Friday, December 31, 2010

The Climate Crisis Fulfills Bible Prophecy of End Times

The Climate Crisis has made the prophecy in the Bible's Book of Revelations true.

Mysteriously, the Bible's prophecy fits the Climate Crisis like Cinderella's slipper, a prophetic perfect fit. And that's sort of fascinating, right?

Humanity is destabilizing the delicate sky and we are on-track to causing the End of the World. It's not over yet. If we stop burning oil and coal, we can save the world. But we must be honest about the SCALE of how much we have to win or lose. The Climate Crisis is an Armageddon battle royale', an epic struggle of good and evil, of planet life versus planet death. So far, the public and our politicians haven't faced up honestly to the SCALE of the problem because CLIMATE ACTIVISTS HAVE BEEN UNDER-SCARING THE CHILDREN by avoiding talk of planet death. Well, kids, let's dig into the Book of Revelation for some spooky talk about the End of the World.

Let me summarize the Book of Revelation, if that's even possible.

Bob Marley introduced me to The Book of Revelation. As a young person, I listened to Bob Marley incessantly. I was fascinated by his rebellious spirituality. Bob's last two records, Exodus and Uprising, were made after he was diagnosed with cancer. The albums were filled with Bible and spirit. As the Immaterial world promises to consume the Material world, wise people settle up with the Eternal. Bob was studying the Book of Revelation closely, and included hundreds of references into his songs.

The Bible's last chapter is John's vision of the End of the World, a wild dark spiritual vision, filled with strange prophecy and epic struggle between good and evil. It's a long, mysterious prophecy about the end of the world, the return of Christ, a battle of good and evil. There are dark metaphors about wine presses of blood. There are cosmic visions of a door opening from Heaven onto the Earth plane and a Supramental energy flowing into the world from the Godhead.

I read the Revelation many times. I was fascinated by it's snap, strange characters, prophetic possibility. The Revelation is a mash-up of images, possibilities and outcomes. It's not clear how it will go.

It's not necessarily the End of the World via Planetary Ecocide Death, but like R.E.M sang "It's the End of the World as We know it, and I feel Fine." Likewise, the 2012 Mayan prophecies predict the beginning of a new Cosmic Age rather than a sudden stop.

The Bible predicts a good outcome after the Armageddon struggle: the 100o year reign of Christ, an Age of Aquarius, a epoch of planetary enlightenment.

Try that trick from the movie "When Harry Met Sally", where Harry always reads a book's last page first, in case he dies before he finishes, then he knows how the story ends. The last page of the Bible's got it all, in cliff-note summary of a really groovy scene of a Christ-lit Age of Aquarius.

Anyway, if we don't stop climate change, we are all going to die. Humanity is in the closed garage with the car running, our shared air slowly poisoned by carbon monoxide. Death, destruction, abomination. It will be the End of the World, as we know it, and we won't feel fine. We'll be among the souls that the Universe views as wimpy, lazy, slacker douschebags because we didn't figure out away to save our beautiful blue green marble.

So open your Third Eye of Vision, the mark of the living God on the Forehead, and wake up to Climate Change and to your own soul's availability to feed you mojo from the Divine realms. All the angels surround you in your ability to do what's required at this magic moment of possibility, when the future pivots on our actions today when we work like horses and dogs to change our society's reckless profligate carbon-based lifestyles.

May the will of the Divine be achieved.




Thursday, December 30, 2010

Avoid Arguments to Maximize Healing

When we have arguments, our healing is set back.

Science has proven this to be so, documented in one place here: http://www.thrivingnow.com/arguments-dramatically-slow-wound-healing/

Today I was reminded of this after a stupid and habitual argument with a family "member". Afterwards I felt old wounds and sickness grimly brooding in my mind and flesh.

My family argues: deep grooves of old BS habitual conflict, high octane jousting and old fault line wound-finding. Not pleasant. It's a sad thing to be an adult and recognize in oneself all the dumb habits one perfected as a teenager while pitting mom against dad to get the car keys, I said "OK, then, I'll just hitchhike." Ahh, the perfect schism!

So friends, we are all wounded. We all love our side of an argument. We all are trained to be rational, brain-centered beings who want to argue our way to success. But really, we are emotional, heart-centered beings who are more swayed by emotion than logic. Fierce argument hurts us, and makes us go out of heart-resonance with our friends and allies.

I honor conflict as truth's snowplow, forcing motion to clear the way. Sometimes a rumble is necessary to rearrange the landscape. Sometimes there should be strong and clear and direct words to say what we need or don't want.

But often fights sit in our stomach and gnaw at our bones long afterwards. So let us resolve to not fight, especially about the dumb things, and to dehabitualize ourselves from tasty masochistic arguing.

Let our family relations sit on a foundation of peace coexistence and calm discussion.

May our healing be swift and unhindered by arguments.

Monday, December 20, 2010

Re-Inventing Christmas to save it

We adults are free to re-imagine Christmas in a way that pleases us. We are allowed to not buy anything. We may go to church or not, go to the in-laws or not, get a tree or not.

When you are a kid, you live amidst the rituals of your family and society, and there's little wiggle room. But as adults, it's completely pleasing to accept and reject the traditions that we love or hate.

I am agonized by the gluttonous consumption. Much of my distaste for Christmas comes from the TV ads, who snort all the beautiful holy and true and cough out tinsel to hang on their products. So I reject the consumerism and the buy-buy-buy. I saw a study that said people rarely had stuff they bought a year later, and Christmas gifts were even less likely to be retained. It's a small planet, people, we can't afford to be whole-hogging the resources that we don't need.

But as much as I hate the the corporate consumerist Christmas, and I groan at that season's arrival every year, so too, every year I am seduced by Christmas and it's ability to expose a deeper humanity.

Christmas is the one seasonal holiday in America that's really still observed society wide, everything closes, things slow down, people are nicer to each other because it would be dickish to be so douschy so near Christmas.

This year I've been going to Dorset's congregational church. It's a beautiful marble building, made in 1784, filled with tastefully psychedelic stain-glass windows. Further, the Holy Spirit is in the room there, one can feel it, a pulsing current, a deep hum. Last week they did a sweet Christmas pagent, with twenty kids playing the parts: sheep, wisemen, Mary, everybody. I like singing the hymns that somehow automatically catapult your consciousness into relationship with the Divine.

There are few young people in church these days. Perhaps if they felt more freedom to reinvent the traditions in a way that worked for them, they'd be more into it.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Spring Him: The Gospels According to Ocean's 13

Peter had the idea at first but it was Thomas who really ran with it. Peter was sort of daydreaming and said “What if we bribed the Roman guards?” And Thomas snapped out of his morose mood and was into a military planning mood in about two seconds flat.

“Holy One, God of the angels, look after your children in the here and now and please, please bless this endeavor” Thomas said, with a quick and sincere Inward turned invocation to the Divine. You know, first things first.

Then he turned to Peter, and said, “Good idea, brother. We are absolutely going to pull this off. God willing.”

The mood in the room changed pretty fast after that. We’d been a morose bunch since the Garden of Gesemany when the Romans had yanked Our Brother, with dogs barking and people crying. The religious elites and the Romans and the Banksters had conspired to put on that shady show trial. He was jail right then and set to be executed tomorrow. We had been feeling more than a little blue. But in an instant all that changed. A disciplined energy came over the team. We had been through some tight scenes before, and had pulled through, and that spirit had returned suddenly.

Everyone pulled up to the table, and started talking at once for about five seconds until Thomas yelled “shut up!”

Then we made the plan, and debated tactics and strategy as swift and orderly as we could.
“My sister grows the herbs that we can us to stop the bleeding on his hands. Comfrey, calendula flowers, rosemary. She probably knows a few others” I said.

“Good, Simon” said Thomas, “Get the herbs, but be cool about it. Don’t let her know what they are for. We can’t have the whole town knowing that this is going down, or the Romans will get tipped off.”

“How am I supposed to ask her which herbs to give us without telling her, Thomas? ‘Ah sis, so just hypothetically speakin, if I wanted to stop the bleeding gushing out of big holes in the center of somebodies hands, what herbs might be good for that?’” I said.

“Is she trustworthy?” asked Thomas.

“Yes” I said.

