1. Cleaning up our streets and parks that were
covered with hamburger wrappers and cigarette butts.
And that grew up into cleaning our air and streams
which were filled with industrial waste. And that
became a moral issue regards greed and cars
and oil and war.
2. Immanual Velikovskys debate over catastrophic
evolution .. claiming that our world had changed
dramatically due to sudden events ... comet impact
.. Venus passing near us ... poles shifting .. the
sudden ice ages killing Mammoths and freezing
them.
The first movement was very productive. It was
easy to understand, and right in our faces. So
we acted on it, and our environment is better
for it.
The second movement was Anti-establishment,
and a favorite of college students .. basically a
hippie movement of the 60s, protesting the bull
headed ignorance of their professors. I remember
it grew up in National Geographic Magazine with
constant reminders that Velikovsky was right,
and research that proved it ... such as the
temperature of Venus. Velikovsky won the debate,
and a new generation of Professors was born,
with Venus being the perfect example of Global
Warming caused by its "organic" cloud cover.
At the same time, the Kennedy years came along,
and politicians took advantage of what appeared to
be an "intellectual" persona ... as opposed to the
war mongering generation of WWII .. and the
coming Nuclear Winter ... a kind of "global
warming" that would decend into another ice age
in a matter of just a few years. Everybody would
die.
I'm not saying that nobody knows what they are
talking about. It's just that I felt the "Pollution
Movement" was much easier to understand, and
act on. And, it was getting the job done regards
a more responsible use of our natural resources
and maintaining our environment.
Personally, I thought the Velikovsky debate was
over ... he won ... and Pensee had moved on
to more appropriate topics on the Harvard Campus.
It surprises me, the degree of indoctrination of
the 60s generation intellectuals, that they would
jargonize modern day efforts to reduce pollution,
by tying it back to the good old days of Coffee
Houses, black lights, and waay too much pot
smoking. I'm just waiting for Bob Dylan to show
up and start dating Joan Baez again. God, I hope
they don't bring back those "granny dresses".
johns
Pollution is not passe' but currently they want to add CO2 to the list of
pollutants. The enviros of today are inventive to be sure but have forgotten
who they were.
BTW I read somewhere Velikovsky's book was open on Einstein's desk when he
died. That may have been some sort of literary nicety but no one knows for
sure.
I was at the fringe of the hippie movement in the 1960s, and I
listened to Bob Dylan - remember especially his song "It's a hard
rain, is gonna fall" -- which was anti-Establishment, no doubt about
it. But so what? "Global warming" was not primarily a fad from the
60s.
The issue of "greenhouse warming," goes back to the late 1800s, when
the Irish scientist John Tyndall did laboratory experiments showing
water vapor and CO2 to be "greenhouse" gases.
Then in ... can't recall if it was 1895 or 1898, the Nobel-prize-
winning chemist Svante Ahrrenius published a paper calculating how
much he though increasing the CO2 in the atmosphere, through fossil
fuel combustion (mostly of coal) would affet the climate over time.
Ahrrenius's theory was controversial, and disputed by some, but then
Guy Callendar in England backed it up with more research in the 1930s,
and it was in the 1950s that Roger Revelle and Keelling got interested
in the issue, and when Keeling with funding through the International
Geophysical Year of 1957 started to produce the CO2 measurements at
Mauna Loa observatory in Hawaii that backed up the theory.
It was in 1988, of course, that James Hansen, who appears to have been
raised in a breakaway sect of the Mormons, of the Reformed Latter Day
Saints or something -- made his famous announcement to Congress about
"global warming" having become dectectable.
Johns -- you're not seriously suggesting, I hope, that the strait-
laced Mormon Republican James Hansen was somehow influenced by the
1960s craze for Bob Dylan and pot smoking?
And I assume you're not blaming pot smoking in the 1960s for the
warnings about greenhouse warming that Roger Revelle of the US
National Academy of Sciences was issuing in the late 1950s.
Or for what Guy Callendar was writing about CO2 and global warming in
the 1930s, or what Svante Ahrrenius wrote about CO2 and climate change
back in the 1890s.
Or is that in fact what you really are trying to say here?
That a bunch of pot-smoking Bob Dylan fans from 1967 somehow invented
a time machine and went back to 1895 and planted the greenhouse
warming idea in Ahrennius's brain?.
>That a bunch of pot-smoking Bob Dylan fans from 1967 somehow invented
>a time machine and went back to 1895 and planted the greenhouse
>warming idea in Ahrennius's brain?.
No, lefty, this is what he said in 1896;
[Quote]
" Is the mean temperature of the ground in any way influenced by the
presence of heat-absorbing gases in the atmosphere? Fourier[3]
maintained that the atmosphere acts like the glass of a hot-house,
because it lets through the light rays of the sun but retains the dark
rays from the ground. This idea was elaborated by Pouillet[4];"
[Unquote]
So who planted it?
Joe Fischer
johns
Whether or not Al Gore is correct about everything, global climate
change is an "inconvenient truth," or at least it's a damned
inconvenient environmental issue. And from what I've read, tropical
deforestation
is an important factor contributing to the problem, tho' not the only
one.
It's prettty dfficult to put your arms around trying to save the
atmosphere, of course.
Getting the trash picked up and the bottles recycled is a LOT easier.
And I also miss
the good old fashioned 1960s solution of getting wasted on weed, which
often helped me to avoid
worrying about much of anything for days at a time. Ahh - the good
old days.
For what it's worth, though, your comment abut tree planting seems a
good one, though there
are some climate scientists who are skeptical about the net benefits
of some kinds of tree planting.
Beyond that, I have a paperback on my desk, by Jeffrey Langholz and
Kelly Turner, titled "You Can Prevent Global Warming (and save
money!) - 51 EASY WAYS." Have you seen it?
They do have a page or two on planting trees, for what it's worth.
Also lots of presumably money-saving tips on how to reduce your energy
use and your CO2 footprint through buying low-wattage lightbulbs,
adjusting your furnace, buying a new hot water heater, weather
proofing your windows better, altering the way you use your dishwasher
etc. etc. -- everything up to "Invest in Green Stocks."
According to the authors' hype: "There are easy ways you can prevent
global warming and also save over $2,000 a year. Global warming is a
colossal problem that is going to require the entire world's
cooperaion but you don't have to feel helpless."
I don't know if Velikosky would have liked the book, but it looks
pretty user friendly to me. Why not pick up a copy and see if the 51
tips make sense?
johns
johns