Al Gore will testify next month on climate change issues. He will be the only witness to appear before the Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Energy and Air Quality and the Science and Technology Subcommittee on Energy and Environment. Gore served on both committees during his House tenure representing a Tennessee district.

How much will this dog and pony show cost taxpayers? A ton. How much will this change anything? Will anyone at this meeting be conserving anything. Why hell no. Zip.

Our illustrious senators and congress could have simply watched An Inconvenient Truth.

Link to article.



So the world’s premiere scientific minds have reached a conclusion. The official global warming verdict is in and the forecast is not pretty. We are in hot water and it will only get hotter. They didn’t even factor in the influence of recent ice-shelf collapses. And they aren’t including the influence of continued population growth or environmental degradation occuring in every country on earth.

IPCC Report (PDF)

What do I know that the experts don’t know? I know that you, reading this, are the problem. And the solution, should you ever find it in you to opt for change.

Even if you see yourself as neither, you are both. Grapple with that and have a nice day.

Ever feel you’re fighting a losing battle on the environment? Welcome to the club. “We” are definitely the underdogs. But please don’t stop trying or spreading the word.

I eat almost no animal products. I don’t drive a car to work every day, I work on my computers from home. I wear extra layers of clothing instead of reaching for the thermostat. I sometimes wear Ugg boots indoors. I recycle as much as possible. I compost all organic matter. I’m doing my part, but it’s still not enough.

I have two neighbors who live entirely off the grid and have for over 30 years. That’s no electricity, period. They do burn wood to stay warm, but their house is well built out of Montana-grown logs. Their water comes from a free-flowing stream which they and others in our community protect and manage vigorously, especially during the winter when a hard freeze can divert the stream out of its banks.

But it’s still not enough.

Their position is rare in post-modern America. Homesteaders living off the grid and disavowing the conveniences of today except for a phone and a pickup truck. He runs a pack guide service in the Bitterroot National Forest. He lives a 19th century lifestyle along with his wife. If he were somehow elected president, it would quickly become a bloodbath in suburban and urban America.

This guy doesn’t negotiate. He takes action. He’d kill all of us in the ‘burbs for being so…selfish and stupid. His indignation is righteous and sincere. His contention: Talk is cheap when it comes to the environment, people are all scammers and bullshitters who ultimately don’t give a shit about anyone but themselves. And most people can’t handle nature. (Of this, he’s seen plenty of softies crying for the comforts of home while camped somewhere in the vast wilderness he calls his backyard.)

I think he’s spot on, but it’s still not enough.

Here it is, Christmas Day 2006. It’s been snowing gangbusters here in western Montana. All is quiet, all is still. All is peaceful. Or so it seems.

2006 was a year of treading water, at best. The rich got richer. The poor got poorer. Governments became even more ruthless and reckless, pursuing nuclear technologies, testing nuclear weapons, wasting soldiers lives and hundreds of billions spreading the seeds of “democracy” where it is neither welcome or understood, all while ignoring the real environmental problems they are facing in their own backyards. And we proles kept spending.

And since you’re likely to be somewhere in the gaping maw known as the middle class here in Amerikay, you probably felt the squeeze on your resources from every direction; energy, food, transportation, housing. No wonder we don’t have much of our collective human spirit to focus on solving environmental problems when it requires all any one person can muster to sustain their lifestyle.

Oh I know. It’s all just business as usual. The way of things. For now at least. But while you were living your life and feathering your nest, the earth got hammered, again. Worldwide, we exceeded all records for carbon dioxide output, and moved the bar higher on solid waste. Temperatures have risen to their highest in the past 1 million years. How can next year bring any improvement, unless we take a closer look at the real source of the problem: ourselves, the 7 billion people living like there’s no tomorrow?

Hmm, maybe tomorrow doesn’t mean very much after all the lip service and wishful thinking I’ve heard from well-intentioned people. Could be why nobody in this country saves much money either. In tomorrow’s world, money won’t mean much because our progeny will have much bigger problems to cope with, like finding themselves without clean air, clean water, or food.

So be thankful you live in a time when you can ignore the world at large and block it out with material comforts. We of today are truly blessed, in a wickedly finite way. And successive generations cursed—saddled with a diminished set of expectations and a polluted planet as a result.

Whirled Home Journal wishes you and yours a 2007 full of happiness and joy driven by introspection and reconsideration of the material world that defines us all. A self-reckoning for the good of the world around you. Because who you are isn’t best measured by what you own or what you preach or believe. It will be best measured in the world of tomorrow by what you do (or don’t do) about the environment around you today.

And here’s wishing you a little less of everything to illumine your path.

Chris, my sis, is a changeling! Not many people take the plunge and decide to change to the very core of their beingness! Love you Chris, way to go!

How much waste, garbage and trash did you generate today? How long, stinky and ugly is your personal slime trail, you petroleum-addicted slob you?

Okay so I’m likely insulting my blog readers, if there are any. I may have broken the first law of successful writing and journalism, but I’m also feeling a bit righteous about minding the store. (The phargin’ planet, you moron.)

Sure your consumptive life is none of my business? Wrong. It’s everybody’s business. And since it isn’t against the law to be a rapacious consumer, other methods of behavior influence must hold sway.

Avoid. Reduce, reuse, recycle. Re-think while you still have the luxury of even lightly considering the havoc you wreak on this planet with all that you consume and throw away each and every day. Repent, sinner, and be saved.

Nobody’s perfect, true. But a better world has its origins in folks like you and me doing an about face on the consumptive lifestyle we live as Americans…if you still drive an SUV, you’re part of the problem and definitely not the solution. Sell that pig!

Americans in particular will define success in the 21st century by finding ways to profitably deconstruct the monster economy we’ve built that espouses progress at all costs and cares not a wit for what our unrelenting lifestyles of conspicuous mass consumption is doing to (y)our planet. Yours. Mine. Dubya’s.

Why am I taking the high ground? Well, it’s not that I’m all that high, but I do live where it’s very hard to make a living as a writer. Consequently, I’m wired. I live and die (work) through an Internet connection. That’s my highway to work and back. It’s always free of traffic. And my commute is 40 feet and dress is informal at best so getting on that highway isn’t a matter of life and death. It’s as simple and as effortless as turning on a light switch. My cars are sitting in the driveway literally rusting away and not getting used.

©1997-2011 Jay Toups :-)