“OK, tell her but swear her to secrecy and she’s not to come tomorrow. The less people who know what we’re up to at the event, the better” said Thomas. He continued, “Bribing the Romans. Not an impossible task” hands in prayer position, beneath his lips, but eyes far-off in thought, thinking aloud, “A lot of those guys got stolen from their families by the Emperor’s army, and don’t give a damn about anything but wine and women, and maybe going home someday.”

“But, the officers, not so much” said John. “They can be a disciplined bunch. They have stuff to lose. Mostly they’re literate.”

We debated it for a while. In the end, we decided to bribe the soldiers and work around the officers. It seemed a better plan. The officers might not go for it or might demand more money than we could pull together. Besides, the trial was big news all over Judea, the elite were watching close. The money swine were still grumbling about the way Jesus turned over the tables at the temple. But we figured the soldiers would be more pliant. (As a backup plan, we decided to keep a big bag of gold in case we need to bribe the officer.)

We decided to offer them all gold coins worth 3 months of their pay upfront, to be followed by 20 gallons of wine and another 3 months pay if it went off. It was Peter, the fisherman, who had bribed a few Romans before, he worked up the deal. He was a hard-living guy before he got spiritualized. But you know how it is, the Lord turns your talents towards His purposes as He sees fit.

Luckily Our Brother had made some rich friends as he walked around healing everybody. Lazarus’s uncle had offered him a 10 acre fig plantation, but he had said just laughed and said “Thanks, but I’m into different fruit.” He made poor friends too, he just was a sort of a charming walking love factory. One of his main disciplines was a rich merchant, and he also had a cave outside of Jerusalem, that we agreed would be the perfect place to get Him well again afterwards.

We were a psyched and happy bunch that night. It seemed possible that we could get away with it. The Romans were notoriously easy to bribe. We could just get them to turn the other way at the last minute, and then boom, whisk him down, off we go, let him rest up for a few days, and then disappear back to India, where he could live out his days until he was a happy, old man with a big grey beard and some wrinkles but that same big smile. Maybe a few children running around, who knows?

A lot of it fell into place pretty quickly and with general agreement. Who to get the loot from, where to get the herbs, where to get the opium to knock him out with.

There was only disagreement about whether to tell Mary or not. Peter said “we just can’t tell her. She’s sweet. She won’t be able to fake it.

“It will break her heart if we don’t. We have to tell her.

“No! She’ll blow it. She’s an innocent, she’s not actor, she won’t put it off.

The debate got fierce.

Peter won in the debate in the end. Mary shouldn’t know, if she got super emotional at the event, it would help the show. Besides, she’d understand later.

We also decided to keep it under raps even from some of the other disciples. We were not the most trusting bunch after what happened with Judas. It’s true, he’d always been a bit of an outsider. Yashua had let him hang around because he wanted us to stretch our hearts. He said that if God wanted to redeem this guy, then who were we to say no.

Peter had never liked Judas and had given a lengthy discourse on how he was going to gut him like a fish and disembowel him. But by then, it wasn’t necessary. Sad, that whole thing. Betrayal. A backbiter. Bad ally etiquette. You gotta be a good ally to your friends. Stick with ‘em. Stick together. It’ s hard enough to get things done in this world, without the egomaniacs who don’t know how to work together.

So we decided to try and tell as few people as possible. The people who were at the first meeting were the one’s who know. It was about half. The others we’d let act as decoys.

There was debate about whether to tell Yeshua himself. We all knew the story of Socrates. That great teacher was condemned to death by hemlock and for the sake of truthfulness had taken it!

We decide to tell him. We figured that if he thought he was really dying he might hold out, but if he knew he was faking, he could just go into deep prayer and meditation and make the body like a corpse. He had learned some really super tricks in India. He could make his heartbeat slow way down. He could turn inward so deeply that you could poke him with a stick and he’d gaze at you with peaceful eyes. He’d be soon entranced in union with the Divine that the body was like toy boat on the surface of a deep, deep ocean, and he was identified with the ocean.

When to tell him, though? We decided to try and get him the message as soon as possible. We didn’t want to risk passing
information along through the jail. We’d figured we’d try to get him the message when he was carrying the cross through Jerusalem. If not, we’d say something at the hill when we fed him the opium drink.

Peter agreed to arrange from a doctor friend for a hefty dose of opium, a big pain killer, mixed with some kava kava root from the spice traders. That should keep him peaced out hopefully stop the trauma and shock from settling into his flesh. But also hopefully conscious enough so that he could meditate and do his super-samadhi trick.

We ended our meeting with one of the most intense prayer sessions of my life. Everybody was filled with sincerity, in part because we wanted it so bad and perhaps in part because we remembered Yashua telling us “A Sufi teacher named Ibrahim once told me ‘God hears all sincere prayers.’ And in my experience that has been true.”

The next day everybody reconvened over a working lunch of bread, olives, oil.

Peter said “It’s funny, when I first got the idea to spring him, it came in a sort of daydream. The idea was fully formed, complete and perfect, all filled in, nothing missing. I feel it was a kind of Divinely guided dream. In this vision, Yashua came to me and said, ‘what about pulling a sly one on the day? I’ll do my deep meditation yogic sleep technique and appear dead. You can convince the guards to pull me down early. The bigwig rabbis will race off for shabbat because of sunset, and then you’ll have a reason to pull me down. We can drag out the walk though town, making it a late arrival so sunset is closer. Down I go, and back to India. We have gotta win our victories.”

“But what if it’s God’s will?” said John.

“What do you mean?” said Thomas.

“What if it’s God’s will that he be sacrificed? You know, like say, as some kind of sacrificial lamb, a perfect sacrifice to atone for the sins of all mankind” said John.

“Our Brother is not a sacrifice animal. Besides, if God’s will that he dies, then we won’t get away with it tomorrow. And anyway, “I and the Father are One”, right?” said Thomas. “ Humanity and Divinity can reach union where they are of united will. Thy Will be done. We are surrendered fully, fully in service to God, and we want this, so why wouldn’t Our Father want it for us?”

The next day, John had gotten the herbs from his sister. The rich disciple with the cave had come up with the loot.

The Romans had Him walk through town with his cross. Peter approached him, slipped him the medicine, whispered “it’s all set up, just drag out the walk, deep meditate on the cross, and we’ll pull you down.” Yashua said “A fine plan. Thanks for listening” and winked.

When the first nail went in, He said “oh, that’s going to leave a mark!”

By the time he was on the cross the sun was setting. The crooked rabbis were there to see their dirty work was done, but as soon as the first nail went in, they turned and left for the shabbat meals and rituals. Perfect.

The Roman guards happily took our money. We pulled him down shortly after.

Putting the limp body into the wagon, and rolling away, when we were out of site of the Romans, Thomas whispered, “Are you with us brother?” Yashua smiled a little opened one eye and said “Is God good?” We shared a moment of intense happiness that was contained in a tight box of our acting sad still.

We took him up to the cave. He rested and got feed great food for 2 days. His hands were as big as melons, wrapped in bandages made of comfrey leaves.

Then Mary cut his hair and beard and we took him north to Galilee semi-hidden in the back of a wagon.

The funny thing was, the other disciples saw him on his way out of town, it was a dusty road, twilight, but they didn’t recognize him until afterwards. And then the tomb was empty, and there was a little bit of a stir about that. But nobody really thought much about it.

He was around for a few weeks, making a pass to say goodbye to a few beloveds.

He left town in a horse drawn cart, partying in the back with couple of us. I was playing the drum, Thomas the lute, He was chanting the holy names. When we got to the last knoll where you could see Jerusalem, He stood up on the back of the rolling cart and said “Goodbye Jerusalem, I love you. And you Romans and religious phonies, I got one word for you... Suckerfish!” We all laughed.

Some of the disciples followed him to India, to beautiful mountains and lakes of Kashmir, where He lived a long and happy life.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Cancun climate talks off to beautiful start on-line. Have a Watch Party!

Check out great video on-line from the U.N. climate negotiations in Cancun, Mexico. The UNFCC.int event website has live streaming from the event, and yesterday’s events available on demand.

Watching climate negotiations in Cancun online can be pretty inspiring, like a TED Conference video binge meets planetary survival think-tank/diplomat theater.

On-line you’ll find the Climate Action Network gave a good summary of what’s on-the-table at negotiations. “Cancun can be be the calm after Copenhagen’s political storm, a calm where we can get some real progress made for poor people” said Tim Gore of Oxfam, who notes that the UN process allows poor countries to be heard.

