Sunday, January 6, 2013

Essay#2


Introduction:

 

         “Have you ever wondered where all the stuff that we buy comes from?”  The story of stuff by Annie Leonard (Story Of Stuff, 2012) is a presentation about the materials economy, which it consist of 5 stages, extraction, production, distribution, consumption and disposal, also I will talk in this essay about consumerism in the UAE. In this essay, I’m going to talk about these stages and all of them.        

 

 

Extraction:

            The first step of the body materials process starts with extraction. Extraction is natural resource exploitation, which means actually trashing the plant, because we cut the trees and destroys the mountains to get the metal inside these mountains. We also use the all water and kill the whole wildlife in that area. We are using too much stuff. In last three decades, one-third of the planet’s neutral resources that had consumed gone, because they are cutting and trashing the planet so fast.

 

Production:

               The second step in the material economy is called production. Production is a compound product of natural resources and energy that gives us a toxic contaminated product. People uses over than 100,000 synthetic chemical in their products. Only a few of the products have been tested for health impacts, so this is will be problem for us, because we are bringing these toxic stuff to our homes, workplaces, and schools, Actually to our body, like BFRs, it makes things more fireproof but it’s so toxic which it effects in the brain. "The absence in the United States of those vast accumulations of wealth which favor the expenditures of large sums on articles of mere luxury... impact to the productions of American industry a character distinct from that of other countries' industries. [Production is geared toward] articles suited to the wants of the whole people". (De Tocqueville, 1835)                       

                    

Distribution:

             The third step in that process is called distribution. Distribution means selling all toxic-contaminated products as fast as possible. They keep the prices down, keep people buying and keep inventory moving.” How do they keep Prices down? Well, they don’t pay the store workers very much and they skimp on health insurance every time they can” (Story of Stuff, 2012). It’s all about externalizing the costs, which means the real costs of making the stuff not in their price.            

Consumption:

             The forth step of that process is called consumption. Consumption is actually the important step in the system. This is what makes the system moves without stop because people are shopping too much and became consumers not teachers or mothers, but the problem they don’t care as past as they care now because people are throwing their stuff after almost six months and also because people consumes double as they did before 51 years ago. There are two ways to makes people throw their stuff and buy a new one. First way is planned obsolescence which means they make people buy stuff that it broken as quickly as possible and throw it to buy new one. Second way is perceived obsolescence which convinces us to throw the stuff that still working by using a lot of advertising.       

 

 

Disposal:

          The last step of the materials process finishes with disposal. Disposal is throwing the rubbish to the curb. How they get rid these rubbish, they just burn the waste and dumped in a landfill. This is actually effects to the water, air and land. Incineration is really bad because it produce dioxin which is the most toxic man made substance known to science. So we could stop producing dioxin by stopping incineration. 

 

Consumerism in the UAE:

              Consumption in the UAE is too much. A lot of emirates think that increasing the consumerism is the great risk to national identity because the number of Emirates is small while the number of migrants is increasing in each year. So, here we should remember Sheikh Zayed’s word “Heritage represents the spirit, the wisdom and the various creativities of the people. Nations are measured by their heritage. A nation without heritage is a nation without a land to live on or a shore to reach before getting lost in the ocean.”( Sheikh Zayed).  People in the UAE are buying too much stuff even if they not need it. I know its bad habit and we must change it, but the reason is UAE had a lot of sources which means a nice salary for Emirates. 

 

Conclusion

         To conclude all things discussed before, story of stuff taught us about the things that we bought and throw. How people deal with these things and how do they make us throw these even if we bought week ago. This paper discussed about materials economy. In addition, the 5 steps took a part of this paper. In other word, how it starts from extraction and finish in disposal. The other part was about the consumerism in the UAE. In my opinion, story of stuff is real great example to show us what we are doing in this world and how could we do better without destroying the trees and killing the animals.    









References

Gerson, J. (2008, October 4). 'Consumerism and foreigners' greatest identity threats - The National. Latest and breaking news | thenational.ae - The National. Retrieved December 10, 2012, from http://www.thenational.ae/news/uae-news/consumerism-and-foreigners-greatest-identity-threats

Humaid, s. (2011, April 27). Heritage must be our shelter from the consumerist tide - The National. Latest and breaking news | thenational.ae - The National. Retrieved December 10, 2012, from http://www.thenational.ae/thenationalconversation/comment/heritage-must-be-our-shelter-from-the-consumerist-tide

leonard, A. (n.d.). Story of Stuff آ«  The Story of Stuff Project.  The Story of Stuff Project. Retrieved December 10, 2012, from http://www.storyofstuff.org/movies-all/story-of-stuff/

Mithra, S. (2011, March 17). UAE consumers get more online-friendly: MasterCard. cnmeonline. Retrieved December 10, 2012, from www.cnmeonline.com/features/uae-consumers-get-more-online-friendly-mastercard/

 

Tocqueville, D. (n.d.). Mass production - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Retrieved December 10, 2012, from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_production

 

 

1 comment: