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Environment

Home-Front Ecology: What Our Grandparents Can Teach Us About Saving the World

By Mike Davis, Sierra Magazine. Posted July 10, 2007.


The World War II home front was the most important and broadly participatory green experiment in U.S. history. Is it a model we should use today?
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Does this generation of Americans have the "right stuff" to meet the epic challenges of sustaining life on a rapidly warming planet? Sure, the mainstream media are full of talk about carbon credits, hybrid cars, and smart urbanism -- but even so, our environmental footprints are actually growing larger, not smaller.

The typical new U.S. home, for instance, is 40 percent larger than that of 25 years ago, even though the average household has fewer people. In that same period, dinosaur-like SUVs (now 50 percent of all private vehicles) have taken over the freeways, while the amount of retail space per capita (an indirect but reliable measure of consumption) has quadrupled.

Too many of us, in other words, talk green but lead supersized lifestyles -- giving fodder to the conservative cynics who write columns about Al Gore's electricity bills. Our culture appears hopelessly addicted to fossil fuels, shopping sprees, suburban sprawl, and beef-centered diets. Would Americans ever voluntarily give up their SUVs, McMansions, McDonald's, and lawns?

The surprisingly hopeful answer lies in living memory. In the 1940s, Americans simultaneously battled fascism overseas and waste at home. My parents, their neighbors, and millions of others left cars at home to ride bikes to work, tore up their front yards to plant cabbage, recycled toothpaste tubes and cooking grease, volunteered at daycare centers and USOs, shared their houses and dinners with strangers, and conscientiously attempted to reduce unnecessary consumption and waste.

The World War II home front was the most important and broadly participatory green experiment in U.S. history. Lessing Rosenwald, the chief of the Bureau of Industrial Conservation, called on Americans "to change from an economy of waste -- and this country has been notorious for waste -- to an economy of conservation." A majority of civilians, some reluctantly but many others enthusiastically, answered the call.

The most famous symbol of this wartime conservation ethos was the victory garden. Originally promoted by the Wilson administration to combat the food shortages of World War I, household and communal kitchen gardens had been revived by the early New Deal as a subsistence strategy for the unemployed. After Pearl Harbor, a groundswell of popular enthusiasm swept aside the skepticism of some Department of Agriculture officials and made the victory garden the centerpiece of the national "Food Fights for Freedom" campaign.

By 1943, beans and carrots were growing on the former White House lawn, and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt and nearly 20 million other victory gardeners were producing 30 to 40 percent of the nation's vegetables -- freeing the nation's farmers, in turn, to help feed Britain and Russia.

In The Garden Is Political, a 1942 volume of popular verse, poet John Malcolm Brinnin acclaimed these "acres of internationalism" taking root in U.S. cities. Although suburban and rural gardens were larger and usually more productive, some of the most dedicated gardeners were inner-city children.

With the participation of the Boy Scouts, trade unions, and settlement houses, thousands of ugly, trash-strewn vacant lots in major industrial cities were turned into neighborhood gardens that gave tenement kids the pride of being self-sufficient urban farmers. In Chicago, 400,000 schoolchildren enlisted in the "Clean Up for Victory" campaign, which salvaged scrap for industry and cleared lots for gardens.

Victory gardening transcended the need to supplement the wartime food supply and grew into a spontaneous vision of urban greenness (even if that concept didn't yet exist) and self-reliance. In Los Angeles, flowers ("a builder of citizen morale") were included in the "Clean-Paint-Plant" program to transform the city's vacant spaces, and the Brooklyn Botanic Garden taught the principles of "garden culture" to local schoolteachers and thousands of their enthusiastic students.

The war also temporarily dethroned the automobile as the icon of the American standard of living. Detroit assembly lines were retooled to build Sherman tanks and B-24 Liberators. Gasoline was rationed and, following the Japanese conquest of Malaya, so was rubber. (The U.S. Office of the Rubber Director was charged with getting used tires to factories, where they became parts for tanks and trucks.) When shortages and congestion brought streetcar and bus systems across the country near the breaking point, it became critical to induce workers to share rides or adopt alternative means of transportation.