Look for the inspirational nature video, (about 46:30 minutes into the very interesting Opening Plenary/ Welcoming Ceremony.)

So why not play five hours of this content while you clean your kitchen. Or better yet, invite friends over for a watch party!

To spice it up, play the Cancun Watch Party Drinking Game. Suggested rules: gather friends and favored beverages. Watch the event on-line and drink when you hear the word “mitigate” “transparency” or “350 parts per million.” Drink every time you feel patriotic. Drink if you have lovin' feelings for the U.N.. Make a toast to Mother Earth every time you hear “Rights for Mother Earth.” And so forth.

Seriously, though, people should watch the Cancun process, because the more public attention that is on this process, the more our political leaders will want to do something. Like it or not, these UN proceedings is the most serious forum for dealing with the climate crisis at the moment. We need an educated citizenry on the Climate issue, so please gather and tune in!

Here are some of the topics being negotiated. UN climate chief Christiana Figueres talked about four places to make a deal: climate adaptation measures, clean technology transfer to poor countries, forestry protection, and creation of an international climate fund.

Cancun is a U.N. meeting of countries that signed the Kyoto Protocol to assess what can be done to make it work better. Or according to the official website jargon, “COP16/CMP6 is the 16th edition of the Conference of Parties of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP) and the 6th Conference of Parties serving as the meeting of the Parties of the Kyoto Protocol (CMP). “Parties” refers to all the national states that signed and ratified both the international treaties...”

The meeting is being held at a big resort in Cancun, on the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico. Delegates and media are meeting at the Moon Resort, while other events happen around the city. Civil society will be given space to get their ya-ya’s out, in a 5000 person auditorium billed as an Expression Zone. That’s an improvement to many international meetings where the public and NGOs are kept away by barricades and tear gas.

Still, it’s a private party compared to Cochabamba. The Cochabamba Summit was far more vital and interesting than Copenhagen. Held in April 2010 as a response to Copenhagen, the World People’s Summit on Climate Change and Rights for Mother Earth was a model of inclusive participatory democracy and open process.

Cochabamba created the vast, intelligent and radical Cochabamba Accords that Bolivia is trying to include into the negotiations this year in Cancun. The Cochabamba Accords call for a goal of temperature increase as 1 or 1.5 degrees, rather than 2 degrees, as industrialized nations favor. (We have 1 degree increase already and have seen lots of change. So I agree, let’s aim low, 1%!!!!)

The Cochabamba Accords also passed the Resolution on the Rights of Mother Earth. Bolivian President Evo Morales is the world’s first indigenous president. He is a sturdy voice in climate leadership and in bringing indigenous thinking into the political sphere. It may seem dreamy to talk about granting Rights to Mother Earth, but some view this as a central idea to healing humanity’s relationship with the Earth. We must see the Earth as alive, worthy of respect and protection. Follow this discussion on the lively blog at pwccc.wordpress.com.

I hope for positive movement of the Rights for Mother Earth in Cancun. I hope the US delegation supports this language. It would not cost anything and would be a place to compromise in a culturally respectful manner.

I hope some good progress comes from Cancun. Yet it’s hard not to feel dissatisfied by that this is the best government can do. Humanity’s survival hangs in the balance, and they struggle to agree on un-ambitious actions that won’t stop the problem. Politicians don’t deal with the approaching climate Tsunami, because it’s terrifying effects are in the future, while economic concerns nip at the heels this moment. US politicians are particularly irresponsible, especially since the US is the number one carbon polluter in historical terms. Unfortunately, the US congress has yet to pass Climate Legislation, and so the US remains “all talk and no walk” in terms of having legal obligations to cut carbon emissions. Time for the US to get on it!

The annual climate negotiation’s most useful function may be the annual focusing of the world’s scattered ADHD attention on the Climate Crisis. Earthlings take an annual moment to thinking about the Big Problem That May End Us All. Last year at this time, the world’s media was abuzz about a summit in Copenhagen. That gathering disappointed many, and made association with the process a political liability. Who knows, maybe they’ll get more done this year with calmness and less political hubbub.

We must stop the Climate Crisis, or everything we love is destroyed. The Sermon on the Mount will go into nonexistence! So does Glee! Runaway climate change means the end of the world as we know it and probably human extinction! So let's get on it, people!

People of the world want action on the Climate Crisis. Check out incredible aerial art made by 350.org and thousands of people as evidence. May we witness solutions to Climate Crisis in Cancun and in our own lives.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Reading into the Signs at the Rally to Restore Sanity

Many people carried funny protest signs at the Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear on Washington DC’s National Mall. On a sunny late October Saturday, thousands of silly signs bobbed in the massive crowd called to Washington by comedians Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert. .

Some signs were insightful into the political landscape, like cloud watching for signs of approaching weather.

On Obama: “Sanity: Knowing that it takes longer than 2 years to fix an eight year disaster!”

“Yes we can- but it’s not going to happen overnight.”

“I see you went half-black and are deciding whether or not to go back.”

Many signs spoke to the rally’s main theme: “Take it down a notch, America.” The American body politic has been getting riled up in a dangerous way that historically has led to violence. Recently, a zombie-like volunteer for Rand Paul assaulted MoveOn’s Lauren Valle. The Nazis started by finger pointing at the different: Jews/Roma/gays etc. America has a proto-fascist movements afoot, so this comedy serves a serious healing function at a serious time.

“Radicals for moderate discourse”

“Endless outrage is a form of mental illness, not a form of gov’t.”

“You are mad as Shell and I’m not going to take it anymore.”

A highbrow statement from Thomas Jefferson was given more snap by being held by a very cute young woman, “Let us restore to social intercourse that harmony and affection without which liberty and even life are but dreary things.” Imagine! Jefferson predicted the theme of the rally over two hundred years ago!

Jefferson, an early adopter of interracial babymaking, would have appreciated the healthy modern views on sexuality on display:

On Christine O’Donnell: A sign said “I’m You* (*but I masturbate.)” On another sign was a picture of a sheep saying “I’m not a witch. I ewe.”

Some signs were against all extremism, like this war cry from a Unitarian Sunday school:

“If you aren’t with us, well, you may have an equally valid worldview to consider.”

and:

“The center: getting stuff done since 1776.”

Some signs winked at the act of carrying signs.

“I have a sign”

“I have a really big sign”

“I like this sign”

“This sign doesn’t say anything.”

“My political views cannot be summarized on a pithy sign.”

“Americans for... OH LOOK! A puppy!”

“Who farted?”

The doctors were more straightforward.

“Young doctor for universal health care.”

“More doctors, less jails.”

Some signs called for civility:

“Beat your pitchforks into sporks”

Some signs called to evolution:

“Men: Liberate! Ditch the tie!”

“Fear high-speed trains! They save energy.”

Something about the cultural superiority trip and masturbatory Reaganism of Sarah Palin really sets this crowd on edge.

One sign had a picture of Palin and “Keep fear alive.”

and: “You don’t have to hunt a moose to be a real American.”

“I can see America from my house!”

“Pray for secular gov’t”

Redheads gathered to get a picture with a sign that read: “Redheads for reason: we’re on fire for sanity”

On moderation:

“I’m moderate as hell.”

“I’m with sensible.”

“Death to nobody!”

“Nonviolence by any means necessary!”

On interfaith religious tolerance for Muslims:

“Muslims are nice people.”

“Beards are evil” carried by a bearded man.

The rally had a healthy, Muslim-friendly atmosphere that is a beautiful, godly improvement on the Vibe of recent days. America is stronger and wiser because of our interfaith tolerance. Hyper-partisan religiousness is almost always a tool of secular people to bad trip sincere religious people.

I love Sufi poetry, the poems of Rumi and Hafiz, and the ugliness of a decade of Islamophobia was put in perspective when suddenly, Islam was included in the circle of the cool. I want to live in the Jon Stewart’s America: tolerant, multi-ethic, and islam-friendly, so Kareem Abdul-Jabber can stop by.

For me, the rally’s most heartwarming moment was when Cat Stevens came on stage. This man suffered greatly for following his spiritual path where It lead. When Ozzie came out, it was grotesque counterpoint, but dynamic theater. But, hey, that’s America: the sublimely spiritual and Loud People must share one big stage.

