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Environment

The Solution to Global Warming Is Us

By Julia Whitty, Mother Jones. Posted December 15, 2006.


It is time to shift from personal denial to personal responsibility when it comes to climate change.
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This piece is adapted from a longer article in the current issue of Mother Jones.

What if 12 asteroids were on collision courses with earth? What if we could alter their trajectories and save our planet by the cumulative effect of our individual efforts? What if science and history proved that we were fully capable of such heroism? What would it take to get us started?

John Schellnhuber, distinguished science advisor at the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research in the United Kingdom, has identified 12 global warming tipping points, such as the deforestation of the Amazon rainforest or the melting of the west Antarctic ice sheet. Any of these, if triggered, will likely initiate sudden changes across the planet, as cataclysmic as any asteroid strike. So what will it take to trigger what we might call the 13th tipping point, the shift from personal denial to personal responsibility? What will tip us toward addressing global warming with the urgency it deserves, as the mother of all threats to homeland security?

A 2005 study on Americans' perceptions of global warming found that most are moderately concerned, but 68 percent believe the greatest threats are to people far away or to nonhuman nature -- a dangerous and delusional misperception. Only 13 percent perceive risk to themselves, their families or their communities.

Many secretly perceive global warming to be an insoluble problem and respond by circling the family wagons and turning inward. Yet science shows that human beings are born with powerful tools for solving this quandary. We have the genetic smarts and the cultural smarts. We have the technological know-how. We even have the inclination.

The truth is we can change ourselves with breathtaking speed, sculpting even "immutable" human nature. Forty years ago many believed human nature mandated that blacks and whites live in segregation; 30 years ago human nature divided men and women into separate economies; 20 years ago human nature prevented us from defusing a global nuclear standoff, but in 1987 the U.S. and Soviet Union signed the INF agreement. Nowadays we blame human nature for the insolvable hazards of global warming.

Research out of the Max Planck Institute in Germany suggests how we might help ourselves evolve. We behave as better environmental citizens when educated about the science of global warming, and when our individual actions are visible to those around us -- a phenomenon known as "social facilitation." Perhaps if we're vigorously informed of how global warming endangers our neighborhoods, we'll individually forego the McMansions and the Hummers and make other sustainable choices. Anything less compromises our children's future.

Until then, our denial facilitates "social loafing": the tendency of individuals to slack when work is shared and individual performance is not assessed. There's no better example than the U.S. Congress, where members cloak their lethargy regarding global warming behind the stultifying inactivity of their fellows. And why not? After all, who's watching?

Not the media, which habitually squelch new science stories on global warming by rationalizing that we've heard that before , though they would never ignore another round of Middle East bloodletting. The growing body of scientific knowledge on climate change gains heft and power as it accumulates, but the public rarely hears about it, reinforcing our loafing.

Scientists don't help when they react to the terrifying dimensions of public ignorance by sheltering inside hallowed halls. At a recent meeting of the Society for Conservation Biology, 70 percent of members argued in favor of advocating real solutions to environmental problems directly to lethargic policymakers and the press. Yet most researchers remain sequestered at a time when we need their knowledge and expertise like never before.

The nature of tipping points is that they happen dizzyingly fast. The good news is that history proves we're capable of keeping up. Social scientists once believed it would take decades of government pressure and education for Americans to choose smaller families, since the desire to procreate is an absolute part of the human animal, or so they thought. Yet population growth radically declined over only three years in the 1970s -- one woman at a time -- without an ounce of government involvement.

Political leaders can help. But even without them we can help ourselves. Whether or not Marie Antoinette actually said, "Let them eat cake," she inspired change that reverberated far beyond Europe. Likewise, when George W. Bush says we can't act on global warming until we "fully understand the nature of the problem," we can use his callous disregard as a rallying cry.

The truth is, humans can change, and change fast. Our hallmark is adaptability. Long ago, we looked out from the trees and saw the savannas. Beyond the savannas we glimpsed further frontiers. History proves that when we behold a better world, we move toward it -- one person at a time -- leaving behind what no longer works. We know what to do. We know how to do it. We know the timeline. We are our own tipping point.

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See more stories tagged with: global warming, climate change

Julia Whitty is a contributing writer for Mother Jones and the author of the forthcoming book The Fragile Edge: Diving and Other Adventures in the South Pacific.