While overcrowded defense hubs like Detroit, San Diego, and Washington, D.C., never achieved the national goal of 3.5 riders per car, they did double their average occupancy through extensive networks of neighborhood, factory, and office carpools. Car sharing was reinforced by gas-ration incentives, stiff fines for solo recreational driving, and stark slogans: "When you ride ALONE," warned one poster, "you ride with Hitler!"

Even hitchhiking became an officially sanctioned form of ride sharing. Drivers were encouraged to pick up war workers stranded at bus stops and soldiers heading home for furloughs. In Colorado, the Republican Party vowed to save rubber by having all of its candidates in the 1944 elections hitchhike to campaign rallies. In Hollywood, a starlet in revealing tennis shorts won editorial praise for helping a stranded serviceman catch a ride home.

Emily Post, America's mandarin of manners, frowned on such roadside seductions and emphasized a modest etiquette for snagging a ride: It was "bad form to jerk the thumb when hitchhiking"; instead, a woman should "display her defense identification tag." She also warned that "these 'rides' are not social gatherings and conversation is not necessary," although many baby boomers are undoubtedly the result of wartime ride sharing.

One of the major films of 1942 was Orson Welles's The Magnificent Ambersons, a pessimistic chronicle of how modern corporate capitalism and the automobile had destroyed the easygoing horse-and-buggy world of the late 19th century. Yet aspects of that world, including even the horses and buggies, were reborn under the auspices of wartime austerity.

To the delight of children as well as elderly people who still mourned the passing of the urban horse, grocers and delivery companies circumvented the rubber shortage by hooking up Old Nellie to a wagon. Suburbanites in Connecticut and Long Island began to "break their saddle horses to harness," the New York Times reported in May 1942, adding that "harness makers are doing a brisk little trade and horse-drawn carriages are coming out of hiding."

More important, that national obsession of the 1890s, the bicycle, made a huge comeback, partly inspired by the highly publicized example of wartime Britain, where bikes transported more than a quarter of the population to work. Less than two months after Pearl Harbor, a new secret weapon, the "victory bike" -- made of nonessential metals, with tires from reclaimed rubber -- was revealed on front pages and in newsreels.

Hundreds of thousands of war workers, meanwhile, confiscated their kids' bikes for their commute to the plant or office, and scores of cities and towns sponsored bike parades and "bike days" to advertise the patriotic advantages of Schwinn over Chevrolet. With recreational driving curtailed by rationing, families toured and vacationed by bike.

In June 1942, park officials reported that "never has bicycling been so popular in Yosemite Valley as it is this season." Public health officials praised the dual contributions of victory gardening and bike riding to enhanced civilian vigor and well-being, even predicting that it might reduce the already ominously increasing cancer rate.

Ideas as well as commodities were recycled in the war years. Much of the idealism of the early New Deal reemerged in wartime housing, fair employment, and childcare programs, as well as in the postwar economic conversion from military to civilian production. One particularly interesting example was the "rational consumption" movement sponsored by the Office of Civilian Defense (OCD), which encouraged "buying only for need" and set up consumer information centers that gave advice on family nutrition, food conservation, and appliance repair.

The OCD consumer committees challenged the sacred values of mass consumption -- the rapid turnover of styles, the tyranny of fashion and advertising, built-in obsolescence, and so on -- while promoting a new concept of the housewife as an "economy soldier" who ran her household with the same frugal efficiency that Henry Kaiser ran his shipyards.

Yet with millions of women wielding rivet guns and welding torches, traditional concepts of gender roles were increasingly contested. In April 1942, for example, the New York Times visited a trailer village near a Connecticut defense plant, expecting to find young wives yearning for the postwar future of suburban homes and model kitchens that the 1939 New York World's Fair had prophesied. Instead, they found female war workers who liked their industrial jobs and were content to live in simple quarters that demanded little or no housework.

One point of convergence between this incipient "war feminism" and the conservation imperative was the fashion upheaval of 1942. Desperate to conserve wool, rayon, silk, and cotton, the War Production Board (WPB) believed that the same techniques that were revolutionizing the production of bombers and Liberty ships -- the simplification of design and the standardization of components -- could be usefully applied to garment manufacture.

In an unusual role for a department store heir, H. Stanley Marcus (of the Neiman Marcus dynasty) became the WPB's chief commissar for rational fashions. As such, he emphasized conservation and durability -- priorities that coincided with the egalitarian-feminist values long advocated by the radical fashion designer Elizabeth Hawes, whose 1943 book, Why Women Cry, was a bold manifesto on behalf of the millions of "wenches with wrenches."

The goal was a "slim, abbreviated silhouette," whose higher hemlines, girdleless form, and stabilized variation in styles would free fabric and looms to make more uniforms, tents, and parachutes. As shorter skirts, along with overalls and pants, became the WPB-approved norm, Life magazine photographers delighted the troops overseas with images of true patriotic zeal: starlets cutting off the bottoms of their nightgowns or showing off the shorter pajamas that were helping to win the war. Those nightgown trimmings, along with the wool cuffs from men's pants (ordered sheared by the WPB in May 1942), were eagerly recycled into blankets and other military fabrics in the 500-odd sewing workshops across the country that had been organized in response to an appeal from the Bureau of Industrial Conservation.

Conservation also warred with luxury lifestyles. Although defense production was adding billions to the net worth of America's plutocrats, it became harder for them to spend it in the usual conspicuous ways. In order to force builders to meet the acute demand for affordable housing for war workers, the WPB banned construction of homes costing more than $500 (the median value of the average home was then about $3,000).

Simultaneously, thousands of servants fled Park Avenue and Beverly Hills to take higher-paying jobs in defense factories, while many of those who remained joined the Congress of Industrial Organizations' new United Domestic Workers Union. Some millionaires retreated to their clubs to grouse about Franklin D. Roosevelt's latest outrages, but others accepted the servant shortage and moved into smaller (although still luxurious) apartments while allowing their mansions to become temporary war housing. In a typical story, the Chicago Tribune in July 1942 described the adventures of seven young Navy petty officers and their wives who were sharing an old robber baron's mansion. (Today we would call it "cohousing.")

The total mobilization of the time was dubbed the "People's War," and while it had no lack of conservative critics, there was remarkable consistency in the observation of journalists and visitors (as well as in later memoirs) that the combination of a world crisis, full employment, and mild austerity seemed to be a tonic for the American character.

New York Times columnist Samuel Williamson, for example, monitored the impacts of rationing and restricted auto use on families in commuter suburbs that lacked "the self-sufficiency of the open country" and the "complete integration of the large city." After noting initial popular dismay and confusion, Williamson was heartened to see suburbanites riding bikes, mending clothes, planting gardens, and spending more time in cooperative endeavors with their neighbors.

Without cars, people moved at a slower pace but seemed to accomplish more. Like Welles in The Magnificent Ambersons, Williamson pointed out that American life had been revolutionized in a single generation and many good things seemingly lost forever; the war and the emphasis on conservation were now resurrecting some of the old values. "One of these," he wrote, "may be the rediscovery of the home -- not as a dormitory, but as a place where people live. Friendships will count for more."

An alternative future lurked in Williamson's hopeful comment, but it was swept away by the backlash against the social and economic reforms of the New Deal and the postwar euphoria of abundance. Few of the core values or innovative programs of the People's War survived either the cold war or the cultural homogeneity of suburbanization. Yet, even a few short generations later, we can find surprising inspirations and essential survival skills in that brief age of victory gardens and happy hitchhikers.


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See more stories tagged with: world war ii, green living

Mike Davis is the author, most recently, of Buda's Wagon: A Brief History of the Car Bomb. He is working on a new book on the geopolitics of climate change..

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Save the world?
Posted by: Temporary on Jul 10, 2007 1:07 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Generations of the past couldn't even save themselves! What a bunch of CRAP!

You want to save the world? Then start cutting down the number of people! Thats how they used to do it in the GOOD OLD DAYS!

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My Grandmother's Garden Beat Your Grandmother's Garden
Posted by: Pojer on Jul 10, 2007 1:12 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ah, thank you Alternet. All I can say is that there will be a lot of Victory Gardens in the near future!

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Today's 'green' movement will not make sacrifices for the planet
Posted by: Bobsays on Jul 10, 2007 1:20 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let's face facts: today's green movement could not come close to the dignity and sacrifice of the WWII generation. While they lecture use about climate change, they furiously jet around the world from conference to conference. None have reduced their standard of living, and in fact are enjoying the fruits of high-paid consultancy and all the money-making opportunities of carbon credits etc. I don't call that a sacrifice.

I agree if we lived like Grannie did we would be: a) better at managing money (Grannie never had credit cards), b) made all meals fresh and sat around the dinner table, c) repaired things and used arts and crafts to take care of most of our home needs. Now, can you really imagine these green yuppies who jet around the world, do high-paid consultancies, invest in carbon schemes actually making all their meals fresh, repairing things, and putting people above status and material things?

I don't think so. Though I am more than happy to see Al Gore's Victory Garden. Or maybe the Victory Garden of the thousands of executive directors of this or that green NGO.

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it is about money
Posted by: richholland on Jul 10, 2007 3:17 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
we sell GREEn for the profits......
to eat vegetarian food(soya i.e) big coorporations destroy the rain wood.
The same for GReen electricity in malaysia and indonesia the destroy rainwoods and orang oetans and natives for palmpits
Mr Al Gore and the Green yuppies donot give up their lifestyles.
Papa Gore sold tobacco, Ally Gore sells green crap. Grandson Gore arrested with drugs in his car.
As long as corporation and capitalism rules instead of communityfeelings all the talks and traveling by plane are. just moneymaking things

Think of the poor Chinese if the average american REPAIRS things how their factories can make profits???
If you prepare your own food how the shareholders of STARBUCKS and McDONALD can stay rich.
In the past in Holland (40 years ago) people were growing their own weed and even same tobacco,
Under pressure of the USA the maximum was restricted to 4 plants.
Now marihuana is legalised but controlled by big companies and it is still forbidden to have more than 4 plants.

HOLLAND IS THE LAND OF WINDMILLS but before many farmers had small mills on their land, thanks to the GREEn the small windmills are forbidden and we have large windmillparks.
Awake we cannot go back

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» RE: it is about money Posted by: Trazom
» RE: ecycle your Heineken bottles Posted by: MyLeftFoot
» RE: ecycle your Heineken bottles Posted by: richholland
frederick
Posted by: sport on Jul 10, 2007 4:53 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
in spite of "Temporary's" call for mass murder and his strange assertion that past generations didn't save themselves from something, this article is a rare admission (for leftist circles) of the power people can wield when they "come together". If the Americans would do just that with respect to the environment or with the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, imagine how much more successful we'd be in achieving goals set by our leaders. It wouldn't take a week for gas prices to fall if we all walked to the grocery store once a day instead of driving. It wouldn't take a month for al Qaeda to give up violence if we all recognized and supported our troops' efforts to bring stability to Iraq and Afghanistan. If our media wouldn't give groups like Hamas and Hizbullah all the hope they receive from watching Western press releases, they'd lay down their arms and approach Israel with negotiation instead of violence. Great article Alternet!

