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Carol Pierson Holding

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Could Summer's Devastation Provoke Environmental Action?

Posted: 07/18/2012 6:00 pm

If you've been reading the news this hot summer, you know that the will to combat climate change appears to be dead. The United Nations conference Rio 20+ was by all accounts a dismal failure. Neither presidential candidate has uttered a word about the environment except for Romney blasting the EPA. Climate change language is being expunged from state legislatures; the issue is rarely raised in the U.S. Congress, except by those who insist the whole thing is a hoax.

Our institutions have given up. And the last best hope, Bill McKibben's grass roots organization 350.org, opted out of its sparklingly vivid prank to time the melting of an ice sculpture reading "HOAX," out of deference to the deaths in states with extreme heat.

Snarky doesn't cut it with the environment.

Where do we turn now?

Here's an idea from Michelle Nunn, CEO of the volunteer organization Points of Light presented to the Chautauqua Institution last week on the theme "Inspire. Commit. Act." Nunn started with the premise that we are wired to help others, that compassion combined with co-operation has enabled us to become the dominant species. Not strength or speed. Not our intellect. Our empathy and ability is our most powerful weapon.

And empathy is hard-wired in connections to our vagus nerve. Present in babies from birth, before any socialization takes place.

Nunn went on to say the course of human history is shaped by people who act on their empathetic impulses. When those impulses are unleashed, progress happens. Democracy is founded on empathy for others. Our society has advanced through movements to increase equality, from the abolitionist movement, to the women's movement, to civil rights and gay rights... and now planetary rights.

If as Nunn says, the enduring heroes of our nation are the citizens who called upon us to align our reality with our ideals, and if she thinks this is true of "planetary rights" too, we can see hope for our environmental future.

Like previous social justice movements, the environmental or "planetary" movement must be fought on all planes. But what's missing for me is sustained anger around environmental justice.

The civil rights protests gave Lyndon Johnson the support for civil rights laws and enforcement. Occupy protests got the banks to roll back fees and the justice department to take financial corruption seriously. The few environmental protests have had results: Hands Around the White House had immediate positive effects in giving Obama the support to reverse halting the Keystone Pipeline.

Fighting for social justice is what we do best. As Nunn puts it, "Our democracy is based on sacrifice for each other. The U.S. marches towards egalitarianism and that single force drives us to live up to our ideals."

Maybe this summer of devastation -- drought along the Mississippi, severe heat across the Midwest and fires in Colorado -- can awaken citizens to the inequities of climate change. Who hasn't seen the photos that woke us to the inequity in civil rights -- not just the riots, but the conditions under which many people of color had to live?

Who hasn't seen photos of the gross inequity brought about by climate change over this summer? Environmental injustice didn't happen here in the Pacific Northwest, but we all hurt watching it unfold on TV. It's not the impressive intellect of Al Gore's scientists or the facts that tell us how bad the ultimate outcomes might be. It's the sight of human suffering that galvanizes citizens to action.

 
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If you've been reading the news this hot summer, you know that the will to combat climate change appears to be dead. The United Nations conference Rio 20+ was by all accounts a dismal failure. Neither...
If you've been reading the news this hot summer, you know that the will to combat climate change appears to be dead. The United Nations conference Rio 20+ was by all accounts a dismal failure. Neither...
 
 
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04:39 AM on 07/20/2012
What if a dry Midwest is the new "normal"? If we lose the Midwest Breadbasket, and then in a few hundred years lose California's Central Valley to rising ocean levels, we will go from a food exporter to a food importer.
12:22 PM on 07/19/2012
While I agree with you that most persons have a sence of social justice, the bad effect on climate is being caused by all of us. We are all consumers of all the stuff that adds more CO2 to the atmosphere, and while many of us try to reduce our carbon footprint, its nearly impossible to eliminate it entirely. The social justice that the writer speaks about comes from recognising that others are being treated poorly and responding to this. Sadly we are educated to see the planet as something abstract, that can be used for our enjoyment/benifit etc. It is therefore very difficult to persuade people that there is a problem. My weatherman on tv last night went to great lenghts to explain all of this heat as a La Nina event. We need more people like Bill McKibben and 350.org to counteract all this propoganda. And don't forget that those Abolisionists in the Nineteenth Century had to counter all that ingrained stuff such as "Black people are better off as slaves" or "the economy will collapse without free labor". There is hope for us still!
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Carol Pierson Holding
01:01 PM on 07/19/2012
Well said! As Bill McKibben and others believe, the only way to stem the crisis will be to shut down the fossil fuel industry. And this may be best accomplished by using the courts to force financial compensation to those hurt by climate change. The oil and gas business could become so unprofitable they'd be forced to turn to alternative fuels.
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BeerLover
Carpe Diem!
09:25 AM on 07/19/2012
One can only hope.....but with America's instant amnesia about the past.... I'm doubtful.

I am ready to see mass deaths of animals and people.... ANYTHING..... that will open at least some eyes to the destruction of our planet.
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artleads
Let's have a national retreat.
11:18 AM on 07/19/2012
The first line seems true. But die-offs are to be dreaded more than anything. There will continue to be extraordinary recurring hardships, though, and it will be hard to take our minds off them. Yes, it's going to take some kind of miracle...

So we keep trying private and collective things. There is spiritual power in this if we are aware of what we're doing. If more and more people do this, we will reach a critical mass that (through spiritual power) will push the government to change. So, not to worry (too much). Steady as she goes. We just keep doing what we can. There is nothing more important than that.
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MS Ind
My micro-bio was empty.
11:42 AM on 07/19/2012
Instant amnesia? Like the current amnesia concerning last year where the Mississippi reached near historic heights and many area in the northwest receive record snowfall?

One year does not make a pattern.
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ILoveFiction
That's unbelievable!
09:33 PM on 07/18/2012
We're mad and we're not going to take it any more.

And whew it's hot in here.

By the way, do you have a good sangria recipe? I must do something to cool off.