Eco exhibits, photos, furniture, etc.

photo

photo by Lyndon Douglas via the Barbican

1) Londoners: Visit the art exhibit Radical Nature at the Barbican through October 18 and/or read about it here. The Barbican is also hosting other events about nature.

2) Grist article about climate change art

3) Take a slideshow tour of eco-ish museums

4) View some stunning photographs of birds in the wild

Puffin. Photo from telegraph.co.uk

Puffin, Northumberland, UK. Photo from telegraph.co.uk

5) New York: Visit the Design for a Living World exhibit at Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum through January 4, 2010. Read a blog post about it at supereco.

6) Play to Stop – Europe for Climate is a collaboration between MTV and EU Climate Action to get the “young’uns” to give a damn. Because I’m not in the mood to tell you about it, I’ll let someone else do it:

The campaign will involve three concerts, TV spots, webcasts and games, and editorial content about the battle against climate change.

The concerts will be connected with major events related to climate change. The first concert, by Moby, will be in Stockholm and will be linked to World Water Week. The second and third concerts (entertainers yet to be announced) will be in Budapest linked to Mobility Week and in Copenhagen linked to the Climate Conference.

Other famous celebrities involved in the campaign will be the Bulgarian tennis player Magdalena Maleeva, Danish singer Anna David, Italian TV star Paola Maugeri, Polish entertainer Michal Pirog, and Romanian climate activist Serban Miron Copot.

So you go, make an account, and watch videos and so on. There is a knowledge test and games you can play to go to the concerts. This is open to people 18 years old+ in Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Sweden and the United Kingdom.

Read more about it at PlanetSave.

7) See NASA’s sexy, first-ever images of “night-shining” clouds possibly linked to global warming. They were captured by the AIM, or Aeronomy of Ice in the Mesosphere, satellite at different dates.

8 ) Holy Jezeus it’s an office atop a tree! And it is gorrrgeous.

photo by inhabitat

photo by inhabitat

9) Check out photos of living, growing furniture. ‘Nuff said.

10) Get crafty with ideas to make throw pillows, homemade lava lamps, and more by reusing stuff you already have.

Activism NOW – #2 – Climate

photo borrowed from yourgreenfriend.com

image borrowed from yourgreenfriend.com

Here are 10 things you can do today:

1) Sign up to be a climate precinct captain (this is mostly in the U.S., although you can participate from anywhere)

By signing up you can become part of this collaborative web platform by 1Sky, the Energy Action Coalition / Power Shift 2009, an online community and find likeminded people in your area to join or form a local community and plan local events (whatever “local” means to you). Then, you can help

hold our elected officials accountable for creating a Power Shift and passing bold, federal climate legislation in 2009

You can do this by signing this petition, organizing a rally, joining one, organizing fundraisers, helping fund the movement, and other things, but mostly—if you want—doing hands-on stuff. Which can be particularly exciting when naked:

1Sky Solutions also has a “training video” (don’t worry: it’s 2 minutes long!) on its home page so you can learn about the movement and a forum for discussions.

Also, nationwide beach parties for clean energy begin on August 10. Hell yes. You can join others or sign up to start your own. Amazing.

Check out the Energy Action Coalition and Power Shift 2009’s photos and videos and add them on Twitter and Facebook. Also, read their blogs! Sweet.

2) Download the thorough Citizen’s Guide to Climate Policy to learn tons about what makes good climate policy and tons of other important information. You can also read an article about the document at Grist here.

3) The geeks and economists among us might also be interested in reading Climate economics 101 and policy activism.

4) Remember yesterday’s post about pushing for health care reform to get to the issue of climate policy faster? Here’s an article about this issue.

5) Miami: Find a whole bunch of awesome events to attend and participate in at Greener Miami.

6) TreeHugger article: Why the U.S. doesn’t get climate change – a poll tells us that

Americans find climate change to be the lowest priority out of any country in the entire world

7) Washington, D.C.: Join the Climate Action Factory. Read the blog, watch the video, receive alerts, check out photos, follow them on Twitter, contribute time/energy/materials/space, etc.

8 ) Europe: Join the Climate Action Factory. Read the blog, watch the video, receive alerts, check out photos, follow them on Twitter, contribute time/energy/materials/space, etc.

9) Become an Environmental Crime Fighter! The EPA needs you. If you live in the U.S., you can call the EPA’s tips and complaints line or inform them online:

It was this kind of tip that led to the capture earlier this month of Larkin Baggett, a Utah man who pleaded guilty to seven environmental and assault charges after he pointed a loaded rifle at Florida authorities in March.

