In
1965, as a college freshman, one of the general education courses I was
required to take was Biology.
The
man who taught the course was obviously angry that he had to teach this
bonehead science class, and clearly of the opinion that everyone should be
majoring in the sciences.
His
name I do not remember. What I do remember is that he was the first person I
ever heard use the word “ecology.”
He
spoke of how human beings were, through carelessness, ignorance, arrogance, and
greed, ruining the ecology of planet Earth. He spoke of a coming environmental
apocalypse and painted a dire picture of species extinctions, famine, rising sea
levels, and crazy weather.
It
was a doomsday scenario and it scared me, I can tell you. I was seventeen,
though, and that doomsday seemed so far off – if it was even real - that it was
easy to forget.
In
the 1970s ecology popped up again. We began to have Save the Earth rallies.
There was talk of recycling, and how what we did affected the environment.
By
1973 I was living here on the island and waiting in line for gasoline. We were
being told to drive more slowly to conserve gas. A national speed limit of 55
miles per hour was made into law. Oil was a finite resource and we were running
out.
We
have short attention spans. The 55 miles per hour speed limit is long gone. Oil
is still a finite resource, and it is now being acquired in ways that no one
would have considered years ago – e.g., fracking – because it was so easy to
drill a well and strike oil.
Now
many of us would like to see our country turn to energy sources other than oil:
solar panels, wind turbines, hemp oil, and tidal energy are all possible energy
sources. But there is still too much money to be made in oil. Those who profit
by it will not release their death grip on those profits, regardless of what
that means for their children and grandchildren.
For
years we heard about “global warming,” and then at some point the term “climate
change” began to be used instead. Many people did, and still do, call climate
change a hoax, and treat the idea with contumely.
Even
if you think it’s a hoax, you can’t deny that we were choking on forest fire
smoke last summer, and people were burned out of house and home in California
and other Western States. People died in those fires; people died from bad air.
What
we are now calling “Fire Season” (remember when we didn’t have a Fire Season?) has
already started this year.
Could
fire happen on Vashon? It has in the past. It is still moist enough here that
we are in slightly less danger of wildfire than dry locales but clear the brush
from around your house if you are worried. Seriously.
Then
there are those pesky hurricanes (cyclones, typhoons) that are devastating the
Caribbean islands and the southern and eastern states of our country, as well
as countries in other parts of the world, destroying homes and people and infrastructure,
and new storms striking before people have recovered from the last one.
This winter there was something called a
“cyclone bomb” of snow in the Midwest, which along with the heavy rains that
followed contributed to flooding of a magnitude people say they’ve never seen before.
If
it is your opinion that climate change is a hoax, fine. Believe whatever you
wish.
You,
and climate change believers, and people who have no opinion on the subject, will
still need to roll up your sleeves and deal with the results of the fires,
floods, droughts, snows, hurricanes, tornados, rainfall, drought, polluted air,
rising sea levels, and accompanying diseases, famines, wars, homelessness, and
refugees, and whatever else is thrown at us, because reality does not care what
your opinion is.
Reality
is impartial and fair that way.
Right
now it seems that almost everyone except the people presently running this
country understand that we are in deep kimchi and we need to live responsibly
if our species is to survive.
I
believe that part of being responsible is to vote for people who have more
sense than God gave a goose. If anyone like that runs for anything. If not,
maybe we should turn our government over to the geese.
My
college biology teacher knew what he was talking about, the old curmudgeon, so
he really did contribute to my general education, even if I cannot remember zip
about biology.
Mind
you, we have not even mentioned what happens in Pugetopolis when the Cascadia
Fault shifts, or Mt. Rainier erupts.
Let’s
face it: life on earth is not for sissies.
No comments:
Post a Comment