Do you want to Save the Earth?

 We understand that to achieve global communication, you need to use the World Wide Web. Technology connects us in ways we couldn’t imagine 20 years ago. Consistent access to technology and data is changing the way literacy practices of individual cultures, their identities, and collaboration are taking place.

Our world is becoming technology-rich, we can now share and collaborate across continents, sending reports, images, and documents, and connecting businesses, corporations, and schools regardless of cultural differences or languages. We are living in a global market where anyone can be connected to a consumer's wants and needs.

global-crisis-300x200.jpg

How can we develop a global community?

This global-village narrative is changing the world, it is the true nature of American and Western politics, economics, and culture. We are starting to see a global community develop, reaching out to others around the world who have solved problems that extend beyond our boundaries. The web is a global literacy environment, which can be an exceptional resource or a bubble of ignorance. As of lately in Jeremy Rifkin says that this new view of biological and cognitive sciences and creating controversy in intellectual circles from the business, communities, and government will later haunt us shortly with the escalating bill that now threatens catastrophic climate change and our very existence. As we know, with these literacies come frameworks, and the acquisition of literacies does not automatically lead to social mobility, educational progress, or effective involvement on the part of citizens. I hope we can reach across the world and save the world in order to avoid the collapse of civilization and save the Earth. 

We must change our lifestyles 

 We are going to have to change our expectations about material lifestyles, the nature of our focus of our work and career, about our expectations of government, and about how we all behave I our communities and our companies.  We will soon be in a crisis, and it is up to us to make the conscious change as a human race.

Paul Gilding says, It’s time to stop just worrying about climate change, says Paul Gilding. We need instead to brace for impact because global crisis is no longer avoidable. This Great Disruption started in 2008, with spiking food and oil prices and dramatic ecological changes, such as the melting ice caps. It is not simply about fossil fuels and carbon footprints. We have come to the end of Economic Growth, Version 1.0, a world economy based on consumption and waste, where we lived beyond the means of our planet’s ecosystems and resources.

Embed Block
Add an embed URL or code. Learn more