judyssign2
The signs are up along Highway 90 in Gulfport, Mississippi. Judith was a force to be reckoned with on the coast, in life, and, it’s turning out (pun intended) in the afterlife.

She worked tirelessly to set aside and revegetate key parts of the public beach for nesting pairs of Least Terns. To this day her many birdwatching friends are still fighting to preserve and protect this habitat set aside for Least Tern breeding in 1976, right next to Gulfport-Biloxi’s busiest highway. It’s almost impossible to protect it from complete morons who still ignore the signs and fences and tromp through critical habitat, often in the middle of the night, crushing eggs and disturbing the chicks and their parents. I can remember as a kid the Terns dive bombing anyone who got near their nests, day or night.

My mother’s life story is good reading, and an example for anyone to follow in being a real environmentalist.



SarahPAC

Name a PAC after yourself? You lost me right there, Mrs. Palin.  I don’t like egotists of either sex or party. Especially scheming egotists.

This is laughable, but it had to happen. Palin’s angling for a seat at the table in 2012. Nevermind what happens during the next four years, and with Obama in office but one brief week.

She wants it that bad.

Hey if you like Palin, send her some money.   And it better be a lot. Only blind, stupid luck and a boatload of brain-dead-yet-somehow-still-rich Republicans would put this woman in the ring again for leading our country.

I’m sure she’s thinking by 2012 the economy and the environment will both be “peachy” and she’ll waltz back onto the national stage, mouth some choice doggone-its in a few dee-bates, win the election and move right into the White House after the country (or at least a very moral majority) finds it can’t live without with her folksy wit, her stunning intellectual prowess, and her legendary ability to field dress an elk she dropped with her own 30-30.

This woman as President would gut our country the same way George Bush did, which was by any measure badly.

No thanks, Sarah Palin!

Link to SarahPAC

Fascinating testimony from Russell Tice, NSA Whistleblower examining NSA data collection methods and the involvement of major telcos in sharing your (our) information. Was your electronic communication and credit information collected and scrutinized by spooks and their elaborate data mining tools in this massive undertaking? Hmm, sure looks like it. Tice has been speaking out for several years in a brave attempt to uncloak the truth about this country’s wholesale disregard for and invasion of privacy for the sake of keeping us safe.

This man deserves a job in the Obama administration and a bust of his likeness placed on the desk of whoever is running the NSA.

Link to Wired article.

My mother was a well-known birder, writer, lecturer and teacher who passed away February 27 from lung cancer. She lived from the Great Depression of the 1930s to the new Environmental Great Depression of 2007. She was a true friend of the environment.

This time, the depression isn’t simply economic. America recovered from the Great Depression. This time it’s environmental. Can mankind recover from bankrupting the planet’s natural environment?

While the earth and all its creatures are suffering from our studious neglect and institutionalized indifference, people in this beautiful country continue doing what they have always done, which is buy into an economic paradigm that equates progress with our ability to consume everything that isn’t nailed down, trash it when we’re done, and leave finding a solution to the problem of our declining environment to the supposed experts.

Just after my mother passed away, I was excoriated by someone I care about for taking a “superior” tone about the source of the world’s environmental problems, such as NASCAR and the huge industry behind it. I was told that people “around here” don’t want to hear criticism about their favorite forms of recreation, all of it mechanized and resource intensive. Moreover I was told that I could expect any number of threats from “Bubba.”

Well Bubba save yourself the dime. I’m onto your games and they suck because they’re suicidal. I’m reaching out to give you a hand to save you from yourself.

I’m sorry if anyone finds the truth offensive. Too damn bad. People who can pull their heads out of their asses long enough to see what is going on make great environmental crusaders. You should try it. I might not come off as superior to you.

NASCAR is the problem. NASCAR sponsors, drivers, fans, mechanics, tracks, bobble head announcers, cameramen, etc., are the problem. Bikers are the problem. Bike week is the problem. NFL is the problem. NFL fans are the problem. Stadiums where lots of people drive to week in and week out, year after year, and watch their precious teams are the problem.

Whatever is unnecessary by environmental measure is the problem.

If you identify with corporatized recreation enough to get mad at someone who insists the stuff that passes for “recreation” in a large swath of middle America is a big part of our environmental problems, you should take a harder look at what’s killing the planet and where it’s coming from.

Any mirror will do.

Running and writing for a blog that deals head on with you and your connection to some of the top issues facing humanity and all life on Earth is tantamount to standing on a street corner 24/7 handing out “Repent Now!” flyers to people as they pass by. Most of the flyers get tossed without a read. Normal people seldom bother to look up, stop, say hello, ask a question, or exhibit interest that could somehow derail their headlong rush to wherever.

Some are curious enough to cast a sidelong glance at the billboard I’m wearing or stop to consider the content of the flyer before moving on. Others are hard as stone and keep their attention focused on the sidewalk. They’ve seen it all. Right.

