
I have excogitated and acknowledged within my conscience thoughts many idiosyncratic nuances of our species mannerisms throughout over seven decades of wondering aimlessly about the desolate parcels of Earth’s environments. The many disturbing revelations I have recognized actually seem to have served to weaken our ability to make meaningful progress as a collective world village. Observations of inequality and other disproportional measures of behavior seem to be inherent throughout the world’s evolutionary history of our species.
Natural and human created resources are not equally distributed throughout the planet, nor are they always entirely recoverable or renewable. Throughout human history many tribes have existed, flourished, and even advanced in stature; while others have become extinct. As time has progressed, our species has evolved to become a living tapestry of settlements, unevenly distributed as a patchwork of fabrics consisting of variations in physical appearance, culture, religion, ideology, social structure, and individual values.
The struggle to acquire the basic necessities of food, water, clothes, and shelter still remains a challenge for survival in many geographic regions. The variable conditions of weather (the physical condition of the lower atmosphere at any given time), climate (the historical record of weather conditions for a region), terrain surface variances, elevation, latitude, available food, and water sources are a constant challenge for many native inhabitants in the tropics, mid-latitude deserts, Arctic, and Antarctic environments.