Transformation

Achievement

From Reinhold Niebuhr’s, The Irony of American History:

“Nothing that is worth doing can be achieved in our lifetime; therefore we must be saved by hope. Nothing which is true or beautiful or good makes complete sense in any immediate context of history; therefore we must be saved by faith. Nothing we do, however virtuous, can be accomplished alone; therefore we are saved by love. No virtuous act is quite as virtuous from the standpoint of our friend or foe as it is from our standpoint. Therefore we must be saved by the final form of love, which is forgiveness.”

How might this relate to the climate emergency? Just because we can’t achieve success in our lifetime, it means we have to play a part. We need to have faith in both small actions and join others in taking larger ones. It does seem that in some respects we don’t act because we can’t forgive ourselves for what we as a species have done. It is a paradox that we are also the species who can do so.

An Elder Paves the Way

So many messages don’t receive an audience. Jane Goodall could teach many of us who want to communicate about a cause to think of the channels used by the receivers rather than the senders. She founded Roots and Shoots to speak to the coming generation about the three crises we currently face - biodiversity loss, climate change, and environmental inequality.

Only if we understand, can we care. Only if we care, will we help. Only if we help, we shall be saved.” she says. She notes that we have been stealing the futures of the young at least since the industrial revolution. But the young are interesting what she has to say - and they have influence over their parents and grandparents and the way they think. Those adults may be CEOs or senior government officials and the influence of the young reaches others with decision making power.

She founded a global institute in 1991 - and it now has a Canadian chapter here. In a recent interview with Fast Company, she spoke about partnering with a comic book publisher to tell the story in a meaningful way for its readers. Starting as a book called Rewriting Extinction, the formats are monthly cartoon videos - webtoons - with scripts read by celebrities. What we can do alone is wonderful, she reminds us - but what we can do with at least one other person can be even better. The cartoon reading platform has 72 million global readers. You can become another one and share it with kids you know.

What we need

The only remedy is moral outrage heated enough to get people to the polls. “Nothing great happens without anger.” (Thomas Aquinas)

This was Matthew Fox talking this morning about the impending American Supreme Court Decision if a leak is prescient. Abortion as a culture war imperative has lost any sense of nuance or humanity in much discourse.

It reminded me of something in the book that I continue to read - Earth Honoring Faith: Religious Ethics in a New Key. In his chapter, “The Ethic we need” he observes that science can provide us with what we must need to know about a subject - in the book’s context, it’s nature, but the same can apply to any moral issue. Unlike most of the culture wars which focus of what is good for an individual, he looks at the broader implications for a society as a whole. What is nearly always missing in the current brouhaha is the larger context of the reality of a pregnancy and all the players that surround it - or for that matter, that it takes more than one person to make it happen.

The Author, Larry Rasmussen, goes on to talk about change and quotes Vaclev Havel on its anatomy: “The distinguishing features of such times are periods when all consistent value systems collapse, when cultures distant in time and space are discovered or rediscovered”. Havel thought modernity was ending and saw the world as disconnected, confusing and chaotic with few common meanings or inner understandings of what we are experiencing. Rasmussen goes on to ask us what will make our species become the one that is capable of the right kind of change.

He suggests that the levels of change are threefold.

  • The first one that we think of and is the easiest to do. It’s based on what we know already and is most familiar.

  • The second comes when we realize that an unexpected crisis demands something more - certainly in the case of the climate crisis, but that one is now swamped in the news by the war crisis and the abortion crisis. One decision was made about the latter. It can’t be reversed without a chance of causing another crisis.

  • The shouting and distrust of institutions calls for something quite different and calls for a third - a change of consciousness - what Havel called “New meaning . . . gradually born from the encounter or the intersection of many different elements” - a different view, Rasmussen says, of what does and does not make sense.

The good thing about anger is that it can be motivating and energizing - but just yelling at one another doesn’t deal with an issue and dissuades others from exercising their own view through voting since all of the speakers eventually seem like idiots.

