Monday, October 15, 2007

Serve God, Save the Planet (Part I)

4 comments
Tara recently got me reading a book that we picked up for her birthday titled, Serve God, Save the Planet by J. Matthew Sleeth, MD. You may recall back in this post where I began describing some of our journey towards intentionally respecting the earth that God so amazingly created. Seeing that today is Blog Action Day, I thought I'd pass on some ecological/lifestyle stats from Sleeth's book that jumped out at me. I've decided not to comment on them much at this point because they paint a fascinating & jolting picture all in their own right:
  • Rate of forest destruction worldwide = 1 acre per second

  • Number of species going extinct = more than 100 per day

  • The U.S. uses more natural resources than any country in history
  • In the next ten years, 20 million Americans will be diagnosed with cancer (1 out of every 15)
  • Currently, more than 700 man-made toxins can be found in human tissues
  • If every household changed its five most used light bulbs to compact fluorescents, the country could take 21 coal-fired power plants off-line tomorrow
    • "This would keep one trillion pounds of poisonous gases and soot out of the air we breathe and would have the same beneficial impact as taking eight million cars off the road" (Sleeth 66).
  • Approximately 64,000 Americans die annually as a result of soot in the air
  • One power plant in Massachusetts was alone found to cause 1,200 ER visits, 3,000 asthma attacks, 110 deaths annually
  • The average American watches 1,700 hours of television annually
    • The average school-age child attends 900 hours of classes a year
  • By the time a typical American reaches age 71, they will have spent a solid 10 waking years in front of a TV
  • There are 300 million television sets in America, which consume five times more energy than is produced by all the geothermal, biomass, solar, & wind sources in the U.S. combined
  • Ten times more energy, water, & grain is needed to produce a pound of beef or pork than to produce a pound of milk or cheese
  • The loss of rain forests in South America means that the clouds they once made no longer blow across the Atlantic to drop their water on Africa
    • As a result the Sahara grows by thousands of acres per year
  • Nearly a billion people live in chronic hunger
  • Every 10 days, a quarter of a million people die from starvation (25,000 every day)
  • Haiti's forests have been cut down and shipped to the U.S. As a result, Haiti has lost 90% of its topsoil
  • In America, junk mail fills 340,000 garbage trucks per year all bound for landfills
    • 4 out of 5 pieces of junk mail aren't recycled
  • About 70% of U.S. electricity is generated by fossil fuels, 20% nuclear, 9% hydropower
    • Solar, wind, geothermal, biomass, and methane combine for the remaining 1%
    • We have been developing these alternative sources for three decades

This is a lot to take in at once, but my goal in relaying this info is to drive at a major theme: an element of interconnectedness defines these statistics. Nearly ALL of us in America play a role in the problems, and ALL of us have the option sitting right in front of us to play a role in the solutions...


*Note: While I haven't taken the time to research and provide cited references, I have a reasonably high degree of confidence in validity of each of the above statistics. Of course, I'm completely willing to be persuaded otherwise if contradictory data is out there... but I haven't seen any.

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

We Feel Fine.

1 comments
Those that are close to me know that one of my favorite web destinations is the TED site (especially since they started posting videos of the various presentations over a year ago). I think I originally learned about TED a few years ago via John Chandler's stellar blogging and have admired it ever since.

Anyway, the latest presentation** that I viewed was given by Jonathan Harris on his project titled We Feel Fine. This melding of art + digital programming + humanity really captured me. I found the thought-process behind it all and the dynamic results simply beautiful (...not to mention Harris's incredible knack for minimalist asthetic).

This from the Mission of the project:
Since August 2005, We Feel Fine has been harvesting human feelings from a large number of weblogs. Every few minutes, the system searches the world's newly posted blog entries for occurrences of the phrases "I feel" and "I am feeling". When it finds such a phrase, it records the full sentence, up to the period, and identifies the "feeling" expressed in that sentence (e.g. sad, happy, depressed, etc.).

Because blogs are structured in largely standard ways, the age, gender, and geographical location of the author can often be extracted and saved along with the sentence, as can the local weather conditions at the time the sentence was written. All of this information is saved. The result is a database of several million human feelings, increasing by 15,000 - 20,000 new feelings per day. Using a series of playful interfaces, the feelings can be searched and sorted across a number of demographic slices, offering responses to specific questions like: do Europeans feel sad more often than Americans? Do women feel fat more often than men? Does rainy weather affect how we feel?...

Since starting in 2005, they've collected nearly 9,000,000 feelings from almost 2,000,000 unique individuals all over the globe. I encourage you to check it out, and spend some time rolling around with other peoples' emotions. It effectively erases physical and social barriers, and I think there's great value in that.

Ok, so let's see if I can get my feelings pulled into the We Feel Fine project:
I am feeling a lot of tension when I think about how to follow the ways of Jesus in the American suburbs (but that's a subject for a separate post...).


**If you have a spare 17 minutes, below is the Harris presentation (he explains his projects far more interestingly than I have...):


.

Monday, October 01, 2007

Head of Radio...

0 comments

I overfloweth with great anticipation!

Radiohead has just made their new studio album, In Rainbows, available for pre-order.

In true Radiohead-curveball fashion: you name your own price when you pre-order the album download.
Seriously.
No, really.
I just did it. Just fill in the blanks.
Welcome to Radiohead in their post-EMI contract world.


(Sidenote: I think this is really a fantastic experiment, but if you're a Radiohead fan, I think that you should pay what you deem their art to be worth... rather than see how little you can pay to consume... just my two pence.)

I'll plan to post my thoughts on the album after I am able to download it on October 10th...

::anticipatory grin::

*Photo credit: Dead Air Space