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The weather sure seems nice in neverneverland...
Posted by: timebomb734 on Dec 15, 2006 12:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While the aspirations of this article are noble, the author offers very little evidence that americans are leaning toward a new attitude about global warming, other than to compare it to a bunch of unrelated historical events. The truth is, our culture refuses to recognize the individual level of global responsibility. People instead prefer to shift blame to policy makers and government. Americans CAN make a major difference, but won't because they refuse to see their implicitcy in their own demise. Some paraphrased excerpts from the "joe six-packs" I know...i'm from wisconsin:
"Man, its 45 degrees out here in the middle of december. Global warming isn't that bad man!"
"I need this truck to haul shit" ...from an individual who doesn't haul anything except his ass to the nearest drunk female.
"Hey, you know what? I do what I can, and no one can say that I do more damage than the next guy"
Tell me how to change their minds because I'd really like to know how; I've been trying for years.

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It' Too Late Baby, It's Just Too Late.
Posted by: edith on Dec 15, 2006 12:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Perhaps if we're vigorously informed of how global warming endangers our neighborhoods, we'll individually forego the McMansions and the Hummers and make other sustainable choices. Anything less compromises our children's future."

In the US, any "takings" of property by the government triggers a right to compensation under the Fifth Amendment. Who is going to come up with the money to purchase and then demolish all those Hummers and McMansions? Whose going to tell the farmers that they can't sell the land to developers to build townhouses where sheep & cattle grazed and you could see sunsets at the tops of rolling hills as you drove along a winding road through unspoiled countryside?

Around major cities are exurbs; cities of their own right that spawl around and along interstate highways jammed to capacity with automobiles. Jobs are in suburbs, and universities rush to build or rent buildings in office parks to provide branches of established institutes of learning in the steel, glass and concrete malls and office parks where most Americans shop and work today.

The McMansions are built, the traffic patterns established. The Feds are in huge deficit, and election aside, there is no evidence Americans are in any mood to pay higher taxes to remigrate to the cities. Tens of millions have already moved in the past 30 years from farms and cities to suburbs. We have an unenforced immigration policy so millions more have moved to new suburban exurb cities.

Again I ask; who will pay these people for their homes and places of employment. Is a "freeze" on new building and on purchases of high mileage vehicles what the author wants?

It's too late. The public is addicted to large homes, suvs, and suburban opportunities. Tell middle class blacks and hispanics they have to live in the old neighborhood because they are in "smart growth" areas!

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"Personal responsibility"? What is this, a rightwing site?
Posted by: superfeduphoosier on Dec 15, 2006 4:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Out here in Indiana, public transportation is hard to come by. If I miss a bus, I would have to wait one hour just to catch the next one and if the bus don't come to the stop on time, it just rolls on over to the next. Keep blaming people but unless you change the system which forces waste and makes conservation difficult all too often, you're just condescending and acting like another fucked up nanny.

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And what the hell is all that praise for Marie Antoinette about ?!?!?
Posted by: superfeduphoosier on Dec 15, 2006 4:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I can see an Exxon CEO posting this kind of shit but Alternet? What's the matter with Alternet ?!?!?

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» It was a literary reference Posted by: Bic Pentameter
Smaller Families?
Posted by: clutenbacher on Dec 15, 2006 4:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm no statistician, but wasn't Roe V. Wade an event of 1973? The claim that there was no government involvement in the smaller families of the 1970s seems to ignore the huge impact that legalized abortion had in women being able to make choices about their bodies and their families.

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» RE: Smaller Families? Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
That's it, I'm installing the scrubbers
Posted by: pastora on Dec 15, 2006 5:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not only that, next time I put out a line of cars they're going to be fuel efficient. From now on all my factories will be environmentally friendly. Just for good measure I'm working on those fossil fuel alternatives. I know I can do it. I have the power. For good measure, I'll make sure all the news I broadcast is accurate and not controlled by corporate media interests. I feel reborn.

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Marie Antoinette Said "Let Them Eat Cake" and Many Alternet Posters Say . . .
Posted by: Douglas on Dec 15, 2006 5:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
. . . "Let us keep our cars and trucks and hummers and petroleum based lifestyle and we will use biofuel as our source of energy instead of gasoline." Such a statement, like Marie Antoinette's statement, shows a total misunderstanding of the problem, and one that denies its essential existence. As Bradford Travis says, "there is not enough land in the entire Mississippi River Valley to meet our transportation needs. And then where would we get food from?" (Alternet 12/2/06). Stopping global warming is about facing facts, not indulging in denial and wishful thinking!!!