Suppose the placard carrying supporter and opponent of abortion - or even their counterparts in the Supreme Court - needed to hear not from lobbyists or lawyers, but from several pregnant woman as to what they were facing in terms of decision - perhaps a mother with several children to support already with less than adequate means to do so, or a young teenage girl after a chance encounter with a teenage boy where neither knew anything about unprotected sex, or a woman molested by a family member, or a woman raped at gunpoint. Putting on those shoes - what does the mind say? What about the heart? What about the gut? In turn each supporter and opponent might be asked to tell their stories of unexpected crisis in their own lives when they had to make a choice - and what the values were leading to that decision - and if the decision had to be made again, what the choice might be. Could there ever be a learning experience for any of them?

Keeping the two placarded sides separate may prevent violence brought on by anger. But is it the only possibility?

A New Start for our City

The City of Toronto where I live has spent the last five years addressing climate change:

  • In 2017 the City Council unanimously approved a long term climate strategy to reduce local greenhouse gas emissions and improve health - also considering economic and social well being.

  • Two years later in 2019, the council declared a climate emergency. Emissions were 38% lower that year than they were in 1990.

    On December 15, 2021, the Council Approved the TransformTO Net Zero Strategy. It includes the following goals for 2030:

    • Homes & Buildings

      • All new homes and buildings will be designed and built to be near zero greenhouse gas emissions

      • Greenhouse gas emissions from existing buildings will be cut in half, from 2008 levels

      Energy

      • 50 per cent of community-wide energy comes from renewable or low-carbon sources

      • 25 per cent of commercial and industrial floor area is connected to low carbon thermal energy sources

      Transportation

      • 30 per cent of registered vehicles in Toronto are electric

      • 75 per cent of school/work trips under 5km are walked, biked or by transit

       Waste

      • 70 per cent residential waste diversion from the City of Toronto’s waste management system

      • Identify pathways to more sustainable consumption in City of Toronto operations and in Toronto’s economy

      City of Toronto Corporate Goals

      • City of Toronto corporate greenhouse gas emissions are reduced by 65 per cent over 2008 base year

      • All City Agency, Corporation and Division-owned new developments are designed and constructed to applicable Toronto Green

      • Standard Version 4 standard achieving zero carbon emissions, beginning in 2022

      • Greenhouse gas emissions from City-owned buildings are reduced by 60 per cent from 2008 levels; by 2040, City-owned buildings reach net zero greenhouse gas emissions

      • All City-owned facilities have achieved zero waste

      • Generate and utilize 1.5 Million Gigajoules of energy from biogas

      • Approximately 107,700 tonnes CO2e per year are reduced through Organics Processing with Renewable Energy and Landfill Gas Utilization

      • 50 per cent of the City-owned fleet is transitioned to zero-emissions vehicles

      • 50 per cent of the TTC bus fleet is zero-emissions

      • Greenhouse gas emissions from food the City of Toronto procures are reduced by 25 per cent

  • It includes a directive to everyone.

The suggestions in this short video may not apply to everyone directly - renters for example - but even here, tenants associations can play a role. Most of the suggestions are actionable by families and bring participation down to the local level. Cities are where we live and work. They are also the places where we have the most impact on local policies. I commend all local councillors - and especially two who send regular newsletters I have signed up to receive. I’ve met in person with both on occasion. In the amount of noise in the news, it’s good to go back to local sources and see that citizens can have an impact.

Gratitude

I’m cheating by one day to try to post twice a week - but the last week was a busy one. As the American Thanksgiving weekend winds down and the news that Black Friday online shopping was lower than in previous years, perhaps we are discovering that being grateful is more satisfying than acquiring more stuff. In fact a recent article written by a physician and published in Fast Company backs that up. Here are ways to be ensure it. Nearly all religions and philosophies tell you the same things:

  • Be thankful for the beauties of nature and its constancy. The sun rises and sets each day

  • Compared to other living species we have been blessed with consciousness.

  • Good conversation enlivens us.

  • Love and encouragement of friends and family assures us.

  • Giving thanks in the morning and evening reminds us of how fortunate we are.

  • Writing thank you notes reinforces our gratitude

  • A journal allows us to record the good things that happen.

  • Seeking experiences rather than just buying things gives us pleasure.

  • Making gratitude a habit helps us through sorrow and challenges - so that we can remember that there are other good things waiting for us.