The phenomenon of a self-selecting crowd is always interesting to observe. The crowd for the rally seemed like educated, politically aware, liberal people with a sense of humor. A quarter million people who like jokes! Yes, 250,000 is the semiofficial estimate on numbers, reported by Politico.com, based on 50 people’s estimates. To compare, Glenn Beck’s rally was 87,000, from the same source.

One new friend said he “just felt they should come, an inner call to stand up for something, albeit vague.”

One sign expressed why so many came:

“Thanks, guys, for keeping me sane during the Bush years”

The Daily Show has kept people sane while enduring the deceitful Bushite political theater. The rally felt healing to the national mind of America. Clear thinking and being grounded in reality is healthy. Tolerance, justice, and goodness are healing. Dark thoughts of anger and racism make us sick. The American media is creating a dark, propagandized mindscape.

The media isn’t helping us think together and act rationally. We haven’t yet gotten political will to solve the Climate Crisis because oil-companies are out propagandizing Dr. James Hansen. So we are destabilizing the structure of our sky! This situation threatens humanity’s survival, but try to get that heard through the punk band racket of the Fox Noise Machine.
This allows Climate Denial to be nearly prerequisite for Republican Senate candidates.

Humanity must learn to think straight on the science of the composition of our atmosphere in this delicate, thin terrarium, or we are no place. But that’s my private soapbox. Note: I did not see one sign about the Climate Crisis, nor hear one comment from the stage. We need a climate movement, and we don’t have one sign.

In closing, the day felt like it might be DC’s best day ever. DC is town of spooky impressive stage set theater buildings. It needs the good vibes off the American people. Americans need to be in DC more, that our tolerant goodness can rub off. At the very least, we should gather annually so that the Mythbuster guys can lead is in a progressively sillier group antics, like when they got everybody to jump and measured for an earthquake.

On Oct 30, 2010, the lonely, unheard masses gathered, this underrepresented american majority: liberal, tolerant, with a sense of humor.

They came, they laughed, maybe they voted.

Friday, October 29, 2010

I dare you to praise Obama for something!

This is a test of your ideological flexibility!

Can you praise President Obama for a success in the last two years?

Progressives probably can't and conservatives probably won't.

Therefore, the progressive blogging community is partially responsible for the 'Enthusiasm Gap' in the Democratic base that may lower voter turn-out and may throw the Congress to the GOP. Meanwhile, the GOP's inability to see the good is creating a delusional, hysterical, traitorous Disloyal Opposition.

Try this exercise that illustrates my point: I dare you to praise Obama for something.

I will take my own challenge to demonstrate.

I appreciate Obama getting the military into reverse on both of Bush's stupid wars. The new Bob Woodward book "Obama's Wars" shows Obama and Biden wisely recognizing Afghanistan as another Vietnam, and creating the conditions for ending the war. The book shows Obama standing up to the generals, demanding a six page letter of terms, after the military kept trying to roll him on things they'd already decided. Now this is pretty "Inside Baseball" talk, but it provides reassurance to anti-war base voters. After the Afghanistan decision to escalate, there was a widespread deflating in the base. Obama is on the way to fulfilling the promise to get us out of these wars and he deserves credit for that work in process. May these movements towards peace be successful.

I think we naturally don't want to be cheerleaders for power, and this is a healthy instinct. And also we live in a time of national madness, when the group thinking machine of the media is completely delusional. We are suffering under a Fox propaganda culture that's winning over Reality (where facts about carbon-dioxide exist!) So it's up to us people, to tell the truth as we see it!

Or how will the public know what has gone well?

The Obama Administration is up to some cool stuff, but you'd never know it. They just haven't telling their story that well. Www.Whitehouse.gov is pretty cool as blogs go, but it is like a museum: quiet, scholarly, under utilized, careful. Obama's new media hasn't gone very deep into the Net-roots or youth Facebook culture. Then add the noise: Fox is a GOP mouthpiece and only talks smack. Then add the silence: progressives are alienated or very quietly supportive. Suddenly Obama is the Invisible Man, an Unsymbolizing Symbol.

So let us celebrate the victories of the Obama Administration so far and help them out.

I say: Overall, I believe Obama is a good guy in a very hard job, and he has done a pretty good job so far.

I liked the 42 nation summit on Non-Proliferation of nuclear weapons.

I liked that the Attorney General allowed Medical Marijuana to advance in California.

I like the organic garden and the anti-obesity/whole foods campaign of Mrs. Obama.

I like that they are putting solar panels up on the White House!

I liked that the international banking system didn't do a 1929 meltdown. (That was good, right GOP?)

I like the anti-bullying GLTB work they've done lately.

I like that they are moving on 54 high-speed rail projects in 23 states that will get $2.4 billion dollars.

I like that they haven't pushed "free trade" deals.

I appreciated the Cairo speech's outreach to the Muslim world.

I liked that Credit Card companies can't jack your rates without telling you.

And so on.

Try this exercise. I double-dog dare you. It pushes some buttons in the psyche but please stretch yourself.

Because the Republican Climate-Denying Zombies are at the door of Congress and if they get in, we'll never get the Climate Legislation necessary for planetary survival!

On the November 2nd election, I stand with the President Obama and the Democrats and I hope you will too.

May truthful words build a sustainable world.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Sane Suggestions for Traveling to DC for the Stewart/Cobert Rally

My friend Anna said "I think the Rally is going to be a generational event, like MLK speaking or something, something that we'll remember." It does feel like it's going to be huge. A mass gathering of sane Americans arising as antidote to Fox mania! And then a crazy Halloween party weekend in the capital. So come! Here are some suggestions on how to get here and stuff to do.

Washington D.C. is a beautiful, great and strange town. Everybody talks smack about Washington, but that's just because the politics are lame and entrenched while the world burns. But DC is a brilliant town to ramble around in. Internationalism, intelligence and prosperity mix to create seemingly endless novelty, as if we were riding the cresting waves of Terrence McKenna's Novelty Wave towards the Eschaton.

To get to DC, Amtrak trains travel to DC's Union Station. From there it's a short metro or long walk to the event. Drivers can drive until outside city and then catch the Metro in. Several bus companies are organizing trips to the event, with links on the Rally To Restore Sanity's website. The event is in front of Congress's building on the Mall, so take Metro stations Smithsonian or Capitol South.

DC's public transport is the best in the country. The Metro is fast and, more importantly, clean. Public transport is more pleasant when not grimy. (NYC, I'm lookin' at you!) Buses go everywhere the subway doesn't. Be careful, though, sometimes two different color train lines can arrive on the same platform.

DC is a town that can be feel tough to navigate until you get it. Here's the city's design. DC is arranged into quarters around a city center, so streets have a quadrant designation. This allows for the numbers to stay low, counting up from the center. Remember to check this NW/SW/NE/SE designation or you might be aiming for the other side of town, though in practice it doesn't factor in that much. Street names go up alphabetically from the center. Shorter syllable words are closer to the city center than longer syllable words.

During the day, the National Mall has dozens incredible museums to amble about. And they are all free! Literally, miles of hallways, so wear comfortable shoes. The cops are chill, though their metal detectors won't like corkscrews or swiss army knives at the museum door. The Smithsonian's Freer Gallery has some incredible Asian art. National Air and Space Museum's got a 3D movie about the Hubbell Telescope that looks cosmic. The new Native American Museum looks like the Anasazi cliff dwellings of the American Southwest. Integrating natural themes like water and sky, it celebrates native sensibility brought into architecture, as with the Mohegan Sun Casino in CT. This museum has the best food on the Mall, from buffalo stew to veggie chili, arranged in a food court based by different geographic food sheds. The Mall is a bit of "food desert", where it can be easy to be hungry even with money in your pocket. In theory the Smithsonian has a cafe, if you consider a $3 Coca Cola digestible.

For evening adventures, DC is has a lively bar culture, embodied at the Tune Inn (331 Pennsylvania SE). In the Du Pont Circle area, Afterwards Cafe serves good food inside a terrific bookstore. The best dive bar I've ever been was the Raven, gritty and brilliantly human-scale, with rock star pictures on the wall and a surly bartender who will serve you well, (from DuPont Circle metro, bus 42, 3125 Mt Pleasant Ave NW). For dinner in DuPont Circle, a great salad factory is Sweetgreens. Nearby is the nation's first certified organic restaurant, Nora, pricey but wholesome.

