Sociology professor draws attention to end of the world

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โ€œThe world today is not the same as it was five years ago,โ€ said Wilfrid Laurier University sociology professor Garry Potter. โ€œBut both for you and I itโ€™s recognizably the same.โ€

โ€œTwenty-five years from now what I said about five years from now will be completely opposite,โ€ he continued. โ€œIt will not be remotely recognizably the same world at all.โ€

Over the course of the last several years Potter has been researching a project on the uncertain future of humankind that has culminated now in a film, book and website all titled Dystopia: What is to be done?.

โ€œI started doing research on it quite a long, long time ago because Iโ€™m trying to cover almost all the problems that are facing humanity,โ€ he said.

The results of the project, notably the film, contain a clear message Potter sees as pressing for the current generation of university students.

โ€œLetโ€™s jump to 20 years, maybe Iโ€™ll still be alive,โ€ he explained. โ€œ25 years? No, I donโ€™t think so. You will be though.โ€

The hour-long film, being screened Sept. 29 at the Princess Twin cinemas in Waterloo, emphasizes Potterโ€™s point of view that there are many pressing issues to be dealt with for the future of the human species, issues that are being ignored by those who will be forced to deal with the consequences, notably students.

Whatโ€™s lost on those who will encounter a dystopian future is of concern to Potter.

โ€œAlways being bombarded with images, it prevents people from coming to grips with what are
going to be huge problems,โ€ he said.

โ€œItโ€™s sort of a schizophrenic thing. Yes, weโ€™re aware that global warming is going to be a big problem but thereโ€™s a basketball game on Friday and Iโ€™m going to watch this and Facebook.โ€

โ€œThere are all these distractions so people arenโ€™t taking it in,โ€ he added.

Along with the aforementioned issue of climate change, Potter emphasized the other major issue confronting future generations: โ€œpeak oilโ€ and the end of readily accessible and inexpensive energy. โ€œWeโ€™re going to run out of cheap energy. That will cause a necessity forced upon the world to completely restructure,โ€ he said.

โ€œWill we do it in a sane, carefully planned out, sensible way or will we do it chaotically?โ€
What Potter deems necessary to confront the future is โ€œdramatic political change,โ€ notably the adoption of socialism.

โ€œ[There are] problems that are really urgently calling out for solutions and theyโ€™re not even beginning to think sensibly about them at the present,โ€ he explained of current governments.

โ€œIโ€™ve got a causal thesis about it all which is that itโ€™s capitalism thatโ€™s making it impossible.โ€
Society needs to recognize that itโ€™s in a race between education and catastrophe, Potter said, but added, โ€œThereโ€™s an emotional resistance to taking on the whole horror of it all.โ€


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