It's a beautiful morning and time for some praise, even though this is the
most grim, most alienated summer I've ever known. (Humans seem to be intent on
throwing away everything that's good, oblivious to the losses, while they play
with their digital toys. I feel like the character John, in Brave New
World, not captivated like all the others by the easy fun and escape. I learned
in June that gigantic dams destroying hundreds of square miles of rain
forest in the Amazon basin are proposed, to provide electricity for growing
Brazilian cities. And that's just one assault on Nature among so
many!)
Anyway, first, praise for the morning, to borrow Cat Steven's phrase. It's
like being on vacation up at a Minnesota lake now, right here in the heart of
Des Moines. Despite massive human-caused damage, the planet is still
capable of providing us with amazing beauty.
Praise for the tomatoes I picked this morning from my chemical-free,
compost-fed, backyard garden. It's a great year for tomatoes. I fervently
wish I could plant on more than 0.013 of an acre of bountiful Iowa
land.
An excellent recent letter to the editor, Jim Redmond. I was not aware
of the effect on Native American tribes of the huge dams on the Missouri River.
Sorry for the delay in praise for your letter.
Apology accepted, Donna, but your comments were not a waste of
time. We should be constantly working on messaging. I thought my phrase,
"Genetic engineering is genetic damage, deliberately inflicted," would get
people's attention on the Genetically Modified Organism (GMO) issue but so
far it hasn't. (I haven't really done much to publicize that concept, I
admit.)
You wrote:
Maybe you'd like some help with better messaging of the hazards of GMO's as
well?
You may have been ironic in saying that, but I am taking it
seriously. Please do post here any suggestions you have.
The failure to stop the spread of GMOs into the environment is beyond
tragic--it's like a slow-moving nuclear war. It's leading to a world where
Nature is gone, extirpated: replaced by engineered life forms. All of us
working on the issue need all the help we can get.
Neila, this should be a discussion on the Iowa Topics list,
because if this is not an Iowa Topic, then what is? Iowa is probably the
most genetically engineered place in the world. As to giving our
enemies information they should not see, I'm not really worried about Monsanto
or DuPont infiltrating this list. After all, If we can't discuss matters of
substance on this list, we might as well shut it down.
I will try to post some writing I have done, from as far back as 1996, on
the genetic engineering issue.
More praise;
We as Iowans should all be happy that Donna is on the national
Sierra Club board. There are a number of projects involving the national Club
that she might be willing to help us with. Imagine if the 1.4 million members of
Sierra Club could be motivated to save the irreplaceable, world-class
resources that are right here in Iowa. To stop the cancer of urban
sprawl that's destroying our farmland, for example. But there needs to be
a way to communicate to those 1.4 million what we volunteers on the ground
see as goals, as well as what staff see as goals. More about this soon, I
hope.
Tom
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