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Greenhouse Gases or Bureaucratic Hot Air which is the Biggest Pollutant?
Greenhouse Gases or Bureaucratic Hot Air which is the Biggest Pollutant?
Greenhouse Gases or Bureaucratic Hot Air – which is the
Biggest Pollutant? by ACS
Advancing technology has brought with it lots of nifty toys and
tools but nothing comes for free. The trade-off is some of the
worst environmental pollution in human history.
Likewise, the highly structured and organised system of government
that helps our lives to run so smoothly and easily (bless the
wheelie bins) has brought with it huge levels of bureaucracy. Death
by 1000 lashes – of red tape.
Both environmental pollution and bureaucratic pollution have the
same effect on their environments; they stifle diversity of species
(or ideas), create a stagnant environment in which life struggles
to thrive, and may cause mass proliferation of noxious
micro-organisms (eg bacteria, algae, public servants).
Contemporary society is built on the twin scourges of pollution and
bureaucracy but these need to be managed and controlled to ensure
they don’t cannibalise the host. But this is a tricky
balancing act. In order to eliminate pollution, we would need to
forfeit much of our technology, and the complete elimination of
bureaucracy could create societal chaos. Clearly these are not
realistic options.
But allowing technology to proliferate unchecked will result in the
destruction of our environment and ultimately life as we know it.
And allowing bureaucracy to grow unchecked may cause the costs of
operating society to grow so large that nobody can reasonably
afford the benefits which bureaucrats are supposedly
administering.
Experts say the environment could reach a point of no return within
decades if we don’t act now. How long before bureaucracy
becomes so unweildy that it halts the progress of the very social
functions it is meant to promote?
The trouble with bureaucratic systems is they are created by the
same people who will benefit from their growth. So for public
servants to advance their careers, they need a bigger public
service and more bureaucracy to do so. And who has the power to
make a public service bigger? Public servants! So the red tape
proliferates, keeping the bureaucrats in occupied with
ever-increasing amounts of potentially pointless activity designed
to keep them in a job.
This is a problem that can be identified in all facets of society,
from health care to national defence. The education sector is no
exception. Where once the primary role of educational institutions
was to educate, they are now knotted up like pretzels trying to
fulfil endless accreditation, auditing, assessing, evaluation and
reporting requirements which offer little benefit to students and
kill many trees with their resultant paperwork.
So bureaucrats suckles freely on budgets that should be spent on
improving the quality of teaching and learning. Such a system will
inevitably skeletonise the very services the bureaucracy was
created to advance.
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