Ecology: Difference between revisions

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Ecology (from Ancient Greek οἶκος ''(oîkos)'' 'house', is the study of of the relationships between living organisms and their physical enviroment. Contrary to common belief, ecology also refers to the relationship between humans and their physical enviroment, making man-made infrastructure like roads and electricity grids a part of the ecology.  
Ecology (from Ancient Greek οἶκος ''(oîkos)'' 'house', is the study of of the relationships between living organisms and their physical enviroment. Contrary to common belief, ecology also refers to the relationship between humans and their physical enviroment, making man-made infrastructure like roads and electricity grids a part of the ecology.  


In the [[Build the New Paradigm, Defeat Green Fascism|Schiller Institute conference October 2022]], [[Haz Al-Din|Haz al-Din]] argued in his speech that unintuitively, it is the green movement which artificially is creating an ecological crisis by destroying human infrastructure.
In the [[Build the New Paradigm, Defeat Green Fascism|Schiller Institute conference October 2022]], [[Haz Al-Din|Haz al-Din]] argued in his speech that unintuitively, it is the green movement which artificially is creating an ecological crisis by destroying human infrastructure.<ref>[https://youtu.be/12uNL8ob_-w The Green Agenda EXPOSED - Haz from Infrared Speech] by [[Infrared]] on [[YouTube]]</ref>
 
== References ==

Latest revision as of 17:40, 20 November 2022

Ecology (from Ancient Greek οἶκος (oîkos) 'house', is the study of of the relationships between living organisms and their physical enviroment. Contrary to common belief, ecology also refers to the relationship between humans and their physical enviroment, making man-made infrastructure like roads and electricity grids a part of the ecology.

In the Schiller Institute conference October 2022, Haz al-Din argued in his speech that unintuitively, it is the green movement which artificially is creating an ecological crisis by destroying human infrastructure.[1]

References[edit | edit source]