Our Climate Choice

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onFeb 20, 2013 @ 13:18 PST

I boarded a jet plane this past Friday and traveled 16 hours through the night to Washington, DC. I was back on a plane again on Monday morning flying the reverse 16 hours back home.ย ย 

I was in Washington for the Forward on Climateย rally, to call on President Obama to say โ€œnoโ€ to the KXLย pipeline.ย 

The journey was long and on the way there I read Tim Flanneryโ€™s Now or Never, an inspiring (short) read on the state of the planet in the face of climate change. On the way back I was too exhausted to read or do anything productive, so I watched b-movies and contemplated my experience at the largest climate rally in US history. ย 

ย 
I thought about the KXL pipeline and what it represents at this moment in American/Canadian history. ย I thought about all of the concerns over the pipeline on both sides. I thought about solutions to climate disruption – solutions that won’t slow our economy or stop commerce, green energy soluions like the advanced carbon-neutral biofuels that should be fueling my jet travel. I thought about how many people are crying out that we need the pipeline for economic stimulation and for job creation. I thought about the hard working citizens who feed their children through oil related jobs. ย 
ย 
Andโ€ฆI couldnโ€™t help but wonderโ€ฆ.
ย 
If oil workers could choose, would they choose to work in toxic environments with damaging chemicals, or would they choose to work surrounded by clean air?
ย 
If Americans could choose, would they choose to work on the infrastructure for cancer-causing oil power or would they choose to work on the infrastructure for health reviving wind power?
ย 
If Canadians could choose, would they choose to dig up their forests, leaving behind barren and filthy wastelands, or would they choose to harvest the sunโ€™s rays and leave behind a legacy for their children?
ย 
If people had a choice, what would that choice be?
ย 
My reflections on climate choice were abruptly interrupted by the ever more sobering understanding that, right now, so many citizens of our free, democratic nations have no choice. ย They go to work in the dirty energy sector for lack of a better alternative.
ย 
There are jobs to be created on both sides of the climate argument. ย Whether we are investing in oil or sun, coal or wind, gas or algae, the economy will be stimulated by the investment. ย The economy, unlike each of us, is not swayed by ideology. ย 
ย 
So, by the time I touched down at home, I had but one, echoing thought in my mind, one aching plea for the leaders of our โ€œfree worldโ€: ย Pleaseโ€ฆ ask not the people if they want to work, but ask the people what they want to work towards. ย 
ย 
Even slaves have jobs. A free man should have choice.
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