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» How Pedantic! Posted by: Douglas
Bad analogy
Posted by: Julia Cat on Dec 15, 2006 6:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Experts may have dismissed the idea that people would want few children, but that just shows they didn't know history. In US, family size had been declining since 1800. The 1950s, when family size increased, were an anomaly. To have sex without procreation is something people have wanted for centuries!
Unfortunately, living large is also something people have wanted for centuries. To stop global warming would require many many changes in the way we live that most americans, I'm guessing, will not enjoy, whether it's driving slower and in smaller cars, flying less often, forgoing air conditioning, or living in city apartments rather than sprawling suburban houses. Only govt can organize the shift toward less energy and resource consumption, through regulation and taxation and so on. I'm not optimistic about that happening in time.

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» RE: Bad analogy Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
Happy Talk
Posted by: KeepsonTickn on Dec 15, 2006 6:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
People have been saying this since the 70's, and one in a thousand have been seriously and actively trying to conserve. It will take changes in the laws worldwide, and strict enforcement of those laws, along with full media support to make a dent in attitudes on global warming. The Chinese have successfully attacked a problem of a similar scope (but without the problem of dealing with errant governments) with their "One child per family" laws.

We will do it, someday, somehow. It willl be too late, and likely will be very ugly, unless governments, particularly the U.S. government can be brought to make the tough and sustained choices necessary to bring it in check.

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Stop whining and start re-designing your life
Posted by: Taurus on Dec 15, 2006 6:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let's face it, nothing will come from this White House, so while we wait for an environmentally savvy and concerned administration, there's lots to do to reduce your energy footprint. Read Ravaging Tide to see how one man inspired a whole community to do so. Invite doubtful friends to watch An Inconvenient Truth with you; watch it with your family. Get yourself moving, rather than staying stuck in despair. Go out and switch all your light bulbs to compact flourescents--that makes a huge difference. If you don't have a hybrid, you must buy or lease one. Two steps that will change your world. Change has to start someplace--why not with you?

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The buck stops here . . .
Posted by: mysticalrae on Dec 15, 2006 6:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Back in the early 1970's, I made an extensive search for affordable (to a moderate income family) solar provisions for our home here in the Midwest. I found that it was an impossibility, to do so would put me in danger of bankruptcy. My family then took on the responsibility of finding ways that were available to us to practice conservation in any form. My children are grown now, and each hold the belief that any conservation efforts on their part is a gift back to our home, Mother Earth. We make sure the heat is turned down, buy cars that use less gasoline, turn off unneeded lights, grow our own food to the best of our abilities. We are focused on keeping our lives as simple as possible, and take pleasure in doing so.
There is power in doing your own part, however small it may seem to be, even if it goes unnoticed. Seek out ways to improve your own contributions, and then do what you can. If the policies of certain corporations don't agree with your life view, then don't buy their products and services. If government policies don't agree with your life view, don't support the politicians who are supporting them. Talk to your children, friends and neighbors about doing the same.Focus your time and energy on what you CAN do, not on what you CAN'T. This is the way of lasting change.

Blessings for a peaceful and prosperous New Year!

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» I'll second that! Posted by: Cathyc
» RE: The buck stops here . . . Posted by: badkitty
Revolution is the answer -What is the question?
Posted by: WitchyNy on Dec 15, 2006 7:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This government does not WANT change. They are oil men.
That is how they think, that is what they know. Oil and War.

Yes, we can create change in our own lives. Plant a garden. Recycle, shop at second hand stores, become a vegetarian.
Buy better light bulbs.
All that is good, but it is not enough.

Driving smaller cars is for sure not enough. We need to give up cars. People need to work at home, and use public transportation- We need to build smaller houses and smaller (energy consuming) lives.

But Americans are spoiled, drunk on beer and wine and power and energy, and useless jobs that are more for social interaction and feeding the system than actually doing any real work.

And it seems hopeless to me when I leave my horse and small house in the country to visit the nearest city and see it full of cars and huge buildings with lights on all night long.

We need to change the entire system, of our government and the way we live. We need a revolution.

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Revolution is the answer -What is the question?
Posted by: WitchyNy on Dec 15, 2006 7:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This government does not WANT change. They are oil men.
That is how they think, that is what they know. Oil and War.

