping sustainable, equitable, eco-friendly
peaceful societies. With the now 6-billion member human family, women
are no longer just joining their genes with men to procreate. As
my visionary sister Barbara Marx Hubbard says “Today, women are joining
their genius with each other and our dear brothers to co-create a better
future.” Women are taking equal partnership and responsibility with
all men of goodwill in building cultures of peace for this new century.
In a large-enough, planetary perspective, all our self-interests are identical:
continuing the 15-million year experiment of life. At this stage
of human development, Earth ethics, cooperation and altruism have become
pragmatic. |