Sea Level Rises on Siesta Key Beach.  Get Involved in your local community with Citizens’ Climate Lobby

Sea Level Rises on Siesta Key Beach. Get Involved in your local community with Citizens’ Climate Lobby

Ringling College of Art & Design’s David Houle, Futurist in Residence, and Tim Rumage, Professor of Environmental Studies, are the co-founders of ThisSpaceShipEarth.org, and co-authors of This Spaceship Earth.

They teamed once again to produce, with the help of local citizens, a short video of where the high-tide line would be as the sea level rises. They chose to illustrate this on Siesta Beach, consistently listed as one of the top ten beaches worldwide.

Join this organization to become more involved with your local politicians with regards to sea level rise, global warming and other environmental issues

Citizens’ Climate Lobby–please go to this web site below
citizensclimatelobby.org

SEE VIDEO below

 

 

How to talk to conservatives about climate change

How to talk to conservatives about climate change

 

 

FEATURE

the week.com

Alasdair Wilkins
Brendan Smialowski/Getty Images
December 19, 2016
Nothing imperils humanity’s future like global warming, and that very fact may help explain why conservatives are generally so skeptical of climate science.

After all, conservatism first emerged as a defense of tradition against progressive change, so why would conservatives care about preserving a future they already view with suspicion? That’s the argument a recent study puts forward, and it points to a possible better way to talk about the environment with those skeptical of climate science.

Although 97 percent of climate scientists agree that the Earth is getting hotter and human activity is a primary cause, the public is far more divided. A recent Pew Research poll was just the latest of dozens of polls to demonstrate the profound partisan split on climate issues, with 70 percent of liberal Democrats saying they trusted climate scientists compared with just 15 percent of conservative Republicans. And so-called climate change deniers will soon hold pretty much all the power in the United States, with Donald Trump set to become the only head of state on the planet who rejects climate science. If ever there was a time for a renewed effort to change the minds of conservatives — if not Trump, then at least friends and family who voted him in — about climate change, the time is now.

Researchers at Germany’s University of Cologne ran a series of online surveys with a range of 200 to 300 American participants from across the political spectrum. They worked on the assumption that conservatism has historically been about preserving the traditional status quo in the face of change, whereas liberals tend to see such change as necessary to building a better tomorrow. In other words, conservatives look fondly on the past and are wary of the future, with the situation reversed for liberals. Calls for dealing with climate change that are rooted in protecting the planet for future generations might then not be persuasive to conservatives, particularly when they associate such environmental messages with liberal efforts to change society for the worse.

Are these broad generalizations? Absolutely. But broad generalizations can be useful, and the results from the surveys seem to bear out the researchers’ hypothesis. In one survey, the participants would see one of two nearly identical messages. While one talked about how “there is increasing traffic on the road, the air is becoming polluted, and land is disappearing,” the other noted how, in the past, “there was less traffic on the road, the air was clean, and there was plenty of land.” One talked about wanting to make future generations proud, while the other worried about doing right by the founding fathers.

Conservative participants consistently liked the past-focused message better than the forward-looking ones. Liberal participants somewhat preferred the future-centric messages, but they generally responded positively to pro-environmental messages of any stripe. They found that switching the focus of global warming messaging towards the past was enough to erase 77 percent of the opinion gap between liberals and conservatives.

MPowered- Innovative, Affordable Solar Light that Brightens Lives and the World

MPowered- Innovative, Affordable Solar Light that Brightens Lives and the World

A New York City based B Corporation, Mpowered creates innovative and affordable products to help people receive solar light. Their inflatable product was first introduced to me at a gift exchange holiday party in Sarasota, Florida. Unfortunately, I was not the one who received the gift, but am going to run out and buy dozens of them.

There is a need for light in the world. They created Luci, a inflatable solar light, to empower the 1.5 billion people in the developing world who still live without electricity. In many places, as soon as the sun goes down, children can’t study, entrepreneurs have to stop working, women are less safe walking outside, health clinics have to close… the list goes on. Kerosene lamps are the most common solution in these areas – but they are dangerous, toxic and expensive.

Lightweight, easy to carry, and shining for hours on a single charge, Luci is a clean, safe and affordable way to bring light to the world.

HE LITTLE LIGHT THAT OPENS DOORS

 

THE LITTLE LIGHT THAT GUIDES THE WAY !

With Luci, children are to safely walk long distances home from school at night.


Kids around the world can keep studying by bright, clean light, even after the sun goes down. It doesn’t just brighten lives, it saves them. It doesn’t just set the mood, it lifts it. It doesn’t just radiate hope, it lights the way for brighter futures.
Email me at bestweatherroemer@gmail.com or twitter me at @bestweatherinc.com and I will send you updates like this— Jim Roemer