How acquiring more technology deepens e-waste problems, revealing Taoist paradox where gain contains loss.
The Daodejing warns: 'The more you have, the more you lose.' This paradox directly addresses e-waste: wealthier nations consume devices at accelerating rates, generating mountains of toxic waste while claiming technological progress. The pursuit of the newest phone, laptop, or gadget creates a treadmill of obsolescence. Laozi would recognize this as ignorance of natural limits and cyclical time. Each 'upgrade' extracts rare earth minerals from conflict zones, poisons waterways in manufacturing hubs, and exports refuse to Ghana, India, and Vietnam. The paradox cuts deeper: believing more technology solves problems created by technology itself. True resource wealth, from a Taoist view, means sufficiency and repair culture. Global justice requires recognizing that the 'gain' of technological abundance for wealthy consumers is balanced by devastating loss imposed on extracting and receiving communities.
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