Lazyness can be a virtue whereas I’m not so sure about Live Earth
Sunday, July 8th, 2007I want to start of this post with a big thank you to a certain odb for my birthday present of Terrapass offsets. I got the nifty little luggage tag in bright transluscent green plastic in the post yesterday (i hope the plastic is biodegradable, and i’m just going to credit TP by saying it probably is). It lists the amount of miles offset for my cross-continental travel. But best of all, I definitely felt a little less guilty for flying this upcoming August.
But speaking of guilty, I listened to a very interesting “Talk of the Nation” on NPR online this week on environmentalism. They had the Lazy Environmentalist guy speaking, defending his position on being a pro-active modern and yes, lazy environmentalist. I completely related to this guy for several reasons. First he is very frank about wanting to be a full fledged member of modern society — which involves all the luxuries and the nifty technology of our modern lives and he also thinks that for environmentalist to be truly effective and become a mass philosophy then it needs to step out of the “privation” mindset and into one of healthy creative solutions to respecting nature and fixing what we’ve done.
I suggest that if you are interested in being pro-active about the environment without turning all granola compost-loving no-car-ever hemp-only live-off-the-grid environmentalist (which is a valid way of doing things, just not my way) then this is a good source of information and motivation.
His basic premise is that we can all be environmentally conscious without having to “sacrifice” to the greater green. That notion of sacrifice, until very recently, was intimately intertwined with being an environmentalist — you couldn’t possibly be good, or do good, without giving up on a little or a lot of your traditional lifestyle. I would agree that that was definitely the case a few years ago, but with all the new technological resources now available and creative thinking, people can do a lot now without really having to alter some of their basic behaviors. I’m not talking about continuing to act in truly wasteful and destructive ways, those behaviors will never mesh with being ‘green’, but rather being able to continue with simple everyday acts that before would have to be altered or changed.
The Lazy environmentalist has a good illustration in his interview — he loves long languid hot showers, and is loath to give them up. These kind of showers, however, are particularly wasteful in water and energy. His solution: instead of taking shorter showers and depriving himself of something he enjoys, install a water recycler which takes his used shower water and uses it flush his toilet. This could save thousand of gallons a year in water.
And this brings me to my point about this new “lazy” generation of environmentalist: sure the impact might not be as great per person, but what this mindset drives is creativity and greater participation — i.e. its scalable. Looking for techy solutions to problems allows people to live (to a certain extent) a lifestyle they have been used by devising solutions that are both cheap, effective and possible scalable to lifestyles all across the globe.
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Live Earth:
I don’t quite know what to thing of this event. Maybe I should start off with saying I’ve never really understood the rationale behind any of these Live ***, except maybe the first one done for Africa ( I think) back in the 80s.
Live Earth, all the concerts, promotions etc seem like a very hollow attempt at trying to get people engaged in environmental action. I just don’t see how the message gets across in an effective way by getting a bunch of very rich, very wasteful (the wealthier you are, the bigger your carbon footprint) celebrities up on a stage singing songs about money, love, sex, and lots of other topics totally unrelated to the environment.
Either way, the cumulative negative environmental impact of such an event is pretty massive no matter how much they might “offset the concert”. They aren’t offsetting the carbon effect of people getting to and leaving the concert — not to mention all the waste these things usually produce. I think I’m being a little mean now, but you get my thinking.
Original post by mysustainablefuture