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  • “We don’t conserve until we’re down to the last roll of toilet paper.”

    Over at Current TV, which is the new cable network that I'm obsessed with even though I don't have cable, browsers of the online studio can find out if a video clip has made it on air. So this morning I was pleased to learn that part one of Earth Current "cody" did so.

    Earth Current "cody" is a three part series of video shorts, produced by Dharma Dog Pictures, which introduces us to Cody Lundin, founder of Aboriginal Living Skills School and ACES Arizona Center for Environmental Sustainability. In part one, we get a tour of Cody's home, which looks to me like a Hobbit hole in the middle of the desert. In fact we discover it is a eco-designed house.

    Part two is an interview with Cody, formerly known as ABO DUDE, where get gems like "we don't conserve until we're down to the last roll of toilet paper" during conversations on global warming, sustainability, and conservation. According to Cody, what is going to get people to "shift" their behavior so that they make less of a footprint is "pain." Not public-education campaigns, but pain. Ouch!

    In part three, we learn how one would make fire in a world without matches, lighters, and Swedish Firesteel. The moral of the story: We've lost touch with the basics of nature. (Yeah, but the Swedish Firesteel is so cool!)

    So head on over to Current TV, watch the clips, leave some comments, and greenlight parts two and three if you think they deserve to be on air.

    And you can check out some other clips from Dharma Dog over at the Current TV studio, including one of my favorites, the Organic Rap.

    Lastly, let us know in comments if Cody would make for an interesting InterActivist.

  • Mooney on TPMCafe

    For the past week, on TPMCafe's Book Club, they've been discussing Chris Mooney's book The Republican War on Science. It's been a great back and forth among Chris and several guests, including Roger Pielke Jr. and Lawrence Krauss. The reader comments, as usual on that site, have been literate and insightful. Head on over and start scrolling down.

  • Carl Pope is speaking my language

    Has Carl Pope been reading Gristmill? Cause he's speaking my language. (Leave me alone with my illusions, people.)

    In a post today he makes this point:

  • Cradle to Cradle certification arrives

    Ever since I first heard him mention it, I've been wondering when Bill McDonough's "Cradle to Cradle Certification" program was going to become a reality. I think it has huge potential to become for product design what LEED has become for green building (though probably, as Jamais cautions, more slowly and fitfully).

    Well, via WC, here it is. The first six recipients have been announced.

    Cradle to cradle is a biomimetic approach to design, wherein every material used can either be returned to the earth to biodegrade without harm (a biological nutrient) or can return to the manufacturing cycle with no loss of quality (a technical nutrient). In short: no waste. Or rather, in C2C terminology: waste is food. A great primer on biomimicry can also be found at WC.

    The certification ...

    ... covers five categories (PDF): Materials (including assessment and emissions); Material Reutilization/Design for Environment (including product recovery plans); Energy (including an emphasis on solar energy use); Water (including plans for conservation and quality); and Social Responsibility (including corporate ethics statements and third-party social responsibility assessments). The overview linked above is a basic checklist; the Application Form (PDF) has the full details on what's required for each step of the certification process.

    Look for C2C product on shelves near you! Uh, some day.

  • Featuring the faces of over 1,000 JibJab fans

    For all you crusaders against Wal-Mart and overconsumption, check out the latest from JibJab.com. Happy Friday.

  • Rebuilding: do it right

    Two good things on rebuilding:

    Leo DiCaprio (heard of him?) and (ex-InterActivist) Matt Petersen give a brief but pungent rundown on what went wrong in New Orleans and how it could be made right. I wonder which part Leo wrote.

    (Oh, and no offense, Leo, but the consensus in the office is that Jake Gyllenhaal is the eco-hottie du jour.)

    Van Jones has a similar piece in Yes! Magazine, calling for social justice and environmental principles to govern the rebuilding process. Apparently a longer version will run in the Oct. print issue.

  • Green humor

    As I believe I've mentioned, environmentalism is never funny.

    Environmentalists, however, are the source of endless amusement. To wit: here's a set of jokes that's been making the eco-rounds:

  • Jeff Jarvis on Current TV and the new iPod

    For a different perspective on Al Gore's recent speech and cable TV network, Current TV, head on over to the BuzzMachine to read what Jeff Jarvis has to say.

    While I won't go into his critique of all things Al, other than to say he's critical of the former Veep for not embracing the Internet more, he did make one suggestion I've meant to blog about:

    Finally, at the end, Gore returns to the internet.
    Indeed, Current TV relies on video streaming over the Internet as the means by which individuals send us what we call viewer-created content or VC squared.
    Not to nitpick, but streaming is usually outbound, not inbound. And I find it odd that you still call these people "viewers" if they're supposedly programming the network. Aren't they your journalists and programmers? Aren't you supposed to be the viewer now?

    And he still complains about the internet because there's not enough bandwidth for full-motion video. Try Bittorrent, Al. Try video iChat. Try video on those new iPods.

    For those who did not hear the latest news, Apple is now selling a video iPod. If you've been toying around with the idea of participatory journalism, your potential audience just got a whole lot bigger.

    Now wouldn't it be interesting to have someone make a clip about the iPod's non-replaceable battery, which destines it and its constituent toxic heavy metals for a premature trip to the landfill, to play on said iPods.

  • DDT myths

    You may not have noticed, but the Right is fairly obsessed with propagating the notion that environmentalists, by getting DDT banned in 1972, are responsible for the deaths of millions of poor in the developing world. This is the kind of thing that people with, um, lives tend to ignore. It travels around underground on right wing sites until it slowly seeps into conventional wisdom.

    It's bullsnot, though. For a brief primer on why, see Tim Lambert.