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» RE: frederick Posted by: cellorelio
Truman's A Bombs Derailed Women Getting Union Seniority
Posted by: odcherenow on Jul 10, 2007 6:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Women war workers, enjoying fully the joy of economic and personal liberation in the best jobs they ever had access to,
were seen as a major reason for Truman's decision to drop the Atomic Bombs that rapidly ended the war with Japan (already over with Germany and Italy). Most of those jobs were union jobs, with high pay and seniority rights after five full years of work. The war was entering it's sixth year. The women would have earned seniority; thereby standing in the way of jobs for the returning warriors, trained killers all. Not a pretty picture, but true.

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VICTORY GARDENS AND MAKING DO WITH LESS
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Jul 10, 2007 7:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
People did not consider themselves to be deprived. They were practical by nature. Most people did not grow their own food. They shopped at a local family owned store. Everything else bought was made in the USA. It was television that made people aware of what they 'didn't have'. Need became want. Foreign made products and credit abuse are two of the worse things to happen in this country. Our leisure time is gone and our greatest fear is losing the job. Thanks, ANNA

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Good article
Posted by: Trazom on Jul 10, 2007 7:16 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think this was a good article, as it reminded me (and I have been reminded more and more of this lately), how frugal and truly "green" our parents and grandparents generation were (relatively speaking) in the days surrounding WWII.

We have lost a few things in the past fifty years, namely the means of production, means of massive mobilization, and the pointed vision required to achieve a far-reaching goal.

Back then, I think most of our products were manufactured in the United States, were they not? Today something on the order of less than 5% is, with the bulk of our imports coming from China and a few other Eastern countries. Of course when you make almost everything domestically, there is a vested interest to conserve. After all, the natural resources required to make products are the key ingredient, without with such products would not be possible. But once globalization and the prospects of cheap imports became a national philosophy, the impetus to conserve went out the window. Why save a broken television when you can simply buy a new one for almost the same price as it would be to have the old one repaired? This age of globalization and over-consumption is mostly to blame for our collective apathy toward conservation, as the cheapest price (and maximum profit) has won out over all other variables.

The ability to mobilize en masse is contingent upon an underlying goal or philosophy under which all the people can get behind and support. Fifty years ago they had Pearl Harbor. Every man, woman, and child understood their nation was under attack and knew they needed to volunteer and sacrifice for the greater good. Fast-forward fifty some years and we had 9/11. This was a fantastic opportunity to mobilize the country and start a new movement of consciousness, but we all know what Bush did and said (or didn't say). We could have had our Pearl Harbor, but instead we were told to continue to be good little consumers and go back to "business as usual".

As far as having the vision required to reach a specific goal, my only comment is that in 2007 we are a nation that is continually dumbed down by the media, blinded by a million useless "must have" gadgets and devices, and (at least for a percentage of us) beaten down and apathetic toward our government due to years of a lack of any kind of progress.

In short our culture has allowed all these things to transpire, and it will take a hell of a lot more effort to wake us up from this deep coma we are in.

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WWII Generation Was Poor to Begin with.
Posted by: edith on Jul 10, 2007 7:20 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Apples and oranges. The WWII generation was coming out of a depression that just before WWII had unemployment rates nearly as high as the height of the Depression, despite all of FDR's makework jobs and regulation of industry. I do admire the sacrifices of the homefront in WWII, but realistically those people had far less to give up than the average American, after 60 years of economic growth, would give up.

Pearl Harbor scared the public to death,and the Feds ran an allout propaganda campaign against the enemies, including racist propaganda. That scare impelled local conservation discipline and equated consumption with treason.

What would scare Americans today? Obviously conflicting estimates of the thickness of the polar sheets and the amount of elevation in seal levels has not worked to date. The real problem is that even the IPCC cannot state with certainty that global warming will cease if we reduce carbon levels to say, 1990 levels(Kyoto). Warming occurred prior to 1940 and it has continued since as America and Europe generated massive amounts of CO2. Now, India and China intend to enter the CO2 contest and they have no intention of slowing down.