For accommodation, there are many youth hostels online, though most seemed booked for the weekend. (Try the William Penn House, $40 a night.) Hotels available by Metro are plentiful. DC is a fairly easy place to just sneak off into the greenery with a sleeping bag. Rock Creek Park is home to a beautiful river with miles of biking trails.

DC is filled with brilliant architecture. For two hundred years people have sought to increase the prestige of their organization by having a really impressive building in the Big Town. The embassies near Du Pont Circle are so beautiful, though they seem to have witnessed unhappiness. The city is stuffed with public space treasures, like the beautiful little park on Embassy Row dedicated to Khalil Gibran, at 3100 Massachusetts Ave NW.

DC feels pretty safe. It's a prosperous town, so perhaps government doesn't suffer recession. In the words of Brother Cornell West, DC is an chocolate city. There are half-a-million Ethiopians here, the most outside of Ethiopia. Due to the international schools and embassies, there are people from all over the world, creating a great gumbo of ethnicity, and America's most international city.

DC is a also a place where the military/industrial complex takes out ad campaigns for their new tank, with full page ads in Post, and subway billboards. The metro stop before the mega-mall at Pentagon City is always good for unintentionally funny ads. Check out the billboards at Capital South metro, where cleanskies.org has the most egregious green-washing campaign ever: using climate change facts to justify getting "natural" gas by hydrofracking the shale beds of NYC's water-supply. Please take a moment to publicly mock these ads.

Capital South metro station is the stop to take to go to the Democratic National Committee building, 430 South Capital Street, an orange building near some sort of factory, where you can stop by after the rally and make some phone calls for the upcoming election. And afterwards, check out the nearby Tortilla Coast mexi-cafe and see where Capital Hill staffers eat chips after a day of difficult legislation.

For Friday night, at the Rock n Roll Hotel, there's a Masquerade Party with 3 bands, (5$ or free with Mask!) at 1353 H St. NE. On Saturday, there's a costume rally afterparty the Eighteenth Street Lounge at 1212 18th NW Street.

DC, our capital, let's restore it's sanity with a one big sane weekend.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Signs of Climate Change in the Northeast

Vermont’s fall colors may arrive two weeks early this year. Vermont’s strange spring was hot and therefore compressed. All the flowers bloomed at once instead of the usual leisurely parade. By the reckoning of many gardeners, the spring was two weeks ahead. And through the summer, several biological arrivals have been early. So perhaps the leaves will turn color two weeks early this fall and all the leafpeeper tourists will be too late!

Saratoga Apple’s crop will be 40% of normal this year because of the weird Climate Changed weather this spring. A long hot spell in the spring tricked the trees into blossoming ten days to two weeks early. Then came a fairly normal cold patch that froze the forming fruit.

The lilacs bloomed two weeks ahead of the Lilac Festival in Rochester, NY, to organizer’s dismay.

These are just more data points allowing us to ”solve for pattern” that we are already living on an Earth experiencing the Climate Crisis. These are relatively harmless examples compared to Pakistan’s floods and Russia’s fires, but perhaps more persuasive because they are local.

Author Bill McKibben said on Democracy Now recently, “The planet that we live on now is different, and in fundamental ways, from the one we were born onto. The atmosphere holds about five percent more water vapor that it did forty years ago. That’s an incredible change in one of the basic physical parameters of the planet, and it explains all those deluges and downpours. The ocean is 30 percent more acidic, as it absorbs all that carbon from the atmosphere. NASA said yesterday that we’ve just come through the warmest January, February, March on record, that 2010 is going to be the warmest year that we’ve ever scene.”

The “debate” about “Is Climate Change happening?” should be over. McKibben’s new book Eaarth gives dozens of examples of how our world is already experiencing a Climate Catastrophe. He says that we live on an Earth so changed we might as well call it a new name, like Eaarth. But the debate isn’t over because it’s not a debate. “The Debate” is a well-documented public relations stalling tactic by fossil fuel companies to confuse the public while grubbing every last fossil fuel dollar. Wall Street will be under water before Exxon Mobil stops funding “The Debate.” Mother Jones magazine reports that Exxon Mobil spent 55 million dollars to fund think tanks to contradict mainstream science. The Debate Stalling Tactic has worked because the sky looks so big, the science is complicated, and consequences seem far off.

I guess it’s Human Nature “to need to see it to believe it.” Seeing this out-of-phase spring unfolding was my wake-up call. Now I’m sure that the Climate Crisis is actually happening and I’m a little freaked out because that means humanity is in a very dire situation indeed.

Skies are air oceans, limited, able to be polluted, changeable in their make-up. Carbon may invisibly disappear out of our tailpipes but it doesn’t drop out of the atmospheric mash-up for a thousand years! Carbon in the atmosphere takes a long time to be sequestered, or gathered back by plants. Carbon is more like a cathedral than a fart. Every flippant car trip causes pollution that will be in the atmosphere for 1000 years. As in, “Oh my god, do you really have to drive to return that movie?”

So we need to leave the coal in the hole and leave the oil in the ground. We need to stop burning stuff. We need to make burning oil and coal ILLEGAL! We need electric cars powered by an electrical grid that’s charged by solar and wind. We would already have these technologies if those selfish oil companies hadn’t been blocking and stalling and ‘debating’ for 40 years.

The BP Gulf Coast Oil Catastrophe was a national wake up call (though we seem to have hit the snooze button. Again.) We need to get off the oil. We should start the process by banning offshore drilling. Oil companies are sociopathic non-human entities that don’t care who lives or dies. The oil companies are forcing humanity onto a Trail of Tears towards runaway climate change and Planet Death. We must stop them, stop burning oil, and protect the ecosystem stability that allows us to grow apples.

On 10/10/10, (10 October 2010), there is a Global Work Party for the Climate Crisis being organized by 350.org. Join your community members in responding to the Climate Crisis and then we’ll tell our politicians, “hey, we’re getting to work on the problem, how about you?” And who knows, maybe working together will help you transition your town into a community that’s more resilient and pleasant to live in. Check out the Transition Town movement to see how some communities are trying to prepare for post-oil.

Monday, June 7, 2010

The Smartest Conversation Yet on Climate Crisis

Last night four authors talked about the Climate Crisis. All had written books on the subject. When people have a shared language and knowledge base, the conversation can go much deeper. It was the smartest conversation yet on the climate crisis that I've heard.

Listening to the conversation felt theraputic, healing, affirming, because it made me feel not alone in my head with these terrifying visions of climate apocalpyse. I think about the climate crisis a lot and I sometimes wonder if I'm not just getting myself hot and bothered. (It would be pleasant to become a Climate Denier and hit the snooze button and shake of the nightmares.) So it felt good to know that smart people who write books are also freaked out, that I'm not the only one shuddering with visions of the death of the Biosphere, that the basic contours of my understanding of the climate crisis are correct.

The Northshire Bookstore brought together Bill McKibben, Elizabeth Kolbert and two others. Someday soon I will post a link to the audio of the event.

I want to be having a conversation on this subject, with people this smart, four nights a week. Can some TV producer please manifest a Climate Crisis Roundtable?

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Sociopathic Oil Companies and Runaway GMO algea

What do the BP oil spill and the recent announcement of a scientist creating a living cell have in common?

A dangerous threat to the Commons, our shared life here on earth.

Just as BP throws up it hands and says, 'we don't know how to fix it', someday the GMO algea may get loose in the ocean and out compete normal algea, creating a disrupted oceanic ecosystem.

A scientist is pulling the most productive algea components out the algea DNA, and creating a super algea that would be useful in producing fuel. Now, I'm not a super scientist or anything, but it doesn't take alot to see where this one would go into the dickey weeds. It gets loose, it out-competes, disrupts the ecosystem, spreads a mad red tide across the planet, and so on...

our Commons, our shared earth, is a shared valueable treasure, and individuals and corporations don't have the right to disrupt it just for their own greed or desire for scientific fame.

Corporations aren't people, they don't die or feel empathetic pain of others, and one of humanity's great challenges is figuring out how to put humans in the driver's seat instead of faceless corporations. The other great challenge is to learn to handle our super scientific powers and place them in the context of a breakable ecology and a useful morality.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Apple Crops in Northeast Sabotaged by Big Oil’s Changing the Climate

Saratoga Apple’s Nate Darrow says his apple crop will be 1/4 of normal this year because of the weird Climate Changed weather this spring. A long hot spell in the spring tricked the trees into blossoming ten days to two weeks early. Then came a fairly normal cold patch that froze the forming fruit.

