Go Green or Die —> The Way Home

The purpose of this site is to find a ‘green’ lever big enough to move the world to sustainability. I titled it Go Green or Die because, well, that is true, we must, and becauseI thought it rather catchy.

That said, I have come to realise that people will not see climate change and peak oil as the crises they are unless and until a social tipping point is reached, where likely we will go from denial to near-panic. Various things can push us toward this tipping point; this site is my own small attempt, as are my The Way Home presentations, but we are not there yet and we are already late getting started on addressing these crises.

And that brings me to the main point. We cannot count upon governments or corporations – large organizations led by people with a strong vested interest in business-as-usual – to wake up and take action on climate change and peak oil in time.

I have come to accept this, and I won’t say I found it easy. I ran as as Green Party of Canada candidate in the last federal election, and as a Green Party of British Columbia candidate in the last provincial election. Clearly I recently thought that action at the national or provincial level was possible; I no longer think so.

It would be a long story to explain all my reasons why, but perhaps a small, real example will help illustrate. In the last provincial election, Lana Popham was one of my opponents as the NDP candidate. She seemed as ‘green’ as me; in talking with her, she clearly understood the threat posed by climate change. Her family runs an organic vineyard. She cycles everywhere.

I nearly withdrew to give her a clear run, but was persuaded otherwise. She won anyway. What has been the result? Her party formed the Opposition, and made her Agriculture Critic. The leaders of the NDP have her spending her time and energy and goodwill campaigning to get bicycles exempted from a new tax.

And that is just a tiny example of why change is unlikely to come from above. It rarely does, really; those entrenched naturally oppose change.

I came to realise that it is up to us. “We are the ones we have been waiting for,” as the song says. We must at least work to save local areas as best we can, to make them sustainable and self-reliant. Done alone, that will not ultimately stop or save anyone from climate change. It will only buffer against the coming oil shock and allow life to continue in a somewhat civilised manner.

The best route I’ve found so far is Transition Initiative, which every town and city and region should be doing. It’s a grassroots movement to make the local region more self-reliant, less dependent upon oil. There is no head office, no Executive Director. There are only guiding principles and local examples.

This is all a long way of saying that I’ve joined my local Transition Initiative. That is where the action is going to come from. The movement has caught on and has spread like wildfire, which gives me hope for wider action. It would be wonderful if ultimately there were thousands and thousands of Transition Towns, and these millions upon millions of people joined forces to end dependence on fossil fuels.

This journey has allowed me to create The Way Home presentation that ends on a positive, optimistic note. I was trained by Al Gore to deliver the An Inconvenient Truth presentation, which I did 40-or-so times to a few thousand people in total. One thing that always bothered me was the lack of realistic solutions offered. I don’t mean just the “Change your lightbulbs” ’solution,’ but even writing to your elected representative is largely a waste of time at this point.

Transition Initiatives do offer hope. I am going to re-do this site in the next few weeks to reflect the path we must take. Yes, we must ‘go green or die.’ But that message is not inspiring change. In an attempt to communicate the extent of the threat, it inspires fear.

What we need is the truth, which is that things are bad. We have not responded appropriately to warnings from experts, and we are going to pay a price for that. Ok, so what do we do? Reality must be faced, and realistic action must be taken. That is the focus of the Transition Initiative, and also of the new look of this site, which will become The Way Home.

6 comments ↓

#1 Tweets that mention Go Green or Die becomes The Way Home | Go Green or Die -- Topsy.com on 04.12.10 at 9:13 am

[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Brian Gordon. Brian Gordon said: Go Green or Die —> The Way Home http://goo.gl/fb/8R1vx [...]

#2 Julian Barabas on 04.12.10 at 10:57 am

Why is your blog not carbon neutral, and/or hosted on green energy?

Check out where I host my blog. It’s 100% wind powered. Thought you might like to learn more.

I enjoy your blog btw. A friend recommended me. I too am interested in peak oil discussions.

URL:
http://www.webhost4life.com/join/index.bml?AffID=618442

(affiliate link to my green host)

#3 elasticsoul on 04.12.10 at 3:19 pm

Thanks Julian. In fact, I’m on Dreamhost, which is powered by green energy. I just don’t have the little symbol displayed on the site. Please keep coming, and tell your friend “Thanks!” from me!

All the best,
Brian

#4 The Norris Group Real Estate News Roundup 4/12/10 | The Norris … | Orange County FL Real Estate on 04.12.10 at 6:00 pm

[...] Go Green or Die becomes The Way Home | Go Green or Die [...]

#5 James on 04.13.10 at 12:30 pm

Canada has so much land and unused space, not to mention the massive coastline, I cannot belive more wind power is not used, it is a great form of sustainable, clean energy.

#6 Tim Taylor on 04.20.10 at 6:44 am

I have also come to the realization that local action is the only way that change is going to happen. If the provincial and federal governments are going to remain relevant, they better get off the corporate teat and start learning how to adapt or die.

Transition towns are a great solution to helping to bring the organizing power of citizens together for local solutions. Good on you Brian!!

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