What if humanity suddenly abandons Earth in order to reach a similar planet? Perpetuating the demand for growth seems to justify the desire to find another world.
Moving to another location without altering the dynamics of interaction will continue to promote the instinctive return to the logic of production, forgetting where, in what, and from what this being lives. The ecological agenda needs to reposition itself, not allowing itself to be directed by political-territorial division, managing to impose itself through knowledge in a way that does not allow it to be surprised by negative consequences such as climate change.
The dream of settling in another “place” presupposes reconfiguring the model of connection with other species, focusing on the present, recognizing dependence and strengthening ties to overcome the conflicts caused by an economy that is taking initial steps towards harmonization with an ecology that is struggling to free itself from the archaic concepts that victimize a large part of the green agenda.