Dress Down Friday June 22 | The Green Edition

Here’s another edition of dress-down Friday. This week I wanted to focus on green issues, and let me forewarn you: this is somewhat intense. I’ve decided to focus more of my attention on these issues, and try and help do what I can to educate and make aware the seriousness of caring for the creation.


Daisy

This week I had a lot of help from my friend Holly (who is currently experiencing Blog Block). She sent me a bunch of great links that are great resources for what we can do on a practical level about these issues. By the way, if ever you find links you’d like to be posted in dress-down friday (they can be funny or serious), drop a note in my contact box. If you are interested in more tips and some concrete ideas visit the post I did a couple months back on becoming green. Also, using Holly’s tips I point out at what level of society these sites appeal to.

Here are various ways to become active now.

The Inconvenient Truth website has tons of helpful information: send a petition to your US representative, consider voting solar, investigate all the US cities that are becoming cool-cities (these cities have decided to make a difference regardless of what the country as a whole does, I Just learned of some of the cities around me who have not yet adopted energy efficiencies policies), and join the attempt to Stop Global Warming, with an online petition you can sign and plenty of helpful videos. (Most of these sites focuse on the personal and governmental levels)

Sierra Club also has some great resources, ten easy things you can do right now, a video on making your home cool. (They Deal on the Local, Global & Environmental level)

Visit the Greenbelt Movement’s site,

GBM provides income and sustenance to millions of people in Kenya through the planting of trees. It also conducts educational campaigns to raise awareness about women’s rights, civic empowerment, and the environment throughout Kenya and Africa.

GBM’s founder Wangari Maathi recently won the Nobel Peace Prize for her work with this organization. (They work on the Global & Governmental scale)

The Clinton foundation is working on a climate initiative. (This organization works on a global scale)

It is important to mention just how essential diet is in all of this, our diets have a huge impact on the climate, from shipping food, to unhealthy demands for the production of meat, not to mention the land that sustains those eating habits. Check out Treehugger’s page on food and healthy, The Vegan Society, and Friends of the Earth (also see here)for more information. Also on the Friends of the Earth site, a news article on on of my favorite all time musician’s, Thom Yorke, involvement in these issues.

Other links for getting involved with environmental issues:

Wow, that’s a complete overload of sites, and things to check out. So where to start? I’ve added a few of these to my RSS reader and become subscribers to their news. I’ve also signed a few petitions where I could. I have also bookmarked these sites so I can return to them later, there is too much to take in all at once. Start taking steps to become educated on the issues that surround this. And of course, the most important is to change the way we live, little by little, step by step, start finding ways to cut back on the way we use things, eat things, what we buy, and how we travel.

3 responses to “Dress Down Friday June 22 | The Green Edition”

  1. Thanks for all these links to so many thought provoking resources. Linked to this, and just from my experience this year from helping at my brother’s allotment, an increasingly popular and practical response to green issues, has been the return to growing your own produce – which is both fun, rewarding and environmentally friendly. And this can be done at any scale – from growing vegetables in pots on the porch, to a full-blown small-holding. And there’s nothing quite like tasting the organic and homegrown fruits of your labour!