Yes, we can create change in our own lives. Plant a garden. Recycle, shop at second hand stores, become a vegetarian.
Buy better light bulbs.
All that is good, but it is not enough.

Driving smaller cars is for sure not enough. We need to give up cars. People need to work at home, and use public transportation- We need to build smaller houses and smaller (energy consuming) lives.

But Americans are spoiled, drunk on beer and wine and power and energy, and useless jobs that are more for social interaction and feeding the system than actually doing any real work.

And it seems hopeless to me when I leave my horse and small house in the country to visit the nearest city and see it full of cars and huge buildings with lights on all night long.

We need to change the entire system, of our government and the way we live. We need a revolution.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Revolution is the answer -What is the question?
Posted by: WitchyNy on Dec 15, 2006 7:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This government does not WANT change. They are oil men.
That is how they think, that is what they know. Oil and War.

Yes, we can create change in our own lives. Plant a garden. Recycle, shop at second hand stores, become a vegetarian.
Buy better light bulbs.
All that is good, but it is not enough.

Driving smaller cars is for sure not enough. We need to give up cars. People need to work at home, and use public transportation- We need to build smaller houses and smaller (energy consuming) lives.

But Americans are spoiled, drunk on beer and wine and power and energy, and useless jobs that are more for social interaction and feeding the system than actually doing any real work.

And it seems hopeless to me when I leave my horse and small house in the country to visit the nearest city and see it full of cars and huge buildings with lights on all night long.

We need to change the entire system, of our government and the way we live. We need a revolution.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Revolution is the answer -What is the question?
Posted by: WitchyNy on Dec 15, 2006 7:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This government does not WANT change. They are oil men.
That is how they think, that is what they know. Oil and War.

Yes, we can create change in our own lives. Plant a garden. Recycle, shop at second hand stores, become a vegetarian.
Buy better light bulbs.
All that is good, but it is not enough.

Driving smaller cars is for sure not enough. We need to give up cars. People need to work at home, and use public transportation- We need to build smaller houses and smaller (energy consuming) lives.

But Americans are spoiled, drunk on beer and wine and power and energy, and useless jobs that are more for social interaction and feeding the system than actually doing any real work.

And it seems hopeless to me when I leave my horse and small house in the country to visit the nearest city and see it full of cars and huge buildings with lights on all night long.

We need to change the entire system, of our government and the way we live. We need a revolution.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» Sorry!-I didn't do it! Posted by: WitchyNy
The world and the cosmos is not static in nature
Posted by: jack alexander on Dec 15, 2006 7:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and the weather here on the earth have been changing for eons and there is nothing that any living being or creature has done to have an adverse effect on it. species come and species go...the weather changes, period....

the current clap-trap about global warming is just another politcal ploy or exercise in social engineering to control us, cause us to adopt the wishes of the powers that be and buy the products they wish us to have at an ever inflated price.

now here are the words of a real scientest:

http://geobay.com/e1d6bb

shortened version of the real url through url shortener via firefox browser....

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Revolution is the answer -What is the question?
Posted by: WitchyNy on Dec 15, 2006 7:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This government does not WANT change. They are oil men.
That is how they think, that is what they know. Oil and War.

Yes, we can create change in our own lives. Plant a garden. Recycle, shop at second hand stores, become a vegetarian.
Buy better light bulbs.
All that is good, but it is not enough.

Driving smaller cars is for sure not enough. We need to give up cars. People need to work at home, and use public transportation- We need to build smaller houses and smaller (energy consuming) lives.

But Americans are spoiled, drunk on beer and wine and power and energy, and useless jobs that are more for social interaction and feeding the system than actually doing any real work.

And it seems hopeless to me when I leave my horse and small house in the country to visit the nearest city and see it full of cars and huge buildings with lights on all night long.

We need to change the entire system, of our government and the way we live. We need a revolution.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

There Are Many Issues Involved Here
Posted by: bttl on Dec 15, 2006 7:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Good article, and good points. I would say that from the standpoint of someone who is somewhat heavily involved in this field teaching this subject to college students, eduacation,or the lack thereof is critical. It is absolutely amazing how little the average Joe knows about science or climate change in particular. They do however know lots about the latest cell phone technology, i-pods and computer games, let alone music groups, etc. Why is this? Well, climate change, and science, has been the province of science geeks- not sexy at all. Also, the popular media, which is where most people get their news in little TV soundbites doesn't find the subject to be all that sexy either- and- they don't understand the science so they'd rather report on something that is easier to digest. So, I'd say that the total lack of comprehension that the mainstream media has for this subject, coupled with our dismal science education here in the US has produced a population that doesn't have a clue.

