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This past December I happened to catch an Oprah show featuring Al Gore and his then-new documentary An Inconvenient Truth. Having seen and been energized by the documentary months earlier, I was initially pleased that the film was getting attention from someone who has such a great influence over US culture, behavior, and attitude. I was so happy to see that mainstream broadcast television was dedicating an entire hour to the topic of climate change. After watching for a few minutes – watching Oprah and the audience’s wide-eyed reactions, their murmurs of shock and revelation – I became agitated and angry and started to question why Oprah was just now addressing this issue, and why these people were behaving as if they were being introduced to a planetary crisis for the very first time.

The Kyoto Protocol (an agreement made under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, commiting ratified parties to reduce their emissions of greenhouse gases) was negotiated in 1997; the first global conference to discuss the changing climate, the World Climate Conference, was held in 1979; and the first Earth Day was celebrated in 1970, the same year that the well known 3 arrow recycling symbol was designed. So why did it take that most influential broadcaster of all – Oprah Winfrey – until 2006 to catch on to the trend and introduce people to the fact of climate change and the human contribution to it?  I decided to just be grateful she is on board, and I expected to see a new energy and enthusiasm in the media.  I figured the Oprah website would tip the tide in favor of survival.

A few days after the broadcast, I checked the Oprah.com website to take a look at the message board for this particular show, and was both encouraged and horrified by the postings. Encouraged by the number of people showing enthusiasm and expressing their readiness to take action to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions and alter their consumption habits. Horrified by the number of people who continue to think that this is an us vs them issue – the United States vs the developing world – and that we, residents of the richest country on Earth, should feel justified in delaying responsive action because we can’t force China or India to make the same sacrifices! China and India are not even in the same pollution league as the US; they don’t have the same history of global polluting and over-consumption of resources as we have in the US.

I believe that if people are presented with truthful information, proper motivation, and a sense of empowerment to make a change, they will take responsibility to change their lives and their habits, and ownership of the consequences of their actions. Climate change is more than big businesses dumping poisons into the air; it is regular people turning on their lights, driving their cars, and consuming in excess. It’s all of us allowing and encouraging the ongoing degradation of our own home through daily consumer decisions we make because we can and because we are waiting on the other guy.

Let me get back to Oprah:  One show not long before the Gore appearance discussed the spiritual void that people in the United States say they feel.  The featured guests talked about the consumption and excess Americans participate in to try to fill this void. The consumption that Americans are stuffing this void with is killing not only our spirits, but our planet and our future as well – and we are allowing our worse nature and our politicians to persuade us to wait around for the other guy – China, India, Thailand, for heavens sake – to do the right thing before we agree to save our own lives.

But behavior change is difficult.  To monitor our resource consumption and make even small sacrifices is hard to sustain beyond a few days or weeks. So it is especially important for visible, influential people and media to keep climate change, conservation, and the danger of our unmindful consumption at the front of the minds of Americans. This is a global problem, and a big one at that, but that does not take either the responsibility or the solution entirely out of the hands of “regular” people. We need to have Oprah and Al and Simon and Conan and Rosie help make saving the planet and the most vulnerable residents of it hip, chic, sexy, popular – and they can’t wait around for rating sweeps week.

The earth is a global commons, providing benefit to all, but at the risk of exploitation and abuse as well. To ignore the current emergency and turn our backs on an opportunity to improve our own lives, the lives of others living with us around the world, and the lives of future, fellow Earth citizens would be a tragedy indeed. It is time to step up the level and intensity of commitment that we have to conserving natural resources and mitigating the damage of our ill-informed ways.

Comments

 

Rosalind said:

In the rating sweeps week Earth should come first - some rockers, like Guster and Barenaked Ladies are doing a lot to promote environmental awareness.

May 24, 2007 9:25 PM
 

Olivia said:

I haven't seen Leonardo DiCaprio's 11th Hour, but I see a lot about it online and hear about it from my friends.  I think it's a good thing that people like him and Brad Pitt, who appeal to people less political than the Gore supporters are, are getting out there with their voice and movie and getting some buzz.

I am disappointed that so much more attention is going to people like Britney and Nicole and Paris than to these people who are really doing something for the world.  They should be showing with their work and words and money that they are interested in saving the planet for the next generation - even some stars with children don't seem to understand this.

October 12, 2007 9:33 AM
 

Ecomonkey said:

I saw Leonardo's movie - I thought it was kind of confusing as a movie but it has a good message.  I think Brad and Angelina are having a good effect on the housing thing with Katrina recovery.  What happened with Harry Connick, Jr. and his New Orleans involvement?  We should be building more sustainable houses there.

Matt Damon is involved, and Billy Joel and his new wife do some good things with organic food.  I wish Al Gore would do something about his house. also John Edwards. Hillary's house should get some attention.  Does she use CFLs?

I heard that some rightwingers and global warming deniers are stocking up on incandescent lighbulbs as a way of protesting the CFL trend.

October 12, 2007 9:33 AM
 

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April 24, 2012 9:28 PM

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