Earth Day - every day - Kate Crowley
GOING
NATURE’S WAY
By
Kate Crowley
On April 22nd
we will celebrate the 44th anniversary of Earth Day. But what does that mean? An entire generation has been born and grown
to adulthood since that day, and to them it may be a bit of history as blurry as
the Vietnam War, which was still being waged in 1970.
I imagine there are
people who believe this event was created by a bunch of flower child hippies,
when it fact it was Wisconsin Senator Gaylord Nelson who is considered the
founder of Earth Day. Oh how times
change. Previously, Nelson had been
known as the “Conservation Governor” in Wisconsin because of his policies that
brought about change in the Department of Natural Resources, initiated a Youth
Conservation Corps with a thousand new ‘green’ jobs and worked to improve and
expand the state parks and wilderness areas.
When he got to Congress
Nelson continued his crusade with stunning results, however it was not his
fellow congressmen who made this happen to begin with. In fact he found little support from them. Working
with college students all over the country, the Senator envisioned a day that
would be grassroots based and that’s what happened. He hoped Earth Day would create "a new
national coalition whose objective is to put quality for human life on a par
with Gross National Product." The
key part of this statement I think is ‘human life’, because somehow in the
years since that first Earth Day, words like ‘tree hugger’ and
‘environmentalist’ came to imply people who only cared for other forms of life,
not humans. And that is absolutely
untrue.
After the midterm
elections of 1970 many politicians who were associated with polluting
industries were defeated. Richard Nixon,
a Republican president, recognized the strength of public opinion and along
with Congress established the National Environmental Protection Act, the
Endangered Species Act, and stringent amendments to the Clean Air and Clean
Water Acts.
As a result, our air
and waterways improved significantly.
Unfortunately, these particular Acts continue to this day to be
challenged by those who would prefer fewer regulations on their industries. But each April, there is a surge of good
feelings and public relations around the environment. It is a day when we are encouraged to do
something ‘good’ for the earth:
Recycling, cleaning up a shoreline, riding bikes or walking instead of
driving; lots of little personal acts we can each do in an effort to reduce our
personal ‘footprint’.
The question is how
many people continue to keep that focus and attention on the environment for the
next 364 days of the year? Obviously for
Mike and I, our every working day was in some way focused on keeping people
engaged with the environment and learning more about it, to understand its
complexities, as well as its beauty.
Thankfully, we know of hundreds of young people we taught and mentored
over the decades who have continued along this path. It is a path that does not lead to membership
in the top 1% income level – far from it, but it is a path that gives one a
sense of engagement in critical issues for the survival of our species. Yes, our species, as well as all the other
organisms we share the earth with who are completely dependent our actions and
choices. As for the earth, I believe we
all understand that it can go on without us, just as it did before we arrived.
All of us who care
about our children, and their children, and their children’s children
understand the importance of leaving an earth that is habitable. Senator Gaylord Nelson died in 2005. I’m sure it was frustrating for him to see
the same battles being waged over and over, yet he continued to work for the
betterment of people through a better environment. In a speech he gave on the 25th
anniversary of Earth Day he said, "The opportunity for a gradual but
complete break with our destructive environmental history and a new beginning
is at hand…. We can measure up to the challenge if we have the will to do
so—that is the only question. I am optimistic that this generation will have
the foresight and the will to begin the task of forging a sustainable
society."
I hope you will think
about his words this April 22nd, that you will take them to heart
and that you will go out to be inspired by the natural beauty we are so
fortunate to have here in East Central Minnesota. Love it and defend it.
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