If you’re one of those people just passing by, I’m the foam-flecked, bearded guy with flame in his eyes and passion in his voice, urging you to mend your environmental ways. But unlike most street corner evangelists, I’m on EVERY street corner.

Ignore the messenger if you will, but you ignore the message at your peril.

“Our hands have met, but not our hearts;
Our hands will never meet again.
Friends, if we have ever been,
Friends we cannot now remain.”

Thomas Hood 1799-1845

Want to see who your real friends are? It’s simple to lose some or all of your “oinker” friends. Just start trying to live your life more sustainably. Just start talking about it. Step away from the trough of materialism and see what happens. Cleave yourself off from the herd and learn how to reduce your carbon footprint. Start making needed adjustments in your lifestyle, and then start actively encouraging other people to reduce, reuse, recycle. Or no-cycle, as in do without.

Talk about being green and do the walk. Bring up environmental issues and explore the topic in earnest as if your life and theirs depended on it. You’re not an expert on being green, but you don’t have to be an expert to understand what is happening to this planet and what we need to do about it. But be ready for some good old fashioned blowback. And the occasional oink.

In some cases, you’ll be treated like a religious fundamentalist or a rabid sports fan, with a mix of open hostility, ridicule or misinformed amusement. Mostly you’ll be ignored, as I have. Very likely most people you consider to be friends and acquaintances will not ever take your efforts seriously. Some will even as far as to sever all contact with you just for crossing the line and talking about something that makes them extremely uncomfortable.

Why is that? Could it be they’re oinkers with snouts firmly planted in the trough who’d rather die than give up their place in line? Is there a “selfish” gene?

Being green is a personal decision that requires good self esteem that isn’t derived solely from what others think of you. You are more than the sumof your stuff and other people’s views of you. Oink. Nobody can decide for you that you will be a good environmentalist from this day forward. It’s your decision. It comes with a price in the social realm.

In this country, the default mode of environmentalism is switched to off or “bad” as people go about their daily business of consuming, traveling and basically trashing the earth’s resources. It’s up to you to take a stand and do something credible or not. But it’s easy to see why you probably won’t. You don’t care enough to lose friends who are stuck in trash mode and wish to remain there. After all, if you’re not consuming in lock step with them you’ll be kicked off the island because you’re no longer like them.

Of course you care about the environment, just not that much. I get it. Go get a double-bacon cheeseburger and make sure to fill your gas tank so you won’t miss a thing at the trough next to your beloved buddies.

Oink.

Welcome to the new online home of The Whirled Home Journal. Published online since 1997 by Jay Toups, The Whirled Home Journal is morphing from a personal journal to become a community-driven portal for environmentally conscious people to meet up, swap stories, and exchange insights into improving our beautiful blue planet Earth.

If you would like to post here, simply send an email request. You don’t need to register to leave comments.

If you don’t like being confronted with disturbing information about your lifestyle, please go away and continue to do whatever you call important in your life. Just remember, you owe it all to Mother Earth.

“Move along when the crowd is right, stand alone when the crowd is wrong.” John Gorka

A friend’s email this morning prompted this post. In it he suggested that I learn to act my age, strive to be more positive, and consider setting down my “gauntlet” and let the younger generation take up causes I spend considerable time on, including political and environmental issues. He further asserted that we are 180 degrees apart, and that I should calm down and be more like him, in particular, singling out my belief in reopening the 9-11 investigation as an obscure point of view. Obscure? Dark? We obviously don’t live under the same rock or enjoy the same pursuits.

I’m a member of the ‘something beats nothing’ club. Which is to say that I much prefer to remain involved in affairs of the world, contributing to whatever dialogue and discussion there is on important topics, than simply doing nothing. I’m not old and tired or scared enough to leave it to professional politicians and pundits. I have opinions and I have the dedication, energy and will to advance those opinions.

I don’t believe in the standard polemic definition of “positive” and “negative” that describes everything in terms of good or bad, black or white, dark or light. There is richness in the infinite shading of colors that constitute the real world. Outside the imaginings of one’s mind little of it is definable in such rote terms. And there is something more than positive or negative at stake. If anyone really thinks it negative to write about topics they choose to avoid, fine. But don’t ever ask me to behave differently. That’s the quickest way I know to sully a friendship, and expanded to worldly proportions, the quickest way to destroy this rich and varied world.

Find a way to celebrate the differences instead of doing your level best to drag me or anyone else down to your level of comfort. I am quite comfortable in my skin, saying what I’m saying. For me, at least, I prefer the blood sport of telling it like it is, or how I see things are, than quietly going along with whatever the world serves up. No, I’m not a golfer, I have more interesting and “positive” things to do with my life.:-)

We will sleep forever. Why go to sleep before we actually have to? And why on earth should I join those who choose to put one foot more or less in the grave while still living in early retirement? Now that’s dark.