Looking over his boxes of Delicious, Galas, and Sun Crisp apples at the Dorset Farmers Market, Nate said, “This time next year we won’t have all these apples still in stock.” He estimates that his harvest will be 20-25% of normal, maybe as low as 10%. “It depends on how well the trees do at the top of the orchard, the trees that are above the pocket of cold air that settles in the valley.”

A few weeks ago, I freaked out when I saw snow covered blossoms arriving before the bees were out. Yet my pear trees seem to be setting some fruit. Perhaps my fruit survived because it wasn’t too cold. Nate said that the young fruit won’t handle 29 degrees or under. A little snow on the blossoms is OK. Some growers will actually spray water on orchards because the conversion of water to ice actually releases some heat that will keep the temperature above 29. Minor temperature changes at certain periods mean the difference between a successful or difficult year.

This is the Climate Crisis. A hardworking fruit grower has his livelihood made unpredictable by an ecosystem swinging out of rhythm. (Perhaps he should sue BP for lost income.) This is just another data point allowing us to ‘”solve for pattern” that says we are already living on an Earth experiencing a Climate Crisis.

Bill McKibben said on Democracy Now recently, “The planet that we live on now is different, and in fundamental ways, from the one we were born onto. The atmosphere holds about five percent more water vapor that it did forty years ago. That’s an incredible change in one of the basic physical parameters of the planet, and it explains all those deluges and downpours. The ocean is 30 percent more acidic, as it absorbs all that carbon from the atmosphere. NASA said yesterday that we’ve just come through the warmest January, February, March on record, that 2010 is going to be the warmest year that we’ve ever scene.”

The “debate” about “Is Climate Change happening?” should be over. McKibben’s new book Eaarth gives dozens of examples of how our world is already experiencing a Climate Catastrophe. He says that we live on an Earth so changed we might as well call it a new name, like Eaarth. But the debate isn’t over because it’s not a debate. “The Debate” is a well-documented public relations stalling tactic by fossil fuel companies to confuse the public while grubbing every last fossil fuel dollar. Wall Street will be under water before Exxon Mobil stops funding “The Debate.” Mother Jones magazine reports that Exxon Mobil spent 55 million dollars to fund think tanks to contradict mainstream science. The Debate Stalling Tactic has worked because the sky looks so big, the science is complicated, and consequences seem far off.

I guess it’s Human Nature “to need to see it to believe it.” Seeing this out-of-phase spring unfolding was my wake-up call. Now I’m sure that the Climate Crisis is actually happening and I’m a little freaked out because that means humanity is in a very dire situation indeed.

Skies are air oceans, limited, able to be polluted, changeable in their make-up. Carbon may invisibly disappear out of our tailpipes but it doesn’t drop out of the atmospheric mash-up for a thousand years! Carbon in the atmosphere takes a long time to be sequestered, or gathered back by plants. Carbon is more like a cathedral than a fart. Every flippant car trip causes pollution that will be in the atmosphere for 1000 years. As in, “Oh my god, do you really have to drive to return that movie?”

So we need to leave the coal in the hole and leave the oil in the ground. We need to stop burning stuff. We need to make burning oil and coal ILLEGAL! We need electric cars powered by an electrical grid that’s charged by solar and wind. We would already have these technologies if those selfish oil companies hadn’t been blocking and stalling and ‘debating’ for 40 years.

The BP Gulf Coast Oil Catastrophe is our national wake up call. We need to get off the oil. Oil companies are sociopathic non-human entities that don’t care who lives or dies. The oil companies are forcing humanity onto a Trail of Tears towards runaway climate change and Planet Death. We must stop them, stop burning oil, and protect the ecosystem stability that allow us to grow apples.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Take Bush out of post-abuse Memory Hole

George W. Bush has disappeared from the national stage and national mind because neither the Left or the Right wants to think about him. Republicans want to disappear Bush to remove scarlet letter W from around their mid-term election necks. Democrats are so sick of this guy that mentioning his name makes the room unhappy and reaching for the Paxil. But we must remember George W. Bush because voters are blaming Obama for Bush-caused problems.

Americans are like people healing from abuse by blocking bad memories. The mention of the Bush name calls forth dozens of unpleasant memories and association, from war, lies, deceit, and to simply incompetant coasting aristocratic governence. So nobody speaks of him. He is down the memory hole.

In George Orwell's book 1984, in a big bureocratic government building, workers had nicknamed the garbage shoots placed throughout the building "memory holes'. Scraps of paper were shoved there to disappear. The state felt free to re-write history, and old propaganda that countered the new propaganda was put down the memory hole.

So it is with Bush. He goes down the memory hole and the Republicans re-brand as libertarian populists.

We live in the United States of Amnesia, as writer Gore Vidal put it. Like a spiritual teacher with an obssessive focus on "The Now", our nation is disconnected to the flow of events that brought us here. Other countries aren't always this way. Some of the South American countries maintain a fierce historical narrative that puts American in the colonialist villian role. Democrats could use a little bit of that radical historical memory to remember who the villians in this story are.

President Obama has been doing a good job with a bad situation. The Bush Team handed him an exploding situation and he defused it. But elections aren't about the truth, they are about national mood, about the strange tidal flows of shaped opinion. With a mid-term coming up that could hand Congress to the Republicans, it's a tight time for Obama.

Somehow, the Right has gelled around being anti-Obama, and the Left has lost the sense that Obama is 'our guy'.
Obama has been governing with a sort of post-partisan elite bureocratic pragmatism, not as a Democrat particularly. And so the Democratic Base is confused, like "'do we have a dog in this fight?"

Luckily, we still remember that we dislike Bush. When we remember...

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Climate Leadership Goes South

The South American nations have now taken leadership role in the Climate Crisis.

From siding with good science to democracy in format, the recent Cochabamba people's summit was a startling revelation in the possibility of a people-centered process to address Our Biggest Problem.

For somebody freaked out about climate change, I'm really psyched to hear a president talk about making 1% temperature increase as the lowest possible goal. Bolivia's Evo Morales is way way out ahead of the herd, like Al Gore in being one of the few global leaders to get it. Al Gore has a great new article, by the way, in The New Republic connecting the dots on the oil spill and the oil industry everyday screw-the-planet. Sure the oil spill sucks, but so does another day of L.A. freeways.

It seems there is a near complete American media silence on the recent events in Bolivia. Goggle: World People's Conference on Climate Crisis and Rights for Mother Earth, and sign up for their e-mail list and you'll suddenly be privy to a social movement with the snap and attitude to be worthy of addressing the Climate Crisis.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Snowy Apple Blossoms? Evidence at the Climate Justice Tribunal

Today snow gathers in the apple blossoms. This means no apples in the fall. The apples bloomed two weeks early, and the bees didn’t get to chance to pollinate them. Now the snow ends the blossom’s fertility. This is Climate Change spoiling Vermont’s apple harvest.

Abnormally warm weather made the plants wake up too soon. The season is two weeks ahead. A month of abnormally warm weather tricked almost every plant into blooming early. Now it has snowed for a day, in typical late-April fashion. The fruit tree blossoms didn’t get pollinated because the honeybees weren’t out yet. So this fall there will be less fruit.

The apple harvest is always variable. If we get a wet patch when the trees bloom, much less fruit in the fall. If the weather is sunny and the bees can work, a big crop. Bees navigate by the sun.

But this spring has been weird. It started with a banging weekend of 80 degree weather and then it was warm for a month. Most plants begin spring growth based on temperature, though some a daylight/day-length sensitive. So most of the ecosystem is going for it. And today, snow. Many of the flowers will decay quickly after today’s rough weather.

I watched the early blossoms without seeing any honeybee pollinators and so I asked a beekeeper about it. Author of The Natural Beekeeper Ross Conrad wrote, “I suspect that you are not seeing the bees you expect because the mild winter and unusually warm weather during the past couple months has fooled the plants into blossoming much sooner than usual (everything seems to be about 2 weeks ahead of schedule). Now that the temperatures have returned to what is considered seasonably "normal" it is often too cold for the bees to fly.”

The snow on the apple blossoms is proof of the Climate Crisis. For too long, action on the Climate Crisis has been stagnated by this idiotic debate “does climate change exist?” In a well-documented plot, the Fossil Fuel industry has conspired to obscure the overwhelming scientific evidence. These dark conspiratorial propagandists should be put on trial at the upcoming International Climate Justice Tribunal.

