THE FAITHFUL CONSUMER
…connecting
faith and the environment
By Sarah Streed
I had been intending to write
about migrant labor in this month’s
column, but instead I’m going to write about “Al Gore’s
movie,” “An Inconvenient Truth.” My husband and I went
to see it with our friends, Laura and Eric Nordstrom. It was stunning.
Yes, I voted for Gore in ‘00—we still have the sticker on
our minivan—but even if I hadn’t, I would be hard pressed
to deny his prowess in this new role. Intelligent, articulate and passionate,
he talks using graphs, charts and photos to clearly show the earth is
warming and that we are now entering into, to quote from the movie which
is quoting Churchill, “a period of consequences.”
As Eric pointed out, only
Al Gore has the connections and resources to accompany a nuclear submarine
in measuring Artic ice, or to know the
man (Roger Revelle) who first started measuring CO2 in the atmosphere
in 1958. Yet Gore is clearly using his access and resources on behalf
of all of us. The film periodically goes to scenes from his personal
life—his son’s accident, his sister’s death of lung
cancer, and his political setback when the Supreme Court ruled that Bush
was President rather than hold a needed recount. These scenes serve to
make Gore, the environmental apologist, completely believable when he
states that alerting people to global warming—not politics—is
his life’s work.
But the finest filmmaking
of all, to my mind, was that we didn’t
leave the theatre feeling depressed and despondent. After all, we had
just seen incontrovertible scientific evidence that the earth is warming
and our climate is irrevocably changing. But it is Gore’s convincing
belief that there is still time to do something about it. Because we
Americans are 5% of the world’s population but contribute 30% of
total CO2 emissions, if we act now, we can save our earth.
“Truth” is perhaps the most important movie in the history
of the world. Because it is appearing in mainstream theatres all over
the U.S., if even a fraction of the audience logs on to the movie’s
website www.climatecrisis.net and follows some of the steps, this will
result in a huge drop in CO2 emissions.
Just one last thing: Whatever
your political persuasion, I’m sure
you’ll leave the theatre, feeling, as my husband put it, “cheated.” The
movie doesn’t dwell on the election of ’00 but after watching
this eloquent, smart man endeavor to protect our world, one can’t
help but see the contrast to our current president who mangles the smallest
of sentences and has started a war based on false evidence. We Americans
were cheated, no question. But perhaps we need to do as Al Gore has done
and put aside the past and look to the future.
(I’ll return to the
topic of migrant labor next month.)
July’s tip: Go see “An
Inconvenient Truth.” If
that is not possible, put your name on a waiting list from Movie Gallery
or
Netflix or the library.
Sarah Streed is a board member of the Wisconsin
Interfaith Climate & Energy
Campaign (WICEC) and the President of Write Stuff Works (www.writestuffworks.com),
a writing business. She lives in Stoughton, Wisconsin with her husband
and children. Email smstreed@sbcglobal.net
All rights reserved by Sarah Streed.