Wednesday, June 28, 2006

Global Warming Finds a Cold Response in Some

"It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on his NOT understanding it."
- Upton Sinclair




A few days ago, I was sitting inside Togos for lunch. For some reason, the topic of the heat came up, because it was freakin' 150 degrees outside, and I was glad we were in air conditioning. I joked that if Global Warming got any worse, I was going to move to Iceland. Providing that it hadn't turned into "Water-Land."

I then mentioned that although I haven't seen the movie An Inconvenient Truth, it is the kind of thing that scares the living tar out of me. The movie, for those of you who haven't heard about it, is the latest project of Al Gore. The former vice-president has been travelling the country making this speech, trying to use his ex-vice-presidency as a publicity tool to get Americans to understand how important and serious a threat Global Warming is. You can see the tailer here.

I realized I said all this because I wanted to inform the people at the table that this was an important issue, and that I have a pretty passionate stance on it.

I mention this because one of the magazines I subscribe to, Wired, just did a cover story on Al Gore two issues ago. Wired is a magazine that examines science and technology and American culture, and how the three converge and collide. I mention this because the editors said that the reader mail they got from that issue was some of the most angry and vile stuff they've ever received. This from Wired's editors:

    Several readers defaced pages and sent them in. Others wrote to tell us they’d ripped up the cover. That’s plain rude. So’s this: “I thank God every day that this unstable individual did not become president of the United States.” A dentist said that.


Apparently, people hate - and I am referring to a special brand of vitriol here - Al Gore and his message. In the past few weeks, I personally have been in conversations which people have made the following points:

    • There's a lot of bad science on both sides
    • Those environmentalists have an agenda.
    • Look, I don't buy the idea that we as humans have the ability to change the climate of Earth. We can no more raise the global temperature than we can move the Earth closer to the sun. The idea that we can change the climate of the Earth and destroy all life - it's absurd.
    • God is in control. We can't harm the Earth.
    • There is data that says that the ice cores at the poles are actually getting bigger and denser
    • I just take offense at the idea of some politician saying that because I drive an SUV, I'm destroying the planet.


I'd like to address these points of contention.

In terms of humans not being able to affect our environment, frankly that's an untenable position. I grew up in Ohio. Because of industrial waste, the Cuyahoga River in Cleveland was not only so polluted that it is unsafe to drink and so toxic that fish cannot live in it, but at one point it actually caught fire. Rivers are not supposed to be able to burn.

Also, I was thinking about the US Nuclear Weapons arsenal alone. What would happen if there were a nuclear war? It seems to me pretty common sense that humans can EASILY destroy lives and eco-systems and if we wanted, we could kill nearly every living thing on earth.

In the film, Gore shows pictures of Mt. Kilimanjaro and the famous picture "Earthrise" taken my American astronauts. Gore shows the same picture 30 years apart. There is no longer any snow on Kilimanjaro and there are whole ice flows that have melted, whole lakes and rivers that have disappeared.

In regard to the scientific accuracy of the film, FOX News reported yesterday that top National Climate scientists are giving Al Gore's movie "An Inconvenient Truth" rave reviews for accuracy in reporting the scientific facts. You can read the stoy here. You also have to factor in the idea that oil companies and energy companies pay scientists to come to conclusions that minimize the culpability of energy industry. For example, the Washington Post reported recently that the oil company Exxon donates millions of dollars to the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI), who said that global warming is "akin to an alien invasion."

Gore makes this claim in the movie:
"There is no controversy about these facts," he says in the film. "Out of 925 recent articles in peer-review scientific journals about global warming, there was no disagreement. Zero."

I want to say this as respectfully as possible, to everyone who believes this: you are wrong.

1. Global warming is real.
2. It is caused by human activity.
3. Mankind and its governments must begin immediate action to halt and reverse it.
4. If we do nothing, in about 10 years the planet may reach a "tipping point" and begin a slide toward destruction of our civilization and most of the other species on this planet.
5. After that point is reached, it would be too late for any action.

I was talking to my father-in-law about this, and told him about the conversation and how in some ways, it frightened me even more than global warming. Here is what he wrote.

    I figured that if an average person held out his or her hands it might reach about 5 feet (probably less given the average is between you—probably six feet—and Justus—probably two feet, but hey this is back of the envelop stuff). At any rate, it would take about 1,000 people holding hands to reach a mile.

    • The circumference of the world is 25,000 miles.

    • The population of the US just turned 300,000,000. If all of us held hands, we would go around the world 12 times!

    • If everyone in China (population 1.3 billion) held hands, they would go around the world 52 times!!

    • If everyone in the world (population 6.2 billion) held hands, that would be 250 times around the world!!!

    Now let’s think about the impact. According to the US Department of Energy and EPA, Americans put out 6.6 tons (!!!) of greenhouse gases per person, per year (driving cars, heating homes, running appliances, etc.). Those numbers can be verified here.

    Given that the population of the US is 300,000,000, that’s 2 billion tons (or 4 trillion pounds) of emissions that go into the atmosphere every year from US citizens. Tell me that there’s no way that can have an impact on our planet.

    What will happen when China and India (population 1.1 billion) catch up with us in the emission of greenhouse gases? If the World’s population can reach around the world 250 times, just think what impact their pollution can have on the environment.

    I think because people can’t comprehend the magnitude of the world’s population or they can’t see the immediate impact of a car’s exhaust on the air we breathe, that they just can’t imagine that humans can have an impact on the planet. Or perhaps they think God will save us from ourselves and would never let the world fall apart, whatever humans do to it.

