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Paul McCartney

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Come Together, to Save the Arctic

Posted: 07/23/2012 10:17 am

1968. That was a hell of a year. The people were on the streets, revolution was in the air, we released the White Album, and perhaps the most influential photograph of all time was taken by an astronaut called William Anders.

It was Christmas Eve. Anders and his mission commander Frank Borman had just become the only living beings since the dawn of time to orbit the moon. Then, through the tiny window of their Apollo 8 spacecraft their eyes fell upon something nobody had seen before, something so familiar and yet so alien, something breathtaking in its beauty and fragility. "Oh my God!" Borman cried. "Look at that picture over there! Here's the Earth coming up. Wow, is that pretty!"

"You got a color film, Jim?" Anders snapped back. "Hand me that roll of color quick, will you..." For a minute or so, two human beings in a tin can nearly 400,000 kilometers from home scrambled furiously to fix a roll of Kodak into their camera. Then Anders lifted it to the window and clicked the shutter and captured our delicate home planet rising slowly over the horizon of the moon. Earthrise. That single image made such an impact on the human psyche that it's credited with sparking the birth of the global environment movement -- with changing the very way we think about ourselves.

That was more than 40 years ago, the blink of an eye in the grand sweep of time, but something quite remarkable has happened since then. For at least 800,000 years the Arctic Ocean has been capped by a sheet of sea ice the size of a continent. But in the decades since that photo was taken, satellites have been measuring a steady melting of that white sheet. Much of it has now gone, and it seems likely that there'll be open water at the North Pole in the lifetimes of my kids. I might even see that moment for myself.

Think about it. Since Earthrise was taken we've been so busy warming our world that it now looks radically different from space. By digging up fossil fuels and burning our ancient forests we've put so much carbon into the atmosphere that today's astronauts are looking at a different planet. And here's something that just baffles me. As the ice retreats, the oil giants are moving in. Instead of seeing the melting as a grave warning to humanity, they're eyeing the previously inaccessible oil beneath the seabed at the top of the world. They're exploiting the disappearance of the ice to drill for the very same fuel that caused the melting in the first place. Fossil fuels have colonized every corner of our Earth, but at some time and in some place we need to say, "No more." I believe that time is now and that place is the Arctic.

That's why I've joined Greenpeace's campaign to create a legally protected sanctuary around the North Pole and a ban on oil drilling and industrial fishing in Arctic waters. My name will be among at least 2 million that Greenpeace is taking to the pole and planting on the seabed 4 kilometers beneath the ice. We're coming together to secure the Arctic for all life on Earth.

In just one month, more than a million of us have already signed up at www.savethearctic.org, but if you're not one of them there's still a chance to ensure your name is planted at the bottom of the ocean at the top of the world.

And if you, like me, are irresistibly drawn to the stunning Arctic wildlife, then you'll want to join the Arctic Rising online movement. You can choose to be one of five animals -- a polar bear, a snowy owl, an Arctic fox, a walrus or a narwhal. Once you've joined an animal clan you hunt in a pack for new supporters for the campaign and compete against the other animals to get new people involved. It's a kind of Earthrise, where we try to spark the dawn of a new mass movement, one that draws a line in the ice and says to the polluters, "You come no further." So now I've got to decide which animal I'm going to be.

Yeah, you've guessed it. I am the Walrus.

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1968. That was a hell of a year. The people were on the streets, revolution was in the air, we released the White Album, and perhaps the most influential photograph of all time was taken by an astrona...
1968. That was a hell of a year. The people were on the streets, revolution was in the air, we released the White Album, and perhaps the most influential photograph of all time was taken by an astrona...
 
 
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02:47 AM on 07/31/2012
Sir Paul,
I believe you are well intentioned but misguided. The Earth's natural capital (biocapacity) is now in a resource overdraft. Human overpopulation is driving massive resource depletion and species extinction. However, human reproduction is the sacred cow nobody is brave enough to discuss. The core issue is human reproduction entitlements and they must be abolished.
11:45 PM on 07/29/2012
Polar bear, snowy owl, arctic fox, a walrus, or a narwhal. You left out two: usurer vulture, and greedy corporatist swine. It is the latter two that are chiefly responsible for the lack of free, clean and abundant energy.
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wesinohio
Energetic Progess
11:39 PM on 07/29/2012
Common sense indicates that when the daily receipt of solar radiation is combined with the heat from 7 billion people, burning fossil fuels from eons ago, and who eat the fruit of recent solar radiation, and who turn all of that into heat, more heat than the daily receipt of solar radiation introduces, that there will be more heat in the troposphere because of human activity. To deny that seems unreasonable to me.
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Lady Cham
Wit...a terrible thing to waste.
11:38 PM on 07/29/2012
Want to help, Sir McCartney? There is an island in Alaska called Shishmaref. The Artic storms have been so violent they lost 10 feet of coastline in 2 hours time. No one will help them move their homes and time is running out. This tribe of Inpuqait Inuits are facing desolution of their tribe and their millenia old customs.

