10/05/2025

Headline, October 06 2025/ ''' MOTHER EARTH'S MOURNS '''


''' MOTHER EARTH'S

 MOURNS '''



! FIRST AND FOREMOST ! : THE WORLD STUDENTS SOCIETY rises to give Student Greta Thunberg from Sweden a standing ovation and endow and bestow on her greatself ' the lifelong membership of !WOW!. '

Thomas Berry writes, '' To redirect the course of humanity, change the stories by which we live.''

The stories we have lived by have brought us to this place. The ' prosperity ' story promotes worship of acquisitions and money. The ' biblical ' story focuses on the afterlife rather than the world around us.

The ' security ' story invents devastating weapons. The story of man as the centre of the universe is the most dangerous of all. The new generation has to be taught to respect and partner with nature.

The term '' Student Angel Mother '' and the term '' Mother Earth '' suggests nature, like a mother, is patient, always and ever supportive, staying hungry to feed her child/student.

REMEMBER nature is a powerful force that resets the planet through earthquakes, renews land through flooding, forest fires or wild  twisters and never to be forgotten hurricanes.

THE FRENCH PHILOSOPHER VOLTAIRE SAID : '' Men argue. Nature acts '' or perhaps reacts.  Humanity, also, say Students, may just be really caught up in Mother Earth's natural reset. ! Welcome All To The World Students Society !.

American environmentalist Rachel Carson's seminal book Silent Spring warned the world of impending disasters, launching the environmental movement. The few lone voices raising the alarm have now grown into universal concern.

This year has shocked people across continents as they struggle to put out wildfires, succumb to flashfloods, pull bodies from under the rubble of buildings in the aftermath of earthquakes, and take shelter from tornadoes and hurricanes.

Just as Pakistanis were coming to terms with an impending drought, excessive rains have flooded the whole country.

Many hold human hubris and our indifference to the calls of nature responsible. While nature adapts and renews itself, humans remain rigidly intractable, waiting for nature to bend to their ways.

Mountains are cut, rivers are straightened, narrowed and damned. Animal habitats are reduced, forests are cut down and clouds are seeded to create artificial rain. Nature is replaced with ever-expanding concrete cities.

Property laws were developed to ensure people learned to coexist. No such laws exist to ensure humans can peacefully coexist with nature.

The economy power drunk in its aim to create what American environmentalist and cultural historian Thomas Berry calls a '' technological ' wonder world ' '' goes through natural resources with increasing volume and speed to produce consumer goods that only become piles of junk and waste heaps.

AWARENESS of the planet Earth was only for the poets, the romanticists, the religious believers, the moral idealists.

The British biologist Sir David Attenborough suggests that " by bringing economics and ecology face to face, we can help to save the natural world and in doing so save ourselves."

While environmental activists engage with policy makers in world summits, society as a whole needs to reconnect with nature.

Urban dwellers can make many parks, zoos and garden spaces but, to truly understand how nature works, there is no substitute to experiencing nature in its own domain. Young men used to raft down the Indus River. Hikers still explore untrodden ways.

Poet Afzal Ahmed Syed writes, '' The bird no longer nests in the tree, because the tree no longer lives in the forest.''

Much can be learnt from village wisdom, from small farmers who can tell a flood is on the way by the colour of the river, who can predict rain by how the eagles fly, and understand a meandering river reduces the flood risk and should not be strengthened.

Eco-linguists stress the need to rethink the words we used to describe our relationship with the natural world.

A 2025 study found more than 60 percent decline in the use of nature-related words between 1800 and 2019. Jackie Morris' bestseller, The Lost Words, brings back words to re-enchant children/students with nature.

Pakistani/Indian children are more likely to describe colours as purple and pink rather than jamani or tarboozi.

The Honour and Serving of the latest Global Operational Research on Nature, Students, the World and Future, continues. The World  Students Society thanks Durriya Kazi.

With most respectful dedication to Leaders, Parents, The Global Founder Framers of The World Students Society and then Students,  Professors and Teachers of the world.

See You all prepare for Great '' Global  Constitutional Convention '' on !WOW! - the exclusive and eternal ownership of every student in the world - and for every subject :  wssciw.blogspot.com and Twitter X !E-WOW! - The Ecosystem 2011 :

Good Night and God Bless

SAM Daily Times - The Voice Of The Voiceless

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