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Greening Your LibraryTips and resources for the library community
We’ve been living on Planet Earth like we’re making a one-night stop in a cheap motel. We throw towels all over the place, pile up the pizza boxes and soda bottles, and don’t worry about the hairs in the bathtub or hairspray on the mirror. But our planet isn’t a temporary stop and there’s no maid to clean up in the morning. It’s true, that Nature can clean up almost anything, given enough time. But the natural cycles often take centuries, or longer. We’ll grow old with the problems our parents got started, problems we’ve been making worse. Wouldn’t it be nice to think that when we have children or grandchildren they won’t grow up wearing masks to school and that there’ll still be butterflies to point out in the garden? To make that happen, we need to realize that the Earth is home, not a temporary stop. For too long, people thought that the earth was so vast that nothing humans could do would really mess things up on a big scale. The threat of nuclear weapons was the first thing that clued us in to the impressively destructive capacity of mankind. But after that a whole succession of other surprises were in store. Bird life began to disappear because farmers and governments were blithely spraying DDT on everything in sight. School cupboards used to be sprinkled with DDT to get rid of insects! The American writer Rachel Carson, a biologist with a deep love for the natural world, created the worldwide environmental movement we know today with her book Silent Spring. She should be a hero to all of us, dying of breast cancer herself while she worked, quietly but with great determination, to alert the public to the dangers we were creating. Now we know that our activities have made massive, and threatening, changes in the planet. The core of environmental thinking is the question of how we humans can live – successfully and sustainably – on this beautiful planet of ours. Sustainability means making ourselves at home on earth in a way that works today and will go on working in years ahead. And ecology starts at home. In fact, the word ecology means home, and the best place to start saving the planet is in our own homes. -- Karen Christensen © 2004 Do something about global warming and threats to forests. Be part of the solution and join others in committing to the goals of the Book Industry Treatise on Responsible Paper Use. Find out more at http://www.greenpressinitiative.org/industrytreatise.htm Green Press InitiativeWant to join with Random House and over a hundred small to mid-sized publishers in improving the book industry’s environmental impacts like reducing greenhouse gases? Here is what you can do right now.
Large scale changes are made as a result of a collective push forward. The Treatise is the vehicle. Contact Erin Johnson or Tyson Miller for more help at www.greenpressinitiative.org
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