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  • 7/29/2019 ENSC110 Craig Peter Singer

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    Trevor Craig

    Energy Science 110

    Peter Singers One World.

    9/15/11

    The bookOne World by Peter Singer confronts the United States, and the world, to

    many ethical and environmental issues, which need to be addressed. The main ethical question

    that this paper will focus on addressing is whether we are truly one world, and if we are one

    world, than should we help others of the world that are less fortunate than ourselves and should

    we be concerned with the rest of the world or stay focused on our own problems?

    The ethic that this paper will be focused on is whether the United States should focus

    more on itself or care about the rest of the world. Singer discusses this ethic on pages 3, and

    multiple other times within thisbook, To what extent should political leaders see their role

    narrowly, in terms of promoting the interests of their citizens, and to what extent should they be

    concerned with the welfare of people everywhere? In other words should nations focus more on

    themselves or on the good for the world? Singer argues for both sides of the argument but

    finally lands on the welfare of people everywhere. He gets to this conclusion by saying that we

    are now one world.

    Peter Singer tries to make it very obvious that we are now one world instead of many

    separate nations and states. On page 1 of One World, Peter Singer tries to grab a hold of his

    audience and show how we are one world in a powerful, meaningful, way, he does this by saying

    that 9/11 shows that we are one world. He says that the fact that different countries, even

    countries that are across the world from each other, can affect each other countries so easily

    proves that we are one world. But he is not done yet, he goes on to say that although many

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    people died in 9/11, more will die as a result from sports utility vehicles, from their carbon

    dioxide emissions and gas guzzling capabilities. He claims on page 1 when people in rich

    nations switch to vehicles that use more fuel than the cars they used to drive, they contribute to

    changes in the climate of Mozambique or Bangladesh- changes that may cause crops to fail, sea

    levels to rise, and tropical diseases to spread. This is due to global warming and the effects that

    will happen if nothing is done to prevent global warming.

    Many people still have their doubts about global warming but on page 16 Paul Singer

    addresses this lack of faith, Those of us who have no expertise in the scientific aspects of

    climate change and its causes can scarcely disregard the views held by the overwhelming

    majority of those who do possess that expertise. They could be wrong- the great majority of

    scientists sometimes are- but in view of what is at stake to rely on that possibility would be a

    risky situation. If global warming is not real, but we still take the precautions against it, we will

    be a better cleaner society. But if global warming is real and we do nothing to do to prepare for it

    and we continue to burn large amounts of fossil fuels and emit larger numbers of carbon dioxide

    a year, then the world will soon change from the earth we know today to something less pleasant.

    The earth will be a completely different thing than what we know it as now.

    So back to the ethical issue of worrying about ourselves or the world, if we refuse to do

    anything about our carbon dioxide emissions it will eventually affect us. The United States may

    not initially be affected by climate change, but we will feel the effects due to the world now

    moving towards a world trade market, instead of the old single nation trading. On page 10 it

    highlights the point of a world trade market, As technology has overcome distance, economic

    globalization has followed. In London supermarkets, fresh vegetables flown in from Kenya are

    offered for sale alongside those from nearby Kent. In this new world economy we often

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    purchase many of our goods from other countries. But if global warming continues and crop

    lands decrease, water levels rise taking farmers land, and diseases spread, this could greatly

    affect our economy.

    As we move more towards a world trade system, we move closer to a global economy. So

    the people that are struggling with poverty and dont have enough food right now become our

    problem. Peter Singer on page 152 says Charity begins at home, people say, and more

    explicitly, we should take care of poverty in our own country before we tackle poverty abroad.

    They take it for granted that national boundaries carry moral weight, and that it is worse to leave

    one of our fellow citizens in need than to leave someone from another country in that state. So

    are the people in the United States taken care of as well as the rest of the world? On average, the

    citizens of the United States have much better lives than other places in the world suffering with

    great poverty, for example India. But now we are back to the original ethical question, due to the

    fact that our nation is becoming part of the one world, their problems will soon become our

    problems in one way or another, should we help them?