Okay, so I bit too hard on the fruit of bitter words in the prior post. I’m sorry and this is an apology (Exception to Disclaimer #1). This time I’ll try to avoid insulting anyone I know. In fact, I do know people are making changes in their lives that are big-time friendly to the environment.

My sister Christina dumped her car in 2001 and usually rides a bike to work. What was essentially a financial decision also had enormous personal and environmental impact, all of it positive. She’s lost over 100 pounds and transformed her life. But that’s her story, and one that I hope she’ll tell someday.

A friend named Kevin Wadsworth, to the best of my knowledge, has never driven a car, much less owned one.

I haven’t driven my car since November. So I guess I should apologize to myself as well. I’m less of a hypocrite today than I was yesterday.

How about you?

Fight for our beliefs. It is what humans are born and bred throughout life to do. It’s the basis of America’s two-party political system. We do it unconsciously and consciously. We learn at an early age to slap labels on the other side of our public (and private) issues rather than dig for common understanding and resolution that benefits both sides. We almost never ask whether there is a more holistic, consensus-based approach to resolving such things. That usually comes after the damage has been done.

We learn to debate and entrench, not necessarily to resolve, our common issues. And the entrenched political debate is tellingly inefficient at producing tangible results, such as reducing our dependence on imported oil, or even more tellingly, reducing our national debt. We have learned to be exquisitely stubborn. We have also learned to ignore the elephant in the room of all public discourse in this country: the truth.

Choose any public issue. The war in Iraq. The price of gasoline. Guns, abortion rights, freedom of speech, the environment. What does it all come down to? Your opinion. My opinion. Right, left, red, blue, Democrat, Republican, atheists, neocons, etc. Money and power. Most issues come down to the pitting of one faction against another as the best way to move forward. Whichever group has the strongest argument (replete with means of funding) wins. And as a result of this outrageously expensive and wasteful political sideshow, we’re not moving forward. On the contrary our country is moving backward because we’re not practicing anything more than how to be good team members in whatever games we’re currently playing.

Polemic and polarity is no longer enough. It’s not a game with two sides.

Why do our politicians divide universal issues, such as the environment, into parts? Why do you? Do tree huggers and real estate developers have anything in common? We all breathe the air, and we all want to ensure that our progeny will be able to breathe the air (and drink the water) in fifty years. Instead, this country pays lip service to the global environment even as it wages a war to ensure that it continues to lead the world in per capita energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions. The U.S. actually increased its output of gases 2 percent this year, according to the government’s latest report.

Bottom line: we’re all hypocrites because the numbers don’t lie.

Our soldiers are dying in Iraq for oil, to implement democracy, and to ensure that Americans continue squandering the very substance that threatens to poison our beautiful country and the entire planet. The USA is setting a particularly tragic example for India and China, which have both, along with USA, opted out of Kyoto Treaty protocols. So we have nearly half the world’s population committed politically to endorsing and protecting their short-term interests on one “side” of the environmental issues facing all of humanity.

It is a dangerous game that cannot be won by any amount of partisan politics and cultural denial. This is a game we will all lose. The environment we are collectively destroying today all but assures a bleak future in which succeeding generations will pay with their lives for our heedless abnegation of moral responsibility.

We’re Not Number 1: We’re Better Than That

Why does the US government have 8 trillion dollars in debt? How does being in hock up to our ears benefit America in world affairs or at home? Does anyone really believe that our crushing debt doesn’t matter because it will be offset by ‘growth’ in our GNP? I would happily write a check for the $28,000 dollars representing my portion of the national debt if I thought it was a good investment. Would you write a similar check?

My fellow Americans, might we try to practice our worst skills for a change? Don’t leap to judgement, suspend it. Don’t slice and dice the issues and focus on your side of the big story, focus on the whole solution. Don’t practice being right or “first” at all costs. Practice self-doubt, real soul searching, and compromise with the world around you for the good of all. Don’t wait for our leaders to lead. Develop sustainable lifestyles in which “less” is actually “more.” Practice happiness through equanimity. If you can get through this letter to the editor, and fully understand the word equanimity, you’ll be well on your way.

The Truth Is Not a Football, Sis Boom Bah

Still equate economic progress with taking everything good and whole in this world and cutting it into parts? Just keep doing what you’re doing and watch what happens in coming years.

When a sufficient amount of this beautiful blue and green planet is burned to cinders and riven into cutlets, it will be game over. No side will win. There won’t be a Hail Mary, 4th-down conversion that saves the day either way. The teams, fans, and cheerleaders on all sides will fail to avert a disastrous outcome by having done nothing, either politically or personally, to change the course of future events while there was a fighting chance. The NFL, the NBA, and NASCAR Nation will all be no longer because humanity will be no longer.

Perish the thought.

Some things are better off viewed from all angles but left alone and appreciated intact. Like rattlesnakes, grizzly bears and frogs. Like the truth in all things big and small.

- Happy Holidaze from your pal in the pines…

©1997-2011 Jay Toups :-)