Showing posts with label Planet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Planet. Show all posts

Friday, October 12, 2007

A Pithy Response to the British High Court

What a strange couple of days for Al Gore: get chastised by a British court one day; win the Nobel Peace Prize for the same material, the next.

At any rate, I was intrigued when I saw a little news item to this effect on some webpage or other I was browsing today. I was struck by the overwrought tone of some of the article titles, which barely evaded the accusation that Gore lied in An Inconvenient Truth. But having reviewed a few articles on the matter, I've learned that the court took issue with alleged "errors" in the film. Hardly the outing of bald-faced lies that some of the headlines suggest. Furthermore, the nine "errors" the court lists, are less errors of fact, than they are errors of interpretation.
  1. They don't deny the validity of the rising sea level, only the timeline.
  2. I wondered about that myself. My understanding was that there have been instances of island communities evacuating after tsunamis, but they tend to return home after the water subsides.
  3. "...very unlikely" doesn't mean "isn't going to happen." While over emphasizing "The Day After Tomorrow" doomsday scenario is a bit much, failing to explain and understand the delicate balance of the "conveyor" would be negligent.
  4. So...then...Gore needs to refresh his Excel graph-making skills. Okay. Though seriously, whenever anyone uses graphs and statistics, care must be taken to use them appropriately. Conservative pundits would do well to remember the lapse in judgment of two of their own with the remarkably twisted book, "The Bell Curve."
  5. Of course it's going to be difficult to assert the MAIN causes. Ecological systems are rather complex after all. But I find it curious that the court DOESN'T challenge the film's argument about the correlative between human industrial activity and rapid changes in the climate. Correlation may not be PRIMARY, but it's something.
  6. see #5, with the added bit: environmental degradation undoubtedly has local roots, but given the interconnectedness of the larger ecological (and social) system, global activities have local impacts as well.
  7. Duh. But when I saw the film, I detected a more nuanced argument: that the type of devastation inflicted by Katrina will become the norm with unchecked global warming. So then, Katrina is an example of the rapidly developing worse case scenario.
  8. Scientific studies take a LONG time to complete (given the rigors of the scientific method), therefore, if the court will only rely on STUDIES, rather than, say the preliminary research data, then they sit a rather high bar for recent phenomena. Oh and the court's claim that the four polar bears drowned because of a storm illustrates the same limited analysis that they accuse the film of making. The storm COMBINED with the intense melting of the ice pack contributed to the polar bears' deaths.
  9. see #5.
So...yeah... the British High Court has chosen to chastise the film's interpretations of the data, as well as question the isolatable factors of the data. But what the court cannot and does not take issue with are the facts.

Fact: climate change is happening.
Fact: climate change has dramatic effects on societies and ecosystems.
Fact: human activity coincides with the dramatic ecological changes that have been documented.

Debatable: why is climate change happening?
Debatable: how much of the social and ecological stresses are due to climate change, and how much to other factors?
Debatable: how much does human activity contribute to the ecological changes?

To my mind, the first debatable question is first a scientific question, then a moral question, then a policy question. Unfortunately, the more vocal & litigious skeptics gloss over the science, confuse morality with religious fundamentalism and go ape-shit over policy.

The second question is a brilliant red herring. Given the incredible complexity & scale of the
global ecosystem, no one will EVER be able to give more than rough estimates and theories. We might discern what all the factors are, but actually deducing the "recipe" for social and ecological stress... good luck.

The third question is both a simple one and an impossible one. Simple in that the adage, "if you make a mess, clean it up," is the solution.

For too long, humans have assumed that when we throw something "away," it disappears.... or ceases to be our problem. We are narcissists to the worse degree and assume that someone else, or the planet itself, will deal with the messes we make. Industrial smoke stacks spewing black, particulate-laden smoke into a once pristine sky...is a mess. Even if that mess doesn't raise the global temperature by a degree and precipitate the melting of a polar bear's den. It's a mess in it's own backyard. It's a mess that the industrialist made and the consumer chose to ignore in his/her material narcissism (i.e. I want what I want, when I want it). It's a mess that needs to be cleaned up.

