Category Archives: The Pacific

Cities of Refuse

I’ve mentioned before on my blog about the giant mound of trash twice the size of Texas floating around in the Pacific Ocean, but only as part of another blog. Since National Geographic wrote about it today, along with some of the first documentation of the phenomenon, I thought I’d bring it up again. Here is a link to the National Geographic article. Here is a better picture of it. The floating plastic trash creates a hazard for aquatic life and consumers of aquatic life in the area, and represents 10% of the total worldwide plastic thrown away each year. No one knows how deep the marine dump is. The Scripps company is funding the effort to document to floating island of garbage. For those of you unfamiliar with Scripps, they own HGTV, several magazine holdings, and a news station and news paper in almost every state. They own a station in Tulsa and a paper in Muskogee here in Oklahoma. I am interested to see where this project leads in the future. If you assume we can ever even stop the annual input of plastic to this contribution, you still have the problem of what are we going to do with what is already there? Will we tie it together and create new land masses? The cities of the future? Or will we put it in a rocket ship and blast it off into the sun. I would love to be a part of this project, but barring that, I am excited to at least see someone researching it finally. Continue reading

Wal Mart

So Wal Mart has been tooting it’s own green horn for a while now, spending millions to remake their image and introduce greener products. You may have seen the signs telling you to buy fluorescent lightbulbs and canvas grocery bags (I won’t even start with the fluorescent light bulbs, that is another post.) But I was talking to two of my co-workers the other day, and we were discussing what we personally do that is eco-friendly. I was amazed at the effort one of my co-workers puts into it, far outdoing me in many categories. I can only hope to catch up to her soon. But she mentioned that when she gets married in September, she is banning her new husband from bringing plastic bags into their house. I thought this was interesting. I hate plastic bags, they are such a waste. And the fact that there is an aggregate of trash the size of Texas floating around the Pacific that comes from American waste makes me sick. But beyond that, China has managed to ban plastic bags entirely in their country. Did everyone perish from their inability to get their groceries home? No. Why can’t we do that too? It seems like such a simple step, and in China, the only people who suffered from this were the plastic bag manufacturers. Sometimes you have to break a few eggs to make an omelet. As much as Wal Mart claims to be green, it’s simple things like banning plastic sacks altogether that would make a real impression. Until actual effort that creates change in consumer behavior is in place, I am going to judge the Wal Mart greening efforts as nothing more than a marketing ruse. I wish I could be optimistic like the great environmentalist Paul Hawkens, when he said, “If corporations say they are green long enough, eventually they will start to believe their own lies, and then maybe we will see real change.” However, I believe that money talks, and until it is unprofitable for corporations to be wasteful, we will not see any changes. And how do you enforce environmental penalties for wasteful companies when you are already in trouble with the lagging economy? Most environmental changes will require some capital up front to get them moving, but at the same time, we can’t afford not to care anymore.

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Wal Mart

What is the Point?

I’ve been reading Walt Whitman lately and it reminded me why I need to do this. I didn’t arbitrarily pick a cause because I needed something to do; I picked this cause because I realized how insurmountably important nature is to me. There are too many places that I remember as a child that have been changed from their natural beauty to urban sprawl. When I lived in Phoenix (the city planner’s guide of what not to do) I remember there were days when I felt like my chest would collapse because of all of the pollution in the valley. I remember when I moved back to Oklahoma what it felt like to breathe again. I remember climbing to the top of the Superstition Mountains, one of the most breathtaking views in Arizona, and looking out to see the brand new copper mine, almost the size of a mountain itself. I remember how my heart felt when I saw that. I remember reading about the cactus owl , and how the EPA had deemed it “not enough of a sub-species of owl to be protected” and allowed builders in Arizona to continue their sprawl into its habitat and that of the saguaro cactus, despite the fact that there are only a handful of cactus owls left. I remember why Christine Whitman is my sworn enemy. I remember when my grandmother died of cancer. I was there, living with her. I don’t ever want to watch someone I care about go through that again. I remember reading about the island of plastic twice the size of Texas floating in the Pacific. I remember trying to drive in L.A. and thinking “What is the point of this?” I remember shopping for groceries in Canada at the local grocery store. I remember coming back here and going to Wal-Mart. I remember eating a fresh organic orange. There aren’t a lot of things better than that. I know what tomatoes fresh off the vine taste like. I know what it looks like when a forest has been clear cut and replaced with a monoculture of trees. I know why that’s bad. I also know what it looks like when Weyerhauser has a stack of trees they have harvested so high that when you look up you can’t see the sun at midday. I know what the mountain looked like after that harvest also. And I remember what it looked like before. I don’t like the obesity epidemic. It’s so pointless and sad! Why aren’t we getting enough exercise? Why don’t we walk more? Why isn’t there more public transportation? Why don’t we eat better? Why is it cheaper to buy soda pop and potato chips than organic juice and berries? Sanity depends on the ability to get away from the technology and just walk in the woods or listen to the water run by in the river. I chose this cause because it can’t go on. People have been effectively blinded to the consequences of commerce in the USA. I fear it’s spreading to other countries. There are other ways of living comfortably, and still creating a world future generations can also live in. We can have a healthy economy and not crush the social justice of the rest of the world. I chose this cause because I don’t give up. I’m not a quitter. I won’t back down just because the odds are against me. And because I think this issue is the single most important issue facing the world today. Without a healthy planet, nothing else matters. Because without air to breathe, water to drink or food to eat, there will be no people to govern. If we can’t find out what’s killing the honey bees, what’s causing more and more children to be born with autism, why Americans keep getting fatter, why the whales and frogs are disappearing, how can we stop the deforestation of the Amazon, why there is NO SUCH THING AS CLEAN COAL , why nuclear is a bad idea, why the sun is the best option, and why not every American should drive a car, then by the time we pay attention to what’s happening it will be too late. It may be a David and Goliath battle, but remember how that story ended.

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What is the Point?