No nation will slash its standards of living intentionally just to experiment with the notion that CO2 might be the primary cause of most of the warming we've recently experienced and warming we may experience in the next century. There are good reason other than global warming for the US to implement strong energy conservation and to develop non-carbon energy sources. We need to scare the public but good however, and Al Gore aside, and I respect him for trying, the warming arguments have scared very few people other than the hard coreleft and the professional enviro lobby.

We have a lot to lose if we are told to conserve because of a threat most people don't believe or don't believe will diminish if they give up their wealth. The WWII comparison just doesn't fit today's circumstances.

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» The Candidates Blast Off. Posted by: edith
» RE: The Candidates Blast Off. Posted by: MyLeftFoot
An easier life
Posted by: Maryanne on Jul 10, 2007 8:18 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When we entered WWII, my father put the car up, found that we could do without it, and sold it once the war was over.

We lived in one room- a large kitchen, which was the only room that was warm. The kitchen stove provided enough heat , making it possible in winter to use the oven or top of stove for cooking and baking without using gas . We wnt to bed in unheated rooms which were visited by Jack Frost each night, but we were warm under homemade feather coverings. It was impossible to buy heaters during this time.

We saved everything- the rag man, and another looking for metal travelled though neighborhoods gathering these materials for the war effort. As well, we saved used fats which were taken to the butchershop apparently to be used for armaments.

The milkman and huckster came down the street several times a week, so there was always fresh food, and other needed foods were purchased within walking distance. Never ANY canned goods! Not only did we not go hungry, but we did not even use most of the ration stamps that were issued to us. These we turned into a local store, which recycled them to bakeries and others who needed them.

Toys for children were almost non existent. Several years after the war, my friend and I went to a local department store at Christmas time, and stood in awe at a WHOLE SHELF of toys for children. We had neverseen that many toys in our lives in one place. Instead of toys, and electronics, we children played outdoors, using our imaginations, and sharing the one Monopoly game on the street.

If it were not for the horrors of the war, it was a wonderful way to live- lots of free time for everyone to enjoy each other rather than running errands, and coping on the telephone with businesses that provide service through prerecorded messages. or a menu of numbers to ply before getting to a real person.

We were not poor at the time, since my father had a good job that paid well (less than $3,000 per year!) Others had less but there seemed to be no difference since everyone was in the same boat- and no one was greedy or trying to keep up with the "jones".

Would that we could return to those days. Materially we had so little, yet had everything we needed.

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» RE: An easier life Posted by: badkitty
» RE: An easier life Posted by: maribelle
» RE: An easier life Posted by: VZEQICVA
What the WWII Generation Had that We Don't!
Posted by: roger.delmar on Jul 10, 2007 3:57 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The WWII generation had the absolute belief that sacrifice and conservation was necessary, not only to preserve our way of life, but to ensure that we survived as a nation. Everyone was totally committed to whatever it took to win WWII because the defeat of fascism was seen as a survival imperitive.

Today's generation is not there! ...yet. Very few really believe that the planet or our country is in real danger. We don't see Global Warming, international terrorism, or the emergence of a GWB with his totaliarian like abuse of presidential influence and power as truly threatening to our survival. Thus, why truly sacrifice or make any effort that costs us something when we have so many toys and have it so good!

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We Must Bomb The Japanese!
Posted by: fanny666 on Jul 10, 2007 4:59 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let's bomb Nagasaki just for the hell of it.

Seriously, it's a great idea to start a compost heap.

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» RE: We Must Bomb The Japanese! Posted by: richholland
Change will occur when the time is right
Posted by: dayahka on Jul 10, 2007 7:17 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No one has ever been successful at calling people to reform their ways voluntarily. I have a "victory" garden of sorts inside my home--some mint, tomatoes, and strawberries. If tomorrow I heard that there was food only for a month, no gas, no room for anything but survival, I assure you I'd be digging up the yard for an underground home and as big a garden as I could manage. Right now, disaster seems but a fantasy--it has no reality. Predictions about the future are contradictory and not compelling. Let's wait for a disaster--the war in Iran? A real heatwave? Oil at over $200 a barrel?--then you'll see people change--but not before.