Then, we have our political leadership and our corporate entities, which are mostly the same(or in bed together). They have been doing quite well with the status quo, making money hand over fist, and rising to positions of power. Recognizing the impacts o fclimate change and what we need to do will necessitate huge changes, many of which won't feather their pockets at all. So why would they wish to promote policies that call for tackling this problem?

And then there is the reality that most Americans are rather fat and lazy and spoiled beyond belief. They don' t wish to envision making changes that might require any sacrifice on their part. And denial is a big one too- I know a number of people who have seen Al Gore's movie and have shrugged off their own contributions to the problem by saying that "hey, I'm only 1 person- what effect do I have? The big businesses need to do something or government." And they resume mowing their 2 acre lawns, driving their SUV's, leaving every light and appliance on all day-no exageration here.... I know these people. And they don't see the role they are playing in this at all.

Lastly, it requires a sort of imagination that many people don't possess. The ability to see beyond the immediate and understand where we are heading with all of the possible ramifications(which ties it back into science). Also, the ability to care beyond the fact that your heating bill will be lower this year and you don't ski anyway so who cares that it's warm and snowless here in the far north in mid-December?
Recognizing the impact that this will have on Africa for instance, or parts of Asia, and truly caring about it requires a certain level of empathy and altruism seemingly in short supply. Understanding how the whole world is tied together, again back to science, and why it matters what everyone does , especially you, is key here. And lastly, while you cannot change anyone else's behavior, or only with great difficulty, you sure can change your own, so do what you need to do and stop waiting for others to act.

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personal economy is fine, makes YOU feel better
Posted by: Ghoulman on Dec 15, 2006 7:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... but to stop the destruction of the planet you'd first have to dismantle the entire Western economy (which relies of polluting the world).

Good luck with that.

After all, blue bagging your garbage is just to make you feel better, has no impact what-so-ever. It's industry that pollutes, it's government, it's corporations. It's the elite rich and powerful network that runs the WTO and IMF, etc. who will continue to destroy the world even unto their own deaths. Marie Antoinette indeed.

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rather than becoming an activist, why not run for office?
Posted by: Tim Chadron on Dec 15, 2006 8:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Many of the posts I read here on the alternet complain incessantly about the government and its obvious lack of understanding in regards to essentially everything that relates to being environmentally friendly or responsible. That this is a problem is undeniable. In order for this situation to be reversed, maybe someone who holds these points of view, believes they have some reasonable answers to many of the questions regarding the environment, should actually take it upon themselves to run for public office.

Most of us write these little blurbs and it really is nothing more than preaching to the choir. There must be someone who believes in what they talk about enough to stand up and run, and begin preaching to those who need to hear the message.....

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» Preaching to the choir.... Posted by: Cathyc
Cow 'emissions' more damaging to planet than CO2 from cars
Posted by: rwa on Dec 15, 2006 9:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
By Geoffrey Lean
Published: 10 December 2006
Meet the world's top destroyer of the environment. It is not the car, or the plane,or even George Bush: it is the cow.

A United Nations report has identified the world's rapidly growing herds of cattle as the greatest threat to the climate, forests and wildlife. And they are blamed for a host of other environmental crimes, from acid rain to the introduction of alien species, from producing deserts to creating dead zones in the oceans, from poisoning rivers and drinking water to destroying coral reefs.

The 400-page report by the Food and Agricultural Organisation, entitled Livestock's Long Shadow, also surveys the damage done by sheep, chickens, pigs and goats. But in almost every case, the world's 1.5 billion cattle are most to blame. Livestock are responsible for 18 per cent of the greenhouse gases that cause global warming, more than cars, planes and all other forms of transport put together.

Burning fuel to produce fertiliser to grow feed, to produce meat and to transport it - and clearing vegetation for grazing - produces 9 per cent of all emissions of carbon dioxide, the most common greenhouse gas. And their wind and manure emit more than one third of emissions of another, methane, which warms the world 20 times faster than carbon dioxide.

Livestock also produces more than 100 other polluting gases, including more than two-thirds of the world's emissions of ammonia, one of the main causes of acid rain.

Ranching, the report adds, is "the major driver of deforestation" worldwide, and overgrazing is turning a fifth of all pastures and ranges into desert.Cows also soak up vast amounts of water: it takes a staggering 990 litres of water to produce one litre of milk.