Whatever "errors" An Inconvenient Truth may have made, its drive to call all of us to clean up our own messes is one fact that it definitely got right.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

21 Things That You CAN Recycle

This is, by no means, a total evasion of original posting on my part. I'm just playing catch up and fighting off a cold. Besides...this is pretty vital info and anything I can do to help spread the word, I will do.

So, without further ado, here's CoOp America's list of 21 Things That Really Are Recyclable:


1. Appliances: Goodwill accepts working appliances, www.goodwill.org, or you can contact the Steel Recycling Institute to recycle them. 800/YES-1-CAN, www.recycle-steel.org.

2. Batteries: Rechargeables and single-use: Battery Solutions, 734/467-9110, www.batteryrecycling.com.

3. Cardboard boxes: cardboard boxContact local nonprofits and women's shelters to see if they can use them. Or, offer them up at your local Freecycle.org listserv or on Craigslist.org. If your workplace collects at least 100 boxes or more each month, UsedCardboardBoxes.com accepts them for resale.

4. CDs/DVDs/Game Disks: Send scratched music or computer CDs, DVDs, and PlayStation or Nintendo video game disks to AuralTech for refinishing, and they'll work like new: 888/454-3223, www.auraltech.com.

5. Clothes: shirtsWearable clothes can go to your local Goodwill outlet or shelter. Donate wearable women's business clothing to Dress for Success, which gives them to low-income women as they search for jobs, 212/532-1922, www.dressforsuccess.org. Offer unwearable clothes and towels to local animal boarding and shelter facilities, which often use them as pet bedding. Consider holding a clothes swap at your office, school, faith congregation or community center. Swap clothes with friends and colleagues, save money on a new fall wardrobe and back-to-school clothes – then donate the rest.

6. Compact fluorescent bulbs: Take them to your local IKEA store for recycling: www.ikea.com.

7. Compostable bio-plastics: You probably won't be able to compost these in your home compost bin or pile. Find a municipal composter to take them to at www.findacomposter.com.

8. Computers and electronics: Find the most responsible recyclers, local and national, at www.ban.org/pledge/Locations.html

9. Exercise videos: Swap them with others at www.videofitness.com.

10. Eyeglasses: glassesYour local Lion's Club or eye care chain may collect these. Lenses are reground and given to people in need.

11. Foam Packing peanuts: Your local pack-and-ship store will likely accept these for reuse. Or, call the Plastic Loose Fill Producers Council to find a drop-off site: 800/828-2214. For places to drop off foam blocks for recycling, contact the Alliance of Foam Packaging Recyclers, 410/451-8340, www.epspackaging.org/info.html

12. Ink/toner cartridges: Recycleplace.com pays $1/each.

13. Miscellaneous: Get your unwanted items into the hands of people who can use them. Offer them up on your local Freecycle.org or Craigslist.org listserv, or try giving them away at Throwplace.com or giving or selling them at iReuse.com. iReuse.com will also help you find a recycler, if possible, when your items have reached the end of their useful lifecycle.

14. Oil: Find Used Motor Oil Hotlines for each state: 202/682-8000, www.recycleoil.org.

15. Phones: cell phoneDonate cell phones: Collective Good will refurbish your phone and sell it to someone in a developing country: 770/856-9021, www.collectivegood.com. Call to Protect reprograms cell phones to dial 911 and gives them to domestic violence victims: www.donateaphone.com. Recycle single-line phones: Reclamere, 814/386-2927, www.reclamere.com.

16. Sports equipment: Resell or trade it at your local Play It Again Sports outlet, 800/476-9249, www.playitagainsports.com.

17. “Technotrash”: Easily recycle all of your CDs, jewel cases, DVDs, audio and video tapes, cell phones, pagers, rechargeable and single-use batteries, PDAs, and ink/toner cartridges with GreenDisk's Technotrash program. For $30, GreenDisk will send you a cardboard box in which you can ship them up to 70 pounds of any of the above. Your fee covers the box as well as shipping and recycling fees. 800/305-GREENDISK, www.greendisk.com.

