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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper provides an overview of the issue of sustainability of the planet and reflects the importance of individual action. This paper reflects on the implications and the need for change. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MH11_MHsustboom.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
increased consumerism, increased mass consumption and continued population growth. Long-term sustainability of the planet cannot be achieved by national directives for pollution control alone; individuals have to believe that
their contribution to the problem is significant and that change requires individual action. Learning how to live and function with less material wealth and learning how to decrease consumption
of nonrenewable energies is essential to creating lasting change. Though debates have emerged about the nature and extent of human involvement in the declining environmental conditions of the planet,
few would debate the fact that the Earth cannot support the current rate of consumption and natural resource use indefinitely (Myers, 2010). In fact, while population growth in some
part of the world have decreased, consumption rates for developed and developing nations have risen (Myers, 2010). The United States plays a large role in this problem; the United
States accounts for only 5 percent of the population of the world, but consumes 26 percent of the worlds energy resources (USGS, 2006, as cited by Myers, 2010, p. 596).
Unfortunately, economic wealth and security foster higher degrees of consumerism and consumption, and improvements in the economic status of individual in the United States, China and Indian have led
to greater carelessness in the use of resources. One of the central problems is that individuals perceive the need for more material wealth in the presence of greater economic
security, and so continues to pursue it endlessly. At the same time, research shows that economic wealth is not always linked to greater emotional well-being. Countries like the
United States have high rates of income, high rates of economic stability and high rates of consumption, but they also have high rates of depression, mental illness, and general dissatisfaction
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