These kinds of people are why my generation, and Rachel's generation, have to pick up the slack and "save the planet" from imminent warming dangers.
Neighbors in Atlanta are arguing over a man's right granted by the county to erect a 45-ft. high wind turbine on his property, at the price of $15,000, in order to curb his dependence on fossil fuels. Angry detractors have placed signs such as "Trees: Yes, Towers: No" in front of Curt Mann's property, blaming zoning officials for siding with Mann and damaging the historic preservation of the neighborhood, which boasts nearly century-old homes and trees.
I love history in its principle. It is the only reason any of us has made it to this moment in time, and although I find it deadly dull to study, there is something to be said for listening to a grandmother talk about the way things were decades ago, or researching how technology has evolved over the years. It teaches us our mistakes and we use it like a compass, pointing us in the right direction when we can't find our way through new terrain.
But. BUT. It is frustrating when humans fall victim to the folly of wishing for no change, for resisting against forces that require us to keep up, forces that sometimes we pushed into motion but now are unable to stop or even slow down. I do not care for people who cry when their neighborhood landscape is marred by a man's attempt at using nature's other resources to make a better future for his kids, and to adapt to the inevitable: that the fuel our Earth has fed us will run out. That the globe is warming at an alarming rate, perhaps faster than it should be, even if we were on the natural evolution for a warming planet. Watching the polar bears suffer from ice melting. Watching our oceans rise, perhaps threatening coastal cities (New Orleans is too obvious: New York City! San Francisco!) and permanently altering the Earth landscape.
Some argue that Earth is on its natural warming trend, that it goes through cycles of hot and cold, and we're just witnesses to a phenomenon that will happen no matter what. But this is supposed to take hundreds of years. We're measuring changes over the last 50 years - a sliver of time, a mere millisecond in the Earth's lifetime.
And you people are worried about your Victorian houses. A shame. I like me a good Victorian house, for sure, but modern times are everywhere. Why not admire the beauty of the mix of the historical and the modern in one landscape? Why not be thankful for the piece of history that you own, and yet realize that it was the very thing that helped your neighbor point himself in the right direction for what is so desperately needed? When Ford rolled his first car off the assembly line, no one had any clue that the thing spewed toxic gases and would eventually force today's car companies to wonder what we have built our lives around?
All I know is that, when my daughter is my age, what will the landscape look like? Will New Orleans be destroyed for good by then? Will San Francisco and Oakland be half-washed into the ocean because of an earthquake that shook the ocean with a record-sized tsunami? Will New York be a wading pool? The lives of coastal peoples all around the world could be, well, not. Look at Indonesia and the Indian Ocean earthquake that spawned the tsunami that destroyed the lives of thousands. In two decades, what will my daughter's generation have to think of? And will they have the luxury of arguing over their Victorian-era houses' livelihood then?
I think my generation's actions now will prove the answer for that question. I can only hope we point them in the right direction.
1 comment:
well said!!
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