The Home Documentary

508 Words2 Pages

The Home documentary was a beautiful, insightful and impactful movie. Starting from the beginning of life on this planet we call Earth. But upon humanities claim the Earth dying off little bits at a time. Adding to, how important it is to balance between organisms, slight changes around the planet affecting everything. Overall, the video starting in the classroom but continues with every breath we take, every one being more valuable than the last.
It’s taken 4 billion years for the Earth to grow. However, humanity took only a few decades to deplete great amounts of the natural resources, the world hurts from deforestation, pollution, and climate change. An astonishing fact is of the destruction of coral reefs. Being one of the most diverse …show more content…

Throughout the movie it shows how much we depend on oil as a main form of energy but suggest solutions without really going in depths. For example, the film suggest reconstructing power sources so we could run “naturally” with wind, wave, solar, or geothermal. The real challenge being the transition towards a green energy. While a large amount of places may have the wind, water, sun and heat they all don’t have the materials or funding to change. In addition, the film also suggests we educate the masses to obtain our desired goal of a better future. While education of the young generations is a great start it fails to take in to consideration the actual people to educate. It’s not only the people of third world countries but those who distribute the resources. A big reason for the poverty is the fact that the population must fend for themselves in any way they can, no real time for schooling. While if there was an equal distribution the resource there’d be a greater chance of survival or time to educate them. In the end, the problem with the Earth is neither the uneducated population nor large industry but the existence of greed for economic stability or

Open Document