Today’s ruined apple blossoms are just a mild beginning of a world wobbling off it’s axis. Imagine the major cities of Bolivia not having drinking water because glaciers have melted. Imagine runaway Climate Change turning our planet into Mars. This is really where we are headed, and unfortunately, most people don’t have the imaginative fortitude to bear witness to science-based projections of our shared future.

The Climate Crisis isn’t a mild disruption of our Earth, but rather an Apocalyptic Trail-of-Tears Death March into a Science Fiction-ish unraveled Ecosystem Planet Death. Mild ecosystem disruptions like today’s apple trees are just the tip of the melting iceberg.

We need a revolution against planet death, for a living healthy future. We need a citizen’s movement to push a government movement to solve the Climate Crisis.

Fortunately, there is indeed an emerging world citizen’s movement for Climate Justice. Last week in Cochabamba, Bolivia, there was the People’s World Summit on Climate Crisis and the Rights of Mother Earth. Democracy Now had exciting coverage last week. Naomi Klein writes, “When Morales invited “social movements and Mother Earth’s defenders... scientists, academics, lawyers and governments” to come to Cochabamba for a new kind of climate summit, it was a revolt against this experience of helplessness, an attempt to build a base of power behind the right to survive.”

The wisdom of Indigenous people’s entered the global discussion with passage of a Declaration of Rights of Mother Earth. In 2011, on the next Earth Day, there will be a Global Referendum on the Climate Crisis. Who knows what any of that will mean for saving the planet from fossil fuels, but it’s thrilling language that calls us in the right direction.

We have a right to survive on an Earth where the bees buzz in the apple blossoms at the right time to make fruit. And Mother Earth has the right for Her Spring Song to be in rhythm.

Bee Author Comments On Blossoms without Bees

To beekeeper and author of the book "The Natural Beekeeper", Ross Conrad, I asked “Are bees light sensitive in their emergence behavoir, and thus missing the right time to wake up? I thought they were warmth sensitive, and woke up based on hive temperatures. If so, why are the blossums here but not the bees?

Conrad said “Bees require both adequate light and warmth in order to forage. It is widely held that they utilize the sun for navigational purposes, and they require warmth in order to maintain a high enough body temperature so that their flight muscles will work and not become immobilized. When temperatures fall to around 57 degrees F, the bees will tend to cluster around the brood and queen in order to keep them warm, and this will restrict the colonies flight activity (the exact temperature varies among bee hives depending on race, genetics, etc.) I suspect that you are not seeing the bees you expect because the mild winter and unusually warm weather during the past couple months has fooled the plants into blossoming muchsooner than usual (everything seems to be about 2 weeks ahead of schedule). Now that the temperatures have returned to what is considered seasonably "normal" it is often too cold for the bees to fly. This especially true for hives that are kept in shaded areas and do not get a lot of direct sunlight inhibiting their ability to warm up enough to send out a lot of foragers during the day. Other factors come into play as well...as the plants have to have the right soil, light, and moisture conditions (among others) to be able to produce the nectar they need to bribe the pollinators into visiting their blossoms. It does not matter how big and beautiful a flower is, if there is no reward for a visiting bee, the bee will go elsewhere.

Of course in your particular area, it may be that the bees have simply died off during the winter and that is why you are not seeing them. Given the critical role that pollinators have come to play in maintaining the biosphere which supports all life on Earth, and the fact that pollinators across the board are in serious decline world-wide, your concern is certainly understandable and warranted.

One note: We would not usually refer to the bees as "waking up" in spring since they don't actually sleep through the winter, but cluster and become dormant or inactive for a brief period during the winter season when the queen stops laying eggs. This is different from hibernation in which the organism's metabolism drops significantly and they go into what is described as a deep sleep. Healthy bees maintain their metabolism throughout the year and keep the temperature within the hive's cluster well above freezing during the entire winter.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Vermont's Spring Three Weeks Early, Blossums without Bees, I'm Freaking Out!

Spring has come 2-3 weeks early this year to southern Vermont. We are witnessing Climate Change. The seasons are out of rhythm because humans are heating our thin, limited skies.

Today I talked some experienced landscapers and gardeners. Everyone agreed it was 2-3 weeks early. Spring's parade of flowers is also compressed, because all the plants and trees have suddenly blossomed all at once.

It's only April 25th. Traditional “last frost date” is June 1st, five weeks away. What if we get a normal frost? Plants, interrupted.

And the Honeybees aren’t out, so I guess they didn’t get the memo about Global Warming Early Spring. Bees generally stay in the hive until warmer days come. I've seen a few wild Bumblebees dumbledorfing around, but the hardworking Honeybees aren't out in full force yet. This is so incredibly not good. The bees pollinate everybody, and without their flower-visiting tours, no fruit. The Climate Crisis is disturbing mind-bogglingly integrated and complex biological systems.

As Bill McKibben’s new book Eaarth says, we don’t need to argue anymore whether Climate Change is real. We are already living on a changed planet where the atmosphere holds 5% more water than it used to and so the storms are so much bigger.

This spring in Vermont is a tragedy like the Titanic, though quiet and easy to gloss over and return to the socially acceptable cultural trance. I am allowing myself to get upset over it because I think it may catalyze fierce commitment to work and fight for a carbon-neutral planet for the rest of my days. (Starting here with fierce blog posts! Tomorrow, the Revolution.)

Our world, our delicate, impossibly beautiful Pandora is unraveling, coming apart at the seams, sprouting at the wrong time, blooming in the middle of nowhere.

So I say to you and myself, snap out of cultural trance! It's OK to be upset by this.

I'm reminded of a poem that asked....

"What did you do when the seasons started to fail? What did you do, once you knew?”

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Go to Copenhagen-in-Cochabamba with these web-links!!!

Today, in Bolivia, there was another day of the World People's Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth. I think this conference is tremendously exciting. I love to hear people talking about Mother Earth and defending here rights! Yes! Mother Earth has rights!

The following post is a list of web-links to see what's going on.

Check out the past two days of Democracy Now and catch up on their amazing coverage of this event.

http://www.democracynow.org/2010/4/21/evo_morales_opens_climate_change_conference


Home page for the conference:

http://envivo.cmpcc.org.bo/?lang=en


to sign in to the virtual conference:

http://envivo.cmpcc.org.bo/spip.php?page=inscribirse&lang=en


Letter from the great author of Memory of Fire, Eduardo Galeano

http://envivo.cmpcc.org.bo/Message-to-CMPCC-from-Author


DN actress Q' orianka Kilcher extremely articulate rap:

http://www.democracynow.org/2010/4/20/three


Hey! Mother Earth has Rights!

http://envivo.cmpcc.org.bo/D%C2%B4ESCOTTO-Y-BOFF-PIDEN-DEJAR-EL


webcasting link:

http://envivo.cmpcc.org.bo/-Difusion-en-vivo-?lang=en


Bolivian President Evo Morales says "Coca-Cola is "poison and sewage water." (YES!)

http://envivo.cmpcc.org.bo/Evo-Morales-message-to-grassroots


Maybe helpful tech note: On the top toolbar of the webpage, you can click to get the pages translated always into English so you wouldn't have to click the "translate' button each time you moved thru the Conference website.

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

People's Climate Crisis summit

Today something very cool is happening in Bolivia... the World People's Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth

It is designed to be an open people's summit, rather than a government meeting. It's also being organized as a voice-giver to the other parts of the world that sometimes get left out. Climate Change has a social justice component because it affects the poor more painfully. Developing Countries (ie. the 2/3rds world etc) will feel the affects of climate change more than rich white northern countries that burned all the damn coal. The Conference seems expressly designed to be more "Climate Justice" orientated than Copenhagen.

The news program Democracy Now (www.democracynow.org) is covering the People's Summit from Cochabamaba. Monday's show was powerful and I expect them to throw it down all week. DN's coverage of Copenhagen was so smart and on-point.

Info on the event is on-line here at: http://pwccc.wordpress.com/

Event organizers are trying to create some live-web features so us far-away people can participate in the conference.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Hurray! Gov't Goes After Goldman Sachs paper-hustlers!

On Friday April 16, the gov't went after crookedest crooked thieves at the center of the financial crisis. Indictments and beginning of public legal process involving the dasterdly mathamatical swindle factory of Wall Street, Goldman Sachs.

