I'm sure we have all seen Russell Brand's interview with - probably better to call it a demolition of Paxman, but of equal if not greater merit is his piece in the New Statesman. His linking of survival, mythology and spirituality with the environment and politics is great to hear:
The model of pre-Christian man has fulfilled its simian objectives. We
have survived, we have created agriculture and cities. Now this version
of man must be sacrificed that we can evolve beyond the reaches of the
ape. These stories contain great clues to our survival when we release
ourselves from literalism and superstition. What are ideologies other
than a guide for life? Throughout paganism one finds stories that
integrate our species with our environment to the benefit of both. The
function and benefits of these belief matrixes have been lost, with good
reason. They were socialist, egalitarian and integrated. If like the
Celtic people we revered the rivers we would prioritise this sacred
knowledge and curtail the attempts of any that sought to pollute the
rivers. If like the Nordic people we believed the souls of our ancestors
lived in the trees, this connection would make mass deforestation
anathema. If like the native people of America we believed God was in
the soil what would our intuitive response be to the implementation of
fracking?
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