From Earth Island Journal <[email protected]>
Subject Live for a World We Love
Date April 23, 2021 11:44 PM
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Earth Day is a good reminder that there’s still work to be done today out of love for our shared planet.


** News of the world environment
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NEWSLETTER | APRIL 23, 2021
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** Live for a World We Love
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This week in 1970, environmentalists celebrated the first Earth Day in commemoration of our shared home — a home that had been scarred by oil spills, industrial pollution, and ecological destruction. “Our goal is not just an environment of clean air and water and scenic beauty,” said Gaylord Nelson, US senator and Earth Day founder, in a speech on that first Earth Day. “The objective is an environment of decency, quality, and mutual respect for all other human beings and all other living creatures.”

Taking stock of that goal, 51 years later, can be “a complicated dance between hope and despair,” as Tia Nelson, the senator’s daughter, recently told journalist Ruth Conniff ([link removed]) . This week also marked the 11th anniversary of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill — bigger and costlier than the Santa Barbara oil spill that inspired the first Earth Day ([link removed]) . Meanwhile in Idaho, lawmakers approved legislation that aims to kill 90 percent ([link removed]) of the state’s wolves. And while George Floyd’s murderer was convicted, in a just world, Floyd wouldn’t have been killed in the first place.

This morning, I returned to one of my favorite pieces in Orion Magazine ([link removed]) , a conversation between climate activist Tim DeChristopher and farmer-poet Wendell Berry. On Berry’s porch in Kentucky, their conversation almost falls into an argument from either side of this "complicated dance.” Berry, true to form, advocates for the little actions — supporting neighbors, living according to place — without indulging “the big despair.” DeChristopher, more confrontational, pushes back: “What is localism’s answer to refugees? To those whose homeland is not livable anymore? Whether that place is underwater, has turned to desert, was destroyed by American imperialism and our desire for more resources?”

“The argument for despair is impenetrable,” Berry concedes. But then, a bit later in the transcript, mid-sentence, Berry points out a warbler on the grapevine, and the tone of the conversation changes. Let’s cast aside despair, the two agree, because when it comes down to it, what choice do we have but to live for a world we love?

If anything, this 51st Earth Day is a good reminder that there’s still work to be done today out of love for our shared planet, notwithstanding despair. Lyndsey Gilpin of Southerly ([link removed]) summed it up best in her newsletter this week: “Multiple things can be true at once: This world is beautiful, and it is unjust. The future feels hopeful, and also bleak. The solutions are often fairly simple, and yet they often feel out of reach. The country is exhausting, but our people and places are worth the fight.”

Austin Price
Contributing Editor, Earth Island Journal

Photo by: Dawn / Flickr ([link removed])
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** Bad Vibrations ([link removed] )
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Off the coast of Kenya, the FlipFlopi — a traditional dhow made of untraditional materials — sails the crystal waters of the Indian Ocean raising awareness about plastic waste.
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** A World Without Monarchs ([link removed])
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When the numbers speak! This stunning data visualization shows just how drastically the population of western monarchs overwintering in California has dropped in recent years.

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** What Good Is Your Labor? ([link removed])
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Yes, it’s spring, but we simply had to share this haunting audio-visual artwork, set in deep winter in rural Saskatchewan, Canada, by poet Sheri Benning, her sister Heather Benning, and filmmaker Chad Galloway.

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