Wastes from feedlots and fertilisers used to grow their feed overnourish water, causing weeds to choke all other life. And the pesticides, antibiotics and hormones used to treat them get into drinking water and endanger human health.

The pollution washes down to the sea, killing coral reefs and creating "dead zones" devoid of life. One is up to 21,000sqkm, in the Gulf of Mexico, where much of the waste from US beef production is carried down the Mississippi.

The report concludes that, unless drastic changes are made, the massive damage done by livestock will more than double by 2050, as demand for meat increases.

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» Why not tax meat? Posted by: rwa
» How About A Nitrogen Tax? Posted by: Douglas
Are Americans suicidal?
Posted by: NowYogi on Dec 15, 2006 10:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Maybe? They sure are lazy and self centered. Can they change 'en mass'? I doubt it!

My contribution? No car (walk, ride a bike or take bus) no children, and vegan. No air conditioning (counts for almost 20% to electricity in US), wear sweaters in Winter. How many Americans would follow my example? Not enough for it to matter. I'm often called "stupid"!

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» RE: Are Americans suicidal? Posted by: ncg96773
» We need to have kids. Posted by: WitchyNy
The Gore Who Stole Christmas
Posted by: Liger on Dec 16, 2006 6:10 AM   
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by Robert L. Bradley Jr.

"As billions of little light bulbs brighten America this holiday season, Al Gore is calling for thousands across the nation to interrupt their regularly scheduled activities and hold house parties showing his environmental cri de coeur.

Gore announced recently on the Oprah Winfrey Show that Americans should congregate this Saturday, December 16, to watch and discuss his DVD, An Inconvenient Truth, advertised as "a true story about the hard science and real threats of global warming."

The idea is to demonstrate that "action" is wanted on climate change.

If climate alarmists are to be believed, Americans must cut their electricity use substantially, and soon, to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions associated with fossil-fuel combustion. Celebratory holiday lighting -- what doomsayer Paul Ehrlich once called "garish commercial Christmas displays" -- would surely be the first to go, coming before indoor lighting, cooking, heating, and air conditioning."


The Gore Who Stole Christmas
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So let's forget about price gouging/manipulation and forget ethics and KISS MA's ASS !!!! NARF !!!!
Posted by: Jason Jordan on Dec 17, 2006 8:49 AM   
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Conserve all you want but the prices will still go up as has been the case and is happening right under our noses. On the other hand, hold Corporate America's feet to the fire and squish their private parts and we wouldn't be in this crisis in the first place. The same deserves to be done to all politicians that promote the kind of RECKLESS policies that were just as responsible for dragging America into total crisis in the first place. The author sure sounds like a spokeswoman for a "morality" hypocrite such as Bill Bennett !

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Let them eat recycling! Let them eat hybrids!
Posted by: Erik1968 on Dec 17, 2006 9:01 AM   
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Just STOP IT. Yes, we can all do our part. Yes, we are a democracy. But PLEASE STOP BLAMING THE VICTIMS.

It drives me insane. We all had to start recycling instead of just banning little tiny containers. We had the electric car ripped away from us just as it was becoming viable. And now, more of the same.

If we banned the internal combustion engine, the problem would be solved. SOLVED. For what we've spent "liberating" Iraq into anarchy, we could have built factories, put thousands of Americans to work, and given away electric cars to ANY AMERICAN THAT WANTED ONE. We could have built light rail all over America.

Why didn't we?? Because we're not responsible enough? Because we don't take the problem seriously enough? The real "inconvenient truth" is that Our Man Gore never cared a whit about the environment. Thank's for signing that Kyoto Protocol on the way out the door, Bill! Clinton and Gore did nothing for the environment, and the big enviro groups ROLLED OVER. It's like Kerry coming out against the war three years after it MIGHT HAVE MADE A DIFFERENCE.

Please, please, please, I can't take anymore. The powers that be are happy to fight litter, happy to buy us recycling bins, happy to point us to the buzzing light bulb aisle at Wal-Mart.

Tell me again that it's my responsibility. Just like torture in Iraq and Guantanimo. Just like the innocent in Falluja. Tell me.

Let them eat cake, indeed.

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A First Step
Posted by: gellero on Dec 18, 2006 6:44 PM   
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We should demand all progressive politicians give up their personal jets.....what a waste of energy........

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