Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Work In Progress

Paul K. Haeder

It made sense to me two weeks ago to write an impassioned column on Earth Day. Hell, four months back, when I was first tasked with the challenge of co-organizing a killer of a celebration around Earth Day 2010, I envisioned huge media fanfare, tens of thousands of citizens coming out, all this teaching and learning happening, and unstoppable momentum by our city, county and business elite to go “green.”

One idea I proposed was to set up a softball (painted like Mother Earth) dunking machine (the receptacle being a huge green toilet filled with garbage, plastic, gunk) whereby any taker ($20 for three “earth” pitches going toward some environmental project) could dunk a global warming denier or delayer, global cooling aficionado or flat-Earther into the toxic muck.

I was hoping for the retrograde fear-mongering Tea Partiers and minutemen militia to show up at our Earth Day for a little physics-geology-natural history 101 remediation, off in some alleyway behind the Main Market.

Instead, a cacophony of decommissioned upright pianos destined for waste to “energy” incineration, a discordant polytonal tsunami of sound, came from the parking lot between the Rocket and the co-op, thanks to SFCC’s art department’s gurus.

It’s not that we have to look hard for anti-science, climate-change-debunking folk here in Spokane — the kind that shuffle up to a secessionist meeting with Butch Otter, guv of Idaho, spewing paranoia and illogic. You know, the kind who smirk at the ice flow experts cataloguing huge recession of ice at both poles and hundreds of glaciers; who scoff at oceanographers who know what acidification of oceans does to marine and terrestrial ecosystems; and who attack experts like UW’s Peter Ward for penning such books as Under a Green Sky, which foretells a big, bad scenario coming from all that methane and CO2 we’re spewing, a 100 times more than during the Permian volcanic age 250 million years past.

Here’s what Spokane did this Earth Day — we closed down Main Street for 14 hours; we got six dozen groups representing a diverse stream of environmental and social justice concerns answering questions and putting up hands-on Earth Day exhibits; music was performed inside and outside by musicians who jammed for a pittance; there was the heralding in of the Children of the Sun Saturday with kids dressed up and drumming loudly during the Procession of the Species; and parents and singles, along with juniors, made blue bird houses (300 of them, donated by Kohl’s).

There were literally hundreds of Earth ideas popping up around Main, and the food was good, the dancing heartfelt, and the message clear: Spokane has ecological and environmental workers, and they aren’t going away.

It was fitting that both Richard Rush and Todd Mielke, of the city and county, respectively, read Earth Day/Earth Week proclamations: two very diametrically opposed politicians joining with our Earth Team to read some pretty gutsy stuff about preserving the environment, setting stronger transportation challenges, lowering carbon footprints, protecting water and developing better smart city-New Urbanism projects throughout the county. Food, air, water, people and animals were embedded in those proclamations.

While listening to one citizen pining in at the County Commissioners’ meeting, I knew then that Earth Day is about empowerment and action, not about what the media does or does not do in its false balancing of the news. One fellow spoke to Commissioner Mark Richard and Mielke about how the Clean Air Advisory Board should be disbanded because, gulp, the Board has implemented some burn ban restrictions in Spokane County.

Yes, I return to the press’s failure by being absent at most Earth Days, that is, unless a cadre of loud-mouthed, gun-toting flailing folk come out and start burning Al Gore in effigy or chopping up a stuffed polar bear.

The entire 40 years of my work in journalism, education, activism and the environment, all over the globe, came to a crystallized head at that county meeting as I accepted the proclamation for thousands of dedicated Earth scouts. Mr. Richard had something in his craw as he listened to the progressive words of the document.

He wanted it made clear that he supports transportation alternatives and other initiatives that can be tracked economically, but he threw in the caveat that he does not buy into global warming science.

I informed him of the May 4 talk at Spokane Community College, where a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration scientist could take him through the science of how humans’ role in ocean acidification is more than verifiable. I encouraged Richard to head out to another climate change-themed talk, this one by Diet for a Hot Planet’s Anna Lappe. Finally, I suggested that he consult the Post Carbon Institute’s working group helping communities re-code so they can adapt to global warming changes.

It was at that moment when I knew my work on save-the-whale and stop-coral-reef-dredging-bycruise-ship-anchors campaigns wasn’t done.

The media, politicians and business community are the last to really understand why we have Earth Day.