I have a plan to use shipping containers to build new homes [with running water unlike their current ones] to the community's new inland site near Tin Creek. We can build them better home than they had for a fraction of the $180m dollars it would take to move their current homes. Do you want to get some of your recording buddies together to help fund these efficient recycled homes for these people no one cares about, or would you rather "Let It Be"?
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Tom Langley
Successful Beer Guy
10:51 PM on 07/29/2012
Love the commitment Paul, but I gotta tell you. This conversation has to stop being about the planet and has to start being about the survival of the species. The planet, as it has for four billion years, will be fine. The relevant result of global warming, is that the human species will be eradicated from the face of the earth. Stop hugging trees and glaciers, this must become intimately personal for every living human being or the fight is lost. The petroleum burners control the horizontal, they control the vertical, and they control the mind control machine that is corporate marketing. They are also, very, very, good at it. Hugging trees and whales willb e pooh-poohed to the end of time. Killing the human species, on purpose, is murder. THAT's what this conversations about. MURDER.
10:46 PM on 07/29/2012
It was the Obama administration that approved the drilling in the Arctic that is starting. Took the oil giant 6 years to get the lease but it was finally approved under Obama.
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IsisCat
10:40 PM on 07/29/2012
Awesome! I'm in.
10:04 PM on 07/29/2012
Please do a article on being Vegetarian and why you are. We can make the world a better place.
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OC Surfer
A second is 30 nanoyears.
08:37 PM on 07/29/2012
Hey Paul
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Hikerguy22
This is your carbon footprint
08:00 PM on 07/29/2012
Thank you for the concern. Where is the rest of the music world? You can help. This is a world crisis that many cannot see. Spread the word.
07:53 PM on 07/29/2012
Amen Sir Paul! And just "Imagine" all the people sharing all the world.....
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aaazzz111
Ultra super gloat-free user
07:46 PM on 07/29/2012
This is less a circling of radical leftist wagons, then the first phase of attitude change, to what will be mandatory "Earth-side" rules, which all future space-dweller tourists will abide by, to visit the natural park/shrine called "Earth". Just like wearing clean slippers for a pristine cave exploration....

There are more resources in Space than on Earth, and the cost to reach and inhabit those regions will obviously, and eventually drop to a point to clear the human population out to the stars--for jobs, economic growth, and the migratory sub-jobs, that flourish along side that migrating growth. In less than a hundred years, the U.S. wild west was inundated with population migration results. Space is no less a wilderness draw embarkation...

"Earthrise" was the ceremonial initiation of that human course taken.
07:34 PM on 07/29/2012
Anything that can be done to replace fossil fuels as our energy source should be done. The "mining" and usage of gas, coal and oil are killing this planet. It won't happen overnight, but if we wait too long to make real gains in alternative energy it could be too late, heck, it may already be too late. For starters be aware of the enormous power and iron grip that fossil fuel companies have on the government (the officials YOU elected) and the bottomless pits of money they can put into lobbying and advertising. Don't be fooled by their PR campaigns that say they too are into alternative energy (baloney) and that they care because they have "clean coal" (malarkey, no such thing!) and "natural" gas. The Gulf of Mexico is still not cleaned up; the sea life is not pure as it was, ask any commercial fisherman willing to tell the truth. Everyone associated with big oil & gas is in it for the money, not the environment or the well being of people NOT in the business of fossil fuels. End their government subsidies, rally behind alternative and make it happen, before it's too late.
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GaiasChild
loves oregon & a green portfolio . . .
07:19 PM on 07/29/2012
Sir Paul you are so dang lovable I do think you can change the world.
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Conservative Roy
07:12 PM on 07/29/2012
Sir Paul, stick to music. You know nothing about carbon, and you know even less about politics.