Tuesday, June 03, 2008

Take a Bite out of Climate Change

How is the food you eat everyday linked to global climate change? Every animal and plant grown for our consumption has an impact on the climate, but the impacts are not all the same.

The Small Planet Institute, founded by Frances Moore Lappe and Anna Lappe, has started a new website called Take a Bite out of Climate Change. It was created to help consumers understand their food's impact on climate change and what they can do about it. Questions like, "why are scientists worried about genetically modified foods" are answered. Since the website is in its early stages, there's only a few questions so far, but you can make a suggestion as to what you'd like to see answered. Check it out!

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

letter to the editor
Chapel Hill (NC) Newspaper
June 11, 2008



Solutions exist if we apply the science.


Humankind is surely experiencing the fulfillment of a Chinese proverb: "We live in interesting times." Many of our brilliant scientists report that God is a delusion. On the other hand, intuitive and gifted believers regularly tell us that these scientists themselves suffer from a form of delusional atheism. No one knows, I suppose, which of these groups is correct.
I am one of those people who believes the family of humanity can use God's gift of science to take the measure of any global challenge and find solutions that are consonant with universal values. But, before we can move forward to reasonably address and sensibly overcome a challenge to human wellbeing and environmental health such as global warming, that challenge needs to be openly acknowledged and widely discussed. I suppose it is a function of my life experience to suggest that we accurately "diagnose" whatever the challenge is before proceeding to implement "treatment" options.

If great spiritual and scientific leaders are somehow on the right track when realizing, "The Earth has a human-induced fever and could overheat," then at least one available treatment option is to carefully and skillfully examine the extant scientific evidence related to global warming and to make necessary changes in human behavior, both individually and collectively.

All of the above serves to set the stage for our consideration of a question. How can politicians and economic powerbrokers in the human community be empowered to muster the "political will" necessary for addressing human-driven climate change as well as for providing the substantial economic incentives and financial capital necessary to overcome this potential global threat to life as we know it and the integrity of Earth?

-- Steven Earl Salmony, Chapel Hill