    Go see "An Inconvenient Truth" with a friend, loved one, or someone you hope will still be alive in this world in 50 years.

    Then do something.


There was a time in the 60s when people - Christians even - went around saying that the Civil Rights Movement was a big waste of energy. There were people who passionately defended segregation.

Is this another one of those issues? Will history look back at anyone who argues on the other side of this issue and shake their heads, wondering how in the world someone ever took that position.

Makes you think.

Thursday, June 08, 2006

Justus = Vampire?

So yesterday after church, my wife went to pick up our son in the Toddler Play Room at church. Justus was smiling and happy, and Nicole picked him up and hugged him.

"How did it go," she asked.
"Well...." one of the workers, Clarissa, a young girl in her 20s said, hesitantly. "There was an incident."
"Oh, what happened," Nicole asked.
"Well, Justus bit another boy," Clarissa said.
"Really?"
"Yes. Believe me, we were suprised, too, because we haven't really seen that behavior out of Justus."
"So..." Nicole started.
"Well, it didn't break the skin. And the other boy didn't even cry. But there were some red marks, so we had to write it up," Clarissa said. "So you're going to have to sign these forms."

Clarissa slid a few papers over to Nicole. It was an official report of the incident, notifying the parents and FCC's child-care workers.

"Oh my," Nicole said.

So my son was officially written up. I'm pretty sure Justus didn't mean to bit the other kid. Sometimes, when he tries to kiss, he gets mixed up and accidently bites. Of course, I'm not sure trying to kiss another boy is much better...but...

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

The Omen


In this scene, from the new movie "The Omen" - a remake of the 1976 movie about a family whose son turns out to be the anti-Christ - demon-possessed dogs chase the boy's father.

So you've probably seen the billboards. They're stark black, with white letters. 06.06.06. And the simple phrase "You have been warned."

It's a billboard for a movie called "The Omen" a remake of a 1976 creepy, creepy film about a man and his wife who give birth to a son who dies in childbirth. The father is persuaded by a sinister doctor to substitute a baby born that same day under mysterious circumstances to an unwed mother. The father agrees to keep the secret from his wife, which turns out to be a bad call because the son is Satan incarnate. So that's no good.



I am not that interested in the movie per se - though I heard it was really creepy and quite well done. I am more interested in the theological implications. In his review of the movie, Roger Ebert wrote this line which I thought quite interesting:

Enough of the plot. Let us consider instead the genre of theological sensationalism. I've observed before that when it comes to dealing with demons and suchlike, Roman Catholics have the market cornered. Preachers of other faiths can foam and foment all they want about satanic cults, but when it comes to knowing the ground rules and reading ominous signs, what you want at the bedside is a priest who knows his way around an exorcism.

Couple of thoughts:

1. I suppose it goes well along with Catholic tradition that when evil really comes, it does no good for you to try to fight off Satan yourself. What you need is a priest. The same goes for the Bible. Don't try to read that at home. What you need is a priest. Same for forgiveness of sins. Leave confession to the professionals. Jesus didn't seem to think that way - he didn't seem to believe that the only people who could really be spiritually powerful were the professionals. In fact, he left the future of the church to some un-educated fishermen. Kind of the opposite of professional clergy.

2. It's common in movies to exagerrate and be sensational. In this movie, "The Omen" for example, this boy is the ant-Christ and obviously evil - such as the chilling scene where he pushes his mother over the balcony of the home with his scooter, and then smiles as he watches his mother fall to the marbled floor below. But this is too easy. Evil is always this odious, this frightful - but it is rarely this obvious. Evil rarely comes in the form of soul-chilling demons with glowing red eyes.

Satan is far more subtle than that and as C.S. Lewis said in the intro to his Screwtape Letters - the greatest accomplishment of Satan is convincing the world that he does not exist. It is the malign evil that we cannot detect - or do not detect until it is too late - that is the most frightening. And it is this evil that claims the most souls. Gambling. Selfishness. Workaholism. People sated with entertainment, living purposeless lives. Of course, those things don't make good movies.

Thursday, June 01, 2006

Prayer Request...

Earlier today, at about 8:40, Victoria Cornelia, a Gunderson High School senior was in a car with her friend driving to school. Her friend decided to, as he approached Gunderson, drag race with another car driven by a friend of his down a long, open stretch of road on Chynoweth that runs directly in front of the school. As he approached the school, he lost control of the car, going approximately 80 mph, hit the curb, which flipped the car, slamming it into a palm tree.

Victoria was not wearing a seat belt. She was apparently thrown out of the car's passenger-side window, and was caught under the upside-down hood of the car. The car's roof crumpled and the engine fuel lines caught fire. Paramedics and ambulances were able to pull Victoria out.

I know this because kids came running into my room during the passing period between 1st and 2nd period telling me that there was a car, flipped over, on fire right outside the school. Kids gathered in the front parking lot to watch the whole thing unfold. It was pretty awful.

Right now, Victoria is in critical condition at Valley Medical Center. Unfortunately, she has a spinal chord injury which has left her completely paralyzed and ventilator dependent. There does not appear to be any brain damage as she was able to respond to questions by blinking earlier today. The next 48 hours will be critical with regard to her survival and recovery.

As for the driver, he sustained minor injuries, was stitched up and released (and promptly cited by the police for numerous offenses).

So. Yeah.

Three days until graduation. Three. Days.

So. Yeah. Pray.