[vPIP class="hVlogTarget" type="flash" onclick="vPIPPlay(this, 'width=640, height=480, autostart=true', '', 'active=true'); return false;"]direct link of the video
direct link to Ryanne’s post

This video is made by Ryanne and Jay and I’m also posting it because I feel this content should be heard and seen as much as possible.

My comment on Ryanne’s blog:

I’m totally impressed by this woman and the fact that you are publishing the story / facts she so clearly defines.

Offcourse she is not telling something we don’t already know. But I tend to fool myself in believing that when it hurts a lot (disaster strikes) we as humanity will be strong and flexible enough to address the problem. But that will be at a cost and people will suffer terribly because of it.
At first I thought we as humanity are to naive to do something before disaster strikes. Now I think there is just still to much money to be made to make a change.
For instance: We are able to make cars last a lifetime and use 100% of the energy efficiently (instead of just 20% now). But this isn’t economically interesting on the short term and therefore will never happen.
I could give you load of links to positive inventions that will make us able to live in harmony with the world we share. But those will only be implemented when disaster strikes and not before.
The recent movie “who killed the electric car” is a great example why.

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