10) This is just a comic you can read for fun!

comic by toothpastefordinner.com

comic by toothpastefordinner.com

People don’t care about global warming? Change your rhetoric

Message from Tuvalu

Message from Tuvalu

Have you asked yourself this—why people don’t care?

I  have.

Most often, I can only think that it is an issue of greed, selfishness, ignorance or—especially—outright denial (and greed).

We know that people in the South Pacific, such as the islands of Tuvalu, and other low-lying areas are living on land that is sinking (flooding really). Imagine sea water coming up to your knees, your hips…

Food can no longer grow, water is polluted, sewage systems are screwed, hygiene hazards are rampant, and ultimately people must be evacuated lest they die by drowning or other troubles. Elsewhere, droughts turn rich pasture turns into dead, barren land.

Already, 300,000 die yearly due to global warming (the vast majority of whom are women, by the way).

It is expected that millions of refugees will need places to go as global warming advances and water takes over the areas of Bangladesh, Calcutta, New York, Florida, and on and on.

So, this is enough to make people care, right? To get a Nalgene bottle and refill it daily instead of wasting myriad resources on purchasing pricy bottled water, to recycle instead of tossing cans in the garbage, to appreciate things more and be less wasteful, to become conscientious.

You’d think so.

So why isn’t it?

Language

Some people think it’s all in the language. The New York Times article claims that environmentalists worry the term “global warming” repels conservatives and others because they associate it with hippies and cutting spending.

The firm conducting the study suggested discussing “our deteriorating atmosphere” to make it, um, more universally relevant. I know, pathetic.

Women, often in charge of fetching water, must walk increasingly farther to reach it due to droughts.

Drop discussions of carbon dioxide and bring up “moving away from the dirty fuels of the past.” Don’t confuse people with cap and trade; use terms like “cap and cash back” or “pollution reduction refund.”

Whatever. Language? If this is truly the case, it’s so funny I forgot to laugh—and chose to ram my head into the wall instead.

“We know why it’s lowest. When someone thinks of global warming, they think of a politicized, polarized argument. When you say ‘global warming,’ a certain group of Americans think that’s a code word for progressive liberals, gay marriage and other such issues.” – ecoAmerica

Oh no! Liberals!

Plus, screw global warming—it will only affect them.

Did I mention “ram my head into the wall”?

So we can’t say global warming, energy efficiency or the environment. Are you kidding me? Ridiculous.

Listen, if your problem is that anything that sounds liberal spooks you, you’ve got more problems than one—particularly when the issue at hand is as imminent as global warming. Swallow and digest it.

Even the rich in first-world countries cannot escape climate change

Even the rich in first-world countries cannot escape climate change

Make it personal

Perhaps (and this is my opinion) the point is making the issue clearly and directly relevant to everyone.

Whether it’s threatening that your favorite Caribbean hotel where you spend your ritzy summers will shut down due to flooding or that your beloved ski resort will shut down due to a lack of snow, that is, no matter what kind of selfish jerk you are, the answer lies in making the issue relevant to you.

It makes sense. Not everyone is the underdog type who cares about others because of justice. Most people need to be directly affected by something to even blink. And it really seems that it is most people who need to be shaken up out of their catatonic state.

Droughts also mean less food - borrowed from boston.com

Droughts also mean less food - borrowed from boston.com

Changes to make to drive others to change

(FYI: My thoughts are in parentheses.)

Instead of global warming, try climate change (hey, it wasn’t my idea).

Substitute energy efficiency with the purportedly more positive saving money for a more prosperous future.

Drop the environment in favor of the air we breathe, the water our children drink—which right here is an example of making the situation directly relevant to people. Put them in the picture.

Remember to speak in TALKING POINTS aspirational language about shared American ideals, like freedom, prosperity, independence and self-sufficiency while avoiding jargon and details about policy, science, economics or technology – NYT

Switch environmentalists with conservationists (ooh, that feels sleazy).

Forget scientific arguments and stress common sense. (Listen, you need both.)

Use moral arguments—people need to feel guilty to get off their asses, it’s true.

A modest example:

As a conservationist, I urge you to consider saving money for a more prosperous future by turning off the tap when you brush your teeth to conserve water, leaving more for our children and their children to drink. It is our responsibility as Americans/Germans/Brazilians/etc. Think of your family and your friends. Climate change is something we can all collaborate to control through simple common sense.

Yeah, but let me tell you why I don’t like it. Because people should already be concerned and on the go. Because “climate change” sounds less severe than “global warming” (which, already, doesn’t sound critical enough). Because our priorities should lie on mitigating global warming instead of changing our rhetoric to make asshats care.

FYI, here’s a related article I just found while browsing for pictures:  Eco-semantics

Here you go. Now go call yourself a conservationist.