He saw nothing to save, foster, or conserve about it. He thought people who lived in subsistence cultures were "so miserably poor they are frequently reduced to the necessity sometimes of directly destroying, and sometimes of abandoning their infants, their old people, and those afflicted with lingering diseases, to perish with hunger, or to be devoured by wild beasts" (p. 93). Nature was a resource to be used to create wealth. Consumption was the ideal -- everybody able to buy whatever goods were needed and wanted. And civilized Europeans were the "ideal of humanity" (p. 96).
In America and other Western nations today, we have seen the world Smith envisioned come to pass with everything he pictured a reality. People from developing countries are amazed, for example, when they visit the U.S. And find that the poor generally have roofs over their heads, food on the table, and a car to drive. But the downside of the picture is that cement pavements are everywhere and business establishments have blotted out the landscape. Even the Great Lakes are polluted with an inky layer of toxic chemical gunk on the bottom. The air isn't fit to breathe in many places. Rain forests and wetlands are diminishing at an alarming rate. The glaciers are melting, and global warming, the result of all the industry, threatens to destroy life on beautiful earth.
People fail to appreciate earth's generosity and the fact...
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