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Showing posts from October, 2023

The Earth Needs Your Vote!

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Up until now, I’ve avoiding injecting politics into my posts about the Climate Crisis.   However, getting involved in politics could be the most important thing an individual can do about the climate crisis.   Now, I’ll be the first to admit that politics has increasingly become an unpleasant activity involving a number of unpleasant and divisive people.   I don’t blame you for wanting to steer clear of the mess and limit yourself to passively watching the nasty business unfold on the nightly news.                                 Source:  huffingtonpost.com But here’s the catch:   we have a big election coming up in a year and the Climate Crisis is going to be a central issue in the campaign.   Purveyors of disinformation in the press, the political arena, and social media will attempt to discredit candidates who accept the consensus of mainstream scientists reg...

Fighting Climate Disinformation in the Classroom

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Denver, Colorado Last night, our neighborhood association held a forum featuring the two candidates for southeast Denver for the school board.   Since I’m the association president (I was “drafted” – no one else wanted the job), I had to go to the meeting anyway.   My partner, Judy, didn’t want to go.   “I don’t have kids, so why should I care who is on the school board?” she reasoned.   I understand that line of thinking and until recently I figured that school boards were an issue for parents and grandparents of school age children to worry about but not me. Lately, I’ve changed my mind after learning that people with extremist political, social, and religious views have been getting elected to school boards around the country.   They and their supporters’ objective is to control what is being taught in schools making sure that it conforms to their ideologies.   They hope to shape the thinking of school kids on a variety of issues with troubling impli...

What about Gasoline-Powered Lawn Equipment?

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In my last post, I took on the unquestioned acceptance of green-grass lawns as the ideal for urban and suburban America.   I advocated replacing lawns with native plants and pointed out the latter’s advantages for fighting climate change and promoting biodiversity.   But what if you’re not quite ready to tear out your traditional lawn?  There are some things you can do to reduce the associated hydrocarbon emissions associated with lawn maintenance.  Specifically, you can get rid of your power equipment that uses two-stroke engines which run on a mixture of gasoline and oil.  These include lawn mowers, leaf blowers, chain saws, and hedge trimmers.  Electric alternatives are now available which have power equal to that of the old two-stroke engines.  John Deere has even introduced an electric riding mower. My electric chain saw and hedge trimmer have power cords which require me to drag around a 50-foot extension cord to run them.  You can now g...