Apparently, Goldman Sachs was selling clients investments that were design by some big trader betting large that the housing industry was going to collapse. So, selling crap, designed by somebody who was betting it the other way, essentially, fraudulent dealings with the client designed to take their money.

Following the Financial Crisis scandel, reading Matt Taibbi's stuff has been great to keep abreast of the complicated crookednes involving Goldman Sachs and others.

Bearing witness to the financial crisis takes some high-number abstraction math skills and an ability to wade into some truly boring material, but the basic plot isn't so hard to work out. Some rich kids grown big enough (but not morally enough) to figure out how to move a lot of numbers around so that the golden crumbs land on them. And sometimes even better, mega-swindles where millions enter a UBS Swiss Bank with your password on the Euro pile.

To which I say, hurray for good governance. We need the cop on the beat to regulate and police Wall Street. Because when their are billions to make by somehow, oppsy, misreporting something on a piece of paper somewhere, people are going to do it.

Wall Street spent years and millions to dismantle the regulatory function of government in oversight of the banking industry. And now, the unwatched inmates have run amuck,surprise surprise. Here's hoping financial reform happens in a way that protects real wealth (planet, family, food, etc) from the mis-valueing of everything by people who are too cheap to save Mother Earth.

May we someday have a Wall Street sized according to it's function.

Monday, April 12, 2010

The Parade of Flowers marching to the beat of Climate Crisis

It is bittersweet to get gorgeous June days in the first days of April. Yes, we love it. No, we can’t enjoy it guilt-free. Vermont’s spring came too early this year. And 2010 is aiming to be the warmest on record. This is a changing atmospheric climate.

I love to watch the swift return of Life to the landscape. In a few weeks, Vermont goes from frozen-under-snow to summer time’s Green Everywhere. Biologist classify Vermont’s ecology as “Temperate Rainforest.”

Plants decide when to awake because of temperature. Warm spring temperature’s bring a parade of flowers, a sequential revealing of different plants making the beautiful mad dash to reproduction. In early spring, the small plants race ahead before big plants fill the space with big leaves: the Snowdrops, the Crocuses, the Daffodils. In late May, the whole plant kingdom makes a mad dash towards growth and seed-making. The parade of flowers is more purple early on, and more orange and red later in the season.

Unusually warm days in the spring risks “tricking” the plants too early. These delicate ecosystems adapted to centuries of stable temperatures. Climate Change risks upsetting this delicate timing sequence. What if spring comes in February in a few years, and then the snow returns, but all the trees have broken bud?

We live in a tightly wound ecosystem. Spring’s delicate unfolding is seriously in jeopardy because of climate change. Humans need to live in the reality of our biological life-web ecosystem, the ground floor of our existence. We need to stop burning coal and oil, and start moving at full speed to a post-carbon world. Otherwise, someday, spring may spring in January, then backtrack, leaving a confused parade.

Many gardeners are observing a two week drift towards earliness in plants. In England, the arrival of the Lilacs is two weeks ahead. All things being equal, that’s fine. But an ecosystem is complex. What about the birds who are arriving from South America too early or late for the awakening bugs?

The world’s ecosystem’s are being thrown out of rhythm. Nature is supposed to be a joyous, well-organized symphony but burning coal is turning Nature into a arrhythmic Free Jazz cacophony.

So come on, people, let’s get on it.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

How humans think together?

muddy the waters enough and nobody can see thru the murk

human society trying to think together thru the media get sidetracked by street clatter

how do we learn to think together as one Gaian Mind?

how do we debate amongst the dedicated and depreciate the voices of the decietful?

modern media mavens of magic covens of distributive 2.0 function

give humanity voice with elaborate tools of good groupthinking

(please hold the wireless technology that radiates the modernhome)

welcome to the accidental future.


what i meant to say was this:

we need to learn to think clearly together to solve issues like climate change. when

Exxon can shout into the dialogue nursery rhyme facts, it gets hard to think together.

How do we create a fact base without propganda hustlers?

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

The Revival of the Grateful Dead

Music is mysterious stuff.

The morphogenetic fields of Jerry Garcia are being reactivated.

Check out Rupert Sheldrake's theory of Morphogenetic fields, a way information is stored, in non-local fields like electrical fields, charged particles of information. These theories work to explain 'morphogenesis' or how-things-grow...

John of Dark Star Orchestra has studied the guitar playing of Jerry so deeply that he's created a new hybrid information-form that activates charges contributes the original morphic fields of the Grateful Dead.

www.rupertsheldrake.com has more info on the original idea.

Monday, January 11, 2010

The fierce “Storms of My Grandchildren”

James Hansen, the leading climate scientist, has an excellent new book for understanding the Climate Crisis.

The book’s poetic title “Storms of My Grandchildren” distills the crisis to it’s essence: our society’s failure to address the Climate Crisis creates a situation of “intergenerational remote tyranny” that force upon our descendents a terrible fate, while we blithely doze in a self-absorbed stupor from the intoxicating fumes of the oil age.

Hansen writes movingly about his grandchildren motivating him to make clear his ideas and step up to the fight. He has dropped his scientific autism and has drawn some agreeably radical conclusions: complete stop to burning coal, calling out greenwashing politicians, advocating for nonviolent resistance.

Hansen analyzes the Climate Crisis from the vantage point of scientist, policy advocate, Washington bureaucrat, activist, and the concerned grandfather. Hanson was the guy that Bill McKibben bugged to get the actual number (350 carbon parts per million) for humanity to shoot at, an interesting story for climate activists interested in a little bit of movement history of 350.org.

It is fascinating to follow in the wake of a great mind working at the top of their game with the motivation to save his grandchildren and life on Earth. This creates an energized tone to the writing: caring grandfather going over-the-Rubicon with a now-or-never attitude to speak truth to power.

The Climate Crisis issue is stuck mostly for politics, rather than the science, and so Hansen offers a very useful analysis of the political climate around climate change.

Hansen says that politicians pretend to be green but don’t really put out. ”Most politicians advertised themselves as being “green” but what I learned was that, invariably, it amounted to greenwash, demonstrating token environmental support while kowtowing to fossil fuel special interests.”

Hansen gives us an insider’s view of the underworld of Worshington’s Bushite climate denial. Like touring Dante’s inferno, we get to sit in at the Bush’s Climate Task Force, where he was given a whole 20 minutes and it turns out all the decisions had already been made to totally ignore the science and whore for the oil companies.

The book transmits to us a deeper understanding of the climate system mechanisms: oceans, gases, sunlight, and the carbon cycle. For example, Hansen explains that carbon stays in the air for a very long time. It doesn’t dissipate like a fart, but lingers, silent but deadly, for centuries as a near-permanent new addition to the thin, delicate sky.

Therefore, as one graph shows, though China emits more carbon annually than the US, the cumulative output is more important, because the carbon is still around, and the US is still #1 in this, at 27% of the cumulative carbon pumped into the atmosphere 1795-2008. USA! USA!

And so, energy efficiency is not really a solution, because it stands in the place of getting off fossil fuels entirely, which is what is really required. Hansen writes, “The problem is that the act of slowing down emissions, by itself, does almost no good. The reason is that the lifetime of carbon dioxide added to the atmosphere-ocean system is millennia. So it doesn’t matter much whether the fossil fuel is burned this year or next year. Energy efficiency is certainly an essential part of the solution to global warming, but it must be part of a strategic approach that leaves most of the fossil fuels in the round. Yes, most of the fossil fuels must be left in the ground. That is the explicit message that the science provides.”

It is beautiful to get new ideas that allow our mind’s eye to see centuries of sky patterns, to see how clouds work, to see what our delicate sky is made of.

The sky seems tall and way up there, but it’s really the surface of an apple compared to the earth, a thin film of unusual gases that press against the planet amidst a vast airless space. It is beautiful to contemplate the tremendous complexity of this arrangement of sunlight, funny gases, and human life interacting with it all! Hansen deserves credit for making understandable the complexity of Climate science. May we have a world citizenry that arises in shared knowledge of how our sky works and how we can protect it.

Understanding the Climate Crisis is like walking into a dark room, hands in-front as we look for the light switch. Buddhist teacher Pema Chodron talks of the wisdom of not knowing, of acceptance of the borders of our knowing and not getting uptight at our ignorance. This book is a good place to humbly not-know everything and be willing to learn, and travel behind this dedicated activist as he tries to turn on the lights for us.