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Calling WWII a GREEN experiment is Moronic at best
Posted by: IPF on Jul 12, 2007 10:10 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Or would you call two nuclear detonations green? Destruction on the LARGEST scale EVER is green? Millions upon millions of people - never mind creatures - were slaughtered. The only reason materials were recycled was because they were in short supply so as to create weapons and kill more people (not that I'm against WWII - there had to be a defense and the bad guys lost).

Christ on a bike this guy's lost it!

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impeachment
Posted by: gsaephanh on Jul 13, 2007 1:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Call in your vote TODAY for impeaching Bush and Cheney at this number: 202-225-0100

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office is taking calls voting for Impeachment of Bush/Cheney at 202-225-0100. PLEASE CALL TODAY. At the toll free capitol switchboard #s below, you can also call your particular district’s congressional representative to insist that they support impeachment for Cheney. E.g., for Rep. Dennis Kucinich’s H Res 333 for Cheney; please say:

“In addition to supporting Kucinich’s bill H Res 333, I would also support a similar Impeachment Resolution against Bush, especially after the disgraceful Scooter Libby sentence “commuting” and the following issues: wiretapping, torture, numerous 9/11 intelligence misrepresentations, the continued occupation of Iraq, gross negligence during Hurrican Katrina, the Valerie Plame CIA leak, […list your other grounds…] ..”[see resolutions on tab #2 for other grounds for impeachment]).

LANIC requests that Americans call today…Not tomorrow or next week. Every call adds to the extraordinary grasswoots and nationwide movement’s pressures on House Speaker Pelosi to act now .before further innocent lives are lost in Iraq and elsewhere. Last week 28 Americans lost their lives. Over the July 4, 2007 weekend over 400 Iraqis lost their lives…

SEND MAIL TO HOUSE SPEAKER NANCY PELOSI: Attn: Nancy Pelosi, House Representative/Speaker of the House, 235 Cannon H.O.B., Washington, DC 20515 ; Pelosi’s Fax # 202 225-8259

Pelosi’s e-mail address :

Americanvoices@mail.house.gov

CC her at: sf.nancy@mail.house.gov

Please send her a pro-impeachment email and a specific call to endorse H Res 333. Note: On Saturdays/Sundays, Pelosi’s office has a comment line at which you can leave a voicemail. Your message will be transcribed and relayed to her. Please do encourage your family/friends to contact the same number. Refer them to www.bcimpeach.com for the actual telephone #s & contact info.

Find out who your Congressional representative is and call that person. For toll free numbers to your Congress rep: (800) 828 – 0498; (800) 459 – 1887; or (866) 340 – 9281. You will be connected once you name your congress person. The staff aid should take detailed notes and provided to the Congressional representative.

Final Note: Please say “I support Impeachment based on ____. I’d like to know where “[representative name]” stands on this issue.” Let’s strike while the Libby fury keeps the iron hot! Please call and Act Now!

PLEASE ALSO CONTACT THESE KEY CONGRESSIONAL REPS RE IMPEACHMENT:
Representative Capitol Phone Capitol Fax
Howard Berman 202-225-4695 202-225-3196
& 818-944-7200 818-994-1050

MAILING ADDRESS FOR BERMAN
Congressman Howard L. Berman
14546 Hamlin Street, Suite 202
Van Nuys, CA 91411

Henry Waxman 202-225-3976 202-225-4099
Loreta Sanchez 202 225-2965 202-225-5859
D. Watson 202 225-7084 202-225-2422
LindaSanchez 202 225-6676 202-226-1012
L. Solis 202 225-5464 202-225-5467
A. G. Eshoo 202 225-8104 202-225-8890
L. Roybal/Allard 202 225-1766 202-225-0350

http://www.bcimpeach.com/

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