Dr. Richard Feely of NOAA and the Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory will speak on ocean acidification at 7 pm, Tuesday, May 4, at SCC’s Lair Auditorium, Building 6.

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Also By Paul K. Haeder

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I found myself laughing as I read about the softball dunking machine where non believers were thrown into not a water filled basin but instead, basically a trash can of sorts. Throw them into what they are creating and what they are denying to the blame.




Also quite humerous was the fact that someone can make a comment about how he agrees with going green such as using alternative transportation methods only to them turn around and say  he is a non believing in the global warming crisis. If it does not exist, why would he go green? Why would alternative transportation methods be available if there were no reason for them? In short, he is the very definition of the word hypocrite.




Would be interesting to find out if he actually does attend the Ocean acidfication event at SCC and if he still believes it to be a heap of lies.

Apr 29, 2010 | Reply to this comment

 

I found myself laughing as I read about the softball dunking machine where non believers were thrown into not a water filled basin but instead, basically a trash can of sorts. Throw them into what they are creating and what they are denying to the blame.


Also quite humorous was the fact that someone can make a comment about how he agrees with going green (Commissioner Richard) such as using alternative transportation methods only to then turn around and say he is a non-believer in the global warming crisis. If it does not exist, why would he go green? Why would alternative transportation methods be available if there were no reason for them? In short, he is the very definition of the word hypocrite.


It would be interesting to find out if he actually does attend the Ocean acidification event at SCC and if he still believes it to be a heap of lies.


May 06, 2010

 




       I find it funny that some people don’t believe in global warming when there are so much facts and studies proving that it does exist. They just don’t want to believe that they are the ones destroying the world. The dunk tank idea was funny they should of approved it, but $20 seemed a bit much. The press should have been there, but they probably thought it wasn’t something everyone wants to know about. Yeah, like someone failing to rob a bank and getting arrested is more interesting. I wish I could have been there for the Earth Day celebration, it sounded like a fun time. I believe the media, politicians and business community are the last to understand Earth Day because they don’t want to, but when it becomes a public matter they are forced to, probably so they don’t look bad to the public.




May 01, 2010 | Reply to this comment

 

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That part in the beginning about the dunk tank was awesome; it may make some of the non-believer and naysayers re-think things - or not. There is a myriad of evidence to support the fact that we as a species are just plain screwing things up but for some reason some people just don’t want to believe or hear it. I really don’t understand how people can disregard logic and rationality. They can’t see what is before their very eyes. This makes me sad for the world.




 




Mark Richard – what a hypocrite. He’s just trying to appease voters and citizens and not ruffle too many feathers even though that’s what needs to happen from time to time.




May 01, 2010 | Reply to this comment

 

jj

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I was disappointed that Earth Day Spokane wasn´t bigger.  It´s sad to think that we´ll shut down the streets of downtown for a parade but not Earth Day.  As a participant this year it was really exciting to see so many people trying to make a conscious effort in "going green".  From reading this article I cannot believe how ignorant and unaware some of our politicians are.  To not believe in global warming?  That is part of the reason of how we got this bad in the first place, ignorance.  It´s a bit nauseating to think that there are so many people out there still non-believers.  I hope to play a more active role in the coming years.  I am just being shaped and learning about the environment seems to be empowering for me.  If more people like Haeder can come together for one cause and convey emotion, urgency, and seriousness, then I think Spokane can be well on its way for "greener" efforts.




May 03, 2010 | Reply to this comment

 

I am a new convert, only about 5 years old, in the green movement.  Daily I think about what kind of impact am I making on my planet asking myself “what does this affect outside of me?”  I have started taking the bus everywhere; it has tripled my commute time and forced me to become better at time management, but I have more time to study my homework, I save at least $100 per month on fuel and all the other toxic fluids my car uses, I pay less on my insurance premiums because I have reduced the annual mileage I drive, and I know that my decision today and every day that I ride the bus is helping to ensure my future children and grandchildren will still have air that is breathable.  I still make mistakes and poor decisions but I am growing in the “green” way and am deeply appreciative of the help that events like Earth Day give me by showing new ideas and simple steps that can be done every day and the attention that is being drawn to protecting our future.  We each make an impact no matter how small we think it is.  Make your impact a step in the right direction.

May 03, 2010 | Reply to this comment

 

 
 
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