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Taking action by typing about it!

DOF somewhat tongue-in-cheek mentions Blog Action Day, What would happen if every blog published posts discussing the same issue, on the same day?  One issue. One day. Thousands of voices….

DOF somewhat tongue-in-cheek mentions Blog Action Day,

What would happen if every blog published posts discussing the same issue, on the same day? 

One issue. One day. Thousands of voices.

I’m not sure that having a single day a year for a single topic is all that big of an activism thing, but there you go.

This year’s (today’s) topic is:  the environment.

(Use both sides of the paper if necessary.)

I actually have a lot I’d like to write about the environment — from alarmism to politics to popular culture to what the heck the “environment” is and how humans fit into it — but my thoughts haven’t quite gelled enough to do so.  So I’ll throw out a few quotations (hat tip, DOF). I’ll also follow through on a notion I’ve had several times in the past several months to create a specific “Environment” category here (most Environment stuff has previously been found under “Science”), of which this post is the first.

In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments — there are consequences.

— Robert Green Ingersoll (1833-1899) American lawyer and orator,  “Some Reasons Why”

Whether we like it or not, the natural and the human environment are inseparable. It would be a great mistake to try to completely erase human traces from any part of the landscape. We need to protect the natural world, but we also need to protect reminders of the human past so that we can learn from them.

— Bonnie Stepenoff (b. 1949) American writer, “Landscapes Remember”

Scan any newspaper for stories about, say, the environment, and you will quickly discover that many journalists are predisposed to consider environmental activists the “good guys” and oil company presidents and loggers the “bad guys.” Or watch all the junk science television news specials about pesticides, food additives, breast implants, nuclear power, and global warming. Reporters are reputed to be natural-born skeptics, but they almost never challenge the alarmists on these important issues.

— Marianne M. Jennings, American educator, ethicist,  Imprimis (Hillsdale College) (July 1999)

CALVIN (walking through snowy field): You know, Hobbes, it seems the only time most people go outside is to walk their cars. We have houses, electricity, plumbing, heat …. Maybe we’re so sheltered and comfortable that we’ve lost touch with the natural world and forgotten our place in it. Maybe we’ve lost our awe of nature. That’s why I want to ask you, as a tiger, a wild animal close to nature, what do you think we’re put on Earth to do. What’s our purpose in life? Why are we here?

HOBBES: We’re here to devour each other alive.

CALVIN (in the house): Turn on the lights! Turn up the heat!

— Bill Watterson (b. 1958) American cartoonist, Calvin & Hobbes (6 Jan 1991)

Hmmm.  Not terribly inspiring.  Let’s see if I can throw out some quick thoughts.

  1. Our environment is our home.  As the saying goes, “don’t shit where you live.” To the extent that we are becoming a global community, there is a growing awareness that there is no back corner that doesn’t affect us, environmentally.  “No man is an island” — and no island is an island.
  2. The biggest problem we as humans face is that “out of sight, out of mind.”  If we don’t see it, it’s not real to us.  People in general aren’t worried about polar bears and Tibetan glaciers as much as they are about their drought-driven water restrictions and the price of vegetables.
  3. There are way too many people who are willing to exploit that short-sightedness — which is short-sighted themselves.  Yes, I’m speaking mostly here of businessfolk who are more interested in this quarter’s earnings — or where the stock will be when they exercise their options in a few years — and less about whether their company, or nation, or world will survive the next century or three.  Oh, and the politicians who are focused on what contributions they need from whom to get elected next time around, not on whether people a century from now will remember their names as visionaries and statesmen.
  4. Garnering the attention of the short-sighted requires a degree of apocalyptic hyperbole — bang them over the head to get their attention.  Unfortunately, that’s just the sort of tactic that turns off some people who are observent and who are tired of apocalyptic hyperbole in their lives from all directions.
  5. Nevertheless, public opinion is like a supertanker — very slow to turn, but it is turnable, and at some tipping point the politicians do have to follow, and the businessfolk with them.  Looking at the changes in awareness and concern in the US about air and water pollution in the last 50 years shows that clearly.  I suspect the global warming thang will follow the same course — indeed, the last decade shows that it is.

So — I guess now I’m good (from an activist standpoint) for another year.

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9 thoughts on “Taking action by typing about it!”

  1. I think I agree most with Calvin & Hobbes… but then, that’s pretty normal for me.

    I’m looking forward, when I move out there, to being able to get away into nature with far more regularity than I do now. I want to even try to instigate a weekly “Get Out in Nature” adventure, or some such thing. You guys are very lucky out there!

  2. Well, Coloradoans are, as a whole, outdoors-activity oriented. I once read that we have more sporting good stores per capita than any other state. And folks who take advantage of that sort of thing certainly have many avenues to do so. 🙂

  3. Point number two is a great one to make and one that Global Warming activists constantly fight. If we reach the point of no return of Global Warming there will be no mother nature bulletin board showcasing what has happened. Things won’t play out like in “The Day After Tomorrow”, where all of the sudden things go from calm and normal to cold and hectic.

    It’s just a slow gradual change that gives the false sense of everything is fine.

  4. I’ve heard some people say that military service should be compulsory, to instill a certain set of values in young people.

    I think that if everybody birded (that’s going birdwatching, to the uninitiated), there’d be a lot more respect for the environment.

    Just a pipe dream, you understand.

  5. There are any number of activities I think it would be good/useful for nearly everyone to attend. Birding could certainly be one. Serving in a soup kitchen might be another.

    I’m not sure of the benefit of compelling people to do so, though, just as I disagree with making some sort of military (or other) service compulsory.

  6. The problem with making anything compulsory is that what is interesting and life changing to one person may not be to the others. And in fact may make matters worse because of this.

    If you force someone from my generation to go bird watching to learn more about the environment, I would say there is a good chance they may not care about the whole experience and may just be bored by it. This may lead to them having a more negative image about the whole experience then what they originally had.

    Which is the problem with communication about certain topics. When it comes to the environment it’s really important not to turn people off, so other ways of communication have to be employed.

  7. I’ve actually gone birding with a bunch of high school kids who were “compelled” to go on the trip for a class assignment. It was very interesting to see the smug, blasé, ultra-hip dudes drop their jaws when they got a look at an indigo bunting through my scope (the picture doesn’t really do justice to the brilliance of the blue plumage in direct sunlight).

    Almost everybody who has voluntarily gone birding with me has taken up the hobby (to varying degrees). I rather doubt that any of those kids became birders, but you never know.

  8. Cool post. I don’t know that I would it mandatory per se, as part of some general enlightenment (as opposed to a school assignment, for example), but, yeah, I could see it having a positive effect for some folks.

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