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Mon, Jun 05, 2006

An Inconvenient Truth    #

I saw "An Inconvenient Truth" last night. Go see it. It's well done, and it's not entirely upsetting. More importantly, bring someone who wasn't already planning on seeing it.    (KL2)

My biggest takeaway from the movie: I had previously thought that there was scientific disagreement over whether or not global warming was real. AlGore shows that this is not the case. They took a 10 percent sample of articles published in peer-reviewed scientific journals (almost 1,000 articles), and every single one of them acknowledged global warming as real phenomenon. They then took a similar sampling of articles in the popular media, and over 50 percent of them suggested that there were some scientific detractors. Propaganda stinks, but it sure is effective. (For more on this, check out MichaelShermer's Skeptic column in the June 2006 issue of ScientificAmerican, spotted by the movie's blog.)    (KL3)

This further reinforces my view on the most important challenges we need to address en route to solving the world's biggest problems: transparency and dialog.    (KL4)

I'm a big believer in markets, but markets rely on "perfect information" to work correctly. When we live in a world that is so easily swayed by propaganda that the popular press reports that global warming is scientifically controversial and the majority of Americans believed that SaddamHussein was behind 9/11, then we don't have perfect information. I have no gripe with people whose beliefs are different from mine. I have a problem who base their opinions on misinformation.    (KL5)

We need more transparency in society, and we need tools that give us that transparency. For example, when I purchase food from the supermarket, I'd like to know the comparative "carbon costs" of those different items. As my friend StephanieSchaaf has often pointed out, when you buy locally grown produce, even if it's nonorganic, you're helping the environment, because less energy is consumed in transporting the food. Everyone needs to know these things, and then they can decide for themselves whether or not to do anything about it.    (KL6)

One of the ways to create a marketplace of better information is by increasing and diversifying dialog. Talk is not cheap. We need more conversations with the people who already surround us, and we need more conversations with those who are different from us.    (KL7)

Several of the friends I was with bemoaned the fact that those of us watching the movie were the wrong target audience. I disagree. I don't think the environmental community has maximized its group potential, and movies like this can help catalyze further progress.    (KL8)

JoelMakower at WorldChanging recently wrote about how Houston ranked last in last year's SustainLane rankings for sustainable cities. The problem? Makower writes:    (KL9)

Houston's problem, it seems, had as much to do with its lack of self-knowledge and coordination of efforts as with its actual performance. And that put it in good company -- not just with other cities, but with thousands of companies that have good, green stories to tell, if only they knew about them. Sometimes, it's the simple matter of finding the stories -- along with good storytellers -- that can begin a positive spiral of inspiration and innovation -- leading, of course, to even more good stories.    (KLA)

Put another way: If only Houston knew what Houston knew. Now, increasingly, it does.    (KLB)

More thoughts:    (KLC)

/movies | Posted at 10:53am

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EEK Speaks

A blog about collaboration, community-building, and the various goings-on at Blue Oxen Associates, with occasional digressions on food and other vital matters.

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