    Before this one world became so connected, people looked at their surroundings to see

    what was concerned poverty and rich, but Singer says on page 173-174 But today it is a mistake

    to think that people compare themselves only with fellow citizens(or will all their fellow

    citizens)Mexicans obviously look longingly north of the borderand the same can be true for

    people who are not in close geographic proximity,not because they are being politically

    persecuted, but because they already have enough of an idea about life in those far away

    countries to want to live there. So other people look now to the world instead of their

    surroundings to dream of a better life for themselves.

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    People in countries that contain extreme poverty will not take much to help them out of

    their poverty. We are willing to help poverty in our own nation but are sometimes reluctant when

    it comes to other countries, Singer touches on this on page 156 in an extremely visual picture of

    what it is like to help someone with a little cost to ourselves, On my way to give a lecture, I

    pass a shallow pond. As I do so, I see a small girl fall into it and realize that she is in danger of

    drowning. I could easily wade in and pull her out, but that would get my shoes and trousers wet

    and muddy. I would need to go home and change, Id have to cancel the lecture, and my shoes

    might never recover. Nevertheless, it would be grotesque to allow such minor considerations to

    outweigh the good of saving a childs life. Singer uses this argument to emphasize that we

    should help the poor in other countries and also help avoid major tragedies like genocides, even

    with small cost to ourselves. Singer argues that all lives are equal when it comes to saving lives,

    on page 157 it makes no moral difference whether the person I help is a neighbors child ten

    yards from me or a Bengali whose name I shall never know, ten thousand miles away. That

    statement may not be shared the majority of the people in the United States, but in general we

    can agree that poverty and genocide is bad and that anything we can do to reduce or eliminate

    those sort of problems would be a good thing, even if there was a small cost to ourselves.

    Although the general population of Americans believes that we should help other nations

    and not just focus on ourselves they are greatly misinformed on the amount of aid that is actually

    being provided right now. It is almost comical looking at the guesses of the amount of foreign

    aid Americans think we provide, by percentage of our Gross National Product. On page 182 it

    says only .14% of our GNP is for foreign aid, and that is including nongovernmental aid. The

    guesses of Americans were not even close they ranged from 20% to 1%. Singer claims that all it

    would take to save a childs life is a donation of $200 on page 188 So it seems that we must be

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    doing something serious wrong if we are not prepared to give $200 to UNICEF or Oxfam

    American to reduce the poverty that causes so many early deaths. If all it took was $200 to save

    someones life, as Singer suggests, many Americans could save many lives with the extra money

    they have. On page 193 it says if we were to give 1% of our yearly income to the poor, we could

    eliminate world poverty in 1 year. That would be quite the accomplishment.

    One of the problems about giving money to poverty right now is our government. We

    often give to countries that we want something from or want some sort of advantage, as Singer

    states on page 191 The United States , France, and Japan- direct their aid, not to those countries

    where it will be most effective in fostering growth and reducing poverty, but to countries where

    aid will further their own strategic or cultural interests. So now the problem comes to how we

    are supposed to get the money to the people who need it with our government giving how it is.

    When we give money to some governments the dictators or corrupt leaders keep the money

    instead of giving it to the people who really need it, holding us back from ending world poverty.

    Obviously our world has gotten more connected with the internet and other new

    technologies; this makes us more and more one world, instead of a bunch of separate nations.

    Other nations have made the ethical decision to focus on the good of the world, instead of

    focusing so much on the good of their own nation. The United States is currently focusing on

    itself, Singer thinks that the answer to the ethical question is not to focus on us but the world, on

    page 198-199 One can only hope that when the rest of the world nevertheless proceeds down

    the right path, as it did in resolving to go ahead with the Kyoto Protocol, and as it is now doing

    with the International Criminal Court, the United States will eventually be shamed into joining

    in. So now we must make our ethical decision, should we as the United States care more about

    helping ourselves and fixing the problems with our own country, like our debts and wars, or

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    should we give most of our attention to the environmental issues and pressing problems of the

    world? I agree with the view of Peter Singer and believe that we should care more about the

    people of the world and not so much on ourselves, but I also believe we need to make sure our

    own country is working so we can carry out the tasks of helping others. We need to find the

    balance between helping your own country and helping the world, that is the key to finding a

    brighter tomorrow.