18. Tennis shoes: Nike's Reuse-a-Shoe program turns old shoes into playground and athletic flooring. www.nikereuseashoe.com. One World Running will send still-wearable shoes to athletes in need in Africa, Latin America, and Haiti. www.oneworldrunning.com.

19. Toothbrushes and razors:toothbrush Buy a recycled plastic toothbrush or razor from Recycline, and the company will take it back to be recycled again into plastic lumber. Recycline products are made from used Stonyfield Farms' yogurt cups. 888/354-7296, www.recycline.com.

20. Tyvek envelopes: Quantities less than 25: Send to Shirley Cimburke, Tyvek Recycling Specialist, 5401 Jefferson Davis Hwy., Spot 197, Room 231, Richmond, VA 23234. Quantities larger than 25, call 866/33-TYVEK.

21. Stuff you just can't recycle: When practical, send such items back to the manufacturer and tell them they need to manufacture products that close the waste loop responsibly.

Friday, June 1, 2007

In The Beginning...

In some ways, it’s a misnomer to call this blog “The Accidental Hippie.” After all, it’s not like I woke up one morning and found myself in itchy tie-dye, cradling a hookah and a poorly groomed stranger.

In fact, I have long considered myself a Champagne Hippie, favoring good food, fine wine and comfortably elegant fashion & housewares – just as long as they're mostly organic and socially responsible (i.e. less sweatshops and factory pharming; more artisans and free-range husbandry, s’il vous plait).

But there were some things that I just could not bring myself to do, some changes that were just too hard to make.

But in the last year, and particularly in the last couple of weeks, I received a swift kick in the pants. Meet my "inner necessity":


No, this is not a cornish game hen. This is my uterus (dark pink mass on top) with a very large intramural fibroid (the lighter pink, veiny monstrosity at the bottom). Last week I drove to Spokane to have it removed, but when my surgeon got inside and saw this, he realized that in 30+ years of practice, he'd never seen anything quite like it. I'm "kind of" adamant about not losing my uterus (because I really want kids, hormonal balance, bladder control and uterine orgasms); but my doctor wasn't sure he could guarantee that. So instead, he stitched a couple of arteries feeding Fi, stitched me up and gave me a shot of Lupron. The new plan: hopefully shrink it over the next three months and try the operation again in August.

So, what does this have to do with my becoming an Accidental Hippie?

EVERYTHING

Fibroids apparently flourish when women don't get enough fiber, eat too much sugar, and have unresolved mind-body-spirit issues. So, after Fi was diagnosed in April 06, I began to sort of half-ass my way to a better lifestyle: I joined a gym and saw a trainer twice a month; ate mostly organic fruits & veggies; integrated flax meal into my diet at least 3 times a week; had weekly acupuncture appointments; joined my parish choir and really did some spiritual "work." But as I stared at the stills and the short video, the only coherent thought I could form was that I hadn't done enough.

In the spirit of Hunter Thompson ("Call on God, but row away from the rocks"), I took stock of my life and recognized three colossal OOPS:
  1. When it comes to my body and my health I have way too often, and for way too long, chosen the path of least resistance: minimalism. If it's fast, easy and cheap, I will do it. If it requires a major paradigm and lifestyle shift ... I'll think about it.
  2. When I was first diagnosed, I went into a cathartic, but in the end, profoundly counter-productive Do-Mode. I remodeled my kitchen and my office, only contracting out the plumbing and electrical work. But I financed all this change with a home equity loan, Home Depot credit and the credit cards I had just paid off when I refinanced. Beyond $tupid. Because, of course, these are debts, not windfalls and I have backed myself into a painful corner of high payments and insultingly high interest rates. Casey Serin, I am not. I am in the process of paying it all off, and tightening my belt in standard and creative ways.
  3. I have subscribed to Green Guide to Go, Organic Gardening and Natural Home for years, and I am a long-standing Co-Op America member. But the extent to which I have really done my part to help heal the planet has been limited to that which is fast, easy and cheap, with an emphasis on easy and cheap.
So, I am making a change.

I suspect it will be full of fits and starts, as well as modest successes. This blog will chronicle my progress and my pitfalls as I try to live a healthier, more fiscally responsible and socially and environmentally sustainable life.