Looking Toward Earth Day 2010

July 29th, 2009

This was in my email box today, so I thought I would forward it to you. Let this be one small act of green.

JULY 2009

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Nobel Prize Winners Join 40th Anniversary Advisory Committee
From Nobel Prize winners, Vice President Al Gore and Dr. Rajendra Kumar Pachauri, chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change; to Shaquille O’Neal, the American basketball star; and famed architect and environmentalist Maya Lin, high powered individuals joining the 40th Anniversary Advisory Committee also include Mrs. Gaylord Nelson, wife of Earth Day Founder Senator Gaylord Nelson; and original Earth Day organizer Denis Hayes. Christo and Jeanne-Claude and Pete Seeger are among the artists who have also joined the committee. In addition to lending their names to the environmental movement, key members will also be speaking on behalf of Earth Day Network for the Earth Day 40th Anniversary.

Call the Senate to Strengthen the Climate Bill
The U.S. House took an historic step earlier this month by passing a climate change bill by a close margin. While, the bill represents the first step toward carbon reduction policies, Earth Day Network recommends an increase in the level of carbon emissions reductions, an auction of 100 percent of carbon permits and more money for green job training and displaced workers. Call your senators today at 202-224-3121 and urge the Senate to pass an even tougher climate change bill!

Register Your Green Acts Today!
In honor of Earth Day’s 40th anniversary in April 2010, Earth Day Network aims to catalyze A Billion Acts of Green worldwide and you can help! Whether it is planting a tree, recycling, or simply changing a light bulb, you can make the hope a reality. Join Earth Day Network in this effort and register your personal action here!

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Earth Day Network helps activists connect, interact, and have an impact on their communities, helping create positive change in local, national, and global policies. Using Facebook and Twitter, we are forming a community of diverse individuals devoted to civic engagement and environmental advocacy: The Green Generation™. Join us on Facebook and Twitter to stay up-to-date on how you can help others and how others can help you, too!

Share your ideas and causes and connect with our community of advocates, organizations, and individuals, in order to make a difference and celebrate 40 years of Earth Day.

New on Earth Day TV – Inspirational Award-Winning Grassroots Environmental Leaders
This year’s Goldman Environmental Prize winners prove that grassroots environmental work can make a huge impact in saving the world’s resources and improving human health. Nominated by Earth Day Network, Maria Gunnoe of West Virginia won a 2009 award for her fight to protect her family and community from the devastating effects of coal mining in the heart of Appalachia. Watch and learn about the heroic efforts of Maria and other leaders around the globe on Earth Day Television at www.earthdaytv.net.

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Five Fundamental Moral Values

July 3rd, 2009

I am a regular reader of Utne Reader, “The Best of the Alternative Press”. So when Miller-McCune, “Turning Research Into Solutions,” won the 2009 Utne Independent Press Award for science/technology coverage, I picked up the latest issue at the bookstore. Utne said, “Miller-McCune is…charging forward on an inspired mission to bridge the divide between academic researchers and journalists, to bring some ivory tower to the people via the printed page.”

Utne wasn’t just whistling “Dixie”! There’s a terrific article in the May/June issue of Miller-McCune magazine on why liberals and conservatives have such a difference of opinion on moral values. “Morals Authority” by Tom Jacobs looks at the work of Jonathan Haidt, a scholar at the University of Virginia. Haidt, best known as the author of The Happiness Hypothesis–an exploration of recent research on contentment–is now working on a new book on “the wellsprings of ethical beliefs and why they differ across classes and cultures.” According to Haidt, liberals and conservatives live in different moral universes. And while there are some overlap in liberal/conservative value systems, there are huge differences in what they hold dear.

In an effort to explain liberals and conservatives to each other Haidt has proposed a framework of fundamental moral values. Drawing on definitions by Dan McAdams, a Northwestern University research psychologist and award-winning author, Haidt has identified five foundational moral impulses:

    Harm/care. It is wrong to hurt people; it is good to relieve suffering.

    Fairness/reciprocity, Justice and fairness are good; people have certain rights that need to be upheld in social interactions,

    In-group loyalty. People should be true to their group and be wary of threats from the outside. Allegiance, loyalty, and patriotism are virtues; betrayal is bad.

    Authority/respect. People should respect social hierarchy; social order is necessary for human life,

    Purity/sanctity. The body and certain aspects of life are sacred. Cleanliness and health, as well as their derivatives of chastity and piety, are all good. Pollution, contamination and the associated character traits of lust and greed are all bad.

Research has shown that liberals tend to feel strongly about the first two but “grudging acknowledge the other three.” Conservatives are big on the loyalty/authority/purity. They acknowledge the first two but don’t have the same passion for care and fairness.

Haidt has two websites Civil Politics promotes “politics in which power and ideas are hotly contested but opponents are respected as fellow citizens who are assumed to be sincere in their beliefs.” YourMorals.Org “is a collaboration among five social psychologists who study morality and politics. Our goal was to create a site that would be useful and interesting to users, particularly ethics classes and seminars, and that would also allow us to test a variety of theories about moral psychology. One of our main goals is to foster understanding across the political spectrum.”

YourMorals.Org is chock full of surveys on moral issues. You have to register; an email address is your user id. They ask demographic questions—age, gender, education, etc–and your political leanings. At the end of each survey they show you how your answers compared to average liberal/conservative answers. Some non-political surveys simply compare your answers to the overall average for the participants. My scores were pretty much as I expected: a little more conservative than most liberals, a lot more liberal than most conservatives.

I have a hard time imagining how other Pagans would answer a lot of the questions. There are very liberal Pagans and very conservative ones, but i don’t know if “purity/sanctity” means the same thing to Pagans as it does to “The People of the Book.” Creating and purifying sacred space are an important part of rituals. Some Pagans practice a purifying bath or shower before ritual and wear ritual robes. Some anoint themselves with essential oils. Some feminist (Dianic) Pagans might use menstrual blood in ritual, other groups might erupt in hissy fits if someone suggested sealing a magical working with a drop of blood from a pricked finger. And–as I pointed out on one survey–”The Charge of the Goddess” includes “All acts of love and pleasure are My ritual.” Many Pagans would consider chastity as “unnatural.”

I finished the main research surveys on the site, but there is another, larger section for the curious. I will visit YourMorals.Org often to look for new research surveys and play with the other questionnaires. And I will encourage other Pagans to add to the research.